Nonfiction
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1 online resource
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The book showcases 75 beautiful words evocative of the wild, from all around the world, that describe natural happenings in nature. It includes words that describe weather, or a feeling you have when in nature as well as sensory words that explain the smell or sound of a place. The words used to express what is seen in the world are vital to an appreciation of it - language is a key component in the call of the wild. As words vanish from a language, it follows that what they describe may disappear. Words deepen understanding of what is seen, and what is seen comes more vividly to life through the words used to describe it. As the natural world and the time spent in it diminish in the face of modern life, it's more vital than ever to recall it into being with the magic of language. Examples of words:Mångata. Sweden. Noun. The path of light that the moon makes on water.Sugar weather. Canada. Noun. A period of warm days and cold nights - the perfect weather to start the sap flowing in maple trees.Rudėnja. Lithuania. The way nature begins to feel as autumn takes hold and the vestiges of summer disappear.Komorebi. Japan. Noun. Beams of sunlight filtering down through the trees. - There is nothing else like this on the market. It's for those who love words and language as well as those who love nature. Robert Macfarlane does a 'word of the day' on Twitter and he has 186k followers so there is clearly an appetite for it.- Includes a mindfulness element as engaging in nature can bring calm and a sense of wonder.- Encouraging people to interact with nature, even just by words, means they are more likely to get out into nature. Nearly 70% of people in a Wildlife Trusts survey said they felt they had 'lost touch with nature'. Even 75% of adults are unable to identify an ash tree. Words like 'acorn, conker, bluebell, dandelion, kingfisher' have been removed from the Oxford Children's Dictionary
Mode of access: World Wide Web