Childrens Illustrated Thesaurus

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

43


a b c d e g h i j k l m p q r s t u v w x y z


n


o


f


colour


club^2
noun a heavy stick
» Andy dressed up as a
caveman and carried a club
to the fancy-dress party.
bat, stick, truncheon

clue
noun something that helps
to solve a problem or mystery
» The police looked for clues
to solve the crime.
hint, indication, lead

clumsiness
noun awkwardness
of movement » Meg’s usual
clumsiness was made worse
by her high-heeled shoes.
awkwardness,
ungainliness

clumsy
adjective moving awkwardly
» Rob is big and clumsy
in his movements.
awkward, gauche,
lumbering, uncoordinated,
ungainly, accident-prone,
bumbling, gawky, maladroit
antonym: graceful

coast
noun the land next to the sea
» We holidayed on the coast
this year.
beach, border, coastline,
seaside, shore, strand

coat^1
noun an animal’s fur or hair
» Anna gave the dog’s coat
a brush.
fleece, fur, hair, hide, pelt,
skin, wool

coat^2
noun a warm piece of
outerwear clothing » You’ll
need a coat; it’s cold outside.
jacket, overcoat, raincoat,
cagoule, mac

coating
noun a layer of something
» The lake had a thin
coating of ice.
coat, covering, layer

coax
verb to persuade gently
» We coaxed her into coming
to the shops with us.
cajole, persuade, talk into,
inveigle, prevail upon,
wheedle

coil
verb to wind in loops
» The snake coiled its body
around the tree.
curl, loop, spiral, twine,
twist, wind

cold^1
adjective having a low
temperature » The spring
weather felt so cold that it
felt more like midwinter.
arctic, biting, bitter,
bleak, chilly, freezing,
icy, raw, wintry
antonym: hot

cold^2
adjective not showing affection
» Aunt Maud was a cold,
unfeeling person who loved
her cats more than people.
aloof, distant, frigid,
lukewarm, reserved,
stony, standoffish,
undemonstrative
antonym: warm

collapse^1
verb to fall down » Stand
well clear – the old building
looks like it could collapse
at any minute.
fall down, give way

collapse^2
verb to fail » The business
collapsed due to a lack
of money.
fail, fold, founder

collapse^3
noun the failure of something
» The collapse of the project
was caused by a disagreement
in the team.
downfall, failure

colleague
noun a person someone works
with » My colleagues all
worked extremely hard on
the latest project.
associate, fellow worker,
partner, workmate

collect
verb to gather together
» My brother Sebastian
collects stamps that come
from all over the world.
accumulate, assemble,
gather, raise, aggregate,
amass
antonym: scatter

collection
noun a group of things
collected together
» We visited the collection
of paintings in the gallery.
assortment, group, store

colloquial
adjective used in everyday
conversation » Clare used
colloquial expressions like:
“He’s gone nuts”.
conversational, everyday,
informal, demotic,
idiomatic, vernacular

colony^1
noun a country controlled
by another country
» Many European countries
used to have colonies around
the world.
dependency, dominion,
territory

colony^2
noun a group of settlers
in a place » A colony of
Scots settled in Australia.
community, outpost,
settlement

colossal
adjective very large indeed
» The statue was colossal.
enormous, gigantic, huge,
immense, mammoth,
massive, vast
antonym: tiny

colour^1
verb to give something a colour
» Jules used hair dye to colour
his hair.
dye, paint, stain, tint

Meg’s usual clumsiness was made
worse by her high-heeled shoes.

The lake had a thin coating of ice.

My brother Sebastian collects
stamps that come from all over
the world.

We visited the collection of
paintings in the gallery.

garb
She preferred
colourful garb.


034-056_C.indd 43 22/03/17 11:34 am
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