Page 5 of 9 FirstFirst ... 34567 ... LastLast
Results 41 to 50 of 85
  1. #41
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Quote Originally Posted by N7 View Post
    For some reason, i love the word Archaic. I guess maybe because i am an English Literary major? Maybe i am a bit pretentious, or just a butt nugget idk.

    Trepidation is good for characters in a rather paranoid position, or even a bit of Absol-ing. Inspires me to use that in my COR backstories.
    I've been trying to pick more descriptive words that aren't common so having "archaic" in the definition usually means it's a pretty old word, so it's less likely they you've heard of it before.

    I've found myself using more and more of these words in my stories. And if you need to look up a definition, but you can't remember what word it is, I've created a link page in the first post that will link you to each word.
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  2. This post has been liked by:

    AD 

  3. #42
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day: Mordant

    Definition:
    Adjective-
    1. sharply caustic or sarcastic, as wit or a speaker; biting.
    2. burning; corrosive.
    3. having the property of fixing colors, as in dyeing.
    Noun-
    1. a substance used in dyeing to fix the coloring matter, especially a metallic compound, as an oxide or hydroxide, that combines with the organic dye and forms an insoluble colored compound or lake in the fiber.
    2. an adhesive substance for binding gold or silver leaf to a surface.
    3. an acid or other corrosive substance used in etching to eat out the lines, areas, etc.
    4. Music a melodic embellishment consisting of a rapid alternation of a principal tone with the tone a half or a whole step below it, called single or short when the auxiliary tone occurs once and double or long when this occurs twice or more.
    Verb-
    1. to impregnate or treat with a mordant.

    Examples:
    1. "Such seemingly effortless—and mordant —improvisation can be a marvel to behold."
    The Stacks: Robin Williams, More Than A Shtick Figure Joe Morgenstern August 15, 2014

    2. "I like that the emotional lives of women are tinged with a kind of mordant humor for the most part."
    Broadway's Comeback Kid Kevin Sessums November 1, 2011

    3. "Bradlee is, at times, funny, mordant, surprisingly perceptive and disturbingly naďve."
    An Ordinary, Extraordinary Life Barbara Kantrowitz March 30, 2009
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  4. #43
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day:: Minatory

    Definition:
    1. Having a menacing quality

    Examples:
    1. The novel's protagonist is haunted by a minatory black specter.

    Did You Know?
    Knowing that minatory means "threatening," can you take a guess at a related word? If you're familiar with mythology, perhaps you guessed Minotaur, the name of the bull-headed, people-eating monster of Crete. Minotaur is a good guess, but as terrifying as the monster sounds, its name isn't related to minatory. The relative we're searching for is actually menace. Minatory and menace both come from derivatives of the Latin verb minari, which means "to threaten." Minatory was borrowed directly from Late Latin minatorius. Menace came to English via Anglo-French manace, menace, which came from Latin minac-, minax, meaning "threatening."
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  5. #44
    XD Really, who's surprised that it's Latin? Oh, Latin. You sneaky language, you. I really like that word though! And you're right; I did think of Minotaur. xD Interesting to know!

  6. This post has been liked by:


  7. #45
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Quote Originally Posted by Suicune's Fire View Post
    XD Really, who's surprised that it's Latin? Oh, Latin. You sneaky language, you. I really like that word though! And you're right; I did think of Minotaur. xD Interesting to know!
    There wasn't much to the word definition and sentence wise so I thought I'd throw in a fun fact for good measure.
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  8. #46
    Quote Originally Posted by Noblejanobii View Post
    There wasn't much to the word definition and sentence wise so I thought I'd throw in a fun fact for good measure.
    It was entertaining! 8D I love learning random little things like that.

  9. #47
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day: Jejune

    Definition:
    1. Not interesting
    2. Too Simple
    3. Lacking nutritive value
    4. Devoid of significance or interest
    5. Juvenile, puerile

    Examples:
    1. She made jejune remarks about life and art.
    2. <another moralizing tale filled with jejune platitudes>

    Did You Know:
    Starved for excitement? You won't get it from something jejune. That term derives from the Latin jejunus, which means "empty of food," "meager," or "hungry." Back in the 1600s, English speakers used "jejune" in senses very similar to those of its Latin parent, lamenting "jejune appetites" and "jejune morsels." Something that is meager rarely satisfies, and before long "jejune" was being used not only for meager meals or hunger, but for things wanting in intellectual or emotional substance. The word most likely gained its "childish" sense when people confused it with the look-alike French word jeune, which means "young."
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  10. #48
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day: Petulant

    Definition:
    1. Moved to or showing sudden, impatient irritation, especially over some trifling annoyance.
    2. Irritable, impatient, or sullen in a peevish or capricious way

    Examples:
    1. A petulant toss of the head.
    2. "I thought he carried it a little too long and began slip into petulant Rick mode, but he tied Romney for the best night." -Romney Rises Rich Galen January 26, 2012
    3. "And Gunn reserves special contempt for Mizrahi, whom he portrays as a petulant, insufferable diva." -Tim Gunn's Tell-All Book Rebecca Dana September 5, 2010
    4. "And like petulant preschoolers, Wall Street craves—and needs—rules, and the discipline to enforce them consistently." -Wall Street: Please Treat Us Like Five-Year-Olds Randall Lane July 20, 2010
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  11. #49
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day: Gustatory

    Definition:
    1. Relating to taste or the sense of taste
    2. Having to do with taste or eating

    Examples:
    1. The dinner was a gustatory pleasure for the palate.
    2. The party included an array of gustatory desserts paired with wine.
    3. The chef was trying to teach his students about the gustatory arts.

    Did You Know:
    Gustatory is a member of a finite set of words that describe the senses with which we encounter our world, the other members being visual, aural, olfactory, and tactile. Like its peers, gustatory has its roots in Latin-in this case the Latin word gustare, meaning "to taste." Gustare is a somewhat distant relative of several common English words, among them choose and disgust, but is a direct ancestor only of gustatory, gustation, meaning "the act or sensation of tasting," and degustation, meaning "the action or an instance of tasting especially in a series of small portions."
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

  12. #50
    The Queen of Shaymin
    Noblejanobii's Avatar
    Site Editor

    Administrator

    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    US
    Posts
    17,593
    Word of the Day: Nyctophobia

    Definition:
    1. An abnormal fear of night or darkness.
    2. A fear of night, darkness; also called noctiphobia

    Examples:
    1. For nyctophobia, try facing the darkness with another person that brings a feeling of safety, such as a parent or good friend.
    2. Other standard phobias are nyctophobia, a fear of the dark, and ochlophobia a fear of crowds, from the Greek words for night and crowd respectively.
    3. Nyctophobia is mostly present in young children, and starts out with night terrors and a healthy fear of the boogeyman.
    4. The American Medical Association believes adult Ncytophobia is very rare and usually treatable with hypnosis and believe it or not, yes prescription drugs.
    / / / / / / / /
    Avatar by Soggymint
    Double Agents with Suicune's Fire

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •