Senator Jack
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The following was posted by Matthew Dalton in the EVP thread, and since I had been meaning to start this as a topic...
I've also been blasted for using a good word or two, and most notably by a presumably educated man who took me to task for using 'ameliorate' in our conversation. He claimed I was being elitist because kids in Africa don't know what ameliorate means. What his line of reason was, I'll never know, but he did get rather heated about it.
I hate having to think about the words I'm going to use, in speaking and writing, and it's a shame that one is presumed to be giving the world the high-hat by using top shelf words. Worse, is when someone snidely remarks, 'Well, I see you have a thesaurus.' It's been said that a great word should fit in a sentence like a brick in a wall - and, yes, I can tell when someone is using a word just for the sake of using it, and when it's being used in a natural manner. It's a fine line, and one I find I have to conciously walk.
I first got hooked on words while reading a few Anthony Burgess books as a kid. He put me on to 'crapulous' and 'crapulent' for intoxicating and intoxicated, both of which I often use in my writing, and then there's 'coeval' for a peer, or 'of the same era.' There's even a word he coined that I believe should really be put to good use: 'Trig', which is a portmanteau of 'trim' and 'snug'.
Other words I seem to have a bad habit of using, though I don't consider them $5 words:
Truculent
Licentious
Priapic
Bailiwick
Peripatetic
Etiolate
Dubiety
Sagacious
Feckless
Epicene
Uxorious
The list goes on. Add your own.
Regards,
Senator Jack
You've basically just described my country also, at least the parts I'm familiar with, I was just attacked on a local forum for the second time, for using words a person didn't understand, I wouldn't call any of them "5 dollar words" either! Kind of off topic, so I'll leave it at that.
I've also been blasted for using a good word or two, and most notably by a presumably educated man who took me to task for using 'ameliorate' in our conversation. He claimed I was being elitist because kids in Africa don't know what ameliorate means. What his line of reason was, I'll never know, but he did get rather heated about it.
I hate having to think about the words I'm going to use, in speaking and writing, and it's a shame that one is presumed to be giving the world the high-hat by using top shelf words. Worse, is when someone snidely remarks, 'Well, I see you have a thesaurus.' It's been said that a great word should fit in a sentence like a brick in a wall - and, yes, I can tell when someone is using a word just for the sake of using it, and when it's being used in a natural manner. It's a fine line, and one I find I have to conciously walk.
I first got hooked on words while reading a few Anthony Burgess books as a kid. He put me on to 'crapulous' and 'crapulent' for intoxicating and intoxicated, both of which I often use in my writing, and then there's 'coeval' for a peer, or 'of the same era.' There's even a word he coined that I believe should really be put to good use: 'Trig', which is a portmanteau of 'trim' and 'snug'.
Other words I seem to have a bad habit of using, though I don't consider them $5 words:
Truculent
Licentious
Priapic
Bailiwick
Peripatetic
Etiolate
Dubiety
Sagacious
Feckless
Epicene
Uxorious
The list goes on. Add your own.
Regards,
Senator Jack