Term
Writhe (writhing)
(1) “Up the length of the street they came shouting, and never knew they had run right through the village, as the empty huts and houses loomed and disappeared again in the writhing fog.” (pg 22.)
(2) “One Karg fell writhing with a spear, still warm from its forging, right through his body.” (pg 21.
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Definition
To twist, as in pain, struggle, or embarrassment; to move with a twisting or contorting motion. |
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Term
Wraith
“One group of Kargs chased the wraiths straight to the High Fall, the cliff’s edge above the springs of Ar, and the shapes they pursued ran out on to the air and the re vanished in thinning mist…” (pg. 22)
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Definition
An apparation of a living person that appears as a portent just before that person's death; something shadowy and insubstantial. |
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Term
Bail
“When they did not row they bailed, for the seas broke heavy on the ship.” (pg 42).
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Definition
To remove water from a boat by repeatedly filling a container and emptying it over the side; a container used for emptying water from a boat. |
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Term
Peril
“Not for his passenger’s sake, but to save his ship for the peril of the storm, the master shouted at once to the steers-man to head westward toward the light.” (pg 43.)
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Definition
Imminent danger; exposure to the risk of harm or loss. |
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Term
Vast
“… and for an instant seemed to behold himself standing in a strange and vast desert place alone among shadows.” (pg. 48)
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Definition
Very great in size, number, amount, or quantity. |
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Term
Scoff
“... that this fellow was scoffing at him with his ‘service’ and his ‘Sir’ and his bowing and scraping.” (pg 49)
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Definition
To mock at or treat with derision; to show or express derision or scorn. |
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Term
Disdain(ful)
“Presently, trying to show himself an equal of this polite disdainful youth, he added, “I suppose you weren’t, when you first came.”” (pg 50)
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Definition
To regard or treat with haughty contempt; despise; to consider or reject as beneath oneself. |
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Term
Fathomless
“He saw that in this dusty and fathomless matter of learning the true name of each place, thing, and being, the power he wanted lay like a jewel at the bottom of a dry well.” (pg 59)
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Definition
Too obscure or complicated to be understood. |
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Term
Shrill
“... the drums silent and only the flutes playing soft and shrill.” (pg 68)
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Definition
High-pitched and piercing in tone or sound. |
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Term
Frolic
“They were all eating and laughing and playing such tricks out of pure frolic as might be the marvel of a king’s court.” (pg 69)
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Definition
Gaiety; merriment; fun; a playful antic. |
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