jungle
jun·gle / ˈjənggəl/ • n. 1. an area of land overgrown with dense forest and tangled vegetation, typically in the tropics: we set off into the jungle | the lakes are hidden in dense jungle. ∎ a wild tangled mass of vegetation or other things: the garden was a jungle of bluebells. ∎ a situation or place of bewildering complexity or brutal competitiveness: it's a jungle out there. ∎ (also hobo jungle) inf. a hobo camp. 2. (also jungle music) a style of dance music incorporating elements of ragga, hip-hop, and hard core and consisting almost exclusively of very fast electronic drum tracks and slower synthesized bass lines, originating in Britain in the early 1990s. Compare with drum and bass.PHRASES: the law of the jungle the principle that those who are strong and apply ruthless self-interest will be most successful.DERIVATIVES: jun·gled adj.jun·gly adj.
jungle
jungle
Jungle
Jungle ★ 1952
A princess and an American adventurer lead an expedition into the Indian wilds to discover the source of recent elephant attacks. 74m/B VHS . Rod Cameron, Cesar Romero, Marie Windsor; D: William Berke; C: Clyde De Vinna.
Jungle
Jungle
land overgrown with tangled vegetation containing the dwelling places of wild beasts.
Examples: jungle of disconnected precedents [legal], 1879; of information, 1897; of red tape, 1850; of sea weed, 1853.