Thursday, July 29, 2004

7 words you simply must know

(from msn.com)

British novelist Evelyn Waugh once said, "One forgets words as one forgets names. One's vocabulary needs constant fertilisation or it will die." Editors at MSN Encarta picked some of their favorite words to nourish your vocabulary. Some of them you may even use.

1. Defenestrate : "throw somebody or something out of window: to throw something or somebody out of a window (formal or humorous)"
It is quite entertaining to defenestrate paper airplanes.

2. Antipodes:
1. "places at opposite sides of world: places at opposite sides of the world from each other, or the areas at the side of the world opposite from a given place"
2. "opposites: two points, places, or things that are diametrically opposite each other"
One could say that Arthur "Fonzie" Fonzarelli and Warren "Potsie" Weber are antipodes.

3. Hallux: "first digit on the foot: the big toe on the human foot, or the first digit on the hind foot of some mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians (technical)"
The ballerina had her hallux insured for $10 million!

4. Otiose
   1. "not effective: with no useful result or practical purpose" 
  2. "worthless: with little or no value" 
   3. "lazy: unwilling or uninterested in working or being active (archaic)"
Will e-mail render traditional letter writing otiose? Let's hope not.

5. Pellucid
   1. "clear in meaning: easy to understand or clear in meaning (formal)"
   2. "transparent: allowing all or most light to pass through (literary)" 
The police officer's warning was pellucid: drivers must go the speed limit in the school zone.

6. Borborygmus: "stomach rumble: the rumbling sounds made by the movement of gases in the stomach and intestine (technical)"
If you lay your head on someone's stomach, you are likely to hear borborygmus.

7. Embrangle: "perplex somebody: to confuse, perplex, or entangle somebody or something (archaic)"
As Lord Needlebottom attempted to explain the rules of cricket, his American friends became more and more embrangled.

1 Comments:

At 5:39 PM, Blogger raymond said...

Here are some more:)

WELTER
1. writhe and toss
2. to become deeply involved
3. to be in turmoil

INVEIGLE
1. to entice
2. to acquire by ingenuity or flattery

ENNUI
1. a feeling of weariness and dissatisfaction

CONTUMACIOUS
1. stubbornly disobedient

INSOUCIANT
1. lighthearted unconcern

CAVIL
1. to raise trivial objections

EXTIRPATE
1. to destroy completely
2. to cut out by surgery

 

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