AARIANA LEE TUCKER Word Scramble
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Word | definition |
Archaeologist | A person who studies archaeology. |
Rummaging | to search thoroughly or actively through (a place, receptacle, etc.), especially by moving around, turning over, or looking through contents. |
Fugitive | having taken flight, or run away: a fugitive slave. |
Colleague | an associate. |
Relics | a surviving memorial of something past. |
Archaeologist | a person who specializes in anthropology. |
obelisk | a tapering, four-sided shaft of stone, usually monolithic and having a pyramidal apex. |
Amulets | a small object worn to ward off evil, harm, or illness or to bring good fortune; protecting charm. |
Illuminated | to supply or brighten with light; light up. |
crurater | the person in charge of a museum, art collection, etc. |
heiroglyphics | Also, hi·er·o·glyph·i·cal. designating or pertaining to a pictographic script, particularly that of the ancient Egyptians, in which many of the symbols are conventionalized, recognizable pictures of the things represented. |
decipher | to discover the meaning of (anything obscure or difficult to trace or understand): to decipher hieroglyphics. |
brandishing | to shake or wave, as a weapon; flourish: Brandishing his sword, he rode into battle. |
sarcophagus | a stone coffin, especially one bearing sculpture, inscriptions, etc., often displayed as a monument. |
deportation | the lawful expulsion of an undesired alien or other person from a state. |
incredulous | not credulous; disinclined or indisposed to believe; skeptical. |
fedora | a soft felt hat with a curled brim, worn with the crown creased lengthwise. |
quayside | the area bordering and around a quay or quays. |
disspated | indulging in or characterized by excessive devotion to pleasure; intemperate; dissolute. |
interveen | to come between disputing people, groups, etc.; intercede; mediate. |
artifacts | any object made by human beings, especially with a view to subsequent use. |
authenticity | the quality of being authentic; genuineness. |
chided | to express disapproval of; scold; reproach: The principal chided the children for their thoughtless pranks. |
gingelly | another name for sesame |
excude | to come out gradually in drops, as sweat, through pores or small openings; ooze out. |
impeckabe | faultless; flawless; irreproachable: impeccable manners. |
minion | a servile follower or subordinate of a person in power. |
seething | to surge or foam as if boiling. |
Rosetta Stone | a stone slab, found in 1799 near Rosetta, bearing parallel inscriptions in Greek, Egyptian hieroglyphic, and demotic characters, making possible the decipherment of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. |
Egyptionologist | the scientific study of Egyptian antiquities. |
auspicious | promising success; propitious; opportune; favorable: |
sabotaged | any underhand interference with production, work, etc., in a plant, factory, etc., as by enemy agents during wartime or by employees during a trade dispute. |
cartouche | an oval or oblong figure, as on ancient Egyptian monuments, enclosing characters that represent the name of a sovereign. |
summoned | to call upon to do something specified. |
palette | a thin and usually oval or oblong board or tablet with a thumb hole at one end, used by painters for holding and mixing colors. |
avatar | the descent of a deity to the earth in an incarnate form or some manifest shape; the incarnation of a god. |
annihilation | the act or an instance of annihilating. |
constured | to give the meaning or intention of; explain; interpret. |
flotsam | the part of the wreckage of a ship and its cargo found floating on the water. |
embodiment | the act of embodying. |
incantation | the chanting or uttering of words purporting to have magical power. |
inferno | hell; the infernal regions. |
necromancer | a method of divination through alleged communication with the dead; black art. |
premonition | a feeling of anticipation of or anxiety over a future event; presentiment: He had a vague premonition of danger. |
reconciling | to cause (a person) to accept or be resigned to something not desired |
retort | to reply to, usually in a sharp or retaliatory way; reply in kind to. |
sinewy | having strong sinews: |
dubiously | doubtful; marked by or occasioning doubt |
imploded | to burst inward |
intercepted | to take, seize, or halt (someone or something on the way from one place to another); cut off from an intended destination: |
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soaringeagles
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