Synonyms for voracity
Grammar : Noun |
Spell : vaw-ras-i-tee, voh-, vuh- |
Phonetic Transcription : vɔˈræs ɪ ti, voʊ-, və- |
Définition of voracity
Origin :- 1520s, from Middle French voracité (14c.) or directly from Latin voracitatem (nominative voracitas) "greediness, ravenousness," from vorax (genitive voracis) "greedy," from vorare "to devour," from PIE root *gwer- "to swallow, devour" (cf. Sanskrit girati "he swallows," garah "drink;" Greek bora "food;" Lithuanian geriu "to drink;" Old Church Slavonic ziro "to swallow," grulo "gullet").
- noun ravenousness
- This voracity must be peculiar to the inhabitants of cold countries, said Altamont.
- Extract from : « The Field of Ice » by Jules Verne
- These she produced likewise; and he ate and drank with the voracity of a famished hound.
- Extract from : « Barnaby Rudge » by Charles Dickens
- A candle of yellow wax illuminated this scene of voracity and revery.
- Extract from : « Notre-Dame de Paris » by Victor Hugo
- He preys only on the smallest quadrupeds, and with all his voracity he is an arrant poltroon.
- Extract from : « The Bush Boys » by Captain Mayne Reid
- Indeed, our means of taking them were as simple as their voracity was great.
- Extract from : « The Little Savage » by Captain Frederick Marryat
- With some of them this voracity went so far that we had to chain them.
- Extract from : « The South Pole, Volumes 1 and 2 » by Roald Amundsen
- Their ferocity, as well as their voracity, surpasses anything that can be imagined.
- Extract from : « Curiosities of Civilization » by Andrew Wynter
- Its boldness and voracity, and craving for blood, are more remarkable than its size.
- Extract from : « The Ocean World: » by Louis Figuier
- Numerous accounts have been given of the voracity of the pike.
- Extract from : « Dog Breaking » by William Nelson Hutchinson
- Their voracity is useful for the preservation of the social organism.
- Extract from : « Appletons' Popular Science Monthly, January 1900 » by Various
Antonyms for voracity
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019