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Category: Worth 1000 Pictures

  • One Word: Flammable / Inflammable

    What is the difference between “flammable” and “inflammable”? Nothing. Nothing at all! For all intents and purposes, they are the same word. In my previous article on the word “connote”, I questioned whether there any two English words that carry both the same meaning and the same connotation. I was inclined to believe there wasn’t.…

  • One Word: Vex

    One Word: Vex

    I’m fond of the word “vex”. My recent report on pangrams reminded me of this fondness. You’ll recall that a pangram is any sentence (shorter the better) that contains every letter of the alphabet at least once. Since working “v” and “x” into the same sentence can be a vexing challenge, it’s no wonder pangram…

  • One Word: Connote

    One Word: Connote

    Every word denotes something, and connotes something more. Its “denotation” is what it denotes – that is, what it means in its most straightforward, minimal dictionary definition. Its “connotation” is what it connotes. That’s where things get interesting. The connotation of a word is its flavor, its feeling, its emotional texture. It’s what the word…

  • One Word: Pangram

    One Word: Pangram

    You all know I love anagrams – those wonderful phrases created by rearranging the letters of one thing to spell something else. Like when I scramble the letters of “Gary Leland Matthews” to spell “sadly elegant warmth” (and lots of other things – most of them unflattering but hilarious). Until a few days ago, however,…

  • One Word: Beggar

    One Word: Beggar

    Here’s a word I (sometimes) like and (sometimes) use: “beggar”. Depending on its meaning. Mostly the word strikes me unremarkable, even depressing. A beggar can be someone who survives by begging. That definition doesn’t inspire me. As a verb, something that “beggars” you reduces you to poverty. Don’t care for that one, either! Nowadays we…

  • One Word: Ourself

    One Word: Ourself

    My recent article on the “singular they” prompted an insightful question from reader Mahin Pouryaghma. Just to provide context: Dr. Pouryaghma is a licensed professional counselor whose practice emphasizes self-honesty. You can read her background here on the Psychology Today website. She writes: “When I am talking to more than one person and am saying…

  • One Word: Brevity

    One Word: Brevity

    “Brevity” is one of those words that exemplifies itself. Seven letters long, it’s the noun form of “brief”, which means short. “Brief” and “short” also are words constituting examples of themselves. Words that rhyme with brevity include “levity” and “longevity”. (This article is part of my series on words that are #worth1000pictures.)

  • One Word: Solitude

    One Word: Solitude

    Some words I love because of the way they sound. The way they feel when I write them. Their playful ambiguities. Their spelling quirks. Others I love mostly on account of what they mean to me. “Solitude” is a word I love for many reasons – but mostly for its meaning. I love to be…

  • One Word: The Singular They

    One Word: The Singular They

    Glad tidings! English now has a third-person pronoun that is both singular and gender-neutral. Best of all, it’s grammatically correct, according to all the best authorities we need to heed. It’s a pronoun we’ve always had – and used. For centuries it was universally accepted. For a while it fell out of favor in formal…

  • One Word: Orthotomeo

    Guest post today from Joel Smith, responding to my article about the word “epistemology” (how we know stuff). Joel writes: “The Apostle Paul, writing about correctly interpreting his letters, said that they need to be ‘rightly divided’ (2 Timothy 2:15). The term rightly divided is translated from the Greek word ORTHOTOMEO. “Ortho = correctly. Tomeo…

  • Two Words: Compound

    Two Words: Compound

    This series is about single words that are each, individually, worth a thousand pictures. Seems a simple enough premise. Except when it isn’t. What about “words” that consist of two or more words? Increasingly I’m feeling the need to write about expressions such as “lame duck”, “ice cream”, or “son of a gun”. No, wait…

  • One Word: Common

    Looking over the list of words I’m writing about, it strikes me how high a percentage are common words – not fancy, unfamiliar words of the literary-technical variety. Not always, of course. I just wrote about “epistemology”, an uncommon word meaning “the study of how we know what we know”. That’s a word I almost…

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