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Meats

Bosk

"The meat was a steak cut from the loin, a juge shaggy long horned bovine, meat is seared, as thick as the forearm of a Warrior on a small iron grill on a kindling of charcoal cylinders so that the thin margin on the outside was black, crisp and flaky sealed within by the touch of the fire - the blood rich felsh hot and fat with juice." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 45, by John Norman.

Gant

"I heard a bird some forty or fifty yards to my right; it sounded like a marsh gant, a small, horned, web-footed aquatic fowl, broad-billed and broad-winged. Marsh girls, the daughters of Rence growers, sometimes hunt them with throwing sticks." Raiders of Gor, pg. 4, by John Norman.

Kailiauk

"The red savages depend for their very lives on the kailiauk said Kog. "He is the major source of their food and life. His meat and hide, his bones and sinew, sustain them. From him they derive not only food, but clothing and shelter, tools and weapons." Savages of Gor, pg. 50, by John Norman.

Qualae

"Near one of the green stretches I saw what I first thought was a shadow, but as the tarn passed, it scattered into a scampering flock of tiny creatures, probably the small, three-toed mammals called qualae, dun-coloured and with a stiff brushy mane of black hair." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 140, by John Norman.

Sausage

"There were several yards of sausages hung on hooks; numerous cannisters of flour, sugars and salts; many smaller containers of spices and condiments." Assassins of Gor, pg. 271, by John Norman.

Tabuk

"Gripped in the talons of the tarn was the dead body of an antelope, one of the one-horned, yellow antelopes called tabuks that frequent the bright Ka-la-na thickets of Gor." Tarnsman of Gor, pg. 145, by John Norman.

Tarsk

"If I were lucky, a slice of roast tarsk, the formidable six tusked wild boar of Gor's temperate forests." Assassin of Gor, pg. 87, by John Norman.

Tumit

"I gathered that the best season for hunting tumits, the large, flightless carnivorous birds of the southern plains, was at hand, for Kamchak, Harold, and others seemed to be looking forward to it with great eagerness." Nomads of Gor, pg. 2, by John Norman.

Verr

"The verr was a mountain goat indigenous to the Voltai. It was a wild, agile, ill-tempered beast, long-haired and spiral-horn." Priest-Kings of Gor, pg. 6, by John Norman.

Vulo

"She had been carrying a wicker basket containing vulos, a domesticated pigeon raised for eggs and meat" Nomads of Gor, pg. 1, by John Norman.