LAST ROUND: WORDS Flashcards

1
Q

IN WHICH CONTEXT DOES THE WORD SYLLOGISM MAKE THE MOST SENSE TO ME

A

I would use the word to describe the logical process. E.g because a circle is round and wheels are circles they make good shapes for movement on cars.

He always uses syllogisms to explain what he is saying.

Defined: Deductive reasoning as distinct from inductive reasoning e.g. Logic is rules or syllogisms

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2
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Ermine

A

I’ll use it to describe that white fur coat trim with black dots commonly seen worn by kings or queens.

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3
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

FOUNDER

A

He is a founder because he manufactures articles of cast metal.

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4
Q

HOW DO YOU WANT TO USE THE WORD:

MIASMA

A

To describe my children’s breath in the morning:

A highly unpleasant or unhealthy smell or vapor

Josie’s breath was a potent miasma

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5
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

SIMULACRUM

A

The word means:
An image or representation of someone or something e.g.

A small scale simulacrum of a skyscraper

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6
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

APOTHEOSIS

A

The word means the highest point in the development of something.

The apotheosis of my career was when I completed my doctorate

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7
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

 CORPULENT
A

The word means fat:

If I don’t work out I could become corpulent

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8
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

LEPORINE

A

The word means of or resembling a hare:

Many creatures in fantasy novels have leporine characteristics

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9
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

CLOY

A

It means to disgust or sicken someone with an excessive sweetness, richness or sentiment:

He cloyingly tried to woe her with his poetry

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10
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

CARAVANSARY

A

This is an inn in North Africa or Asia that has a central courtyard.

She stayed in a moroccon caravansary where she lay listening to the central water fountain as it spoke of the mysteries of the desert

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11
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

PAVONINE

A

Of or like a peacock:

Leyli delivered her speech with cloying sentiment as she waved her arms with poorly timed pavonine flutter

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12
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

DIAPHANOUS

A

Adjective describing (especially) fabric that is light translucent and delicate

The candy floss floated into the air transecting a beam of gold light exposing the diaphanous pink soon to be devoured fluff

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13
Q

How would I use the word:

TRITE

A

Trite means hackneyed or uninteresting due to over use:

When I was sick family and friends would speak and everything…was predictable and felt completely and intensely so, to be trite.

A depressed mind finds everything monotonous and trite

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14
Q

How do I want to use the word:

recidivism

A

the tendency of a convicted criminal to reoffend.
“the prison has succeeded in reducing recidivism”

I’m touched by prison policies in countries such as Sweden see documentary by the guy who made bowling for Columbine. In which they have kind genuine empowering and humane programs to reduce recidivism - only love and forgiveness truly work.

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15
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Ribald

A

referring to sexual matters in an amusingly rude or irreverent way.
“a ribald comment”

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16
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Languor

A

1.
tiredness or inactivity, especially when pleasurable.
“her whole being was pervaded by a dreamy languor”

  1. an oppressive stillness of the air.
    “the afternoon was hot, quiet, and heavy with languor”
17
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Cocksure

A

confident in an excessive or arrogant way.

“the cocksure golf prodigy from California”

18
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Credulous

A

having or showing too great a readiness to believe things.

“a ceremony staged for credulous tourists”

19
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Banal

A

so lacking in originality as to be obvious and boring.

“songs with banal, repeated words”

20
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Mawkish

A

sentimental in an exaggerated or false way.

“a mawkish ode to parenthood”

21
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Smack

A

have a flavour of; taste of.
“the tea smacked strongly of tannin”
synonyms: taste of, have the flavour of, have the savour of
“the tea smacked strongly of tannin”

22
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Truculent

A

eager or quick to argue or fight; aggressively defiant.

“the truculent attitude of farmers to cheaper imports”

23
Q

HOW DO I WANT TO USE THE WORD:

Hassock

A
  1. a cushion for kneeling on in church, while at prayer. Leather bound ottoman
    “he collected the prayer books and straightened the hassocks”
    2.
    a firm clump of grass or matted vegetation in marshy or boggy ground.