All Quiet on the Western Front Vocabulary

12345678910111213141516171819202122
Across
  1. 2. a person who has ambitions to achieve something (Page 52, Paragraph 3)
  2. 3. a thing that persuades or influences someone to do something (Page 125, Paragraph 3)
  3. 4. A person recovering from an illness or operation (Page 30, Paragraph 3)
  4. 6. ask someone earnestly or anxiously to do something (Page 172, Paragraph 8)
  5. 7. A truck (Page 52, Paragraph 6)
  6. 9. To exclude (someone) from a society or group (Page 11, Paragraph 3)
  7. 11. exceedingly idealistic; unrealistic and impractical (Page 139, Paragraph 1)
  8. 12. have an effect or impact, especially a negative one (Page 114, Paragraph 1)
  9. 15. attack or assault (someone) physically or verbally (Page 111, Paragraph 2)
  10. 16. deprived of physical or emotional feeling (Page 107, Paragraph 1)
  11. 17. A strict disciplinarian, especially in the armed forces (Page 11, Paragraph 1)
  12. 19. present and explain (a theory or idea) systematically and in detail (Page 167, Paragraph 3)
  13. 20. lodge (soldiers) in a particular place, especially a civilian's house or other nonmilitary facility (Page 143, Paragraph 6)
  14. 21. (adverb) with the head foremost (Page 43, Paragraph 1)
Down
  1. 1. a state of uneasiness or anxiety (Page 172, Paragraph 7)
  2. 5. Phenol, especially when used as a disinfectant (Page 29, Paragraph 2)
  3. 8. a civil officer or lay judge who administers the law, especially one who conducts a court that deals with minor offenses and holds preliminary hearings for more serious ones. (Page 76, Paragraph 2)
  4. 10. neither parallel nor at a right angle to a specified or implied line; slanting (Page 117, Paragraph)
  5. 12. harass (someone) persistently for or to do something (Page 172, Paragraph 9)
  6. 13. listen (Page 172, Paragraph 2)
  7. 14. destroy or debase the moral purity or; corrupt (Page 115, Paragraph 3)
  8. 18. amusement, especially as expressed with laughter (Page 126, Paragraph 4)
  9. 22. (of an action, idea, or goal) deserving praise and commendation (Page 170, Paragraph 2)