You searched for:
“troglodyte”
1. A prehistoric cave dweller or a primitive race of people who lived in caves, dens, or holes: Figuratively, a troglodyte is someone who lives in degradation or has a brutal and uncivilized nature.
2. A person living in seclusion or someone who is considered to be reclusive, reactionary, and out of date: Usually a troglodyte is someone who is unacquainted with what is going on in the rest of the world.
4. Etymology: from Greek trogle, "hole" + dyein, "get into".
© ALL rights are reserved.
© ALL rights are reserved.
© ALL rights are reserved.
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
2. A person living in seclusion or someone who is considered to be reclusive, reactionary, and out of date: Usually a troglodyte is someone who is unacquainted with what is going on in the rest of the world.
Some computer programmers are thought of as being troglodytes because they work alone with their machines and have little contact with other people.
The term troglodyte doesn't necessarily apply just to prehistoric cave dwellers. It also describes someone who lives in a dingy domicile or people who are so socially inept or culturally deprived that they seem to have just emerged from a subterranean cavity into the "blinding light of civilization" or those whose thinking or behavior is considered to be uncivilized and backward.
3. Creatures that live underground: Moles, worms, ants, etc. are considered to be troglodytes because they exist in the terra firma or soil.4. Etymology: from Greek trogle, "hole" + dyein, "get into".
Go to this Word A Day Revisited Index
so you can see more of Mickey Bach's cartoons.
This entry is located in the following unit:
troglo-, trogl-
(page 1)
Word Entries at Get Words:
“troglodyte”
troglodyte
Any prehistoric, pre-human, or human cave dweller.
Usually a prehistoric cave dweller or a race of people who lived in caves, dens, or holes; someone whose thinking or behavior is considered to be uncivilized and backward. (2)
This entry is located in the following unit:
Word a Day Revisited Index of Cartoons Illustrating the Meanings of Words
(page 78)