Anonymous wrote:PP, I also love plethora.
And, "sufficiency"
Anonymous wrote:I adore the words philistine, anathema, and nadir. They express concepts that you would have to use multiple other words to convey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know... I have sort of a niggardly vocabulary, so I'm unlikely to do that.
you have to be careful with that one.
It's a little bit ridiculous that this comment can be made in seriousness. Really? Stupid people have a right to be mad because they don't know the real meaning of a word? I get the issue. It's just sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know... I have sort of a niggardly vocabulary, so I'm unlikely to do that.
you have to be careful with that one.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes these folks are from a low-income background and I think they think that big words make them sound educated. And they don't have the confidence to use simple words because they're afraid people will judge them - which they might.
Growing up in a professional upper middle class home gives you the freedom to not use big words.
Anonymous wrote:As my grandmother used to say,
Be courteous, kind and forgiving,
Be gentle and peaceful each day,
Be warm and human and grateful,
And have a good thing to say.
Be thoughtful and trustful and childlike,
Be witty and happy and wise,
Be honest and love all your neighbors,
Be obsequious, purple, and clairvoyant.
Be pompous, obese, and eat cactus,
Be dull, and boring, and omnipresent,
Criticize things you don't know about,
Be oblong and have your knees removed.
Be tasteless, rude, and offensive,
Live in a swamp and be three dimensional,
Put a live chicken in your underwear,
Get all excited and go to a yawning festival.
Anonymous wrote:Do the lawyer posters speak differently to fellow attorneys and judges than they do to the jury?