Words you should know? - Page 2
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GrapeD
Canada679 Posts
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palanq
United States761 Posts
that said, I think the best way to expand your vocabulary is to voraciously consume erudite literature | ||
hoppipolla
Australia782 Posts
Probably my favourite word, a bit difficult to incorporate into your vocabulary though . | ||
Ryalnos
United States1946 Posts
It is not productive to just get a list and memorize them all. It's more of a lifetime interest where you are interested in finding out what words mean when you encounter them, converse with people who use such words, read books, etc. | ||
eLiE
Canada1039 Posts
I guess you can right click thesaurus stuff in word to get some new words, but make sure you look up the definitions too, because thesaurus' aren't perfect! | ||
Dalguno
United States2446 Posts
On March 07 2011 14:27 Ryalnos wrote: There are many words out there. It is not productive to just get a list and memorize them all. It's more of a lifetime interest where you are interested in finding out what words mean when you encounter them, converse with people who use such words, read books, etc. I'm not merely making a list and memorizing. I've learned words that I'm going to implement where possible. This is very productive indeed. While I will find out words when I encounter them, this will speed up the process. Why not do this? | ||
VorcePA
United States1102 Posts
I asked 10 people if they knew the meaning of this word and only 1 person -- my mother, with a master's degree -- could answer correctly. | ||
forgotten0ne
United States951 Posts
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Ryalnos
United States1946 Posts
On March 07 2011 14:44 Dalguno wrote: I'm not merely making a list and memorizing. I've learned words that I'm going to implement where possible. This is very productive indeed. While I will find out words when I encounter them, this will speed up the process. Why not do this? Ok, I guess I don't like the idea of a list of 'words you should know'. It seems so absolute, when I think that vocabulary is preferably matter of personal style, inspired by words you find interesting or useful. But I guess people will respond in a way that aligns with #2 so whatever, I'm just being picky. | ||
HULKAMANIA
United States1219 Posts
I would say that the words that are most useful to know for an advanced English vocabulary are not English words at all. A huge preponderance (another! and it illustrates my point) of long English words are classically derived, so you get a lot of mileage out of knowing Greek and Latin, especially Greek and Latin affixes. Off the top of the dome: anti vs. ante pre vs. post neo, poly, crypto sub, intra, infra, extra, super, in, im, un, a dis vs. mis (as in disinformation vs. misinformation) -logy, -glot (There are a shit-ton more. Hard to think of them in the abstract, though. There's one! ab-) ab, ex, de ad is an important one. So is com (which often becomes con- or cor- or some other shit via assimilation. Understanding assimilation is important for recognizing a lot of derivatives). Latin words like video, ago, fer are going to get a lot of use, too... I don't know. Basically the absolute best thing I ever did for my English vocabulary was study a lot of Latin and a little bit of Greek. But for your purposes you don't even have to learn the language, you just have to recognize the vocab (although a little familiarity with how words change over time wouldn't hurt either). Other than that you have to read, read, read, because it's the best way to encounter new words in a context that actually suggests how to best use them. I also just had to post in this thread because of my current signature. I I I V | ||
NeoLearner
Belgium1847 Posts
On March 07 2011 15:21 forgotten0ne wrote: Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia - Fear of long words. Jocular. Definition of JOCULAR 1 : given to jesting : habitually jolly or jocund 2 : characterized by jestin as in, Hippopotomonstrosesquipedaliophobia is a jocular and fictional phobia. I also partial to the word frugal/frugality. | ||
QuanticHawk
United States32026 Posts
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Chef
10810 Posts
On March 07 2011 11:05 Archaic wrote: Using words like that are great for intentionally writing stuff to confuse the hell out of readers. We studied "The Intentional Fallacy" by Wimsatt & Beardsley, and they intentionally (no pun intended) used ridiculous prose to make the reader feel inferior and to make it difficult to understand. Appropriate user name ;P Still, I feel like that's the same as artificial difficulty in video games. You can make someone look up every second word, and that's called tedious, the same as making a pixel perfect jump is tedious. Or, you can use interesting grammar and sentence structure to make things difficult, which makes it meaningful to solve it, like an unusual puzzle in a video game that gives you pause. I dunno. It really doesn't make me feel inferior when someone is a bad writer. I speak English, language is made for communication... If someone wants to prove a point by pulling out a thesaurus and making their writing tedious, then the point is probably gonna be lost on me because I'll hand it back after reading two sentences and tell them to rewrite it lol. | ||
Lanaia
Canada1142 Posts
1. inclined to lustfulness; wanton; lewd: a lascivious, girl-chasing old man. 2. arousing sexual desire: lascivious photographs. 3. indicating sexual interest or expressive of lust or lewdness: a lascivious gesture. I just really like how it sounds. | ||
zatic
Zurich15306 Posts
ameliorate - to make better | ||
Zlasher
United States9129 Posts
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MoonBear
Straight outta Johto18973 Posts
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MoltkeWarding
5195 Posts
On March 08 2011 03:50 zatic wrote: Something I learned today and probably the most beautiful English word I know now: ameliorate - to make better When it comes to coining neologisms, Anglophones are handicapped relative to Germans in the sense that our morphemes must be extracted from a foreign tongue. A-melior-ate is merely the Latin equivalent of the German Zu-besser-n. In lexical acquisition, our minds are relatively oriental in disposition- we merely acquire the words by en-rote memorization. However, once you learn to break a word down, you can easily have fun coining you own: Apejorate: Opposite of Ameliorate Remeliorate: To make something better again Deporculate: To debase oneself into a pig Retrogarrulation: Babbling backwards etc. As a register, Latin words in English are prominently employed in scientific and academic usage. A man who overstuffs his vocabulary with Latin emits the air of a dry and humourless pedagogue. You should try to mix up your etymology where possible. And it's certainly beneficial in the diverse walks of life, for each language has its strengths. German has the ability to coin new words for abstract concepts at will, and is a great speculative language. French has the distinction of perfect lexical clarity. English is by contrast is noted for its lexical subtlety. So German for philosophy, French for law, English for poetry, and Italian for music. Someone should take this compromise to the European Commission. | ||
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