Definition of zombies Zombies

/zɑˈmbiz/ - [zambeez] -

We found 3 definitions of zombies from 2 different sources.

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What does zombies mean?

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  • zombies (Noun)
    Plural of zombie.

Part of speech

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WordNet

WordNet by Princeton University

Noun

Plural: zombies

zombie - several kinds of rum with fruit juice and usually apricot liqueur
  zombi
  highball a mixed drink made of alcoholic liquor mixed with water or a carbonated beverage and served in a tall glass
zombie - someone who acts or responds in a mechanical or apathetic way; "only an automaton wouldn't have noticed"
  automaton, zombi
  unusual person, anomaly (astronomy) position of a planet as defined by its angular distance from its perihelion (as observed from the sun)
zombie - (voodooism) a spirit or supernatural force that reanimates a dead body
  zombi, zombi spirit, zombie spirit
  disembodied spirit, spirit a fundamental emotional and activating principle determining one's character
zombie - a dead body that has been brought back to life by a supernatural force
  zombi, living dead
zombie - a god of voodoo cults of African origin worshipped especially in West Indies
  zombi, snake god
= synonym
= antonym
= related word

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OmegaWiki DictionaryOmegaWiki Dictionary Ω

  • zombie
    A legendary figure of a corpse reanimated by a supernatural force or a spell, with no soul and no will of its own.

Wikipedia Wiktionary dictionary logo

  • A zombie or zombi is a dead person who has returned to life as a walking corpse (the living dead). Things that have been "re-animated" are called undead. The Zombie myth came from the Caribbean.

    Zombies have become very popular in horror movies. They are dead creatures that have been brought back to life by science or some spell, and eat the flesh or brain of living people.

    Voodoo Zombies.

    A Voodoo sorcerer or a bokor can bring dead people back to life. The now zombie is under the control of the sorcerer because zombies have no free will. The idea of this is that a zombie is a trapped human soul, and if a sorcerer can catch it, he becomes more powerful.

    Examples.

    Wade Davis, a Canadian ethnobotanist (someone who studies what effect plants have on people), wrote about zombies in two books, The Serpent and the Rainbow (1985) and (1988). Davis went to Haiti in 1982 found out and wrote about how a living person can be turned into a zombie by two special powders being rubbed into a wound. The first powder brought a 'death-like' state because of a certain poison in it, called tetrodotoxin. Tetrodotoxin is the same deadly poison found in the Japanese pufferfish. At just the right amount, it can make a person almost die, but not quite. The second powder, puts the person in a zombie-like state where they seem to have no will of their own.

    Many people still don't believe what Davis wrote about, but in Haiti, lots of people recognized the "zombie drugs". This could mean that, while the

Part of speech

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Pronunciation

Word frequency

Zombies is...

60% Complete
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66% Complete
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Sign Language

zombies in sign language
Sign language - letter Z Sign language - letter Z Sign language - letter O Sign language - letter O Sign language - letter M Sign language - letter M Sign language - letter B Sign language - letter B Sign language - letter I Sign language - letter I Sign language - letter E Sign language - letter E Sign language - letter S Sign language - letter S

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