SKIP TO CONTENT

Learn words with Flashcards and other activities

Full list of words from this list:

  1. nomadic
    relating to persons or groups who travel in search of food or work
    Nomadic peoples made up the remaining 10% of the global population. Despite their more limited numbers, nomadic peoples occupied a majority of the inhabited space on Earth. (1.4.A)
  2. pastoral
    devoted to raising sheep or cattle
    While the practice of shifting cultivation continued, many nomads adapted to climates that could not sustain agriculture by engaging in pastoral herding. (1.4.A)
  3. steppe
    an extensive plain without trees
    Notable areas associated with pastoralism were the steppe grasslands of central Eurasia and the desert fringe and savannah areas in the Arabian Peninsula and Sudanic Africa. (1.4.A)
  4. savanna
    a flat grassland in tropical or subtropical regions
    Notable areas associated with pastoralism were the steppe grasslands of central Eurasia and the desert fringe and savannah areas in the Arabian Peninsula and Sudanic Africa. (1.4.A)
  5. graze
    feed as in a meadow or pasture
    When the conditions of an area no longer supported grazing, pastoral nomads required mobility to relocate. (1.4.A)
  6. facilitate
    make easier
    The domestication of the horse and the camel facilitated the movement of pastoral communities. (1.4.A)
  7. livestock
    any animals kept for use or profit
    Pastoral lifestyles were largely absent from the Americas, which did not have many native livestock species other than llamas. American pastoralism did not blossom until the introduction of the horse and Eurasian herding animals, such as cattle, sheep, and pigs, during the Columbian Exchange of the early modern period. (1.4.A)
  8. expansive
    able or tending to extend in one or more directions
    In the winter and spring, large herds consumed plant cover across expansive areas, and communities set up temporary tent camps as they moved with their herd’s need for fresh grassland. (1.4.B)
  9. compaction
    an increase in the density of something
    Overgrazing not only put pastoral communities at risk, it also led to a compaction and erosion of the soil that could contribute to desertification, and it had detrimental impacts on their environments. (1.4.B)
  10. erosion
    condition in which the earth's surface is worn away
    For example, compaction and erosion contributed to the decline of the Indus River Valley civilization when runoff made rivers impossible to control. (1.4.B)
  11. implement
    a piece of equipment or a tool used for a specific purpose
    Pastoralists produced specialized products such as meat, milk products, wool, hides, and bone implements. (1.4.C)
  12. diversify
    make more varied
    They traded with sedentary communities in order to diversify their diets and to acquire other goods such as metal tools and weapons. (1.4.C)
  13. intermediary
    a negotiator who acts as a link between parties
    Nomadic pastoralists served as important commercial and cultural intermediaries in the spaces between complex urban societies. (1.4.C)
  14. diffusion
    the act of dispersing something
    They were important agents in the Afro-Eurasian diffusion of iron-based technologies, such as the chariot, bridle, and stirrup, as well as the Indo-European and Bantu languages. (1.4.C)
  15. mobility
    the quality of moving freely
    Pastoral nomads developed sophisticated military skills that were built upon the advantages of mobility. Pastoral warriors could fight on horseback or in wheeled chariots and made use of powerful bows. (1.4.C)
Created on Thu Jul 09 11:33:43 EDT 2020 (updated Thu Jul 09 12:23:01 EDT 2020)

Sign up now (it’s free!)

Whether you’re a teacher or a learner, Vocabulary.com can put you or your class on the path to systematic vocabulary improvement.