| | #1 (permalink) |
| Truth. Order. Moderation. | eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) I know this is something that Teresa has written about in her blog (and probably on a thread, though I've not been able to find it quickly) but I thought it was opportune to raise it here with a slight twist. We are writers. We seek to create worlds in which can our readers can become immersed, with characters to be admired, reviled, laughed at or pitied. The way we do this is by using words. They are our tools - our equivalent of an artist's paints or pastels. Moreover we are lucky enough to be writing in perhaps the richest and most flexible language on this planet with close to a million words at our disposal. I believe we should cherish this richness. We should be alive to the nuance and colour and association which every word brings with it. I know that the reading age of the general public is something like seven and three-quarters and plummeting. I know there is a school of thought which says we shouldn't make things difficult for our readers because if they don't understand us they will refuse to read further. Yet I cannot believe that the way to combat stupidity is to surrender to it. We should be striving to use the best word we can in any given situation - and if that means the risk of upsetting the ignorant, so be it. We should not be seeking to decrease our vocabulary since that way lies a colourless life of 'the cat sat on the mat' illiteracy. The brain is like a muscle - it needs to be stretched, to be exercised, if it is to be fit. But as well as preaching to the (I hope) converted, I'd like to start a kind of linguistic swap-shop where we can share words which we think should have a wider audience. Words which are strange, beautiful or intriguing. And because not all of the words will be familiar to all of us, they should come with a brief definition and an example of usage. To begin, three adjectives which I like to use when I can: EGREGIOUS Extremely bad or outrageous eg 'She spent some time correcting the egregious errors in his writing.' ESOTERIC Obscure, likely to be understood only by specialists eg 'His life's work had been the study of the esoteric symbols painted on the sarcophagi.' INEFFABLE Not able to be described in words eg 'The ineffable majesty of the Divine.' Celebrate the effable - give us your words. J |
| | |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| Goblin Princess | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) I like egregious, too. Although, like some of the words below it's more likely to come up in conversation than in my fiction writing. When my blood is up, I often wax a bit bombastic (of speech or writing) over-blown, inflated, pompous. numinous spiritual or supernatural; beyond human comprehension; prodigious extraordinary as in size or amount; wonderful or marvelous feckless ineffective, incompetent, feeble Last edited by Teresa Edgerton; 9th June 2009 at 10:50 PM. Reason: punctuation |
| | |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| Bearly Believable Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: UK: ENGLAND:
Posts: 12,047
| re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Inchoate - just begun, undeveloped; also chaotic, disordered, confused, incoherent, rambling. prepossessing - attracting favour, esteem or love; and its companion unprepossessing - ordinary, dull; sonorous - resonant, loud-sounding; also pretentious, imposing, grandiloquent. (Oh, and feckless couldn't be anything other than effable. Or perhaps not. ![]() ) Last edited by Ursa major; 9th June 2009 at 11:38 PM. Reason: My entry for inchoate wasn't finished. |
| | |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| Destroyer of Words | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Love the idea, J, especially since it has already introduced me to two new words and one incorrectly comprehended one. Sorry I don't have contributions right now, but I hope to be back if no one interposes and purloins the mots I revel in most. I'm off to read me Wodehouse now for inspiration. (I like revel, it reminds me of chocolates ) |
| | |
| | #5 (permalink) | |
| Lagomorphing | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Quote:
I wish Stephen Donaldson were a member here so we could be treated to lambent, gibbous, roynish, threnody, mien, etc ... Perhaps the most interesting word I can think of is oodle. It is the only word I know of which in the singular means very small, but in the plural means a great many. As in: "He hasn't an oodle of common sense"* And: "I'll hold them off - I've got oodles of bullets!" * admittedly this is the only context in which I've ever known it used in the singular - anyone got any others? | |
| | |
| | #6 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: West Sussex
Posts: 3,506
| re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) I'm often incoherent when reading about politicians, but I'm a gregarious chap, who tries not to let those thing that I cannot influence, affect me. It is affectatious, is it not? But I enjoy eulogizing about the Name of The Wind, as I'm sure you all remember And talking of oodles, I always used to ask my Sons 'have you got the whole kit and caboodle?' and I have no idea where I got that from - probably a film. ps: can someone please tell me how to pronounce 'quixotic', so I can use it in conversation? It derives from Don key-ho-tay, so is that word 'key-hot-ick' or 'quicks-ot-ick'? Last edited by Boneman; 10th June 2009 at 12:24 PM. Reason: Added a ps |
| | |
| | #7 (permalink) |
| Senior Member | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Exegesis - critical appraisal of a text or a portion of that text (particularly the Bible) I used this in a science essay once, and got marked down for using "non-existent words". I would have liked to have been able to say I used the word out of a sheer love of language, but really I was an awkward, socially inept teenager who compensated for his frustrations by baiting his teachers (e.g. handing in a review of personal reading on the subject of Feersum Endjinn, written in the style of Bascule the Teller, to a trainee teacher who had dyslexia - I got pulled out of a class to "explain myself" over that one to the Head of English, who was trying desperately not to laugh in front of her colleagues). Going back to the word, I love the rhythm of just saying it. Stressing the second vowel is just so very pleasant. Exegesis. |
| | |
| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Quote:
Also I like making my own collective nouns. | |
| | |
| | #9 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: West Sussex
Posts: 3,506
| re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Thanks, MGIR, I'll try and work it into conversation today. Quote:
So is there a collective term for a collection of collective nouns? Have you made one up? I like exegesis, too, but said 'exodus' once by mistake, and never got over the humiliation. Obfuscation can be very rewarding if said scathingly. | |
| | |
| | #10 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Quote:
In my current WIP I have a sleeve of men-at-arms. | |
| | |
| | #12 (permalink) |
| Goblin Princess | re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) People seem to be leaving out the definitions suggested in the first post. I, however, being an individual of the most exemplary rectitude -- which is to say, rightness of principle, moral virtue, correctness -- will stick to the plan. malediction a curse or imprecation eldritch eerie, uncanny tumultuous full of violent disorder, commotion, or uproar; greatly agitated in the mind or emotions; turbulent vehement intense, ardent, impassioned |
| | |
| | #13 (permalink) |
| Weaponofmassdistraction Join Date: Feb 2009 Location: Lithuania
Posts: 8
| re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Well hello! Clambered: to climb, using both feet and hands; climb with effort or difficulty. The first giant clambered awkwardly out of the side door, one gargantuous extemity at a time. Sordid: morally ignoble or base; vile. "Are you out of your wits, that sordid cesspool," he spits, "it's full with Boggits." Ta Ta, B. Rigglesby |
| | |
| | #15 (permalink) |
| Fool Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Australia, New South Wales
Posts: 1,988
| re: eloquent... exotic... esoteric... (please provide definitions) Ha ha ha. That was facetious! (sarcastic, witty, jocose - a word I love) Perhaps I should have been Facetious Joke. Doesn't really have the same ring to it though. |
| | |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Rate This Thread | |
| |