Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                           


 Word: Culminate

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Describes a high point or a Climactic stage in a process; end.
  • Example: The goal of a Major League football team is to have their season culminate in a World Series victory.

 

Word: Conform

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Comply with rules, standards, or laws, to adapt to fit in with new conditions.
  • Example: If you travel to a foreign country, you should conform to the local customs and adjust your usual wardrobe to a more modest one.

 

Word: Artisan

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: An Artisan has both the creativity and the skill to make a product.
  • Example: Next to the straw market is the woodcarvers’ lane, where local artisans demonstrate their crafts and sell them made of wood.

 

Word: Climactic

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Consisting of or causing a climax
  • Example: Slowly and climactically, Powell and Donovan finished a graphic and resounding story (I, Robot).

 

Word: Grizzled

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Having dark heirs mixed with grey or white.
  • Example:  Your dad’s grizzled beard might need a trim by the end of your two-week camping trip.

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                           


 Word: Auditory

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Process of hearing.
  • Example: If someone says "Surrender Dorothy" and you hear "Where's the laundry," you have an auditory problem.

 

Word: Tactile

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective 
  • Meaning: Relating to the sense of touch.
  • Example: I'll think I'm responding to the play, when it's only a tactile reaction to vibration (Fahrenheit 451).

 

Word: Kinesthetic

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: The sensory perception of the movement.
  • Example: If you're interested in kinesthetic questions, you might consider going into physical therapy as a career.

 

Word: Autonomous

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Describes the things that function separately or independently.
  • Example: The partitioning of India created several separate and autonomous jute economies.

 

Word: Aural

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Of or Pertaining to hearing.
  • Example:  If you have excellent aural abilities, it means that your ears work well. Aural means "pertaining to hearing."

Monday, January 29, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                 


Word: Straddle

  • Parts of Speech: Verb/Noun
  • Meaning: When you straddle something, you sit on it with one leg on each side, such as straddling a horse or fence.
  • Example: Storage for a single object cannot straddle the two kinds of tablespaces.

 

Word: Queasy

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Queasy defines a feeling of nervousness, anxiety, or uneasiness.
  • Example: The experience is not like that parasailing trip you took on a small boat where everyone was queasy by the end of the trip. 

 

Word: Amenable

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Disposed or willing to comply, liable to answer to a higher authority.
  • Example: But freshers don't always know how much thought goes into planning dining and how amenable the staff are to catering to special diets.

 

Word: Rambunctious

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Noisy and out of control.
  • Example: Kids can be rambunctious when they are with their friends.

 

Word: Disembarked

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Leave a ship or aircraft or other vehicle.
  • Example:  The passengers disembarked at Tampa Bay port.

Sunday, January 28, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                          

 Word: Intertextuality

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The relation between texts, especially literary ones.
  • Example: Every text is a product of Intertextuality.
  • This story describes the relationship between Irony and Intertextuality.

 

Word: Inherent

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: belonging to or being a part of the nature of a person or thing.
  • Example: I tend to turn our inherent fear of failing into the fear of failing to meet my potential.

 

Word: Mosaic

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: A decoration on a surface made by setting small pieces of glass, tile, or stone of different colors into another material to make pictures or patterns.
  • Example: Just like a mosaic, our lives are made up of many individual moments, experiences, and choices.

 

Word: Interpretation

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The action of explaining the meaning of something.
  • Example: The dispute is based on two widely differing interpretations of the law.

 

Word: Dialogic

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Relating to, characterized by, or participating in the dialogue.
  • Example:  A teaching and learning strategy called, “Dialogic Learning” is centered on conversation and engagement.

 

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                    

Word: Intrepid

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Bold, Brave, and Fearless.
  • Example: The realm of rock climbing was conquered by intrepid adventurers, turning it into a realm of conquest.

 

Word: Harmonious

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Tuneful, Melodious, Not discordant, sweet-sounding.
  • Example: The Arcade hummed with the harmonious clatter of players.

 

Word: Conquest

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Conquer, Vanquish, Defeat, Beat, Trounce.
  • Example: The realm of rock climbing was conquered by intrepid adventurers, turning it into a realm of conquest.

 

Word: Triumph

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: A great victory or achievement, Conquest, Success, Achievement.
  • Example: The domain of rock climbing was triumphed over by daring adventurers, transforming it into a realm of conquest.

 

Word: Clatter

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: To make a loud rattling sound, A continuous rattling sound of hard objects falling or striking each other.
  • Example: The Arcade hummed with the harmonious clatter of players.

Friday, January 26, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                            


 

 Word: Impassable

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Impossible to travel along or over.
  • Example: Some of the roads are impassable because they are covered with water.
  • After the heavy snow, many roads were impassable.

 

Word: Contrast

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: Compare two people or things to show the difference between them.
  • The state of being strikingly different from something else; difference; dissimilarity; disparity.
  • Example: People contrasted her with her sister.
  • The day began cold and blustery, in contrast to almost two weeks of uninterrupted sunshine.

 

Word: Reckless

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Dangerous and without care or concern for negative effects.
  • Careless, heedless, or thoughtless.
  • Example: His behavior was reckless in the extreme.

 

Word: Refrain

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Stop oneself from doing something.
  • Abstain, hold back, stop oneself, withhold.
  • Example: Please refrain from smoking.
  • She could not refrain from weeping at these words.

 

Word: Pulse

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Throb or beat rhythmically, vibrate, palpitate, beat, pound, thud, thump.
  • Example:  The basketball courts pulsed with the vibrant energy of youth.

Thursday, January 25, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                            


 

 Word: Galley

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The Kitchen in a ship or aircraft.
  • Example: He cleaned the Galley.

 

Word: Infer

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Conclude, deduce.
  • Example: His own nature could be inferred from the nature of his work.

 

Word: Arouse

  • Parts of Speech: 
  • Meaning: Provoke, evoke, or awaken a feeling, response, or emotion.
  • Example: I don’t want to arouse the neighbor’s curiosity.

 

Word: Vivisection

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The practice of performing a surgery on a living organism for experimental purposes.
  • Example: They have been anti-vivisection campaigners for years.

 

Word: Sclerosis

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Abnormal hardening of body tissue, excessive resistance to change.
  • Example:  The challenge was to avoid Institutional sclerosis.

Wednesday, January 24, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                 

              

  Word: Imagineer

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: A person who is skilled at putting creative ideas into practice.
  • Example: So I dashed off my letters of application to Walt Disney Imagineering.

 

Word: Persistent

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Continuing to exist or endure over a prolonged period of time.
  • Example: I was ridiculously persistent, and I kept getting passed on and on until I was connected to a guy named Jon.

 

Word: Parrot

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: Repeat mechanically; A vividly colored bird.
  • Example: It’s easy to look smart when you are parroting smart people.

 

Word: Sabbatical

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Adjective
  • Meaning: A period of paid leave granted to a university teacher or other worker for study or travel.
  • Example: After i explained the concept of sabbaticals, he thought it would be a fine idea to have me spend mine with his team.

 

Word: Hypothesize

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Make a really good educated guess.
  • Example: And so I asked lots of data-seeking questions, and found myself hypothesizing along with the doctors.

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                            


 

 Word: Predicament

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning:  A difficult, unpleasant, or embarrassing situation.
  • Example: If you are engaged with somebody but suddenly fall in love with someone else, you have gotten yourself into quite a predicament.

 

Word: Comprehend

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Understand, grasp, take-in. Get the meaning of something,  become aware of through the senses.
  • Example: When you comprehend something, you grasp its meaning.

 

Word: Interpretation

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: An explanation of something that is not immediately obvious.
  • A mental representation of the meaning or significance of something.
  • Example: The first interpretation is mainly true but not very significant, but not very significant; the second would be significant, but is untrue (The Invention of Science).

 

Word: Metadata

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Data about data.
  • A library catalog is metadata because it describes publications.
  • Example: Then cataloguers describe the object physically and add context and metadata (Washington PostSep 13, 2016).

 

Word: Cynicism

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Cynicism is the feeling of distrust or that something isn’t going to work out well.
  • Example:  Some people feel cynicism when politicians makes big promises.
  • How, in this age of cynicism, could I convince my audience that I'd really won these things? (The Last Lecture).

Sunday, January 21, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                         


 Word: Tuft

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A tuft is a clump or bunch of something soft and feathery; A bunch of feathers or hair.
  • Example: His tufts of black hair stuck up in curls like baby bat wings (The House of Hades).

 

Word: Succinct

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Something succinct is short and clear, Briefly giving the gist of something.
  • Example: “Of course I won’t. I am occupied at the moment with an especially succinct passage.” (A Confederacy of Dunces).

 

Word: “Annotated bibliography"

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective/Noun
  • Meaning: List of sources (Books, Articles) used for researching a topic with notes on how the material was used.
  • Example: An annotated bibliography is a list of sources (books, articles, websites, etc.) with a short paragraph about each source. 

 

Word: Bequeath

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Leave your possessions to another person after someone’s death.
  • Example: These invaluable lessons weren't bequeathed to me by my parents, friends, or well-wishers. 

 

Word: Envision

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Picture to oneself; imagine possible
  • Example:  When I envision the tapestry of my life.

Saturday, January 20, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                    


 

 Word: Glean

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Gather, Collect, or gather bit by bit, especially information.
  • Means gather bit by bit either literally or figuratively.
  • Example: When I envision the tapestry of my life, the thought of having gleaned such wisdom in advance from my parents.
  • You might glean leftover grain from a recently harvested field.

 

Word: Intricate

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Intricate things are complex and have many elements; they are not simple.
  • Having many complex arranged elements; Elaborate.
  • Example: Leo could admire the intricate workmanship, but it was too much, too bright, too flashy (Blood of Olympus).

 

Word: Ponder

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Reflect deeply on a subject, Contemplate, think over.
  • Example: Bobby pondered for a long while and, with no apparent winning chances left, reluctantly agreed (Endgame).

 

Word: Untapped

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Not drawn upon or Used, Unexploited.
  • Example: The untapped stockrooms of our minds (G.R. Harrison).

 

Word: Resilience

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The ability to recover fast from adversity or a change.
  • Example: The absence of these insights leaves me pondering the untapped reservoir of strength and resilience that might have been cultivated.
  • I’m amazed by their resilience, by their hidden pockets of strength (If I Stay).

Friday, January 19, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                               


 

 Word: Innate

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Natural; Present at birth but not necessarily hereditary.
  • Example: In this chapter, we will examine the following questions: Is music innate to humans? (Music and the Child).

 

Word: Impulse

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Sudden strong desires to do something without considering whether it is sensible; An impelling force or strength; The act of applying force suddenly.
  • Example: I had to fight an impulse to say, But I need to talk to you (The Secret Life of Bees).

 

Word: Manifest

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective/Verb/Noun
  • Meaning: Ability to be clearly and easily understood; Reveal its presence or make an appearance; Cleverly revealed to the mind; A custom’s document listing the contents put on a ship or a plane.
  • Example: Already the nuns are saying that a miracle was manifested in Therese’s death (Ophelia).

 

Word: Opaque

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Difficult or impossible to see through.
  • Example: At first, I didn’t see the soldiers at all—just a giant, swirling mass of insects, so dense it was opaque, about fifty feet down the footpath (Hollow City).

 

Word: Portend

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Providing a sign that something is going to happen; Indicate by signs.
  • Example: Portend is a helpful way for authors to foreshadow dark events ahead in their stories.

Thursday, January 18, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                 


 

Word: Etiquette 

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Etiquette is a code of polite conduct. 
  • Example: As a general code of etiquette, all users who post should be respectful of other community members.
  • If you practice proper etiquette, you are less likely to offend or annoy people and you may even charm them.

 

Word: Disparaging

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Expressive of low opinion, Derogatory, Derogative
  • Example: Productive criticism is encouraged, but posts of a disparaging and inflammatory nature are unwelcome and will be rejected.

 

Word: Succinctly

  • Parts of Speech: Adverb
  • Meaning: To the point; With concise and precise brevity.
  • Example: Your subject line should clearly and succinctly describe your question.
  • Please state your case as succinctly as possible.

 

Word: Custodianship

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The position of a custodian
  • Example: Please understand that this custodianship is performed for your safety and security.

 

Word: Venture

  • Parts of Speech: Noun/Verb
  • Meaning: An investment that is very risky but could yield great profits; Proceed somewhere despite the risk of possible dangers.
  • Example:  The thought of venturing out seems like a distant galaxy.

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                


 Word: Prospect

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: The possibility or likelihood of some future event occurring; a person regarded as likely to succeed
  • Example: She has a good prospect of finding a new job.

 

Word: Implausible

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Not seeming reasonable or probable; failing to convince
  • Example: The prospect of another vacation within the next year seems implausible. 

 

Word: Notion

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A conception of or belief about something; an impulse or desire; an individual's object of attention
  • Example: She had a notion that he was hiding something.

 

Word: Hiatus

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A pause or gap in a sequence, series, or process
  • Example: Can such a hiatus indeed be achievable?
  • The band is taking a hiatus from touring.

 

Word: Respite

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A short period of rest or relief from something difficult or unpleasant
  • Example: In a land far from my cozy home, enjoying a pleasant respite from my usual daily tasks and troubles.
  • The vacation provided a much-needed respite from work.

Tuesday, January 16, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                                 


                                            

Word:  Realm

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A royal domain, A Field or Sphere of activity or interest.
  • A Kingdom, Territory, World, Region.
  • Example: In the distant realm beyond my cozy abode, a delightful escape from the mundane tasks and troubles that fill my daily existence.

 

Word: Abode

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: A place of residence, a house or home.
  • Example: After a long day, he returned to his sweet and peaceful Abode.

 

Word: Delightful

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Greatly Pleasing or entertaining; Charming.
  • Example: We had a delightful time at the beach.

 

Word: Mundane

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Lacking interest or excitement, dull, everyday, ordinary.
  • Example: The routine tasks made the job feel Mundane.

 

Word: Embarking

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: To begin a journey, venture, or a project. 
  • To board a vehicle or a vessel for a journey.
  • Go onboard a ship, aircraft, or other vehicle.
  • Example:  They are embarking on a new business venture.
  • He embarked for India in 1817.

Monday, January 15, 2024

Lexicon Lift: 5 Daily Words (Are you familiar with these? And how do you use these words?)

                                                             

 Word: Peer-review

  • Parts of Speech: Verb
  • Meaning: Involves a process of approval by experts before publishing.
  • Evaluate professionally a colleague’s work.
  • Example: I thought they went on peer-review and so on (The Subtle Knife).

 

Word: Manuscripts

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Pieces of writing that have not been published.
  • Handwritten book or document, The form of literary work submitted for publication.
  • Example: Samuel Johnson said, “Your manuscript is both good and original, but the part that is good is not original, and the part that is original is not good.” Harrumph!
 

Word: Glaring

  • Parts of Speech: Adjective
  • Meaning: Obviously very bad, Shining Intensely, Outrageously bad or Reprehensible.
  • Example: “Regrets,” they apologized in turn and sat down glaring at each other (The Phantom Tollbooth).

 

Word: Carnival

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: Fair, FunFair, A Traveling show, A large public entertainment with rides and games of skill.
  • Example: One of my earliest childhood dreams was to be the coolest guy at any amusement park or carnival I visited.

 

Word: Awe

  • Parts of Speech: Noun
  • Meaning: An overwhelming feeling of wonder or admiration.
  • Example: It was an absolute quest. And once we got there, I was just in awe of the place.