Greek Words
Across
- 1. (n.) GK. loss of voice : inability to articulate.
- 2. (n.) GK. a usually representative collection of selected literary pieces or passages.
- 3. (n.) GK. one that is cursed by ecclesiastical authority.
- 9. (n.) GK. the separation of substances in solution by means of their unequal diffusion through semipermeable membranes.
- 12. (adj.) GK. spread by way of the blood stream
- 13. (n.) GK. an imaginary place which is distressingly wretched and whose people lead a fearful existence.
- 16. (n.) GK. the aggregate of qualities (as absence of echo or reverberation) of an enclosure (as an auditorium) or other area that affects production, control, transmission, reception, and perception of sound
- 17. (adj.) GK. of or relating to a tonsil.
- 18. (n.) GK. loss of memory : forgetfulness.
- 19. (n.) GK. an animal or plant accustomed or adapted to life both on land and in the water
Down
- 1. (n.) GK. one who maintains a continuing doubt about the existence or of a god
- 2. (n.) GK. an incident or solution of plot in tragedy in which the main character recognizes his or her own or some other character’s true identity or discovers the true nature of his or her own situation.
- 4. (adj.) GK. of doubtful authenticity : fictitious, spurious, untrustworthy.
- 5. (n.) GK. a person in holy orders or consecrated to the service of the church.
- 6. (n.) GK. a joining of the parts of a branched system.
- 7. (adj.) GK. one affected with abnormally enlarged glands in the back of the throat.
- 8. (v.) GK. recruiting members for an institution, team, or group especially by the offer of special inducements.
- 10. (adjadj) GK. serving to assuage pain : soothing.
- 11. (n.) GK. pain inside the head : headache.
- 14. (n.) GK. an identifying mark, emblem, or device used by a printer or publisher
- 15. (adj.) GK. ingeniously formed or working : like a maze : intricate.
- 18. (n.) GK. a going or marching up; especially : a military advance.
- 20. (n.) GK. one who voluntarily suffers death as the penalty of witnessing to and refusing to renounce his or her religion or a tenet, principle, or practice belonging to it.