4000 Essential English Words 4 » Unit 28: Thucydides and the Plague of Athens

Word List
  • avail [əˈveil] n.
    Avail is help. It is often used in the achievement of a goal.
    His studying was to no avail because he failed the test.
  • expand [iksˈpænd] v.
    To expand is to become bigger in size.
    A balloon will expand as you blow air into it.
  • define [diˈfain] v.
    To define means to clearly state, show, or explain what something is.
    People define success in many different ways.
  • dread [dread] v.
    To dread is to be afraid of something that could, or is going to, happen.
    I dread the idea that I will not get into college.
  • fundamental [ˌfʌndəˈmentl] adj.
    If something is fundamental, it is a basic part of something.
    The fundamental rules of basketball are easy.
  • horrifying [ˈhɔ:rəfaiŋ] adj.
    If something is horrifying, it is frightening and very unpleasant.
    There was a horrifying car accident today.
  • incredulous [inˈkredjələs] adj.
    If someone is incredulous about something, they do not believe that it is true.
    She was incredulous that monkeys could ever drive a car.
  • linger [ˈliŋgər] v.
    To linger is to last for a long time.
    The smell of fresh cookies lingered in the bakery.
  • organism [ˈɔːrgənizəm] n.
    An organism is a living thing, especially a very small one.
    We studied the organism on the microscope.
  • paraphrase [ˈpærəfreiz] v.
    To paraphrase is to make someone else’s writing or speech shorter.
    The students were asked to paraphrase the story they just heard.
  • plague [pleig] n.
    A plague is a serious disease that quickly spreads to many people.
    A plague in Europe killed millions of people.
  • presently [ˈprezəntli] adv.
    If something happens presently, it is happening right now.
    Presently, our profits are good, but by next year we can do even better.
  • random [ˈrændəm] adj.
    If something is random, it happens without any pattern or reason.
    Young children often ask random questions.
  • riot [ˈraiət] n.
    A riot is a crowd that reacts to bad news by violently breaking laws.
    A riot broke out after the candidate lost the election.
  • scribble [ˈskribəl] v.
    To scribble is to write something quickly without caring about how it looks.
    I scribbled a rough diagram of our plan and gave it to him.
  • shrine [ʃrain] n.
    A shrine is a religious building built to honor a person, event, or god.
    He prayed at the shrine for an hour.
  • solitude [ˈsɒlitjuːd] n.
    Solitude is the state of being totally alone.
    John lives a life of solitude because he doesn’t get along well with people.
  • stark [stɑːrk] adj.
    If a contrast is stark, then the things being compared are utterly different.
    There is a stark contrast between their test scores.
  • summon [ˈsʌmən] v.
    To summon a person is to ask them to come to you.
    We summoned the doctor as soon as we noticed she was sick.
  • worsen [ˈwəːrsən] v.
    To worsen is to get worse.
    The weather suddenly worsened, and we had to stay inside.
Exercise 1

Part A: Choose the right word for the given definition.

  1. to ask someone to come
    • a. worsen
    • b. scribble
    • c. linger
    • d. summon
  2. basic
    • a. verse
    • b. riot
    • c. avail
    • d. fundamental
  3. to get bigger
    • a. expand
    • b. define
    • c. stark
    • d. organism
  4. to be afraid
    • a. dread
    • b. shrine
    • c. random
    • d. horrifying
  5. not believing
    • a. solitude
    • b. presently
    • c. incredulous
    • d. plague

Part B: Choose the right definition for the given word.

  1. plague
    • a. a violent reaction
    • b. different
    • c. a disease
    • d. without reason
  2. solitude
    • a. being alone
    • b. success
    • c. afraid
    • d. right now
  3. define
    • a. to last a longtime
    • b. to get bigger
    • c. to explain clearly
    • d. to make easier
  4. organism
    • a. a religious building
    • b. a living thing
    • c. not believing
    • d. to send for
  5. horrifying
    • a. to get worse
    • b. basic
    • c. to write quickly
    • d. very unpleasant
Exercise 2

Choose the word that is the better fit for each blank.

  1. shrine / riot
    • There was a ____________ in the city yesterday, but the ____________ was not damaged.
  2. paraphrased / defined
    • For the book report, I ____________ the book and clearly ____________ the author's purpose for writing it.
  3. expand / presently
    • There are 15 members in the group ____________ , but I expect that number to ____________ .
  4. avail / solitude
    • His attempt to catch the train was to no ____________ . He spent hours in ____________ waiting for the next one.
  5. fundamental / worsen
    • The ____________ point of my speech was to show that people need to act. If we don’t do something, things will ____________ .
  6. linger / scribble
    • I tried to ____________ the information as fast as I could because I didn’t have time to ____________ .
  7. dreaded / horrifying
    • After seeing that ____________ plane crash, I ____________ flying.
  8. incredulous / stark
    • She was ____________ that there could be such a ____________ contrast between boys' and girls' grades.
  9. organism / summon
    • We should ____________ scientists from around the world to study this new ____________ .
  10. plague / random
    • At first we thought ____________ people were getting sick. Then we realized that a ____________ was spreading.
Answer Key
Exercise 1
Part A
  1. d
  2. d
  3. a
  4. a
  5. c
Part B
  1. c
  2. a
  3. c
  4. b
  5. d
Exercise 2
  1. riot / shrine
  2. paraphrased / defined
  3. presently / expand
  4. avail / solitude
  5. fundamental / worsen
  6. scribble / linger
  7. horrifying / dreaded
  8. incredulous / stark
  9. summon / organism
  10. random / plague
Answer Key
Thucydides and the Plague of Athens

Thucydides was the world’s first historian. Presently, we get most of our knowledge about ancient Greece from his writing. But Thucydides didn’t just write about history, he lived through it. However, he almost didn’t survive one historical event: the Plague of Athens.

In 430 BCE, an army attacked the city of Athens, where Thucydides lived. Thousands of people hid from the army behind Athens’ large walls. The city became very crowded as the population expanded. Then a horrifying disease broke out. People summoned doctors. But it was to no avail because no one understood how the disease spread. It seemed random. They didn’t know that it was an organism. Instead, they defined disease as a punishment from their gods. Thucydides was incredulous that gods caused the plague, but he explained why others believed it. There was an old, long verse which predicted the disease. To paraphrase it, the verse said the gods would send a disease during a war. As a result, large crowds gathered at shrines to ask the gods to stop the plague. But the situation only worsened because these people were so close to each other they became sick. That’s how they learned a fundamental lesson about the plague: it spread from person to person.

People wanted to leave the crowded city, but they dreaded what the army outside would do to them. At this time, Thucydides got sick, too. He quickly scribbled down notes because he thought he would soon die. His writing shows a stark contrast between people’s behavior before and during the plague. There were riots, and people ignored laws. They didn’t think they’d live long enough to be punished. Many sick people were left to die in solitude because no one wanted to be near them. The plague lingered for two years. But luckily, Thucydides survived. Without his writing, we would know much less about ancient Greece and the Plague of Athens.

Reading Comprehension

Part A: Mark each statement T for true or F for false. Rewrite the false statements to make them true.

  1. _____ Presently, a horrifying plague has broken out in Athens.
    • _____________________________________________________
  2. _____ At first, people thought the spread of the disease was random.
    • _____________________________________________________
  3. _____ The people summoned doctors to no avail.
    • _____________________________________________________
  4. _____ Thucydides was incredulous that the plague was caused by an organism.
    • _____________________________________________________
  5. _____ By gathering in shrines, people made the plague worse.
    • _____________________________________________________
  6. _____ Thucydides luckily survived the plague.
    • _____________________________________________________

Part B: Answer the questions.

  1. Why did Athens’ population expand?
    • a. Because the army moved into the city
    • b. Because people were hiding from the army
    • c. Because the army told people to enter
    • d. Because people dreaded the plague
  2. Thucydides scribbled quickly because ______.
    • a. there were so many riots
    • b. he had to define the disease
    • c. he though he’d die soon
    • d. there were too many sick people
  3. What fundamental lesson did the people learn?
    • a. The plague was a punishment
    • b. The plague was ended in the shrines.
    • c. The plague was from the army.
    • d. The plague was spread between people.
  4. What is NOT true of Thucydides?
    • a. He was the world’s first historian.
    • b. He thought gods caused the plague.
    • c. He survived the Plague of Athens.
    • d. He lived in the city of Athens.
Answer Key
Answer Key
Reading Comprehension
Part A
  1. F / In 430 BCE, a horrifying plague broke out in Athens.
  2. T
  3. T
  4. F / Thucydides was incredulous that the plague was caused by the gods.
  5. T
  6. T
Part B
  1. b
  2. c
  3. d
  4. b
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