Dictionary
is primeval
adjective
Belonging to the first ages.
Exact(8)
I mean, this is primeval".
The airconditioning is primeval, producing more sound than air.
Childbirth is primeval, and so is the dialogue.
IM The Clearing, by Tim Gautreaux Sceptree, £7.99) Louisiana in the 1920s is primeval America.
One was The Elusive Moth by Ingrid Winterbach [translated from the Afrikaans by Iris Gouws and the author], and the other is Primeval and Other Times by Olga Tokarczuk [translated from the Polish by Antonia-Lloyd Jones].
What inspires us to realize our highest potential is "the primitive vigor of Nature in us" (Journal, 8/30/56), and this influence is something we are able neither to predict nor to comprehend: as he describes it in the "Ktaadn" chapter of The Maine Woods, nature is "primeval, untamed, and forever untamable," a godlike force but not always a kind one.
Similar(50)
It's primeval, primordial even, visceral, sensual.
The view out the Cessna window was primeval.
It was primeval, cathartic and certainly not suitable for a family audience.
Such values would fit in well with most of the helium being primeval and a small admixture having been produced in stars in the galactic lifetime.
Decimated by two decades of war, isolated by international economic sanctions and indifference, the Afghan state over which the Taliban ruled during the late nineteen-nineties was primeval.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com