🥩 carnivore
car‧ni‧vore /ˈkɑːnəvɔː, ˈkɑːnɪvɔː $ ˈkɑːrnəvɔːr/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1800-1900; Language: Latin; Origin: carnivorus 'flesh-eating', from caro ( ⇨ carnal) + -vorus 'eating']
1. an animal that eats flesh ⇨
🦁 • Lions and tigers are carnivores.
#Vocabulary #Carnivore #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
car‧ni‧vore /ˈkɑːnəvɔː, ˈkɑːnɪvɔː $ ˈkɑːrnəvɔːr/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1800-1900; Language: Latin; Origin: carnivorus 'flesh-eating', from caro ( ⇨ carnal) + -vorus 'eating']
1. an animal that eats flesh ⇨
herbivore, omnivore
meat-eater; meat eating mammals🦁 • Lions and tigers are carnivores.
#Vocabulary #Carnivore #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
🥩 carnivore
car‧ni‧vore /ˈkɑːnəvɔː, ˈkɑːnɪvɔː $ ˈkɑːrnəvɔːr/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1800-1900; Language: Latin; Origin: carnivorus 'flesh-eating', from caro ( ⇨ carnal) + -vorus 'eating']
1. an animal that eats flesh ⇨
🦁 • Lions and tigers are carnivores.
#Vocabulary #Carnivore #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
car‧ni‧vore /ˈkɑːnəvɔː, ˈkɑːnɪvɔː $ ˈkɑːrnəvɔːr/ noun [countable]
[Date: 1800-1900; Language: Latin; Origin: carnivorus 'flesh-eating', from caro ( ⇨ carnal) + -vorus 'eating']
1. an animal that eats flesh ⇨
herbivore, omnivore
meat-eater; meat eating mammals🦁 • Lions and tigers are carnivores.
#Vocabulary #Carnivore #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
🐋 blubber 2
noun [uncountable]
🐳 [Date: 1600-1700; Origin: blubber 'bubble, foam' (14-19 centuries), probably from the sound of bubbling; perhaps because the inside parts of fish, whales, etc. seem to bubble when they are cut open]
the fat of sea animals, especially whales
• Whale blubber
#Vocabulary #Blubber #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
noun [uncountable]
🐳 [Date: 1600-1700; Origin: blubber 'bubble, foam' (14-19 centuries), probably from the sound of bubbling; perhaps because the inside parts of fish, whales, etc. seem to bubble when they are cut open]
the fat of sea animals, especially whales
• Whale blubber
#Vocabulary #Blubber #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
🐋 blubber 2
noun [uncountable]
🐳 [Date: 1600-1700; Origin: blubber 'bubble, foam' (14-19 centuries), probably from the sound of bubbling; perhaps because the inside parts of fish, whales, etc. seem to bubble when they are cut open]
the fat of sea animals, especially whales
• Whale blubber
#Vocabulary #Blubber #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
noun [uncountable]
🐳 [Date: 1600-1700; Origin: blubber 'bubble, foam' (14-19 centuries), probably from the sound of bubbling; perhaps because the inside parts of fish, whales, etc. seem to bubble when they are cut open]
the fat of sea animals, especially whales
• Whale blubber
#Vocabulary #Blubber #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
🗑 scavenge
scav‧enge /ˈskævəndʒ, ˈskævɪndʒ/ verb [intransitive and transitive]
1. if an animal scavenges, it eats anything that it can find:
• Pigs scavenged among the rubbish.
scavenge for
• rats scavenging for food
#Voabulary #Scavenge #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
scav‧enge /ˈskævəndʒ, ˈskævɪndʒ/ verb [intransitive and transitive]
1. if an animal scavenges, it eats anything that it can find:
• Pigs scavenged among the rubbish.
scavenge for
• rats scavenging for food
#Voabulary #Scavenge #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
🗑 scavenge
scav‧enge /ˈskævəndʒ, ˈskævɪndʒ/ verb [intransitive and transitive]
1. if an animal scavenges, it eats anything that it can find:
• Pigs scavenged among the rubbish.
scavenge for
• rats scavenging for food
#Voabulary #Scavenge #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
scav‧enge /ˈskævəndʒ, ˈskævɪndʒ/ verb [intransitive and transitive]
1. if an animal scavenges, it eats anything that it can find:
• Pigs scavenged among the rubbish.
scavenge for
• rats scavenging for food
#Voabulary #Scavenge #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
💣 destructive
de‧struc‧tive /dɪˈstrʌktɪv/ adjective
[Word Family: noun: destroyer, destruction; adjective: indestructible, destructive; verb: destroy; adverb: destructively]
causing damage to people or things ⇨ destroy:
• the destructive power of modern weapons
destructive to
• What is good for the individual can be destructive to the family.
—destructively adverb
OPP: Creative
#Voabulary #Destructive #C1 #IELTSVocabulary
de‧struc‧tive /dɪˈstrʌktɪv/ adjective
[Word Family: noun: destroyer, destruction; adjective: indestructible, destructive; verb: destroy; adverb: destructively]
causing damage to people or things ⇨ destroy:
• the destructive power of modern weapons
destructive to
• What is good for the individual can be destructive to the family.
—destructively adverb
OPP: Creative
#Voabulary #Destructive #C1 #IELTSVocabulary