summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--10073-0.txt12361
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/10073-8.txt12783
-rw-r--r--old/10073-8.zipbin0 -> 239684 bytes
6 files changed, 25160 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/10073-0.txt b/10073-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..fc43586
--- /dev/null
+++ b/10073-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12361 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10073 ***
+
+Note: Italics indicated by _
+ Bold print by <...>
+
+ THE CENTURY HANDBOOK SERIES
+
+THE CENTURY HANDBOOK OF WRITING.
+By Garland Greever and Easley S. Jones.
+
+THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+THE CENTURY DESK BOOK OF GOOD ENGLISH.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+A BUSINESS MAN'S DESK BOOK.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+THE FACTS AND BACKGROUNDS OF LITERATURE, English and American.
+By George F. Reynolds, University of Colorado, and Garland Greever.
+
+PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE.
+By General Henry M. Robert.
+
+_Other Volumes To Be Arranged_
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER.
+
+ By GARLAND GREEVER
+
+ and
+
+ JOSEPH M. BACHELOR
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+DANA H. FERRIN
+
+WHOM THIS BOOK OWES MORE
+THAN A MERE DEDICATION CAN ACKNOWLEDGE
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+You should know at the outset what this book does _not_ attempt to
+do. It does not, save to the extent that its own special purpose requires,
+concern itself with the many and intricate problems of grammar, rhetoric,
+spelling, punctuation, and the like; or clarify the thousands of
+individual difficulties regarding correct usage. All these matters are
+important. Concise treatment of them may be found in THE CENTURY HANDBOOK
+OF WRITING and THE CENTURY DESK BOOK OF GOOD ENGLISH, both of which
+manuals are issued by the present publishers. But this volume confines
+itself to the one task of placing at your disposal the means of adding to
+your stock of words, of increasing your vocabulary.
+
+It does not assume that you are a scholar, or try to make you one. To be
+sure, it recognizes the ends of scholarship as worthy. It levies at every
+turn upon the facts which scholarship has accumulated. But it demands of
+you no technical equipment, nor leads you into any of those bypaths of
+knowledge, alluring indeed, of which the benefits are not immediate. For
+example, in Chapter V it forms into groups words etymologically akin to
+each other. It does this for an end entirely practical--namely, that the
+words you know may help you to understand the words you do not know. Did
+it go farther--did it account for minor differences in these words by
+showing that they sprang from related rather than identical originals, did
+it explain how and how variously their forms have been modified in the
+long process of their descent--it would pass beyond its strict utilitarian
+bounds. This it refrains from doing. And thus everything it contains it
+rigorously subjects to the test of serviceability. It helps you to bring
+more and more words into workaday harness--to gain such mastery over them
+that you can speak and write them with fluency, flexibility, precision,
+and power. It enables you, in your use of words, to attain the readiness
+and efficiency expected of a capable and cultivated man.
+
+There are many ways of building a vocabulary, as there are many ways of
+attaining and preserving health. Fanatics may insist that one should be
+cultivated to the exclusion of the others, just as health-cranks may
+declare that diet should be watched in complete disregard of recreation,
+sanitation, exercise, the need for medicines, and one's mental attitude to
+life. But the sum of human experience, rather than fanaticism, must
+determine our procedure. Moreover experience has shown that the various
+successful methods of bringing words under man's sway are not mutually
+antagonistic but may be practiced simultaneously, just as health is
+promoted, not by attending to diet one year, to exercise the next, and to
+mental attitude the third, but by bestowing wise and fairly constant
+attention on all. Yet it would be absurd to state that all methods of
+increasing one's vocabulary, or of attaining vigor of physique, are
+equally valuable. This volume offers everything that helps, and it yields
+space in proportion to helpfulness.
+
+Aside from a brief introductory chapter, a chapter (number X) given over
+to a list of words, and a brief concluding chapter, the subject matter of
+the volume falls into three main divisions. Chapters II and III are based
+on the fact that we must all use words in combination--must fling the
+words out by the handfuls, even as the accomplished pianist must strike
+his notes. Chapters IV and V are based on the fact that we must become
+thoroughly acquainted with individual words--that no one who scorns to
+study the separate elements of speech can command powerful and
+discriminating utterance. Chapters VI, VII, VIII, and IX are based on the
+fact that we need synonyms as our constant lackeys--that we should be able
+to summon, not a word that will do, but a word that will express the idea
+with precision. Exercises scattered throughout the book, together with
+five of the six appendices, provide well-nigh inexhaustible materials for
+practice.
+
+For be it understood, once for all, that this volume is not a machine
+which you can set going and then sit idly beside, the while your
+vocabulary broadens. Mastery over words, like worthy mastery of any kind
+whatsoever, involves effort for yourself. You can of course contemplate
+the nature and activities of the mechanism, and learn something thereby;
+but also you must work--work hard, work intelligently. As you cannot
+acquire health by watching a gymnast take exercise or a doctor swallow
+medicine or a dietician select food, so you cannot become an overlord of
+words without first fighting battles to subjugate them. Hence this volume
+is for you less a labor-saving machine than a collection and arrangement
+of materials which you must put together by hand. It assembles everything
+you need. It tags everything plainly. It tells you just what you must do.
+In these ways it makes your task far easier. _But the task is yours_.
+Industry, persistence, a fair amount of common sense--these three you must
+have. Without them you will accomplish nothing.
+
+Even with them--let the forewarning be candid--you will not accomplish
+everything. You cannot learn all there is to be learned about words, any
+more than about human nature. And what you do achieve will be, not a
+sudden attainment, but a growth. This is not the dark side of the picture.
+It is an honest avowal that the picture is not composed altogether of
+light. But as the result of your efforts an adequate vocabulary will some
+day be yours. Nor will you have to wait long for an earnest of ultimate
+success. Just as system will speedily transform a haphazard business into
+one which seizes opportunities and stops the leakage of profits, so will
+sincere and well-directed effort bring you promptly and surely into an
+ever-growing mastery of words.
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTERS
+
+I. REASONS FOR INCREASING YOUR VOCABULARY.
+
+
+II. WORDS IN COMBINATION: SOME PITFALLS.
+Tameness
+Exercise
+Sovenliness
+Exercises
+Wordiness
+Exercises
+Verbal Discords
+Exercise
+ 1. Abstract vs. Concrete Terms; General vs. Specific Terms
+ Exercise
+ 2. Literal vs. Figurative Terms
+ Exercise
+ 3. Connotation
+ Exercise
+
+
+III. WORDS IN COMBINATION: HOW MASTERED
+Preliminaries: General Purposes and Methods
+1. A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?
+2. A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?
+The Mastery of Words in Combination
+ 1. Mastery through Translation
+ Exercise
+ 2. Mastery through Paraphrasing
+ Exercise
+ 3. Mastery through Discourse at First Hand
+ Exercise
+ 4. Mastery through Adapting Discourse to Audience
+ Exercise
+
+
+IV. INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS VERBAL CELIBATES
+What Words to Learn First
+The Analysis of Your Own Vocabulary
+Exercise
+The Definition of Words
+Exercise
+How to Look up a Word in the Dictionary
+Exercise
+Prying into a Word's Past
+Exercise
+
+
+V. INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS MEMBERS OF VERBAL FAMILIES
+Words Related in Blood
+Exercise
+Words Related by Marriage
+Exercise
+Prying into a Word's Relationships
+Exercise
+Two Admonitions
+General Exercise for the Chapter (with Lists of
+Words Containing the Same Key-Syllables)
+Second General Exercise (with Additional Lists)
+Third General Exercise
+Fourth General Exercise
+Latin Ancestors of English Words
+Latin Prefixes
+Greek Ancestors of English Words
+Greek Prefixes
+
+
+VI. WORDS IN PAIRS.
+Opposites
+Exercise
+Words Often Confused
+Exercise
+Parallels (with Lists)
+Exercise
+
+
+VII. SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (1)
+How to Acquire Synonyms
+Exercise (with Lists)
+
+
+VIII. SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (2)
+Exercise (with Lists)
+
+
+IX. MANY-SIDED WORDS
+Exercise
+Literal vs. Figurative Applications
+Exercise
+Imperfectly Understood Facts and Ideas
+Exercise
+
+
+X. SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF WORDS
+Exercise
+
+
+XI. RETROSPECT
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+1. The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward (an Editorial)
+2. Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty (by Edmund Burke)
+3. Parable of the Sower (Gospel of St. Matthew)
+4. The Seven Ages of Man (by William Shakespeare)
+5. The Castaway (by Daniel Defoe)
+6. Reading Lists
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER
+
+
+I
+
+ REASONS FOR INCREASING YOUR VOCABULARY
+
+
+Sometimes a dexterous use of words appears to us to be only a kind of
+parlor trick. And sometimes it _is_ just that. The command of a wide
+vocabulary is in truth an accomplishment, and like any other
+accomplishment it may be used for show. But not necessarily. Just as a man
+may have money without "flashing" it, or an extensive wardrobe without
+sporting gaudy neckties or wearing a dress suit in the morning, so may he
+possess linguistic resources without making a caddish exhibition of them.
+Indeed the more distant he stands from verbal bankruptcy, the less likely
+he is to indulge in needless display.
+
+Again, glibness of speech sometimes awakens our distrust. We like actions
+rather than words; we prefer that character, personality, and kindly
+feelings should be their own mouthpiece. So be it. But there are thoughts
+and emotions properly to be shared with other people, yet incapable of
+being revealed except through language. It is only when language is
+insincere--when it expresses lofty sentiments or generous sympathies, yet
+springs from designing selfishness--that it justly arouses misgivings.
+Power over words, like power of any other sort, is for use, not abuse.
+That it sometimes is abused must not mislead us into thinking that it
+should in itself be scorned or neglected.
+
+Our contempt and distrust do not mean that our fundamental ideas about
+language are unsound. Beneath our wholesome dislike for shallow facility
+and insincerity of speech, we have a conviction that the mastery of words
+is a good thing, not a bad. We are therefore unwilling to take the vow of
+linguistic poverty. If we lack the ability to bend words to our use, it is
+from laziness, not from scruple. We desire to speak competently, but
+without affectation. We know that if our diction rises to this dual
+standard, it silently distinguishes us from the sluggard, the weakling,
+and the upstart. For such diction is not to be had on sudden notice, like
+a tailor-made suit. Nor can it, like such a suit, deceive anybody as to
+our true status. A man's utterance reveals what he is. It is the measure
+of his inward attainment. The assertion has been made that for a man to
+express himself freely and well in his native language is the surest proof
+of his culture. Meditate the saying. Can you think of a proof that is
+surer?
+
+But a man's speech does more than lend him distinction. It does more than
+reveal to others what manner of man he is. It is an instrument as well as
+an index. It is an agent--oftentimes indeed it is _the_ agent--of his
+influence upon others. How silly are those persons who oppose words to
+things, as if words were not things at all but air-born unrealities! Words
+are among the most powerful realities in the world. You vote the
+Republican ticket. Why? Because you have studied the issues of the
+campaign and reached a well-reasoned conclusion how the general interests
+may be served? Possibly. But nine times in ten it will be because of that
+_word_ Republican. You may believe that in a given instance the
+Republican cause or candidate is inferior; you may have nothing personally
+to lose through Republican defeat; yet you squirm and twist and seek
+excuses for casting a Republican ballot. Such is the power--aye, sometimes
+the tyranny--of a word. The word _Republican_ has not been selected
+invidiously. _Democrat_ would have served as well. Or take religious
+words--_Catholic, Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Baptist,
+Lutheran,_ or what not. A man who belongs, in person or by proxy, to
+one of the sects designated may be more indifferent to the institution
+itself than to the word that represents it. Thus you may attack in his
+presence the tenets of Presbyterianism, for example, but you must be wary
+about calling the Presbyterian name. _Mother, the flag_--what sooner
+than an insult coupled with these terms will rouse a man to fight? But
+does that man kiss his mother, or salute the flag, or pay much heed to
+either? Probably not. Words not realities? With what realities must we
+more carefully reckon? Words are as dangerous as dynamite, as beneficent
+as brotherhood. An unfortunate word may mean a plea rejected, an
+enterprise baffled, half the world plunged into war. A fortunate word may
+open a triple-barred door, avert a disaster, bring thousands of people
+from jealousy and hatred into coöperation and goodwill.
+
+Nor is it solely on their emotional side that men may be affected by
+words. Their thinking and their esthetic nature also--their hard sense and
+their personal likes and dislikes--are subject to the same influence. You
+interview a potential investor; does he accept your proposition or not? A
+prospective customer walks into your store; does he buy the goods you show
+him? You enter the drawing room of one of the elite; are you invited again
+and again? Your words will largely decide--your words, or your verbal
+abstinence. For be it remembered that words no more than dollars are to be
+scattered broadcast for the sole reason that you have them. The right word
+should be used at the right time--and at that time only. Silence is
+oftentimes golden. Nevertheless there are occasions for us to speak.
+Frequent occasions. To be inarticulate _then_ may mean only
+embarrassment. It may--some day it will--mean suffering and failure. That
+we may make the most of the important occasions sure to come, we must have
+our instruments ready. Those instruments are words. He who commands words
+commands events--commands men.
+
+
+
+II
+
+ WORDS IN COMBINATION: SOME PITFALLS
+
+
+You wish, then, to increase your vocabulary. Of course you must become
+observant of words and inquisitive about them. For words are like people:
+they have their own particular characteristics, they do their work well or
+ill, they are in good odor or bad, and they yield best service to him who
+loves them and tries to understand them. Your curiosity about them must be
+burning and insatiable. You must study them when they have withdrawn from
+the throng of their fellows into the quiescence of their natural selves.
+You must also see them and study them in action, not only as they are
+employed in good books and by careful speakers, but likewise as they fall
+from the lips of unconventional speakers who through them secure vivid and
+telling effects. In brief, you must learn word nature, as you learn human
+nature, from a variety of sources.
+
+Now in ordinary speech most of us use words, not as individual things, but
+as parts of a whole--as cogs in the machine of utterance by which we
+convey our thoughts and feelings. We do not think of them separately at
+all. And this instinct is sound. In our expression we are like large-scale
+manufacturing plants rather than one-man establishments. We have at our
+disposal, not one worker, but a multitude. Hence we are concerned with our
+employees collectively and with the total production of which they are
+capable. To be sure, our understanding of them as individuals will
+increase the worth and magnitude of our output. But clearly we must have
+large dealings with them in the aggregate.
+
+This chapter and the following, therefore, are given over to the study of
+words in combination. As in all matters, there is a negative as well as a
+positive side to be reckoned with. Let us consider the negative side
+first.
+
+
+<Tameness>
+
+Correct diction is too often insipid. There is nothing wrong with it, but
+it does not interest us--it lacks character, lacks color, lacks power. It
+too closely resembles what we conceive of the angels as having--
+impeccability without the warmth of camaraderie. Speech, like a man,
+should be alive. It need not, of course, be boisterous. It may be intense
+in a quiet, modest way. But if it too sedulously observes all the _Thou
+shalt not's_ of the rhetoricians, it will refine the vitality out of
+itself and leave its hearers unmoved.
+
+That is why you should become a disciple of the pithy, everyday
+conversationalist and of the rough-and-ready master of harangue as well as
+of the practitioner of precise and scrupulous discourse. Many a speaker or
+writer has thwarted himself by trying to be "literary." Even Burns when he
+wrote classic English was somewhat conscious of himself and made, in most
+instances, no extraordinary impression. But the pieces he impetuously
+dashed off in his native Scotch dialect can never be forgotten. The man
+who begins by writing naturally, but as his importance in the publishing
+world grows, pays more and more attention to felicities--to "style"--and
+so spoils himself, is known to the editor of every magazine. Any editorial
+office force can insert missing commas and semicolons, and iron out
+blunders in the English; but it has not the time, if indeed the ability,
+to instil life into a lifeless manuscript. A living style is rarer than an
+inoffensive one, and the road of literary ambition is strewn with failures
+due to "correctness."
+
+Cultivate readiness, even daring, of utterance. A single turn of
+expression may be so audacious that it plucks an idea from its shroud or
+places within us an emotion still quivering and warm. Sustained discourse
+may unflaggingly clarify or animate. But such triumphs are beyond the
+reach of those, whether speakers or writers, who are constantly pausing to
+grope for words. This does not mean that scrutiny of individual words is
+wasted effort. Such scrutiny becomes the basis indeed of the more
+venturesome and inspired achievement. We must serve our apprenticeship to
+language. We must know words as a general knows the men under him--all
+their ranks, their capabilities, their shortcomings, the details and
+routine of their daily existence. But the end for which we gain our
+understanding must be to hurl these words upon the enemy, not as
+disconnected units, but as battalions, as brigades, as corps, as armies.
+Dr. Johnson, one of the most effective talkers in all history, resolved
+early in life that, always, and whatever topic might be broached, he
+would on the moment express his thoughts and feelings with as much vigor
+and felicity as if he had unlimited leisure to draw on. And Patrick Henry,
+one of the few really irresistible orators, was wont to plunge headlong
+into a sentence and trust to God Almighty to get him out.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Tameness
+
+1. Study Appendix I (The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward).
+Do you regard it as written simply, with force and natural feeling? Or
+does it show lack of spontaneity?--suffer from an unnatural and self-
+conscious manner of writing? Is the style one you would like to cultivate
+for your own use?
+
+2. Express, if you can, in more vigorous language of your own, the thought
+of the editorial.
+
+3. Think of some one you have known who has the gift of racy colloquial
+utterance. Make a list of offhand, homely, or picturesque expressions you
+have heard him employ, and ask yourself what it is in these expressions
+that has made them linger in your memory. With them in mind, and with your
+knowledge of the man's methods of imparting his ideas vividly, try to make
+your version of the editorial more forceful still.
+
+4. Study Appendix 2 (Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty) as an
+example of stately and elaborate, yet energetic, discourse. The speech
+from which this extract is taken was delivered in Parliament in a vain
+effort to stay England from driving her colonies to revolt. Some of
+Burke's turns of phrase are extremely bold and original, as "The religion
+most prevalent in our northern colonies is a refinement on the principle
+of resistance; it is the dissidence of dissent and the Protestantism of
+the Protestant religion." Moreover, with all his fulness of diction, Burke
+could cleave to the heart of an idea in a few words, as "Freedom is to
+them [the southern slave-holders] not only an enjoyment, but a kind of
+rank and privilege." Find other examples of bold or concise and
+illuminating utterance.
+
+5. Read Appendix 3 (Parable of the Sower). It has no special audacities of
+phrase, but escapes tameness in various ways--largely through its simple
+earnestness.
+
+6. Make a list of the descriptive phrases in Appendix 4 (The Seven Ages of
+Man) through which Shakespeare gives life and distinctness to his
+pictures.
+
+7. Study Appendix 5 (The Castaway) as a piece of homely, effective
+narrative. (Defoe wrote for the man in the street. He was a literary
+jack-of-all-trades whom dignified authors of his day would not
+countenance, but who possessed genius.) It relies upon directness and
+plausibility of substance and style rather than temerity of phrase. Yet it
+never sags into tameness. Notice how everyday expressions ("My business
+was to hold my breath," "I took to my heels") add subtly to our belief
+that what Defoe is telling us is true. Notice also that such expressions
+("the least capful of wind," "half dead with the water I took in," "ready
+to burst with holding my breath") without being pretentious may yet be
+forceful. Notice finally the naturalness and lift of the sinewy idioms ("I
+fetched another run," "I had no clothes to shift me," "I had like to have
+suffered a second shipwreck," "It wanted but a little that all my cargo
+had slipped off").
+
+8. Once or twice at least, make a mental note of halting or listless
+expressions in a sermon, a public address, or a conversation. Find more
+emphatic wording for the ideas thus marred.
+
+9. To train yourself in readiness and daring of utterance, practice
+impromptu discussion of any of the topics in Activity 1 for EXERCISE -
+Discourse.
+
+
+<Slovenliness>
+
+Though we are to recognize the advantage of working in the undress of
+speech rather than in stiffly-laundered literary linens, though we are not
+to despise the accessions of strength and of charm which we may obtain
+from the homely and familiar, we must never be careless. The man whose
+speech is slovenly is like the man who chews gum--unblushingly
+commonplace.
+
+We must struggle to maintain our individuality. We must not be a mere copy
+of everybody else. We must put into our words the cordiality we put into
+our daily demeanor. If we greeted friend or stranger carelessly,
+conventionally, we should soon be regarded as persons of no force or
+distinction. So of our speech and our writing. Nothing, to be sure, is
+more difficult than to give them freshness without robbing them of
+naturalness and ease. Yet that is what we must learn to do. We shall not
+acquire the power in a day. We shall acquire it as a chess or a baseball
+player acquires his skill--by long effort, hard practice.
+
+One thing to avoid is the use of words in loose, or fast-and-loose,
+senses. Do not say that owning a watch is a fine proposition if you mean
+that it is advantageous. Do not say that you trembled on the brink of
+disaster if you were threatened with no more than inconvenience or
+comparatively slight injury. Do not say you were literally scared to death
+if you are yet alive to tell the story.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness I
+
+Give moderate or accurate utterance to the following ideas:
+
+The burning of the hen-coop was a mighty conflagration.
+The fact that the point of the pencil was broken profoundly surprised me.
+We had a perfectly gorgeous time.
+It's a beastly shame that I missed my car.
+It is awfully funny that he should die.
+The saleslady pulled the washlady's hair.
+A cold bath is pretty nice of mornings.
+To go a little late is just the article.
+
+Another thing to avoid is the use of words in the wrong parts of speech,
+as a noun for a verb, or an adjective for an adverb. Sometimes newspapers
+are guilty of such faults; for journalistic English, though pithy, shows
+here and there traces of its rapid composition. You must look to more
+leisurely authorities. The speakers and writers on whom you may rely will
+not say "to burglarize," "to suspicion," "to enthuse," "plenty rich,"
+"real tired," "considerable discouraged," "a combine," or "humans." An
+exhaustive list of such errors cannot be inserted here. If you feel
+yourself uncertain in these details of usage, you should have access to
+such a volume as _The Century Desk Book of Good English_.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness II
+
+1. For each quoted expression in the preceding paragraph compose a
+sentence which shall contain the correct form, or the grammatical
+equivalent, of the expression.
+
+2. Correct the following sentences:
+
+The tramp suicided.
+She was real excited.
+He gestured angry.
+He was some anxious to get to the eats.
+All of us had an invite.
+Them boys have sure been teasing the canine.
+
+Another thing to avoid is triteness. The English language teems with
+phrases once strikingly original but now smooth-worn and vulgarized by
+incessant repetition. It can scarcely be said that you are to shun these
+altogether. Now and then you will find one of them coming happily as well
+as handily into your speech. But you must not use them too often. Above
+all, you must rid yourself of any dependence upon them. The scope of this
+book permits only a few illustrations of the kinds of words and phrases
+meant. But the person who speaks of "lurid flames," or "untiring efforts,"
+or "specimens of humanity"--who "views with alarm," or has a "native
+heath," or is "to the manner born"--does more than advertise the
+scantness of his verbal resources. He brands himself mentally indolent; he
+deprives his thought itself of all sharpness, exactness, and power.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness III
+
+Replace with more original expressions the trite phrases (italicized)
+in the following sentences:
+
+_Last but not least_, we have _in our midst_ one who began life
+_poor but honest_.
+
+After we had _done justice to a dinner_ and gathered in the drawing
+room, we listened _with bated breath_ while she _favored us with a
+selection_.
+
+_A goodly number_ of _the fair sex_, perceiving that _the
+psychological moment_ had come, _applauded him to the echo_.
+
+We were _doomed to disappointment; the grim reaper_ had already
+gathered unto himself _all that was mortal_ of our comrade.
+
+_No sooner said than done_. I soon found myself _the proud
+possessor_ of that for which I had acknowledged _a long-felt
+want_.
+
+After _the last sad rites_ were over and her body was _consigned to
+earth_, we began talking _along these lines_.
+
+With _a few well-chosen words_ he _brought order out of chaos_.
+
+The way my efforts were _nipped in the bud_ simply _beggars
+description_. I am somewhat _the worse for wear. Hoping you are the
+same_, I remain Yours sincerely, Ned Burke.
+
+Finally, to the extent that you use slang at all, be its master instead of
+its slave. You have many times been told that the overuse of slang
+disfigures one's speech and hampers his standing with cultivated people.
+You have also been told that slang constantly changes, so that one's
+accumulations of it today will be a profitless clutter tomorrow. These
+things are true, but an even more cogent objection remains. Slang is
+detrimental to the formation of good intellectual habits. From its very
+nature it cannot be precise, cannot discriminate closely. It is a vehicle
+for loose-thinking people, it is fraught with unconsidered general
+meanings, it moves in a region of mental mists. It could not flourish as
+it does were fewer of us content to express vague thoughts and feelings
+instead of those which are sharply and specifically ours. Unless,
+therefore, you wish your intellectual processes to be as hazy and
+haphazard as those of mental shirkers and loafers, you must eschew, not
+necessarily all slang, but all heedless, all habitual use of it. Now and
+then a touch of slang, judiciously chosen, is effective; now and then it
+fulfils a legitimate purpose of language. But normally you should express
+yourself as befits one who has at his disposal the rich treasuries of the
+dictionary instead of a mere stock of greasy counterfeit phrases.
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness IV
+
+Replace the following slang with acceptable English:
+
+We pulled a new wrinkle.
+He's an easy mark.
+Oh, you're nutty.
+Beat it.
+I have all the inside dope.
+You can't bamboozle me.
+What a phiz the bloke has!
+You're talking through your hat.
+We had a long confab with the gink.
+He's loony over that chicken.
+The prof. told us to vamoose.
+Take a squint at the girl with the specs.
+Ain't it fierce the way they swipe umbrellas?
+Goodnight, how she claws the ivory!
+Nix on the rough stuff.
+And there I got pinched by a cop for parking my Tin Lizzie.
+
+
+<Wordiness>
+
+As a precaution against tameness you should cultivate spontaneity and
+daring. As a precaution against slovenliness you should cultivate
+freshness and accuracy. But to display spontaneity, daring, freshness,
+accuracy you must have or acquire a large stock, a wide range, of words.
+Now this possession, like any other, brings with it temptation. If we have
+words, we like to use them. Nor do we wait for an indulgence in this
+luxury until we have consciously set to work to amass a vocabulary.
+
+Verbosity is, in truth, the besetting linguistic sin. Most people are
+lavish with words, as most people are lavish with money. This is not to
+say that in the currency of language they are rich. But even if they lack
+the means--and the desire--to be extravagant, they yet make their
+purchases heedlessly or fail to count their linguistic change. The degree
+of our thrift, not the amount of our income or resources, is what marks us
+as being or not being verbal spendthrifts. The frugal manager buys his
+ideas at exactly the purchase price. He does not expend a twenty-dollar
+bill for a box of matches.
+
+Have words by all means, the more of them the better, but use them
+temperately, sparingly. Do not think that a passage to be admirable must
+be studded with ostentatious terms. Consider the Gettysburg Address or the
+Parable of the Prodigal Son. These convey their thought and feeling
+perfectly, yet both are simple--exquisitely simple. They strike us indeed
+as being inevitable--as if their phrasing could not have been other than
+it is. They have, they are, finality. What could glittering phraseology
+add to them? Nothing; it could only mar them. Yet Lincoln and the
+Scriptural writers were not afraid to use big words when occasion
+required. What they sought was to make their speech adequate without
+carrying a superfluous syllable.
+
+"The sun set" is more natural and effective than "The celestial orb that
+blesses our terrestrial globe with its warm and luminous rays sank to its
+nocturnal repose behind the western horizon." Great writers--the true
+masters--have often held "fine writing" and pretentious speaking up to
+ridicule. Thus Shakespeare has Kent, who has been rebuked for his
+bluntness, indulge in a grandiloquent outburst:
+
+ "Sir, in good sooth, in sincere verity,
+ Under the allowance of your grand aspect,
+ Whose influence, like the wreath of radiant fire
+ On flickering Phoebus' front,--"
+
+No wonder Kent is interrupted with a "What meanest by this?" Sometimes
+great writers use ornate utterance for humorous effects. Thus Dickens
+again and again has Mr. Micawber express a commonplace idea in sounding
+terms which at length fail him, so that he must interject an "in short"
+and summarize his meaning in a phrase amusing through its homely contrast.
+But humor based on ponderous diction is too often wearisome. Better say
+simply "He died," or colloquially "He kicked the bucket," than "He
+propelled his pedal extremities with violence against the wooden pail
+which is customarily employed in the transportation of the aquatic fluid."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness I
+
+Express these ideas in simpler language:
+
+The temperature was excessive.
+The most youthful of his offspring was not remarkable for personal
+pulchritude.
+Henry Clay expressed a preference for being on the right side of public
+questions to occupying the position of President of the United States of
+America.
+He who passes at an accelerated pace may nevertheless be capable of
+perusing.
+A masculine member of the human race was mounted on an equine quadruped.
+
+But the number of the terms we employ, as well as their ostentatiousness,
+must be considered. Most of us blunder around in the neighborhood of our
+meaning instead of expressing it briefly and clearly. We throw a handful
+of words at an idea when one word would suffice; we try to bring the idea
+down with a shotgun instead of a rifle. Of course one means of correction
+is that we should acquire accuracy, a quality already discussed. Another
+is that we should practice condensation.
+
+First, let us learn to omit the words which add nothing to the meaning.
+Thus in the sentence "An important essential in cashing a check is that
+you should indorse it on the back," several words or groups of words
+needlessly repeat ideas which are expressed elsewhere. The sentence is as
+complete in substance, and far terser in form, when it reads "An essential
+in cashing a check is that you should indorse it."
+
+Next, let us, when we may, reduce phrases and even clauses to a word. Thus
+the clause at the beginning and the phrase at the close of the following
+sentence constitute sheer verbiage: "Men who have let their temper get the
+better of them are often in a mood to do harm to somebody." The sentence
+tells us nothing that may not be told in five words: "Angry men are often
+dangerous."
+
+Finally, let us substitute phrases or clauses for unnecessary sentences.
+The following series of independent assertions contains avoidable
+repetitions: "One morning I was riding on the subway to my work. It was
+always my custom to ride to my work on the subway. This morning I met
+Harry Blake." The full thought may better be embodied in a single
+sentence: "One morning, while I was, as usual, riding on the subway to my
+work, I met Harry Blake."
+
+By applying these instructions to any page at hand--one from your own
+writing, one from a letter some friend has sent you, one from a book or
+magazine--you will often be able to strike out many of the words without
+at all impairing the meaning. Another means of acquiring succinct
+expression is to practice the composition of telegrams and cable messages.
+You will of course lessen the cost by eliminating every word that can
+possibly be spared. On the other hand, you must bear it in mind that your
+punctuation will not be transmitted, and that the recipient must be
+absolutely safeguarded against reading together words meant to be
+separated or separating words meant to be read together. That is, your
+message must be both concise and unmistakably clear.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness II
+
+1. Condense the editorial (Appendix 1) by eliminating unnecessary words
+and finding briefer equivalents for roundabout expressions.
+
+2. Try to condense similarly the Parable of the Sower (Appendix 3) and the
+Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). (The task will largely or altogether
+baffle you, but will involve minute study of tersely written passages.)
+
+3. Condense the following:
+
+A man whose success in life was due solely to his own efforts rose in his
+place and addressed the man who presided over the meeting.
+
+A girl who sat in the seat behind me giggled in an irritating manner.
+
+We heard the wild shriek of the locomotive. Any sound in that savage
+region seemed more terrible than it would in civilized surroundings. So as
+we listened to the shriek of the locomotive, it sounded terrible too.
+
+I heard what kind of chauffeur he was. A former employer of his told me.
+He was a chauffeur who speeded in reckless fashion because he was fond of
+having all the excitement possible.
+
+4. Condense the following into telegrams of ten words or less:
+
+Arrived here in Toledo yesterday morning talked with the directors found
+them not hostile to us but friendly.
+
+Detectives report they think evidence now points to innocence of man
+arrested and to former employee as the burglar.
+
+5. The following telegrams are ambiguous. Clarify them.
+
+Jane escaped illness I feared Charley better.
+
+Buy oil if market falls sell cotton.
+
+6. Base a telegraphic night letter of not more than fifty words
+upon these circumstances:
+
+(a) You have been sent to buy, if possible and as cheaply as possible, a
+majority of the stock in a given company. You find that many of the
+stockholders distrust or dislike the president and are willing to sell.
+Some of these ask only $50 a share for their holdings; the owners of 100
+shares want as much as $92; the average price asked is $76. By buying out
+all the president's enemies, which you can now do beyond question, you
+would secure a bare majority of the stock. But $92 a share seems to you
+excessive; that is, you think that by working quietly among the
+president's friends you can get 100 shares at $77 or thereabouts and thus
+save approximately $1500. On the other hand, should your dealings with the
+friends of the president give him premature warning, he might stop the
+sales by these friends and himself begin buying from his enemies, and thus
+make your purchase of a majority of the stock impossible. Is the $1500 you
+would save worth the risk you would be obliged to take? You call for
+instructions.
+
+(b) You are telegraphing a metropolitan paper the results of a
+Congressional election. Philput, the Republican candidate, leads in the
+cities, from which returns are now complete. Wilkins, the Democratic
+candidate, leads in the country, from only certain districts of which--
+those nearest the cities--returns have been heard. If the present
+proportionate division of the rural vote is maintained for the total,
+Philput will be elected by a plurality of three hundred votes. Philput
+asserts that the proportions will hold. Wilkins points out, however, that
+he is relatively stronger in the more remote districts and predicts that
+he will have a plurality of seven hundred votes. Smallbridge, an
+independent candidate, is apparently making a better race in the country
+than in the city, but he is so weak in both places that the ballots cast
+for him can scarcely affect the outcome unless the margin of victory is
+infinitesimal.
+
+7. Compress 6a and 6b each into a telegram of not more than ten words.
+
+8. (Do not read this assignment until you have composed the night letters
+and telegrams called for in 6 and 7.) Compare your first night letter in 6
+and your first telegram in 7 with the versions given below. Decide where
+you have surpassed these versions, where you have fallen short of them.
+
+_Night letter_: Two factions in company I can buy from enemies
+president bare majority stock at average seventy-six but hundred of these
+shares held at ninety-two I could probably get hundred quietly from
+friends president about seventy-seven but president might detect move and
+buy majority stock himself wire instructions. (Fifty words.)
+
+_Telegram_: Wire whether buy safe or risk control saving fifteen
+hundred. (Ten words.)
+
+A final device for escaping wordiness you will have discovered for
+yourself while composing telegrams and telegraphic night letters. It is to
+pass over details not vital to your purpose. Of course you must have due
+regard for circumstances; details needed for one purpose may be
+superfluous for another. But all of us are familiar with the person who
+loses her ideas in a rigmarole of prosaic and irrelevant facts. Such a
+person is Shakespeare's scatter-brained Dame Quickly. On one occasion this
+voluble woman is shrilly reproaching Sir John Falstaff for his
+indebtedness to her. "What is the gross sum that I owe thee?" he inquires.
+She might answer simply: "If thou wert an honest man, thyself and the
+money too. Thou didst promise to marry me. Deny it if thou canst."
+Instead, she plunges into a prolix recital of the circumstances of the
+engagement, so that the all-important fact that the engagement exists has
+no special emphasis in her welter of words. "If thou wert an honest man,"
+she cries, "thyself and the money too. Thou didst swear to me upon a
+parcel-gilt goblet, sitting in my Dolphin-chamber, at the round table, by
+a sea-coal fire, upon Wednesday in Wheeson week, when the prince broke thy
+head for liking his father to a singing-man of Windsor, thou didst swear
+to me then, as I was washing thy wound, to marry me and make me my lady
+thy wife. Canst thou deny it? Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher's wife,
+come in then and call me gossip Quickly? coming in to borrow a mess of
+vinegar; telling us she had a good dish of prawns; whereby thou didst
+desire to eat some, whereby I told thee they were ill for a green wound?
+And didst thou not, when she was gone down stairs, desire me to be no more
+so familiarity with such poor people; saying that ere long they should
+call me madam? And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty
+shillings? I put thee now to thy book-oath; deny it if thou canst."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness III
+
+1. Study the following paragraph, decide which ideas are important,
+and strike out the details that merely clog the thought:
+
+As I stepped into the room, I heard the clock ticking and that caused me
+to look at it. It sits on the mantelpiece with some layers of paper under
+one corner where the mantel is warped. When the papers slip out or we move
+the clock a little as we're dusting, the ticking stops right away. Of
+course the clock's not a new one at all, but it's an old one. It has been
+in the family for many a long year, yes, from even before my father's
+time. Let me see, it was bought by my grandfather. No, it couldn't have
+been grandfather that bought it; it was his brother. Oh, yes, I remember
+now; my mother told me all about it, and I'd forgotten what she said till
+this minute. But really my grandfather's brother didn't exactly buy it. He
+just traded for it. He gave two pigs and a saddle, that's what my mother
+said. You see, he was afraid his hogs might take cholera and so he wanted
+to get rid of them; and as for the saddle, he had sold his riding-horse
+and he didn't have any more use for that. Well, it isn't a valuable clock,
+like a grandfather clock or anything of that sort, though it is antique.
+As I was saying, when I glanced at it, it read seven minutes to six. I
+remember the time very well, for just then the factory whistle blew and I
+remember saying to myself: "It's seven minutes slow today." You see, it's
+old and we don't keep it oiled, and so it's always losing time. Hardly a
+day passes but I set it up--sometimes twice a day, as for the matter of
+that--and I usually go by the factory whistle too, though now and then I
+go by Dwight's gold watch. Well, anyhow, that tells me what time it was.
+I'm certain I can't be wrong.
+
+2. Study, on the other hand, The Castaway (Appendix 5) for its judicious
+use of details. Defoe in his stories is a supreme master of verisimilitude
+(likeness to truth). As we read him, we cannot help believing that these
+things actually happened. More than in anything else the secret of his
+lifelikeness lies in his constant faithfulness to reality. He puts in the
+little mishaps that would have befallen a man so situated, the things he
+would have done, the difficulties he might have avoided had he exercised
+forethought. Though Defoe had little insight into the complexities of
+man's inner life, he has not been surpassed in his accumulations of
+naturalistic outer details. These do not cumber his narrative; they
+contribute to its purpose and add to its effectiveness. In this selection
+(Appendix 5) observe how plausible are such homely details as Crusoe's
+seeing no sign of his comrades "except three of their hats, one cap, and
+two shoes that were not fellows"; as his difficulty in getting aboard the
+ship again; and as his having his clothes washed away by the rising of the
+tide. Find half a dozen other such incidents that You consider especially
+effective.
+
+
+<Verbal Discords>
+
+We may pitch our talk or our writing in almost any key we choose. Our
+mood may be dreamy or eager or hilarious or grim or blustering or somber
+or bantering or scornful or satirical or whatever we will. But once we
+have established the tone, we should not--except sometimes for broadly
+humorous effects--change it needlessly or without clear forewarning. If we
+do, we create one or the other of two obstacles, or both of them, for
+whoever is trying to follow what we say. In the first place, we obscure
+our meaning. For example, we have been speaking ironically and suddenly
+swerve into serious utterance; or we have been speaking seriously and then
+incongruously adopt an ironic tone. How are our listeners, our readers to
+take us? They are puzzled; they do not know. In the second place, we
+offend--perhaps in insidious, indefinable fashion--the esthetic
+proprieties; we violate the natural fitness of things. For example, we
+have been speaking with colloquial freedom, sprinkling our discourse with
+_shouldn't_ and _won't;_ suddenly we become formal and say
+_should not_ and _will not_. Our meaning is as obvious as
+before, but the verbal harmony has been interrupted; our hearers or
+readers are uneasily aware of a break in the unity of tone.
+
+A speaker or writer is a host to verbal guests. When he invites them to
+his assembly, he gives each the tacit assurance that it will not be
+brought into fellowship with those which in one or another of a dozen
+subtle ways will be uncongenial company for it. He must never be forgetful
+of this unspoken promise. If he is to avoid a linguistic breach, he must
+constantly have his wits about him; must study out his combinations
+carefully, and use all his knowledge, all his tact. He will make due use
+of spontaneous impulse; but that this may be wise and disciplined, he will
+form the habit of curiosity about words, their stations, their savor,
+their aptitudes, their limitations, their outspokenness, their reticences,
+their affinities and antipathies. Thus when he has need of a phrase to
+fill out a verbal dinner party, he will know which one to select.
+
+Certain broad classifications of words are manifest even to the most
+obtuse user of English. _Shady_, _behead_, and _lying_ are
+"popular" words, while their synonyms _umbrageous,_ decapitate,_
+and _mendacious_ are "learned" words. _Flabbergasted_ and
+_higgledy-piggledy_ are "colloquial," while _roseate_ and
+_whilom_ are "literary." _Affidavit_, _allegro_, _lee shore_,
+and _pinch hit_ are "technical," while _vamp_, _savvy_, _bum
+hunch_, and _skiddoo_ are "slang." It would be disenchanting
+indeed were extremes of this sort brought together. But offenses of a less
+glaring kind are as hard to shut out as February cold from a heated house.
+Unusual are the speeches or compositions, even the short ones, in which
+every word is in keeping, is in perfect tune with the rest.
+
+For the attainment of this ultimate verbal decorum we should have to
+possess knowledge almost unbounded, together with unerring artistic
+instinct. But diction of a kind only measurably inferior to this is
+possible to us if we are in earnest. To attain it we must study the
+difference between abstract and concrete terms, and let neither intrude
+unadvisedly upon the presence or functions of the other; do the same by
+literal and figurative terms and instruct ourselves in the nature and
+significance of connotation.
+
+Before considering these more detailed matters, however, we may pause for
+a general exercise on verbal harmony.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Discords
+
+1. Study the editorial in Appendix 1 for unforewarned changes in mood and
+assemblages of mutually uncongenial words. Rewrite the worst two
+paragraphs to remove all blemishes of these kinds.
+
+2. Compare Burke's speech (Appendix 2) with Defoe's narrative (Appendix 5)
+for the difference in tone between them. Does each keep the tone it adopts
+(that is, except for desirable changes)?
+
+3. Note the changes in tone in the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). Do the
+changes in substance make these changes in tone desirable?
+
+4. In the following passages, make such changes and omissions as are
+necessary to unify the tone:
+
+How I loved to stroll, on those long Indian summer afternoons, into the
+quiet meadows where the mild-breathed kine were grazing! An old cow that
+switches her tail at flies and puts her foot in the bucket when you milk
+her, I absolutely loathe. How I loved to hear the birds sing, to listen to
+the fall of ripe autumnal apples!
+
+It wasn't the girl yclept Sally. This girl was not so vivacious as Sally,
+but she had a mug on her that was a lot less ugly to look at. Gee, when
+she stood there in front of me with those mute, ineffable, sympathetic
+eyes of hers, I was ready to throw a duck-fit.
+
+ Old Grimes is dead, that dear old soul;
+ We'll never see him more;
+ He wore a great long overcoat,
+ All buttoned down before.
+
+
+<I. Abstract vs. Concrete Terms; General vs. Specific Terms>
+
+Abstract terms convey ideas; concrete terms call up pictures. If we say
+"Honesty is the best policy," we speak abstractly. Nobody can see or hear
+or touch the thing _honesty_ or the thing _policy_; the
+apprehension of them must be purely intellectual. But if we say "The
+rat began to gnaw the rope," we speak concretely. _Rat_, _gnaw_,
+and _rope_ are tangible, perceptible things; the words bring to us
+visions of particular objects and actions.
+
+Now when we engage in explanations and discussions of principles,
+theories, broad social topics, and the like--when we expound, moralize, or
+philosophize,--our subject matter is general. We approach our readers or
+hearers on the thinking, the rational side of their natures. Our
+phraseology is therefore normally abstract. But when, on the other hand,
+we narrate an event or depict an appearance, our subject matter is
+specific. We approach our readers or hearers on the sensory or emotional
+side of their natures. Our phraseology is therefore normally concrete.
+
+You should be able to express yourself according to either method. You
+should be able to choose the words best suited to make people understand;
+also to choose the words best suited to make people realize vividly and
+feel. Now to some extent you will adopt the right method by intuition. But
+if you do not reinforce your intuition with a careful study of words, you
+will vacillate from one method to the other and strike crude discords of
+phrasing. Of course if you switch methods intelligently and of purpose,
+that is quite another matter. An abstract discussion may be enlivened by a
+concrete illustration. A concrete narrative or portrayal may be given
+weight and rationalized by generalization. Moreover many things lie on the
+borderland between the two domains and may properly be attached to either.
+Thus the abstraction is legitimate when you say or write: "A man wishes to
+acquire the comforts and luxuries, as well as the necessaries, of life."
+The concreteness is likewise legitimate when you say or write: "John Smith
+wishes to earn cake as well as bread and butter."
+
+In most instances general terms are the same as abstract, and specific the
+same as concrete. Some subtle discriminations may, however, be made. Of
+these the only one that need concern us here is that the wording of a
+passage may not be abstract and yet be general. Suppose, for example, you
+were telling the story of the prodigal son and should say: "He was very
+hungry, and could not obtain food anywhere. When he had come to his
+senses, he thought, 'I should be better off at home.'" This language is
+not abstract, but it is general rather than specific. When Jesus told the
+story, he wished to put the situation as poignantly as possible and
+therefore avoided both abstract and general terms: "And he would fain have
+filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave
+unto him. And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of
+my father's have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!"
+Many a person who shuns abstractions and talks altogether of the concrete
+things of life, yet traps out circumstance in general rather than specific
+terms. To do this is always to sacrifice force.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Abstract
+
+1. Discuss as abstractly as possible such topics as those listed in
+Activity 1 for EXERCISE - Discourse, or as the following:
+
+Is there any such thing as luck?
+Is the Golden Rule practicable in the modern business world?
+Is modesty rather than self-assertion regarding his own merits and
+abilities the better policy for an employee?
+Are substantial, home-keeping girls or girls rather fast and frivolous the
+more likely to obtain good husbands?
+Is it desirable for a young man to take out life insurance?
+Is self-education better than collegiate training?
+Should one always tell the truth?
+
+2. Discuss as concretely as possible the topics you have selected from 1.
+Use illustrations drawn from life.
+
+3. Restate in concrete terms such generalizations as the following:
+
+Experience is the best teacher.
+Self-preservation is the first law of nature.
+To him who in the love of nature holds
+Communion with her visible forms, she speaks
+A various language.
+Necessity is the mother of invention.
+The bravest are the tenderest.
+Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.
+Pride goeth before destruction.
+The evil that men do lives after them.
+
+4. Compare the abstract statement "Truths and high ethical principles are
+received by various men in various ways" with the concrete presentation of
+the same idea in Appendix 3. Which expression of the thought would be the
+more easily understood by the average person? Why? Which would you
+yourself remember the longer? Why?
+
+5. Compare the statement "The second period of a human being's life is
+that of his reluctant attendance at school" with Shakespeare's picture of
+the schoolboy in Appendix 4.
+
+6. Burke, near the close of his speech (Appendix 2), presents an idea,
+first in general terms, and then in specific terms, thus: "No contrivance
+can prevent the effect of...distance in weakening government. Seas roll,
+and months pass, between the order and the execution, and the want of a
+speedy explanation of a single point is enough to defeat a whole system."
+Find elsewhere in Burke's speech and in the editorial (Appendix I) general
+assertions which may be made more forceful by restatement in specific
+terms, and supply these specific restatements.
+
+7. State in your own words the general thought or teaching of the Parable
+of the Prodigal Son. (_Luke_ 15: 11-24.)
+
+8. Make the following statements more concrete:
+
+In front of our house was a tree that at a certain season of the year
+displayed highly colored foliage.
+
+A celebrated orator said: "Give me liberty, or give me death!"
+
+On the table were some viands that assailed my nostrils agreeably and
+others that put into my mouth sensations of anticipated enjoyment.
+
+From this window above the street I can hear a variety of noises by day
+and a variety of different noises by night.
+
+As he groped through the pitch-dark room he could feel many articles of
+furniture.
+
+9. State in general terms the thought of the following sentences:
+
+A burnt child dreads the fire.
+A stitch in time saves nine.
+A cat may look at a king.
+A barking dog never bites.
+If his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
+If two men ride a horse, one must ride behind.
+Stone walls do not a prison make.
+A merry heart goes all the day.
+Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just.
+As the twig is bent, so the tree is inclined.
+
+10. Describe a town as seen from a particular point of view, or at a
+particular time of day, or under particular atmospheric conditions. Make
+your description as concrete as possible.
+
+11. Compare your description with this from Stevenson: "The town came down
+the hill in a cascade of brown gables, bestridden by smooth white roofs,
+and spangled here and there with lighted windows." Stevenson's sentence
+contains twenty-five words. How many of them are "color" words? How many
+"motion" words? How many of the first twenty-five words in your
+description appeal to one or another of the five senses?
+
+12. Narrate as vividly as possible an experience in your own life. Compare
+what you have written with the account of Crusoe's escape to the island
+(Appendix 5). Which narrative is the more concrete? How much?
+
+
+<2. Literal vs. Figurative Terms>
+
+Phraseology is literal when it says exactly what it means; is figurative
+when it says one thing, but really means another. Thus "He fought bravely"
+is literal; "He was a lion in the fight" is figurative. Literal
+phraseology as a rule appeals to our scientific or understanding
+faculties; figurative to our emotional faculties. Here again, as with
+abstraction and concreteness, you should learn to express yourself by
+either method.
+
+Both have their advantages and their drawbacks. We all admire the man who
+has observed, and can state, accurately. It is upon this belief of ours in
+the literal that Defoe shrewdly traffics. (See Appendix 5.) He does not
+stir us as some writers do, but he gains our implicit confidence. Dame
+Quickly, on the contrary, makes egregious use of the literal. (See
+paragraph above EXERCISE - Wordiness III above.) Her facts are accurate,
+yes; but how strictly, how unsparingly accurate! And how many of them are
+beside the point! She quite convinces us that the devotee of the literal
+may be dull.
+
+An advantage of the figurative also is that it may make meanings lucid.
+Thus when Burke near the close of his discussion (Appendix 2) wishes to
+make it clear that by a law of nature the authority of extensive empires
+is slighter in its more remote territories, he has recourse to a figure of
+speech: "In large bodies, the circulation of power must be less vigorous
+at the extremities. Nature has said it." More often, however, the function
+of the figurative is to drive home a thought or a mood of which a mere
+statement would leave us unmoved--to make us _feel_ it. Thus Burke
+said of the Americans "Their love of liberty, as with you, fixed and
+attached on this specific point of taxing." He added: "Here they felt its
+pulse, and as they found that beat they thought themselves sick or sound."
+Had you been one of his Parliamentary hearers, would not that second
+sentence have made more real and more important the colonial attitude to
+taxation? The poets of course make frequent and noble use of the
+figurative. This is how Coleridge tells us that the descent of a tropical
+night is sudden:
+
+ "The sun's rim dips; the stars rush out;
+ At one stride comes the dark."
+
+The words _rush out_ and _at one stride comes_ convert the stars
+and the darkness into vast beings or at least vast personal forces; the
+comparisons are so natural as to seem inevitable; we are transported to
+the very scene and feel the overwhelming abruptness of the nightfall. But
+if a figure of speech seems artificial, if it is strained or far-fetched
+or merely decorative, it subtracts from the effectiveness of the passage.
+Thus when Tennyson says:
+
+ "When the breeze of a joyful dawn blew free
+ In the silken sail of infancy."
+
+we must stop and ponder before we perceive that what he means is "When I
+was a happy child." The figure is like an exotic plant rather than a
+natural outgrowth of the soil; it appears to us something thought up and
+stuck on; it is a parasite rather than a helper.
+
+Of course, as with abstraction and concreteness, you should develop
+facility in gliding from literalness to figurativeness and back again. But
+you are always to remember that your gymnastics are not to militate
+against verbal concord. You must never set words scowling and growling at
+each other through injudicious combinations like this: "She was five feet,
+four and three-quarter inches high, had a small, round scar between her
+nose and her left cheek-bone, and moved with the lissom and radiant grace
+of a queen."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Literal
+
+1. Give the specifications for a house you intend to build.
+
+2. Make a list of comparisons (as to a nest, a haven, a goal) to show what
+such a house might mean in the life of a man. Expand as many of these
+comparisons as you can, but do not carry the process to absurd lengths.
+(In the figure of the nest you may mention the parent birds, their
+activities, the nestlings; in the figure of the haven you may mention the
+quiet, sheltered waters in contrast to the turbulent billows outside; in
+the figure of the goal you may mention the struggle necessary to reach
+it.)
+
+3. Describe the looks of the house. Use as many figures of speech as you
+can. If you can find no appropriate figures, at least make your words
+specific.
+
+4. Give a surveyor's or a tax assessor's or a conveyancer's description of
+a piece of land. Then describe the land through figures of speech which
+will vivify its outward appearance or its emotional significance to the
+owner.
+
+5. Observe that the Parable of the Sower (Appendix 3) is an extended
+figure of speech. Is the main figure effective? Are its detailed
+applications effective?
+
+6. The Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4) is also an extended figure of
+speech. Does it, as Shakespeare intends, bring vividly to your
+consciousness the course, motives, stages, evolution of a human being's
+life? There are several subsidiary figures. Do these add force,
+definiteness to the picture Shakespeare is drawing at that moment?
+
+7. Observe from Appendix 3, Appendix 4, and the sentences listed in
+Activity 9 for EXERCISE - Abstract above, that a thing meant to be
+concrete is likely to be stated figuratively.
+
+8. Examine The Castaway (Appendix 5) for its proportionate use of literal
+and figurative elements. See Activity 2 of EXERCISE - Wordiness III above
+for a statement of Defoe's purpose. Could he have effected this purpose so
+well had he employed more figures of speech?
+
+9. Examine Appendix 2 for its use of figures. Are the figures appropriate
+to the subject matter? Are there enough of them?
+
+10. Galvanize the thought of any sentence or paragraph in editorial
+(Appendix 1) by the use of a figure of speech.
+
+11. Summarize or illustrate your opinion on any of the topics listed in
+Activity 1 for EXERCISE - Discourse, through the employment of figure of
+speech.
+
+12. Are these figures effective?
+
+Man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward.
+The flower of our young manhood is scaling the ladder of success.
+
+ Fair as a star, when only one
+ Is shining in the sky.
+ Silence, like a poultice, comes
+ To heal the blows of sound.
+ In my head
+ Many thoughts of trouble come,
+ Like to flies upon a plum!
+
+Let me tell you first about those barnacles that clog the wheels of
+society by poisoning the springs of rectitude with their upas-like eye.
+
+ The day is done, and the darkness
+ Falls from the wings of night,
+ As a feather is wafted downward
+ From an eagle in his flight.
+
+Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
+I will fear no evil.
+
+ Life, like a dome of many-colored glass,
+ Stains the white radiance of eternity.
+
+Mountains stood out like pimples or lay like broken welts
+across the habitable ground.
+
+ Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
+ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
+ And then is heard no more; it is a tale
+ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
+ Signifying nothing.
+
+I saw him in Russia, where the infantry of the snow and the cavalry of the
+wild blast scattered his legions like winter's withered leaves.
+
+13. Recast the following sentences to eliminate the clashing of literal
+and figurative elements:
+
+Life is like a rich treasure entrusted to us, and to sustain it we must
+have three square meals a day.
+
+She glanced at the mirror, but did not really see herself. She was trying
+to puzzle out the right course, and could only see as through a glass
+darkly.
+
+Arming himself with the sword of zeal and the buckler of integrity, he
+wrote the letter.
+
+He swept the floor every morning, and was a ray of sunshine in the office.
+He also emptied the waste baskets and cleaned the cuspidors.
+
+
+<3. Connotation>
+
+The connotation of a word is the subtle implication, the emotional
+association it carries--often quite apart from its dictionary definition.
+Thus the words _house_ and _home_ in large measure overlap in
+meaning, but emotionally they are not equivalents at all. You can say
+_house_ without experiencing any sensation whatever, but if you utter
+the word _home_ it will call back, however slightly, tender and
+cherished recollections. _Bald heads_ and _gray hair_ are both
+indicative of age; but you would pronounce the former in disparaging
+allusion to elderly persons, and the latter with sentiments of veneration.
+You would say, of a clodpole that he plays the _fiddle_, but of Fritz
+Kreisler that he plays the _violin_. And just as you unconsciously
+adapt words to feelings in these obvious instances, you must learn, on
+peril of striking false notes verbally, to do so when distinctions are
+less gross.
+
+Moreover circumstance as well as sentiment may control the connotation of
+a word. A word or phrase may have a double or triple connotation, and
+depend upon vocal inflection, upon gesture, upon the words with which it
+is linked, upon the experience of speaker or hearer, upon time, place, and
+external fact, or upon other forces outside it for the sense in which it
+is to be taken. You may be called "old dog" in an insulting manner, or
+(especially if a slap on the shoulder accompanies the phrase) in an
+affectionate manner. You may properly say, "Calhoun had logic on his
+side"; add, however, the words "but his face was to the past," and you
+spoil the sentence,--for _face_ gives a reflex connotation to
+_side_, slight perhaps and momentary, but disconcerting. Think over
+the funny stories you have heard. Many of them turn, you will find, on the
+outcropping of new significance in a phrase because of its environment.
+Thus the anecdote of the servant who had been instructed to summon the
+visiting English nobleman by tapping on his bedroom door and inquiring,
+"My lord, have you yet risen?" and who could only stammer, "My God! ain't
+you up yet?" Or the anecdote of the minister who in a sermon on the
+Parable of the Prodigal Son told how a young man living dissolutely in a
+city had been compelled to send to the pawnbroker first his overcoat, next
+his suit, next his silk shirt, and finally his very underclothing--"and
+then," added the minister, "he came to himself." Only by unresting
+vigilance can you evade verbal discords, if not of this magnitude, at
+least of much frequency and stylistic harm.
+
+EXERCISE - Connotation
+
+1. Note the contrast in emotional suggestion that comes to you from
+hearing the words:
+
+"Sodium chloride" and "salt"
+"A test-tube of H2O" and "a cup of cold water"
+"A pair of brogans" and "a little empty shoe"
+"Bump" and "collide"
+"A brilliant fellow" and "a flashy fellow"
+"Bungled it" and "did not succeed"
+"Tumble" and "fall"
+"Dawn" and "6 A.M."
+"Licked" and "worsted"
+"Fat" and "plump"
+"Wept" and "blubbered"
+"Cheek" and "self-assurance"
+"Stinks" and "disagreeable odors"
+"Steal" and "embezzle"
+"Thievishness" and "kleptomania"
+"Educated" and "highbrow"
+"Job" and "position"
+"Told a lie" and "fell into verbal inexactitude"
+"A drunkard" (a stranger) and "a drunkard" (your father).
+
+2. Make a list of your own similar to that in Exercise 1.
+
+3. Read the sentences listed in EXERCISE - Slovenliness III and IV. What
+do these sentences suggest to you as to the social and mental
+qualifications of the person who employs them?
+
+4. Read the second paragraph of Appendix 2. What does it suggest to you as
+to Burke's social and mental qualifications?
+
+5. Suppose you were told that a passage of twenty-eight lines contains the
+following expressions: "mewling and puking," "whining schoolboy,"
+"satchel," "sighing like furnace," "round belly," "spectacles on nose,"
+"shrunk shank," "sans [without] teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans
+everything." Would you believe the passage is poetry?--that its total
+effect is one of poetic elevation? Read the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix
+4). _Is_ it poetry? How does Shakespeare reconcile the general poetic
+tone with such expressions as those quoted?
+
+6. What is wrong with the connotation of the following?
+
+The servant told us that the young ladies were all in.
+All my poor success is due to you.
+He insisted on carrying a revolver, and so the college authorities fired
+him.
+The carpenter too had his castles in Spain.
+He rested his old bones by the wayside, and his gaunt dog stood sniffing
+at them.
+On the other hand, he had a white elephant to dispose of.
+When he came to the forks of the road, he showed he was not on the square.
+Body, for funeral purposes, must be sold at once. City Automobile Agency.
+
+7. Can you express the following ideas in other words without sacrifice of
+emotional suggestion? Try.
+
+ The music, yearning like a god in pain.
+ Alone, alone, all, all alone,
+ Alone on a wide, wide sea!
+
+ But O for the touch of a vanished hand,
+ And the sound of a voice that is still!
+ Old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.
+
+ It was night in the lonesome October.
+ How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
+ In the icy air of night!
+ While the stars, that oversprinkle
+ All the heavens, seem to twinkle
+ With a crystalline delight.
+
+ The moan of doves in immemorial elms,
+ And murmuring of innumerable bees.
+
+ Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction and to rot.
+
+ Merrily, merrily, shall I live now,
+ Under the blossom that hangs on the bough.
+
+ 'Tis as easy now for the heart to be true
+ As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
+ 'Tis the natural way of living.
+
+ We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life
+ Is rounded with a sleep.
+
+8. With the most connotative words at your command describe the following:
+
+Your first sweetheart
+A solemn experience
+A ludicrous experience
+A terrifying experience
+A mysterious experience
+The circus parade you saw in your boyhood
+A servant girl
+A dude
+An odd character you have known
+The old homestead
+Your boarding house
+A scene suggesting the intense heat of a midsummer day
+Night on the river
+The rush for the subway car
+The traffic policeman
+Your boss
+Anything listed in the first part of Activity 9 of EXERCISE - Discourse.
+
+
+
+III
+
+ WORDS IN COMBINATION: HOW MASTERED
+
+
+The more dangerous pitfalls for those who use words in combination--as all
+of us do--have been pointed out. The best ways of avoiding these pitfalls
+have also been indicated. But our work together has thus far been chiefly
+negative. To be sure, many tasks assigned for your performance have been
+constructive as well as precautionary; but _the end_ held ever before
+you has been the avoidance of feeble or ridiculous diction. In the present
+chapter we must take up those aspects of the mastery of words in
+combination which are primarily positive.
+
+
+<Preliminaries: General Purposes and Methods>
+
+Before coming to specific aspects and assignments, however, we shall do
+well to consider certain large general purposes and methods.
+
+
+<I. A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?>
+
+First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? A facile, readily
+used one? An accurate one? Or one as nearly as may be comprehensive? The
+three kinds do not necessarily coexist. The possession of one may even
+hinder and retard the acquisition of another. Thus if we seek a ready
+vocabulary, an accurate vocabulary may cause us to halt and hesitate for
+words which shall correspond with the shadings of our thought and emotion,
+and a wide vocabulary may embarrass us with the plenitude of our verbal
+riches.
+
+But _may_ is not _must_. Though the three kinds of vocabulary
+may interfere with each other, there is no reason, except superficially,
+why they should. Our purpose should be, therefore, to acquire not a single
+kind but all three. We should be like the boy who, when asked whether he
+would have a small slice of apple pie or a small slice of pumpkin pie,
+replied resolutely, "Thank you, I will take a large piece of both."
+
+That the assignments in this chapter may help you develop a vocabulary
+which shall be promptly responsive to your needs, you should perform some
+of them rapidly. Your thoughts and feelings regarding a topic may be
+anything but clear, but you must not pause to clarify them. The words best
+suited to the matter may not be instantly available, but you must not
+tarry for accessions of language. Stumble, flounder if you must, yea,
+rearrange your ideas even as you present them, but press resolutely ahead,
+comforting yourself with the assurance that in the heat and stress of
+circumstances a man rarely does his work precisely as he wishes. When you
+have finished the discussion, repeat it immediately--and with no more
+loitering than before. You will find that your ideas have shifted and
+enlarged, and that more appropriate words have become available. Further
+repetitions will assist you the more. But the goal you should set
+yourself, as you proceed from topic to topic, is the attainment of the
+power to be at your best in the first discussion. You may never reach this
+goal, but at least you may approach it.
+
+That the assignments in this chapter may assist you in making your
+vocabulary accurate, you should perform some of them in another way. When
+you have selected a topic, you should first of all think it through. In
+doing this, arrange your ideas as consistently and logically as you can,
+and test them with your reason. Then set them forth in language which
+shall be lucid and exact. Tolerate no slipshod diction, no vaguely
+rendered general meanings. Send every sentence, every word like a skilful
+drop-kick--straight above the crossbar. When you have done your best with
+the topic, lay it by for a space. Time is a great revealer of hidden
+defects, and you must not regard your labors as ended until your
+achievement is the maturest possible for you. If the quantity of what you
+accomplish is meager, suffer no distress on that account. The desideratum
+now is not quantity, but quality.
+
+The assignments in this chapter will do less toward making your vocabulary
+wide than toward making it facile and precise. To be sure, they will now
+and then set you to hunting for words that are new. Better still, they
+will give you a mastery over some of your outlying words--words known to
+your eyes or ears but not to your tongue. But these advantages will be
+somewhat incidental. Means for the systematic extension of your verbal
+domain into regions as yet unexplored by you, are reserved for the later
+chapters of this book.
+
+
+<2. A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?>
+
+In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or
+a vocabulary for writing? It may be that our chief impediment or our chief
+ambition lies in one field rather than in the other. Nevertheless we
+should strive for a double mastery; we ought to speak well _and_
+write well. Indeed the two powers so react upon each other that we ought
+to cultivate both for the sake of either. True, some men, though inexpert
+as writers, have made themselves proficient as speakers; or though
+shambling and ineffective as speakers, have made themselves proficient as
+writers. But this is not natural or normal. Moreover these men might have
+gleaned more abundantly from their chosen field had they not shut it off
+from the acres adjacent. Fences waste space and curtail harvests.
+
+The assignments in this chapter are of such a nature that you may perform
+them either orally or in writing. You should speak and write alternately,
+sometimes on the same topic, sometimes on topics taken in rotation.
+
+In your oral discussions you should perhaps absent yourself at first from
+human auditors. A bedstead or a dresser will not make you self-conscious
+or in any way distract your attention, and it will permit you to sit down
+afterward and think out the degree of your failure or success. Ultimately,
+of course, you must speak to human beings--in informal conversations at
+the outset, in more ambitious ways later as occasion permits.
+
+In your writing you may find it advantageous to make preliminary outlines
+of what you wish to say. But above all, you must be willing to blot, to
+revise, to take infinite pains. You should remember the old admonition
+that easy reading is devilish hard writing.
+
+
+<The Mastery of Words in Combination>
+
+These purposes and methods are general. We now come to the specific fields
+in which we may with profit cultivate words in combination. Of these
+fields there are four.
+
+
+<I. Mastery through Translation>
+
+If you read a foreign language, whether laboriously or with ease, you
+should make this power assist you to amass a good English vocabulary.
+Take compositions or parts of compositions written in the foreign tongue,
+and turn them into idiomatic English. How much you should translate
+at a given time depends upon your leisure and your adeptness. Employ all
+the methods--the spontaneous, the carefully perfected, the oral, the
+written--heretofore explained in this chapter. In your final work on a
+passage you should aim at a faultless rendition, and should spend time and
+ransack the lexicons rather than come short of this ideal.
+
+The habit of translation is an excellent habit to keep up. For the study
+of an alien tongue not only improves your English, but has compensations
+in itself.
+
+EXERCISE - Translation
+
+1. Translate from any accessible book in the foreign language you can
+read.
+
+2. Subscribe for a period of at least two or three months for a newspaper
+or magazine in that language, if it is a modern one. Translate as before,
+but give most of your time to rapid oral translation for a real or
+imaginary American hearer.
+
+3. When you have completed your final written translation of a passage
+from the foreign language, make yourself master of all the English words
+you have not previously (1) known or (2) used, but have encountered in
+your work of translation.
+
+
+
+<2. Mastery through Paraphrasing>
+
+It may be that you are not familiar with a foreign language. At any rate
+you have some knowledge of English. Put this knowledge to use in
+paraphrasing; for thus you will enrich your vocabulary and make it surer
+and more flexible. The process of paraphrasing is simple, though the
+actual work is not easy. You take passages written in English--the more of
+them the better, and the more diversified the better--and both reproduce
+their substance and incarnate their mood in words you yourself shall
+choose.
+
+You may have a passage before you and paraphrase it unit by unit. More
+often, however, you should follow the plan adopted by Franklin when he
+emulated Addison by rewriting the _Spectator Papers_. That is, you
+should steep yourself in the thought and emotion of a piece of writing,
+and then lay the piece aside until its wording has faded from your memory,
+when you should reëmbody the substance in language that seems to you
+natural and fitting. Much of the benefit will come from your comparing
+your version, as Franklin did his, with the original. When you perceive
+that you have fallen short, you should consider the respects wherein your
+inferiority lies--and should make another attempt, and yet another, and
+another. When you perceive that in any way you have surpassed the
+original, you should feel a just pride in your achievement--and should
+resolve that next time your cause for pride shall be greater still. Even
+after you have desisted from formal paraphrasing, you should cling to the
+habit, formed at this time, of observing any notable felicities in
+whatever you read and of comparing them with the expression you yourself
+would likely have employed.
+
+EXERCISE - Paraphrasing
+
+1. Paraphrase the editorial in Appendix 1. You should improve upon the
+original. Keep trying until you do.
+
+2. Paraphrase the second paragraph in Burke's speech (Appendix 2). Burke
+lacked the cheap tricks of the ordinary orator, but his discussions were
+based upon a comprehensive knowledge of facts, a sympathetic understanding
+of human nature, a vast depth and range of thought, and a well-meditated
+political philosophy. In short, he is a model for _elaborated_
+discussions. Set forth the leading thought of this paragraph; you can give
+it in fewer words than he employs. But try setting it forth with his full
+accompaniments of reflection and information; you will be bewildered at
+his crowding so much into such small compass.
+
+3. Try to rival the pregnant conciseness of the Parable of the Sower
+(Appendix 3).
+
+4. Paraphrase in prose the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). Catch if
+possible the mood, the "atmosphere," of each of the pictures painted by
+Shakespeare. Condense your paraphrase as much as you can.
+
+5. In each of the preceding exercises compare your vocabulary with that of
+the original as to size, precision, and the grace and ease with which
+words are put together. Does the original employ terms unfamiliar to you?
+If so, look up their meaning and make them yours; then observe, when you
+next paraphrase the passage, whether your mastery of these terms has
+improved your expression.
+
+
+<3. Mastery through Discourse at First Hand>
+
+Models have their use, but you can also work without models. It is
+imperative that you should. You must learn to discuss, explain, analyze,
+argue, narrate, and describe for yourself. Here again you should diversify
+your materials to the utmost, not only that you may become well-rounded
+and versatile in your ability to set forth ideas and feelings in words,
+but also that your knowledge and your sensibility may receive stimulation.
+
+It is feasible to begin by discussing or explaining. Most of the
+intercourse conducted through language consists in either discussion or
+explanation. Analysis, ordinarily, is almost ignored. Argument is indulged
+in, and so is description (though less freely), but they are of the
+bluntest and broadest. Narration--the recounting of incidents of everyday
+existence--is, however, widely employed.
+
+In your work of discussion or explanation you may seize upon any current
+topic--industrial, social, political, or what not--that comes into your
+mind. Or you may make a list of such topics, writing each on a separate
+piece of paper; may jumble the slips in a hat; and may thus have always at
+your elbow a collection of satisfactory themes from which you may take one
+at random. Or you may invest in language of your own selection the
+substance of an address or sermon you have heard, or give the burden of
+some important conversation in which you have participated, or explain the
+tenor of an article you have read. You should of course try to interest
+your hearers, and above all, you should impart to what you say complete
+clarity.
+
+In analyzing you should select as your topic a process fairly obscure, the
+implications of a certain statement or argument, the results to be
+expected from some action or policy that has been advocated, or the exact
+matter at issue between two disputants. Any topic for discussion,
+explanation, or argument may be treated analytically. Your analysis in its
+final form should be so carefully considered that its soundness cannot be
+impeached.
+
+In arguing you may take any subject under the sun, from baseball to
+Bolshevism, for all of them are debated with vehemence. Any topic for
+discussion or explanation becomes, when approached from some particular
+angle, material for argument. Thus the initial topic in the exercise that
+follows is "The aeroplane's future as a carrier of mail." You may convert
+it into a question for debate by making it read: "The aeroplane is
+destined to supplant the railroad as a carrier of mail," or "The aeroplane
+is destined to be used increasingly as a carrier of transcontinental
+mail." In arguing you may propose for yourself either of two objectives:
+(1) to silence your opponent, (2) to refute, persuade, and win him over
+fairly. The achievement of the first end calls for bluster and perhaps a
+grim, barbaric strength; you must do as Johnson did according to
+Goldsmith's famous dictum--if your pistol misses fire, you must knock your
+adversary down with the butt end of it. This procedure, though inartistic
+to be sure, is in some contingencies the only kind that will serve. But
+you should cultivate procedure of a type more urbane. Let your very
+reasonableness be the most potent weapon you wield. To this end you should
+form the habit of looking for good points on both sides of a question. As
+a still further precaution against contentiousness you should uphold the
+two sides successively.
+
+In narrating you should, as a rule, stick to simple occurrences, though
+you may occasionally vary your work by summarizing the plot of a novel or
+giving the gist and drift of big historical events. You should confine
+yourself, in large part, to incidents in which you have been personally
+involved, or which you yourself have witnessed, as mishaps, unexpected
+encounters, bickerings, even rescues or riots. You should omit
+non-essentials and make the happening itself live for your hearer; if you
+can so interest him in it that he will not notice your manner of telling
+it, your success is but the greater.
+
+Finally, in describing you should deal for the most part with beings,
+objects, and appearances familiar to you. Description is usually hard to
+make vivid. This is because the objects and scenes are likely to be
+immobile and (at least when told about) to lack distinctiveness. Try,
+therefore, to lay hold of the peculiar quality of the thing described, and
+use words suggestive of color and motion. Moreover be brief. Long
+descriptions are sure to be wearisome.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Discourse
+
+1. Select topics from the following list for discussion or explanation:
+
+The aeroplane's future as a carrier of mail
+The commercial future of the aeroplane
+A recent scientific (or mechanical or electrical) invention
+A better type of newspaper--its contents and makeup
+A better type of newspaper--how it can be secured
+The connection between the advertising and news departments
+ of a newspaper--the actual condition
+The connection between the advertising and news departments
+ of a newspaper--the ideal
+Special features in a newspaper that are popular
+A single standard for the sexes--is it possible?
+A single standard for the sexes--how it can be attained (or approximated)
+Should the divorce laws be made more stringent?
+Should a divorced person be prohibited from remarrying?
+What further marriage restrictions should be placed upon the
+ physically or mentally unfit?
+What further measures should be taken by the cities (states, nation) for
+ the protection of motherhood?
+Is the division of men into strongly contrasted groups as to wealth
+ one of nature's necessities, or is it the result of a social and
+ economic system?
+Some shortcomings of the labor unions
+Are the shortcomings of the labor unions accidental or inherent?
+Some ways of bettering the condition of the working classes
+How municipal (state, national) bureaus for finding employment
+ for the laborer may become more serviceable
+Wrongs committed by big business (or some branch of it)
+Should a man's income above a stipulated amount be confiscated
+ by the government?
+Income taxes--what exemptions should be granted?
+The right basis for business--competition or coöperation?
+Are the courts equally just to labor and capital?
+How can legal procedure be changed to enable individuals to secure just
+ treatment from corporations without resorting to prolonged and expensive
+ lawsuits?
+Where our interests clash with those of Great Britain
+How our relations with Great Britain may be further improved
+How our relations with Japan may be further improved
+How may closer commercial relations with other countries be promoted?
+What to do about the railroads and railroad rates
+A natural resource that should be conserved or restored
+Do high tariffs breed international ill-will?
+Should we have a high tariff at this juncture?
+To what extent should osteopathy (chiropractic) be permitted
+ (or protected) by law?
+What is wrong with municipal government in my city
+How woman suffrage affects local government
+How to make rural life more attractive
+The importance of the rotation of crops
+The race problem as it affects my community
+The class problem as it affects my community
+The school-house as a social center
+How to Americanize the alien elements in our population
+To what extent, if at all, should foreign-born citizens of our
+ country be encouraged to preserve their native traditions and culture?
+Censorship of the moving picture
+Educational possibilities of the moving picture
+How to bring about improvement in the quality of the moving picture
+The effect of the moving picture upon legitimate drama
+A church that men will attend
+How young men may be attracted to the churches
+How far shall doctrine be insisted upon by the churches?
+To what extent shall the church concern itself with social
+ and economic problems?
+To what extent, if at all, shall Sunday diversions be restricted?
+The advantages of using the free public library
+Can the cities give children in the slums better opportunities for
+ physical (mental, moral) development?
+Should all cities be required to establish zoölogical gardens,
+ as well as schools, for the children?
+How my city might improve its system of public parks
+The most interesting thing about the work I am in
+Opportunities in the work I am in
+The qualities called for in the work I am in
+The ideals of my associates
+Something I have learned about life
+Something I have learned about human nature
+A book that has influenced me, and why
+A person who has influenced me, and how
+My favorite sport or recreation
+Why baseball is so popular
+What I could do for the people around me
+What I should like for the people around me to do for me.
+
+2. Discuss or explain the ideas listed in Exercise 3 for 'Abstract vs.
+Concrete' in "Words in Combination: Some Pitfalls" above.
+
+3. Analyze the debatable questions included in the two preceding exercises
+or suggested by them. That is, find the issues in each question, and show
+what each disputant must prove and what he must refute.
+
+4. Analyze the results to be expected from the adoption of some policy or
+course of action by:
+
+A newspaper
+A business firm
+The city
+The farmers
+The producers in some business or industry
+The consumers
+The retail merchants of your city
+Some group of reformers
+Some social group
+Those interested in a social activity, as dancing
+Your neighbors
+Yourself.
+
+5. Analyze or explain:
+
+The testing of seed grain
+How to raise potatoes (any other vegetable)
+How to utilize and apportion the space in your garden
+How to keep an automobile in good shape
+How to run an automobile (motor boat)
+How to make a rabbit trap
+How to lay out a camp
+How to catch trout (bass, codfish, tuna fish, lobsters)
+How to conduct a public meeting
+How a bill is introduced and passed in a legislative body
+How food is digested
+How to extract oxygen from water
+How a fish breathes
+How gold is mined
+How wireless messages are sent
+How your favorite game is played
+How to survey a tract of land
+How stocks are bought and sold on margins
+How public opinion is formed
+How a man ought to form his opinions
+The responsibility of individuals to society
+The responsibility of society to the individual.
+
+6. Argue one side or the other, or the two successively, of
+queries contained or implied in Exercises 1 and 2.
+
+7. Argue one side or the other, or the two successively, of queries listed
+in Exercise 1 in EXERCISE - Abstract.
+
+8. Give a narrative of:
+
+The earning of your first dollar
+How somebody met his match
+An amusing incident
+An anxious moment
+A surprise
+The touchdown
+That fatal seventh inning
+How you got the position
+Why you missed the train
+When you were lost
+Your first trip on the railroad (a motor boat, a merry-go-round,
+ snowshoes, a burro)
+A mishap
+How Jenkins skated
+Your life until the present (a summary)
+Something you have heard your father tell
+What happened to your uncle
+Your partner's (chum's) escapade
+Meeting an old friend
+Meeting a bore
+A conversation you have overheard
+When Myrtle eavesdropped
+When the girls didn't know Algy was in the parlor
+A public happening that interests you
+An incident you have read in the papers
+An incident from your favorite novel
+Backward Ben at the party
+Something that happened to you today.
+
+9. Describe ...
+
+For the mood or general "atmosphere":
+
+Anything you deem suitable in Activity 8 in EXERCISE - Connotation.
+An old, deserted house
+Your birthplace as you saw it in manhood
+The view from an eminence
+A city as seen from a roof garden by night
+Your mother's Bible
+A barnyard scene
+The lonely old negro at the supper table
+A new immigrant gazing out upon the ocean he has crossed
+The downtown section at closing hour
+A scene of quietude
+A scene of bustle and confusion
+A richly colored scene
+A scene of dejection
+A scene of wild enthusiasm
+A scene of dulness or stagnation.
+
+With attention to homely detail:
+
+The old living-room
+My aunt's dresses
+Barker's riding-horse
+The business street of the village
+A cabin in the mountains
+The office of a man approaching bankruptcy
+The Potters' backyard
+The second-hand store
+The ugliest man.
+
+For general accuracy and vividness:
+
+The organ-grinder
+The signs of an approaching storm
+The arrival of the train
+Mail-time at the village post office
+The crowd at the auction
+The old fishing-boat
+A country fair (or a circus)
+The inside of a theater (or a church)
+The funeral procession
+The political rally
+The choir.
+
+
+<4. Mastery through Adapting Discourse to Audience>
+
+For convenience, we have heretofore assumed that ideas and emotions,
+together with such expression of them as shall be in itself adequate and
+faithful, comprise the sole elements that have to be reckoned with in the
+use of words in combination. But as you go out into life you will find
+that these things, however complete they may seem, are not in practice
+sufficient. Another factor--the human--must have its place in our
+equation. You do not speak or write in a vacuum. Your object, your
+ultimate object at least, in building up your vocabulary is to address men
+and women; and among men and women the varieties of training, of stations,
+of outlooks, of sentiments, of prejudices, of caprices are infinite. To
+gain an unbiased hearing you must take persistent cognizance of flesh and
+blood.
+
+In adapting discourse to audience you must have a supple and attentive
+mind and an impressionable and swiftly responsive temperament as well as a
+wide, accurate, and flexible vocabulary. Unless you are a fool, a zealot,
+or an incorrigible adventurer, you will not broach a subject at all to
+which your hearers feel absolute indifference or hostility. Normally you
+should pick a subject capable of interesting them. In presenting it you
+should pay heed to both your matter and your manner. You should emphasize
+for your listeners those aspects of the subject which they will most
+respond to or most need to hear, whether or not the phases be such as you
+would emphasize with other auditors. You should also speak in the fashion
+you deem most effective with them, whether or not it be one to which your
+own natural instincts prompt you.
+
+Let us say you are discussing conditions in Europe. You must speak in one
+way to the man who has traveled and in an entirely different way to the
+man who has never gone abroad--in one way to the well-read man, in an
+entirely different way to the ignoramus. Let us say you are discussing
+urban life, urban problems. You must speak in one way to the man who lives
+in the city, in another to the man who lives in the country. Let us say
+you are discussing the labor problem. You must speak in one way to
+employers, in another to employees, possibly in a third to men thrown out
+of jobs, possibly in a fourth to the general public. Let us say you are
+discussing education, or literature, or social tendencies, or mechanical
+principles or processes, or some great enterprise or movement. You must
+speak in one way to cultivated hearers and in another to men in the
+street, and if you are a specialist addressing specialists, you will cut
+the garment of your discourse to their particular measure.
+
+The same principle holds regardless of whether you expound, analyze,
+argue, recount, or describe. You must always keep a finger on the mental
+or emotional pulse of those whom you address. But your problem varies
+slightly with the form of discourse you adopt. In explanation, analysis,
+and argument the chief barriers you encounter are likely to be those of
+the mind; you must make due allowance for the intellectual limitations of
+your auditors, though many who have capacity enough may for some cause or
+other be unreceptive to ideas. In description you must reckon with the
+imaginative faculty, with the possibility that your hearers cannot
+visualize what you tell them--and you must make your words brief. In
+narration you must vivify emotional torpor; but lest in your efforts to
+inveigle boredom you yourself should induce it, you must have a wary eye
+for signals of distress.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Adapting
+
+1. Explain to (a) a rich man, (b) a poor man the blessings of poverty.
+
+2. Discuss before (a) farmers, (b) merchants the idea that farmers
+(merchants) make a great deal of money.
+
+3. Explain to (a) the initiate, (b) the uninitiate some piece of
+mechanism, or some phase of a human activity or interest, which you know
+at first hand and regarding which technical (or at least not generally
+understood) terms are employed. (The exact subject depends, of course,
+upon your own observation or experience; you are sure to be familiar
+with something that most people know hazily, if at all. Bank clerk,
+chess player, bridge player, stenographer, journalist, truck driver,
+backwoods-man, mechanic--all have special knowledge of one kind or another
+and can use the particular terms it calls for.)
+
+4. Explain to (a) a supporter of the winning team, (b) a supporter of the
+losing team why the baseball game came out as it did.
+
+5. Discuss before (a) a Democratic, (b) a Republican audience your reasons
+for voting the Democratic (Republican) ticket in the coming election.
+
+6. Explain to (a) your own family, (b) the man who can lend you the money,
+why you wish to mortgage your house (any piece of property).
+
+7. Explain to the owner of an ill-conducted business why he should sell
+it, and to a shrewd business man why he should buy it.
+
+8. Discuss before (a) old men, (b) young men, (c) women the desirability
+of men's giving up their seats in street cars to women. (Also modify the
+question by requiring only young men to give up their seats, and then only
+to old people of either sex, to sick people, or to people with children in
+their arms.)
+
+9. Explain the necessity of restricting immigration to (a) prospective
+immigrants, (b) immigrants just granted admission to the country, (c)
+persons just refused admission, (d) exploiters of cheap labor, (e)
+ordinary citizens.
+
+10. Discuss the taking out of a life insurance policy with (a) a man not
+interested, (b) a man interested but uncertain what a policy is like, (c)
+a man interested and informed but doubtful whether he can spare the money,
+(d) the man's wife (his prospective beneficiary), whose desires will have
+weight with him.
+
+11. Discuss the necessity of a reduction in wages with (a) unscrupulous
+employers, (b) kind-hearted employers, (c) the employees.
+
+12. Advocate higher public school taxes before (a) men with children, (b)
+men without children.
+
+13. Advocate a further regulation of the speed of automobiles before (a)
+automobile-owners, (b) non-owners.
+
+14. Urge advocacy of some reform upon (a) a clergyman, (b) a candidate for
+office.
+
+15. Combat before (a) advertisers, (b) a public audience, (c) a lawmaking
+body, the defacement of landscapes by advertising billboards.
+
+16. Describe life in the slums before (a) a rural audience, (b) charitable
+persons, (c) rich people in the cities who know little of conditions among
+the poor.
+
+17. Describe the typical evening of a spendthrift in a city to (a) a poor
+man, (b) a miser, (c) the spendthrift's mother, (d) his employer, (e) a
+detective who suspects him of theft.
+
+18. Describe the city of Washington (any other city) to (a) a countryman,
+(b) a traveler who has not visited this particular city. (If it is
+Washington you describe, describe it also for children in whom you wish to
+inculcate patriotism.)
+
+19. Give (a) a youngster, (b) an experienced angler an account of your
+fishing trip.
+
+20. Recount for (a) a baseball fan, (b) a girl who has never seen a game,
+the occurrences of the second half of the ninth inning.
+
+21. Describe a fight for (a) your friends, (b) a jury.
+
+22. Narrate for (a) children, (b) an audience of adults some historical
+event.
+
+23. Give (a) your partner, (b) a reporter an account of a business
+transaction you have just completed.
+
+24. Narrate an escapade for (a) your father, (b) your cronies in response
+to a toast at a banquet with them.
+
+
+
+IV
+
+ INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS VERBAL CELIBATES
+
+
+Thus far we have studied words as grouped together into phrases,
+sentences, paragraphs, whole compositions. We must now enter upon a new
+phase of our efforts to extend our vocabulary. We must study words as
+individual entities.
+
+You may think the order of our study should be reversed. No great harm
+would result if it were. The learning of individual words and the
+combining of them into sentences are parallel rather than successive
+processes. In our babyhood we do not accumulate a large stock of terms
+before we frame phrases and clauses. And our attainment of the power of
+continuous iteration does not check our inroads among individual words. We
+do the two things simultaneously, each contributing to our success with
+the other. There are plenty of analogies for this procedure. A good
+baseball player, for instance, tirelessly studies both the minutiae of his
+technique (as how to hold a bat, how to stand at the plate) and the big
+combinations and possibilities of the game. A good musician keeps
+unremitting command over every possible touch of each key and at the same
+time seeks sweeping mastery over vast and complex harmonies. So we, if we
+would have the obedience of our vocabularies, dare not lag into desultory
+attention to either words when disjoined or words as potentially combined
+into the larger units of thought and feeling.
+
+We might therefore consider either the individuals first or the groups
+first. But the majority of speakers and writers pay more heed to rough
+general substance than to separate instruments and items. Hence we have
+thought best to begin where most work is going on already--with words in
+combination.
+
+As you turn from the groups to the individuals, you must understand that
+your labors will be onerous and detailed. You must not assume that by
+nature all words are much alike, any more than you assume that all men are
+much alike. Of course the similarities are many and striking, and the
+fundamental fact is that a word is a word as a man is a man. But you will
+be no adept in handling either the one or the other until your knowledge
+goes much farther than this. Let us glance first at the human variations.
+Each man has his own business, and conducts it in his own way--a way never
+absolutely matched with that of any other mortal being. All this you may
+see. But besides the man's visible employment, he may be connected in
+devious fashions with a score of enterprises the public knows nothing
+about. Furthermore he leads a private life (again not precisely
+corresponding to that of any other), has his hobbies and aversions, is
+stamped with a character, a temperament of his own. In short, though in
+thousands of respects he is like his fellows, he has after all no human
+counterpart; he is a distinct, individual self. To know him, to use him,
+to count upon his service in whatsoever contingency it might bestead you,
+you must deem him something more than a member of the great human family.
+You must cultivate him personally, cultivate him without weariness or
+stint, and undergo inconvenience in so doing.
+
+Even so with a word. Commonplace enough it may seem. But it has its
+peculiar characteristics, its activities undisclosed except to the
+curious, its subtle inclinations, its repugnances, its latent
+potentialities. There is no precise duplicate for it in all the wide
+domain of language. To know it intimately and thoroughly, to be on
+entirely free terms with it, to depend upon it just so far as dependence
+is safe, to have a sure understanding of what it can do and what it
+cannot, you must arduously cultivate it. Words, like people, yield
+themselves to the worthy. They hunger for friendship--and lack the last
+barrier of reserve which hedges all human communion. Thus, linguistically
+speaking, you must search out the individuals. You must step aside from
+your way for the sake of a new acquaintance; in conversations, in sermons,
+in addresses, in letters, in journalistic columns, in standard literature
+you must grasp the stranger by the hand and look him straight in the eye.
+Nor must you treat cavalierly the words you know already. You must study
+them afresh; you must learn them over and learn them better; you must come
+to understand them, not only for what they are, but for what they will do.
+
+
+<What Words to Learn First>
+
+What, then, is your first task? Somebody has laid down the injunction--
+and, as always when anything is enjoined, others have given it currency--
+that each day you should learn two new words. So be it,--but which two?
+The first two in the dictionary, or hitherto left untouched in your
+systematic conquest of the dictionary? The first two you hear spoken? The
+first two that stare at you from casual, everyday print? The first two you
+can ferret from some technical jargon, some special department of human
+interest or endeavor? In any of these ways you may obey the behest of
+these mentors. But are not such ways arbitrary, haphazard? And suppose,
+after doing your daily stint, you should encounter a word it behooves you
+to know. What then? Are you to sulk, to withhold yourself from further
+exertion on the plea of a vocabulary-builder's eight-hour day?
+
+To adopt any of the methods designated would be like resolving to invest
+in city lots and then buying properties as you encountered them, with no
+regard for expenditure, for value in general, or for special
+serviceability to you. Surely such procedure would be unbusinesslike. If
+you pay out good money, you meditate well whether that which you receive
+for it shall compensate you. Likewise if you devote time and effort to
+gaining ownership of words, you should exercise foresight in determining
+whether they will yield you commensurate returns.
+
+What, then, is the principle upon which, at the outset, you should
+proceed? What better than to insure the possession of the words regarding
+which you know this already, that you need them and should make them
+yours?
+
+
+<The Analysis of Your Own Vocabulary>
+
+The natural way, and the best, to begin is with an analysis of your own
+vocabulary. You are of course aware that of the enormous number of words
+contained in the dictionary relatively few are at your beck and bidding.
+But probably you have made no attempt to ascertain the nature and extent
+of your actual linguistic resources. You should make an inventory of the
+stock on hand before sending in your order for additional goods.
+
+You will speedily discover that your vocabulary embraces several distinct
+classes of words. Of these the first consists of those words which you
+have at your tongue's end--which you can summon without effort and use in
+your daily speech. They are old verbal friends. Numbered with them, to be
+sure, there may be a few with senses and connotations you are ignorant of--
+friends of yours, let us say, with a reservation. Even these you may woo
+with a little care into uncurbed fraternal abandon. With the exception of
+these few, you know the words of the first class so well that without
+thinking about it at all you may rely upon their giving you, the moment
+you need them, their untempered, uttermost service. You need be at no
+further pains about them. They are yours already.
+
+A second class of words is made up of those you speak on occasions either
+special or formal--occasions when you are trying, perhaps not to show off,
+but at least to put your best linguistic foot foremost. Some of them have
+a meaning you are not quite sure of; some of them seem too ostentatious
+for workaday purposes; some of them you might have been using but somehow
+have not. Words of this class are not your bosom friends. They are your
+speaking acquaintance, or perhaps a little better than that. You must
+convert them into friends, into prompt and staunch supporters in time of
+need. That is to say, you must put them into class one. In bringing about
+this change of footing, you yourself must make the advances. You must say,
+Go to, I will bear them in mind as I would a person I wished to cultivate.
+When occasion rises, you must introduce them into your talk. You will feel
+a bit shy about it, for introductions are difficult to accomplish
+gracefully; you will steal a furtive glance at your hearer perchance, and
+another at the word itself, as you would when first labeling a man "my
+friend Mr. Blank." But the embarrassment is momentary, and there is no
+other way. Assume a friendship if you have it not, and presently the
+friendship will be real. You must be steadfast in intention; for the words
+that have held aloof from you are many, and to unloose all at once on a
+single victim would well-nigh brand you criminal. But you will make sure
+headway, and will be conscious besides that no other class of words in the
+language will so well repay the mastering. For these are words you
+_do_ use, and need to use more, and more freely--words your own
+experience stamps as valuable, if not indeed vital, to you.
+
+The third class of words is made up of those you do not speak at all, but
+sometimes write. They are acquaintance one degree farther removed than
+those of the second class. Your task is to bring them into class two and
+thence into class one--that is, to introduce them into your more formal
+speech, and from this gradually into your everyday speech.
+
+The fourth class of words is made up of those you recognize when you hear
+or read them, but yourself never employ. They are acquaintance of a very
+distant kind. You nod to them, let us say, and they to you; but there the
+intercourse ends. Obviously, they are not to be brought without
+considerable effort into a position of tried and trusted friendship. And
+shall we be absolutely honest?--some of them may not justify such
+assiduous care as their complete subjugation would call for. But even
+these you should make your feudal retainers. You should constrain them to
+membership in class three, and at your discretion in class two.
+
+Apart from the words in class four, you will not to this point have made
+actual additions to your vocabulary. But you will have made your
+vocabulary infinitely more serviceable. You will be like a man with a host
+of friends where before, when his necessities were sorest, he found (along
+with some friends) many distant and timid acquaintance.
+
+Outside the bounds of your present vocabulary altogether are the words you
+encounter but do not recognize, except (it may be) dimly and uncertainly.
+Some counselors would have you look up all such words in a dictionary. But
+the task would be irksome. Moreover those who prescribe it are loath to
+perform it themselves. Your own candid judgment in the matter is the
+safest guide. If the word is incidental rather than vital to the meaning
+of the passage that contains it, and if it gives promise of but rarely
+crossing your vision again, you should deign it no more than a civil
+glance. Plenty of ways will be left you to expend time wisely in the
+service of your vocabulary.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Analysis
+
+1. Make a list of the words in class two of your own vocabulary, and
+similar lists for classes three and four. (To make a list for class one
+would be but a waste of time.) Procure if you can for this purpose a
+loose-leaf notebook, and in the several lists reserve a full page for each
+letter of the alphabet as used initially. Do not scamp the lists, though
+their proper preparation consume many days, many weeks. Try to make them
+really exhaustive. Their value will be in proportion to their accuracy and
+fulness.
+
+2. Con the words in each list carefully and repeatedly. Your task is to
+transfer these words into a more intimate list--those in class four into
+class three, those in three into two, those in two into one. You are then
+to promote again the words in the lower classes, except that (if your
+judgment so dictates) you may leave the new class three wholly or
+partially intact. To carry out this exercise properly you must keep these
+words in mind, make them part and parcel of your daily life. (For a
+special device for bringing them under subjection, see the next exercise.)
+
+3. To write a word down helps you to remember it. That is why the normal
+way to transfer a word from class four into class two is to put it
+temporarily into the intermediary class, three; you first _see_ or
+_hear_ the word, next _write_ it, afterwards _speak_ it.
+The mere writing down of your lists has probably done much to bring the
+words written into the circuit of your memory, where you can more readily
+lay hold of them. Also it has fortified your confidence in using them; for
+to write a word out, letter by letter, makes you surer that you have its
+right form. With many of your words you will likely have no more trouble;
+they will be at hand, anxious for employment, and you may use them
+according to your need. But some of your words will still stubbornly
+withhold themselves from memory. Weed these out from your lists, make a
+special list of them, copy it frequently, construct short sentences into
+which the troublesome words fit. By dint of writing the words so often you
+will soon make them more tractable.
+
+4. Make a fifth list of words--those you hear or see printed, do not
+understand the meaning of, but yet feel you should know. Obtain and
+confirm a grasp of them by the successive processes used with words in the
+preceding lists.
+
+
+<The Definition of Words>
+
+Another means of buttressing your command of your present vocabulary is to
+define words you use or are familiar with.
+
+Do not bewilder yourself with words (like _and, the_) which call for
+ingenuity in handling somewhat technical terms, or with words (like
+_thing, affair, condition_) which loosely cover a multitude of
+meanings. (You may, however, concentrate your efforts upon some one
+meaning of words in the latter group.) Select words with a fairly definite
+signification, and express this as precisely as you can. You may
+afterwards consult a dictionary for means of checking up on what you have
+done. But in consulting it think only of idea, not of form. You are not
+training yourself in dictionary definitions, but in the sharpness and
+clarity of your understanding of meanings.
+
+About the only rule to be laid down regarding the definition of verbs,
+adjectives, and adverbs is that you must not define a word in terms of
+itself. Thus if you define _grudgingly_ as "in a grudging manner,"
+you do not dissipate your hearer's uncertainty as to what the word means.
+If you define it as "unwillingly" or "in a manner that shows reluctance to
+yield possession," you give your hearer a clear-cut idea in no wise
+dependent upon his ability to understand the word that puzzled him in the
+first place.
+
+Normally, in defining a noun you should assign the thing named to a
+general class, and to its special limits within that class; in other
+words, you should designate its genus and species. You must take care to
+differentiate the species from all others comprised within the genus.
+You will, in most instances, first indicate the genus and then the
+species, but at your convenience you may indicate the species first. Thus
+if you affirm, "A cigar is smoking-tobacco in the form of a roll of
+tobacco-leaves," you name the genus first and later the characteristics of
+the species. You have given a satisfactory definition. If on the other
+hand you affirm, "A cigar is a roll of tobacco-leaves meant for smoking,"
+you first designate the species and then merely imply the genus. Again you
+have given a satisfactory definition; for you have permitted no doubt that
+the genus is smoking-tobacco, and have prescribed such limits for the
+species as exclude tobacco intended for a pipe or a cigarette.
+
+In defining nouns by the genus-and-species method, restrict the genus to
+the narrowest possible bounds. You will thus save the need for exclusions
+later. Had you in your first definition of a cigar begun by saying that it
+is tobacco, rather than smoking-tobacco, you would have violated this
+principle; and you would have had to amplify the rest of your definition
+in order to exclude chewing-tobacco, snuff, and the like.
+
+EXERCISE - Definition
+
+1. Define words of your own choosing in accordance with the principles
+laid down in the preceding section of the text.
+
+2. Define the following adjectives, adverbs, and verbs:
+
+Miserable Rebuke Wise
+Angrily Rapidly Boundless
+Swim Paint Whiten
+Haughtily Surly Causelessly
+
+3. So define the following nouns as to prevent any possible confusion with
+the nouns following them in parentheses:
+
+Wages (salary) Ride (drive)
+Planet (star) Truck (automobile)
+Watch (clock) Reins (lines)
+Jail (penitentiary) Iron (steel)
+Vegetable (fruit) Timber (lumber)
+Flower (weed) Rope (string)
+Hail (sleet, snow) Stock (bond)
+Newspaper (magazine) Street car (railway coach)
+Cloud (fog) Revolver (rifle, pistol, etc.)
+Mountain (hill) Creek (river)
+Letter (postal card)
+
+4. While remembering that the following words are of broad signification
+and mean different things to different people, define them according to
+their meaning to you:
+
+Gentleman Courage
+Honesty Beauty
+Honor Good manners
+Generosity A good while
+Charity A little distance
+Modesty Long ago
+
+
+<How to Look Up a Word in the Dictionary>
+
+So much for the words which are already yours, or which you can make yours
+through your own unaided efforts. For convenience we have grouped with
+them some words of a nature more baffling--words of which you know perhaps
+but a single aspect rather than the totality, or upon which you can obtain
+but a feeble and precarious grip. These slightly known words belong more
+to the class now to be considered than to that just disposed of. For we
+have now to deal with words over which you can establish no genuine
+rulership unless you have outside help.
+
+You must own a dictionary, have it by you, consult it carefully and often.
+Do not select one for purchasing upon the basis of either mere bigness or
+cheapness. If you do, you may make yourself the owner of an out-of-date
+reprint from stereotyped plates. What to choose depends partly upon
+personal preference, partly upon whether your need is for
+comprehensiveness or compression.
+
+If you are a scholar, _Murray's_ many-volumed _New English
+Dictionary_ may be the publication for you; but if you are an ordinary
+person, you will probably content yourself with something less expensive
+and exhaustive. You will find the _Century Dictionary and
+Cyclopedia_, in twelve volumes, or _Webster's New International
+Dictionary_ an admirable compilation. The _New Standard
+Dictionary_ will also prove useful. All in all, if you can afford it,
+you should provide yourself with one or the other of these three large and
+authoritative, but not too inclusive, works. Of the smaller lexicons
+_Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Webster's Secondary School
+Dictionary_, the _Practical Standard Dictionary_, and the _Desk
+Standard Dictionary_ answer most purposes well.
+
+A dictionary is not for show. You must learn to use it. What ordinarily
+passes for use is in fact abuse. Wherein? Let us say that you turn to your
+lexicon for the meaning of a word. Of the various definitions given, you
+disregard all save the one which enables the word to make sense in its
+present context, or which fits your preconception of what the word should
+stand for. Having engaged in this solemn mummery, you mentally record the
+fact that you have been squandering your time, and enter into a compact
+with yourself that no more will you so do. At best you have tided over a
+transitory need, or have verified a surmise. You have not truly
+_learned_ the word, brought it into a vassal's relationship with you,
+so fixed it in memory that henceforth, night or day, you can take it up
+like a familiar tool.
+
+This procedure is blundering, farcical, futile, incorrect. To suppose you
+have learned a word by so cursory a glance at its resources is like
+supposing you have learned a man through having had him render you some
+temporary and trivial service, as lending you a match or telling you the
+time of day. To acquaint yourself thoroughly with a word--or a man--
+involves effort, application. You must go about the work seriously,
+intelligently.
+
+One secret of consulting a dictionary properly lies in finding the
+primary, the original meaning of the word. You must go to the source. If
+the word is of recent formation, and is native rather than naturalized
+English, you have only to look through the definitions given. Such a word
+will not cause you much trouble. But if the word is derived from primitive
+English or from a foreign language, you must seek its origin, not in one
+of the numbered subheads of the definition, but in an etymological record
+you will perceive within brackets or parentheses. Here you will find the
+Anglo-Saxon (Old English), Latin, Greek, French, German, Italian,
+Scandinavian, or other word from which sprang the word you are studying,
+and along with this authentic original you may find cognate words in other
+languages. These you may examine if you care to observe their resemblance
+to your word, but the examination is not necessary. It could teach you
+only the earlier or other _forms_ of your word, whereas what you are
+after is the original _meaning_. This too is set down within the
+brackets; if your search is in earnest, you cannot possible miss it. And
+having discovered this original meaning, you must get it in mind; it is
+one of the really significant things about the word. Your next step is to
+find the present import of the word. Look, therefore, through the modern
+definitions. Of these there may be too many, with too delicate shadings in
+thought between them, for you to keep all clearly in mind. In fact you
+need not try. Consider them of course, but out of them seek mainly the
+drift, the central meaning. After a little practice you will be able to
+disengage it from the others.
+
+You now know the original sense of the word and its central signification
+today. The two may be identical; they may be widely different; but through
+reflection or study of the entire definition you will establish some sort
+of connection between them. When you have done this, you have mastered the
+word. From the two meanings you can surmise the others, wherever and
+whenever encountered; for the others are but outgrowths and applications
+of them.
+
+One warning will not be amiss. You must not suppose that the terms used in
+defining a word are its absolute synonyms, or may be substituted for it
+indiscriminately. You must develop a feeling for _the limits_ of the
+word, so that you may perceive where its likeness to the other terms
+leaves off and its unlikeness begins. Thus if one of the terms employed in
+defining _command_ is _control_, you must not assume that the
+two words are interchangeable; you must not say, for instance, that the
+captain controlled his men to present arms.
+
+Such, abstractly stated, is the way to look up a word in the dictionary.
+Let us now take a concrete illustration. Starting with the word
+_tension_, let us ascertain what we can about it in the _Century
+Dictionary and Cyclopedia_. Our first quest is the original meaning.
+For this we consult the bracketed matter. There we meet the French,
+Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian kinsmen of the word, and learn that they
+are traceable to a common ancestor, the Latin _tensio(n)_, which
+comes from the Latin verb _tendere_. The meaning of _tensio(n)_
+is given as "stretching," that of _tendere_ as "stretch," "extend."
+Thus we know of the original word that in form it closely resembles the
+modern word, and that in meaning it involves the idea of stretching.
+
+What is the central meaning of the word today? To acquaint ourselves with
+this we must run through the definitions listed. Here (in condensed form)
+they are. (1) The act of stretching. (2) In _mechanics_, stress or
+the force by which something is pulled. (3) In _physics_, a
+constrained condition of the particles of bodies. (4) In _statical
+electricity_, surface-density. (5) Mental strain, stress, or
+application. (6) A strained state of any kind, as political or social. (7)
+An attachment to a sewing-machine for regulating the strain of the thread.
+Now of these definitions (2), (3), (4), and (7) are too highly specialized
+to conduct us, of themselves, into the highway of the word's meaning. They
+bear out, however, the evidence of (1), (5), and (6), which have as their
+core the idea of stretching, or of the strain which stretching produces.
+
+We must now lay the original meaning alongside the central meaning today,
+in order to draw our conclusions. We perceive that the two meanings
+correspond. Yet by prying into them we make out one marked difference
+between them. The original meaning is literal, the modern largely
+figurative. To be sure, the figure has been so long used that it is now
+scarcely felt as a figure; its force and definiteness have departed.
+Consequently we may speak of being on a tension without having in mind at
+all a comparison of our nervous system with a stretched garment, or with
+an outreaching arm, or with a tightly strung musical instrument, or with a
+taut rope.
+
+What, then, is the net result of our investigation? Simply this, that
+_tension_ means stretching, and that the stretching may be conceived
+either literally or figuratively. With these two facts in mind, we need
+not (unless we are experts in mechanics, physics, statical electricity, or
+the sewing-machine) go to the trouble of committing the special senses of
+_tension_; for should occasion bid, we can--from our position at the
+heart of the word--easily grasp their rough purport. And from other
+persons than specialists no more would be required.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Dictionary
+
+For each of the following words find (a) the original meaning, (b) the
+central meaning today. (Other words are given in the exercises at the end
+of this chapter.)
+
+Bias Supersede Sly
+Aversion Capital Meerschaum
+Extravagant Travel Alley
+Concur Travail Fee
+Attention Apprehend Superb
+Magnanimity Lewd Adroit
+Altruism Instigation Quite
+Benevolence Complexion Urchin
+Charity Bishop Thoroughfare
+Unction Starve Naughty
+Speed Cunning Moral
+Success Decent Antic
+Crafty Handsome Savage
+Usury Solemn Uncouth
+Costume Parlor Window
+Presumption Bombastic Colleague
+Petty Vixen Alderman
+Queen Doctor Engage
+
+
+<Prying Into a Word's Past>
+
+To thread with minute fidelity the mazes of a word's former history is the
+task of the linguistic scholar; our province is the practical and the
+present-day. But words, like men, are largely what they are because of
+what they have been; and to turn a gossip's eye upon their past is to
+procure for ourselves, often, not only enlightenment but also
+entertainment. This fact, though brought out in some part already,
+deserves separate and fuller discussion.
+
+In the first place, curiosity as to words' past experience enables us to
+read with keener understanding the literature of preceding ages. Of course
+we should not, even so, go farther back than about three centuries. To
+read anything earlier than Shakespeare would require us to delve too
+deeply into linguistic bygones. And to read Shakespeare himself requires
+effort--but rewards it. Let us see how an insight into words will help us
+to interpret the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4).
+
+In line 2 of this passage appears the word _merely_. In Shakespeare's
+time it frequently meant "altogether" or "that and nothing else." As here
+used, it may be taken to mean this, or to have its modern meaning, or to
+stand in meaning midway between the two and to be suggestive of both;
+there is no way of determining precisely. In line 12 the word _pard_
+means leopard. In line 18 _saws_ means "sayings" (compare the phrase
+"an old saw"); _modern_ means "moderate," "commonplace";
+_instances_ means what we mean by it today, "examples,"
+"illustrations." (Line 18 as a whole gives us a vivid sense of the
+justice's readiness to speak sapiently, after the manner of justices, and
+to trot out his trite illustrations on the slightest provocation.) The
+word _pantaloon_ in line 20 is interesting. The patron saint of
+Venice was St. Pantaleon (the term is from Greek, means "all-lion," and
+possibly refers to the lion of St. Mark's Cathedral). _Pantaloon_
+came therefore to signify (1) a Venetian, (2) a garment worn by Venetians
+and consisting of breeches and stockings in one. The second sense is
+preserved, substantially, in our term _pantaloons_. The first sense
+led to the use of the word (in the mouths of the Venetians' enemies) for
+"buffoon" and then (in early Italian comedy) for "a lean and foolish old
+man." It is this stock figure of the stage that Shakespeare evokes. In
+line 22 _hose_ means the covering for a man's body from his waist to
+his nether-stock. (Compare the present meaning: a covering for the feet
+and the _lower_ part of the legs.) In line 27 _mere_ means
+"absolute." In line 28 _sans_ means "without."
+
+Of the words we have examined, only _sans_ is obsolete, though
+_pard_, _saws_, and _pantaloon_ are perhaps not entirely
+familiar. That is, only one word in the passage, so far as its outward
+form goes, is completely alien to our knowledge. But how different the
+matter stands when we consider meanings! The words are words of today, but
+the meanings are the meanings of Shakespeare. We should be baffled and
+misled as to the dramatist's thought if we had made no inquiries into the
+vehicle therefor.
+
+In the second place, to look beyond the present into the more remote
+signification of words will put us on our guard against the reappearance
+of submerged or half-forgotten meanings. We have seen that the word
+_tension_ may be used without conscious connection with the idea of
+stretching. But if we incautiously place the word in the wrong
+environment, the idea will be resurrected to our undoing. We associate
+_ardor_ with strong and eager desire. For ordinary purposes this
+conception of the word suffices. But _ardor_ is one of the children
+of fire; its primary sense is "burning" (compare _arson_). Therefore
+to pronounce the three vocables "overflowing with ardor" is to mix figures
+of speech absurdly. We should fall into a similar mistake if we said
+"brilliant fluency," and into a mistake of another kind (that of tautology
+or repetition of an idea) if we said "heart-felt cordiality," for
+_cordiality_ means "feelings of the heart." _Appreciate_ means
+"set a (due) value on." We may perhaps say "really appreciate," but
+scrupulous writers and speakers do not say "appreciate very much." A
+_humor_ (compare humid) was once a "moisture"; then one of the four
+moistures or liquids that entered into the human constitution and by the
+proportions of their admixture determined human temperament; next a man's
+outstanding temperamental quality (the thing itself rather than the cause
+of it); then oddity which people may laugh at; then the spirit of laughter
+and good nature in general. Normally we do not connect the idea of
+moisture with the word. We may even speak of "a dry humor." But we should
+not say "now and then a dry humor crops out," for then too many buried
+meanings lie in the same grave for the very dead to rest peacefully
+together.
+
+Even apart from reading old literature and from having, when you use
+words, no ghosts of their pristine selves rise up to damn you, you may
+profit from a knowledge of how the meaning of a term has evolved. For
+example, you will meet many tokens and reminders of the customs and
+beliefs of our ancestors. Thus _coxcomb_ carries you back to the days
+when every court was amused by a "fool" whose head was decked with a
+cock's comb; _crestfallen_ takes you back to cockfighting; and
+_lunatic_ ("moonstruck"), _disaster_ ("evil star"), and "thank
+your lucky stars" plant you in the era of superstition when human fate was
+governed by heavenly bodies.
+
+Further, you will perceive the poetry of words. Thus to _wheedle is_
+to wag the tail and to _patter_ is to hurry through one's prayers
+(paternoster). What a picture of the frailty of men even in their holiness
+flashes on us from that word _patter! Breakfast is_ the breaking of
+the fast of the night. _Routine_ (the most humdrum of words) is
+travel along a way already broken. _Goodby_ is an abridged form of
+"God be with you." _Dilapidated_ is fallen stone from stone.
+_Daisy_ is "the day's eye," _nasturtium_ (from its spicy smell)
+"the nose-twister," _dandelion_ "the tooth of the lion." _A
+lord_ is a bread-guard.
+
+You will perceive, moreover, that many a dignified word once involved the
+same idea as some unassuming or even semi-disreputable word or expression
+involves now. Thus there is little or no difference in figure between
+understanding a thing and getting on to it; between averting something
+(turning it aside) and sidetracking it; between excluding (shutting out)
+and closing the door to; between degrading (putting down a step) and
+taking down a notch; between accumulating (heaping up) and making one's
+pile; between taking umbrage (the shadow) and being thrown in the shade;
+between ejaculating and throwing out a remark; between being on a tension
+and being highstrung; between being vapid and having lost steam; between
+insinuating (winding in) and worming in; between investigating and
+tracking; between instigating (goading on or into) and prodding up;
+between being incensed (compare _incendiary_) and burning with
+indignation; between recanting (unsinging) and singing another tune;
+between ruminating (chewing) and smoking in one's pipe. Nor is there much
+difference in figure between sarcasm (a tearing of the flesh) and taking
+the hide off; between sinister (left-handed) and backhanded; between
+preposterous (rear end foremost) and cart before the horse; between salary
+(salt-money, an allowance for soldiers) and pin-money; between pedigree
+(crane's foot, from the appearance of genealogical diagrams) and crowsfeet
+(about the eyes); between either precocious (early cooked), apricot (early
+cooked), crude (raw), or recrudescence (raw again) and half-baked. To
+ponder is literally to weigh; to apprehend an idea is to take hold of it;
+to deviate is to go out of one's way; to congregate is to flock together;
+to assail or insult a man is to jump on him; to be precipitate is to go
+head foremost; to be recalcitrant is to kick.
+
+Again, you will perceive that many words once had more literal or more
+definitely concrete meanings than they have now. To corrode is to gnaw
+along with others, to differ is to carry apart, to refuse is to pour back.
+Polite is polished, absurd is very deaf, egregious is taken from the
+common herd, capricious is leaping about like a goat, cross (disagreeable)
+is shaped like a cross, wrong is wrung (or twisted). Crisscross is
+Christ's cross, attention is stretching toward, expression is pressed out,
+dexterity is right-handedness, circumstances are things standing around,
+an innuendo is nodding, a parlor is a room to talk in, a nostril is that
+which pierces the nose (thrill means pierce), vinegar is sharp wine, a
+stirrup is a rope to mount by, a pastor is a shepherd, a marshal is a
+caretaker of horses, a constable is a stable attendant, a companion is a
+sharer of one's bread.
+
+On the other hand, you will find that many words were once more general in
+import than they have since become. _Fond_ originally meant foolish,
+then foolishly devoted, then (becoming more general again) devoted.
+_Nostrum_ meant our own, then a medicine not known by other
+physicians, then a quack remedy. _Shamefast_ meant confirmed in
+modesty (shame); then through a confusion of _fast_ with
+_faced_, a betrayal through the countenance of self-consciousness or
+guilt. _Counterfeit_ meant a copy or a picture, then an unlawful
+duplication, especially of a coin. _Lust_ meant pleasure of any sort,
+then inordinate sexual pleasure or desire. _Virtue_ (to trace only a
+few of its varied activities) meant manliness, then the quality or
+attribute peculiar to true manhood (with the Romans this was valor), then
+any admirable quality, then female chastity. _Pen_ meant a feather,
+then a quill to write with, then an instrument for writing used in the
+same way as a quill. A _groom_ meant a man, then a stableman (in
+_bridegroom_, however, it preserves the old signification).
+_Heathen_ (heath-dweller), _pagan_ (peasant), and _demon_
+(a divinity) had in themselves no iniquitous savor until early Christians
+formed their opinion of the people inaccessible to them and the spirits
+incompatible with the unity of the Godhead. Words betokening future
+happenings or involving judgment tend to take a special cast from the
+fears and anxieties men feel when their fortune is affected or their
+destiny controlled by external forces. Thus _omen_ (a prophetic
+utterance or sign) and _portent_ (a stretching forward, a foreseeing,
+a foretelling) might originally be either benign or baleful; but nowadays,
+especially in the adjectival forms _ominous_ and _portentous_,
+they wear a menacing hue. Similarly _criticism_, _censure_, and
+_doom_, all of them signifying at first mere judgment, have come--the
+first in popular, the other two in universal, usage--to stand for adverse
+judgment. The old sense of _doom_ is perpetuated, however, in
+_Doomsday_, which means the day on which we are all to be, not
+necessarily sent to hell, but judged.
+
+You will furthermore perceive that the exaggerated affirmations people are
+always indulging in have led to the weakening of many a word. _Fret_
+meant eat; formerly to say that a man was fretting was to use a vigorous
+comparison--to have the man devoured with care. _Mortify_ meant to
+kill, then killed with embarrassment, then embarrassed. _Qualm_ meant
+death, but our qualms of conscience have degenerated into mere twinges.
+Oaths are shorn of their might by overuse; _confound_, once a
+tremendous malinvocation, may now fall from the lips of respectable young
+ladies, and _fie_, in its time not a whit less dire, would be
+scarcely out of place in even a cloister. Words designating immediacy come
+to have no more strength than soup-meat seven times boiled.
+_Presently_ meant in the present, _soon_ and _by and by_
+meant forthwith. How they have lost their fundamental meaning will be
+intelligible to you if you have in ordering something been told that it
+would be delivered "right away," or in calling for a girl have been told
+that she would be down "in a minute."
+
+You will detect in words of another class a deterioration, not in force,
+but in character; they have fallen into contemptuous or sinister usage.
+Many words for skill or wisdom have been thus debased. _Cunning_
+meant knowing, _artful_ meant well acquainted with one's art,
+_crafty_ meant proficient in one's craft or calling, _wizard_
+meant wise man. The present import of these words shows how men have
+assumed that mental superiority must be yoked with moral dereliction or
+diabolical aid. Words indicating the generality--indicating ordinary rank
+or popular affiliations--have in many instances suffered the same decline.
+_Trivial_ meant three ways; it was what might be heard at the
+crossroads or on any route you chanced to be traveling, and its value was
+accordingly slight. _Lewd_ meant belonging to the laity; it came to
+mean ignorant, and then morally reprehensible. _Common_ may be used
+to signify ill-bred; _vulgar_ may be and frequently is used to
+signify indecent. _Sabotage_, from a French term meaning wooden shoe,
+has come to be applied to the deliberate and systematic scamping of one's
+work in order to injure one's employer. _Idiot_ (common soldier)
+crystallizes the exasperated ill opinion of officers for privates.
+(_Infantry_--an organization of military infants--has on the contrary
+sloughed its reproach and now enshrines the dignity of lowliness.)
+Somewhat akin to words of this type is _knave_, which first meant
+boy, then servant, then rogue. Terms for agricultural classes seldom
+remain flattering. Besides such epithets as _hayseed_ and
+_clodhopper_, contemptuous in their very origin, _villain_ (farm
+servant), _churl_ (farm laborer), and _boor_ (peasant) have all
+gathered unto themselves opprobrium; _villain_ now involves a
+scoundrelly spirit, _churl_ a contumelious manner, _boor_ a
+bumptious ill-breeding; not one of these words is any longer confined in
+its application to a particular social rank. Terms for womankind are soon
+tainted. _Wench_ meant at first nothing worse than girl or daughter,
+_quean_ than woman, _hussy_ than housewife; even _woman_ is
+generally felt to be half-slighting. Terms affirming unacquaintance with
+sin, or abstention from it, tend to be quickly reft of what praise they
+are fraught with; none of us likes to be saluted as _innocent_,
+_guileless_, or _unsophisticated_, and to be dubbed _silly_ no
+longer makes us feel blessed. Besides these and similar classes of words,
+there are innumerable individual terms that have sadly lost caste. An
+_imp_ was erstwhile a scion; it then became a boy, and then a
+mischievous spirit. A _noise_ might once be music; it has ceased to
+enjoy such possibilities. To live near a piano that is constantly banged
+is to know how _noise_ as a synonym for music was outlawed.
+
+A backward glance over the history of words repays you in showing you the
+words for what they are, and in having them live out their lives before
+you. Do you know what an _umpire_ is? He is a non (or num) peer, a
+not equal man, an odd man--one therefore who can decide disputes. Do you
+know what a _nickname_ is? It is an eke (also) name, a title bestowed
+upon one in addition to his proper designation. Do you know what a
+_fellow_, etymologically speaking, is? He is a fee-layer, a partner,
+a man who lays his fee (property) alongside yours. Do you know that
+_matinée_, though awarded to the afternoon, meant primarily a morning
+entertainment and has traveled so far from its original sense that we call
+an actual before-noon performance a morning matinée? Do you know the past
+of such words as _bedlam_, _rival_, _parson_,
+_sandwich_, _pocket handkerchief?_ _Bedlam_, a corruption
+of _Bethlehem_, was a hospital for the insane in London; it came to
+be a general term for great confusion or discord. _Rivals_ were
+formerly dwellers--that is, neighboring dwellers--on the bank of a stream;
+disputes over water-rights gave the word its present meaning. A
+_person_ or _parson_, for the two were the same, was a mask
+(literally, that through which the sound came); then an actor representing
+a character in a play; then a representative of any sort; then the
+representative of the church in a parish. A _sandwich_ was a
+stratification of bread and meat by the Earl of Sandwich, who was so loath
+to leave the gaming table that he saved time by having food brought him in
+this form. A _kerchief_ was originally a cover for the head, and
+indeed sundry amiable, old-fashioned grandmothers still use it for this
+purpose. Afterward people carried it in their hands and called it a
+_handkerchief_; and when they transferred it to the pocket, they
+called it a _pocket handkerchief_ or pocket hand head-cover. A
+scrutiny of such words should convince you that the reading of the
+dictionary, instead of being the dull occupation it is almost proverbially
+reputed to be, may become an occupation truly fascinating. For clustered
+about the words recorded in the dictionary are inexhaustible riches of
+knowledge and of interest for those who have eyes to see.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Past
+
+1. For each of the following words look up (a) the present meaning if you
+do not know it, (b) the original meaning, (c) any other past meanings you
+can find.
+
+Exposition Corn Cattle
+Influence Sanguine Turmoil
+Sinecure Waist Shrew
+Potential Spaniel Crazy
+Character Candidate Indomitable
+Infringe Rascal Amorphous
+Expend Thermometer Charm
+Rather Tall Stepchild
+Wedlock Ghostly Haggard
+Bridal Pioneer Pluck
+Noon Neighbor Jimson weed
+Courteous Wanton Rosemary
+Cynical Street Plausible
+Grocer Husband Allow
+Worship Gipsy Insane
+Encourage Clerk Disease
+Astonish Clergyman Boulevard
+Realize Hectoring Canary
+Bombast Primrose Diamond
+Benedict Walnut Abominate
+Piazza Holiday Barbarous
+Disgust Heavy Kind
+Virtu Nightmare Devil
+Gospel Comfort Whist
+Mermaid Pearl Onion
+Enthusiasm Domino Book
+Fanatic Grotesque Cheat
+Auction Economy Illegible
+Quell Cheap Illegitimate
+Sheriff Excelsior Emasculate
+Danger Dunce Champion
+Shibboleth Calico Adieu
+Essay Pontiff Macadamize
+Wages Copy Stentorian
+Quarantine Puny Saturnine
+Buxom Caper Derrick
+Indifferent Boycott Mercurial
+Gaudy Countenance Poniard
+Majority Camera Chattel.
+
+2. The following words are often used loosely today, some because their
+original meaning is lost sight of, some because they are confused with
+other words. Find for each word (a) what the meaning has been and (b) what
+the correct meaning is now.
+
+Nice Awful Atrocious
+Grand Horrible Pitiful
+Beastly Transpire Claim
+Weird Aggravate Uncanny
+Demean Gorgeous Elegant
+Fine Noisome Mutual (in "a mutual friend")
+Lovely Cute Stunning
+Liable Immense.
+
+3. The following sentences from standard English literature illustrate the
+use of words still extant and even familiar, in senses now largely or
+wholly forgotten. The quotations from the Bible and Shakespeare (all the
+Biblical quotations are from the King James Version) date back a little
+more than three hundred years, those from Milton a little less than three
+hundred years, and those from Gray and Coleridge, respectively, about a
+hundred and seventy-five and a hundred and twenty-five years. Go carefully
+enough into the past meanings of the italicized words to make sure you
+grasp the author's thought.
+
+And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of
+these is _charity_.(1 _Corinthians_ 13:13)
+
+I _prevented_ the dawning of the morning. (_Psalms_ 119:147)
+
+Our eyes _wait_ upon the Lord our God. (_Psalms_ 123:2)
+
+The times of this ignorance God _winked_ at. (_Acts_ 17:30)
+
+And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched me; for I perceive that
+_virtue_ is gone out of me. (_Luke_ 8:46)
+
+To judge the _quick_ and the dead. (1 _Peter_ 4:5)
+
+Be not wise in your own _conceits_. (_Romans_ 12:16)
+
+In maiden meditation, _fancy_-free. (Shakespeare: _A Midsummer
+Night's Dream_)
+
+Is it so _nominated_ in the bond? (Shakespeare: _The Merchant
+of Venice_)
+
+Would I had met my _dearest_ foe in heaven. (Shakespeare:
+_Hamlet_)
+
+The _extravagant_ and _erring_ spirit. (Said of a spirit
+wandering from the bounds of purgatory. Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+The _modesty_ of nature. (Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+It is a nipping and an _eager_ air. (Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+_Security_
+Is mortals' chiefest enemy. (Shakespeare: _Macbeth_)
+
+Most _admired_ disorder. (Shakespeare: _Macbeth_)
+
+Upon this _hint_ I spake. (From the account of the wooing of
+Desdemona. Shakespeare: _Othello_)
+
+This Lodovico is a _proper_ man. A very handsome man.
+(Shakespeare: _Othello_)
+
+Mice and rats and such small _deer_. (Shakespeare: _King Lear_)
+
+This is no sound
+That the earth _owes_. (Shakespeare: _The Tempest_)
+
+Every shepherd _tells_ his _tale_. (Milton: _L'Allegro_)
+Bring the _rathe_ primrose that forsaken dies. (_Rathe_ survives
+only in the comparative form _rather_. Milton: _Lycidas_)
+
+Can honor's voice _provoke_ the silent dust? (Gray: _Elegy_)
+
+The _silly_ buckets on the deck. (Coleridge: _The Ancient
+Mariner_)
+
+4. In technical usage or particular phrases a former sense of a word may
+be embedded like a fossil. The italicized words in the following list
+retain special senses of this kind. What do these words as thus used mean?
+Can you add to the list?
+To _wit_
+Might and _main_
+Time and _tide_
+Christmas_tide_
+_Sad_ bread
+A bank _teller_
+To _tell_ one's _beads_
+Aid and _abet_
+_Meat_ and drink
+Shop_lifter_
+Fishing-_tackle_
+Getting off _scot_-free
+An _earnest_ of future favors
+A _brave_ old hearthstone
+_Confusion_ to the enemy!
+Giving aid and _comfort_ to the enemy
+Without _let_ or hindrance
+A _let_ in tennis
+_Quick_lime
+Cut to _the quick_
+_Neat_-foot oil
+To _sound in_ tort (Legal phrase)
+To bid one God_speed_
+I had as _lief_ as not
+The child _favors_ its parents
+On _pain_ of death
+Widow's _weeds_
+I am _bound_ for the Promised Land
+To _carry_ a girl to a party (Used only in the South)
+To give a person so much _to boot_
+
+5. Each of the subjoined phrases contradicts itself or repeats its idea
+clumsily. The key to the difficulty lies in the italicized words. What is
+their true meaning?
+
+A weekly _journal_
+_Ultimate_ end
+Final _ultimatum_
+_Final_ completion
+Previous _preconceptions_
+_Nauseating_ seasickness
+_Join_ together
+_Descend_ down
+_Prefer_ better
+_Argent_ silver
+Completely _annihilate_
+_Unanimously_ by all
+Most _unique_ of all
+The other _alternative_
+_Endorse_ on the back
+_Incredible_ to believe
+A _criterion_ to go by
+An _appetite_ to eat
+_A panacea_ for all ills
+_Popular_ with the people
+_Biography_ of his life
+_Autobiography_ of his own life
+_Vitally_ alive
+A new, _novel_, and ingenious explanation
+_Mutual_ dislike for each other
+_Omniscient_ knowledge of all subjects
+A _material_ growth in mental power
+_Peculiar_ faults of his own
+Fly into an _ebullient_ passion
+To _saturate_ oneself with gold and silver
+Elected by _acclamation on_ a secret ballot.
+
+
+
+V.
+
+ INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS MEMBERS OF VERBAL FAMILIES
+
+
+Our investigation into the nature, qualities, and fortunes of single words
+must now merge into a study of their family connections. We do not go far
+into this new phase of our researches before we perceive that the career
+of a word may be very complicated. Most people, if you asked them, would
+tell you that an individual word is a causeless entity--a thing that was
+never begotten and lacks power to propagate. They would deny the
+possibility that its course through the world could be other than
+colorless, humdrum. Now words thus immaculately conceived and fatefully
+impotent, words that shamble thus listlessly through life, there are. But
+many words are born in an entirely normal way; have a grubby boyhood, a
+vigorous youth, and a sober maturity; marry, beget sons and daughters,
+become old, enfeebled, even senile; and suffer neglect, if not death. In
+their advanced age they are exempted by the discerning from enterprises
+that call for a lusty agility, but are drafted into service by those to
+whom all levies are alike. Indeed in their very prime of manhood their
+vicissitudes are such as to make them seem human. Some rise in the world
+some sink; some start along the road of grandeur or obliquity, and then
+backslide or reform. Some are social climbers, and mingle in company where
+verbal dress coats are worn; some are social degenerates, and consort with
+the ragamuffins and guttersnipes of language. Some marry at their own
+social level, some above them, some beneath; some go down in childless
+bachelorhood or leave an unkempt and illegitimate progeny. And if you
+trace their own lineage, you will find for some that it is but decent and
+middle-class, for some that it is mongrelized and miscegenetic, for some
+that it is proud, ancient, yea perhaps patriarchal.
+
+It is contrary to nature for a word, as for a man, to live the life of a
+hermit. Through external compulsion or internal characteristics a word has
+contacts with its fellows. And its most intimate, most spontaneous
+associations are normally with its own kindred.
+
+In our work hitherto we have had nothing to say of verbal consanguinity.
+But we have not wholly ignored its existence, for the very good reason
+that we could not. For example, in the latter portions of Chapter IV we
+proceeded on the hypothesis that at least some words have ancestors. Also
+in the analysis of the dictionary definition of _tension_ we learned
+that the word has, not only a Latin forebear, but French, Spanish,
+Portuguese, and Italian kinsmen as well. One thing omitted from that
+analysis would have revealed something further--namely, that the word has
+its English kinfolks too. For the bracketed part of the dictionary
+definition mentions two other English words, _tend_ and _tense_,
+which from their origin involve the same idea as that of _tension_--
+the idea of stretching.
+
+Now words may be akin in either of two ways. They may be related in blood.
+Or they may be related by marriage. Let us consider these two kinds of
+connection more fully.
+
+
+<Words Related in Blood>
+
+As an illustration of blood kinships enjoyed by a native English word take
+the adjective _good_. We can easily call to mind other members of its
+family: goodly, goodish, goody-goody, good-hearted, good-natured, good-
+humored, good-tempered, goods, goodness, goodliness, gospel (good story),
+goodby, goodwill, goodman, goodwife, good-for-nothing, good den (good
+evening), the Good Book. The connection between these words is obvious.
+
+Next consider a group of words that have been naturalized: scribe,
+prescribe, ascribe, proscribe, transcribe, circumscribe, subscriber,
+indescribable, scribble, script, scripture, postscript, conscript,
+rescript, manuscript, nondescript, inscription, superscription,
+description. It is clear that these words are each other's kith and kin in
+blood, and that the strain or stock common to all is _scribe_ or (as
+sometimes modified) _script_. What does this strain signify? The idea
+of writing. The _scribes_ are a writing clan. Some of them, to be
+sure, have strayed somewhat from the ancestral calling, for words are as
+wilful--or as independent--as men. _Ascribe_, for example, does not
+act like a member of the household of writers, whatever it may look like.
+We should have to scrutinize it carefully or consult the record for it in
+that verbal Who's Who, the dictionary, before we could understand how it
+came by its scribal affiliations honestly. But once we begin to reflect or
+to probe, we find we have not mistaken its identity. _Ascribe_ is the
+offspring of _ad_ (to) and _scribo_ (write), both Latin terms.
+It originally meant writing to a person's name or after it (that is,
+imputing to the person by means of written words) some quality or
+happening of which he was regarded as the embodiment, source, or cause.
+Nowadays we may saddle the matter on him through oral rather than written
+speech. That is, _ascribe_ has largely lost the writing traits. But
+all the same it is manifestly of the writing blood.
+
+The _scribes_ are of undivided racial stock, Latin. Consider now the
+_manu_, or _man_, words which sprang from the Latin
+_manus_, meaning "hand." Here are some of them: manual, manoeuver,
+mandate, manacle, manicure, manciple, emancipate, manage, manner,
+manipulate, manufacture, manumission, manuscript, amanuensis. These too
+are children of the same father; they are brothers and sisters to each
+other. But what shall we say of legerdemain (light, or sleight, of hand),
+maintain, coup de main, and the like? They bear a resemblance to the
+_man's_ and _manu's_, yet one that casual observers would not
+notice. Is there kinship between the two sets of words? There is. But not
+the full fraternal or sororal relation. The _mains_ are children of
+_manus_ by a French marriage he contracted. With this French blood in
+their veins, they are only half-brothers, half-sisters of the
+_manu's_ and the _man's_.
+
+Your examination of the family trees of words will be practical, rather
+than highly scholastic, in nature. You need not track every word in the
+dictionary to the den of its remote parentage. Nor need you bother your
+head with the name of the distant ancestor. But in the case of the large
+number of words that have a numerous kindred you should learn to detect
+the inherited strain. You will then know that the word is the brother or
+cousin of certain other words of your acquaintance, and this knowledge
+will apprise you of qualities in it with which you should reckon. To this
+extent only must you make yourself a student of verbal genealogy.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Blood
+
+(Simple exercises in tracing blood relationships among words are given at
+the end of the chapter. Therefore the exercises assigned here are of a
+special character.)
+
+1. Each of the following groups is made up of related words, but the
+relationship is somewhat disguised. Consult the dictionary for each word,
+and learn all you can as to (a) its source, (b) the influence (as passing
+through an intermediate language) that gave it its present form, (c) the
+course of its development into its present meaning.
+
+Captain Cathedral Governor
+Capital Chaise Gubernatorial
+Decapitate Chair
+Chef Shay Guardian
+Chieftain Ward
+ Camp
+Cavalry Campaign Guarantee
+Chivalry Champion Warrant
+
+Camera Inept Incipient
+Chamber Apt Receive
+
+Serrated Inimical Poor
+Sierra Enemy Pauper
+
+Influence Espionage Work
+Influenza Spy Wrought
+ Playwright
+Isolate
+Insular
+
+2. The variety of sources for modern English is indicated by the following
+list. Do not seek for blood kinsmen of these particular words, but think
+of all the additional words you can that have come into English from
+Indian, Spanish, French, any other language spoken today.
+
+Alphabet (Greek) Piano (Italian)
+Folio (Latin) Car (Norman)
+Boudoir (French) Rush (German)
+Binnacle (Portuguese) Sky (Icelandic)
+Anger (Old Norse) Yacht (Dutch)
+Isinglass (Low German) Hussar (Hungarian)
+Slogan (Celtic) Samovar (Russian)
+Polka (Polish) Chess (Persian)
+Shekel (Hebrew) Tea (Chinese)
+Algebra (Arabic) Kimono (Japanese)
+Puttee (Hindoo) Tattoo (Tahitian)
+Boomerang (Australian) Voodoo (African)
+Potato (Haytian) Skunk (American Indian)
+Guano (Peruvian) Buncombe (American)
+Renegade (Spanish)
+
+
+<Words Related by Marriage>
+
+That words marry and are given in marriage, is too generally overlooked.
+Any student of a foreign language, German for instance, can recall the
+thrill of discovery and the lift of reawakened hope that came to him when
+first he suspected, aye perceived, the existence of verbal matrimony. For
+weeks he had struggled with words that apparently were made up of
+fortuitous collocations of letters. Then in some beatific moment these
+huddles of letters took meaning; in instance after instance they
+represented, not a word, but words--a linguistic household. Let them be
+what they might--a harem, the domestic establishment of a Mormon, the
+dwelling-place of verbal polygamists,--he could at last see order in their
+relationships. To their morals he was indifferent, absorbed as he was in
+his joy of understanding.
+
+In English likewise are thousands of these verbal marriages. We may not be
+aware of them; from our very familiarity with words we may overlook the
+fact that in instances uncounted their oneness has been welded by a
+linguistic minister or justice of the peace. But to read a single page or
+harken for thirty seconds to oral discourse with our minds intent on such
+states of wedlock is to convince ourselves that they abound. Consider this
+list of everyday words: somebody, already, disease, vineyard, unskilled,
+outlet, nevertheless, holiday, insane, resell, schoolboy, helpmate,
+uphold, withstand, rainfall, deadlock, typewrite, football, motorman,
+thoroughfare, snowflake, buttercup, landlord, overturn. Every term except
+one yokes a verbal husband with his wife, and the one exception
+(_nevertheless_) joins a uxorious man with two wives.
+
+These marriages are of a simple kind. But the nuptial interlinkings
+between families of words may be many and complicated. Thus there is a
+family of _graph_ (or write) words: graphic, lithograph, cerograph,
+cinematograph, stylograph, telegraph, multigraph, seismograph, dictograph,
+monograph, holograph, logograph, digraph, autograph, paragraph,
+stenographer, photographer, biographer, lexicographer, bibliography,
+typography, pyrography, orthography, chirography, calligraphy,
+cosmography, geography. There is also a family of _phone_ (or sound)
+words: telephone, dictaphone, megaphone, audiphone, phonology, symphony,
+antiphony, euphonious, cacophonous, phonetic spelling. It chances that
+both families are of Greek extraction. Related to the _graphs_--their
+cousins in fact--are the _grams_: telegram, radiogram, cryptogram,
+anagram, monogram, diagram, logogram, program, epigram, kilogram,
+ungrammatical. Now a representative of the _graphs_ married into the
+_phone_ family, and we have graphophone. A representative of the
+_phones_ married into the _graph_ family, and we have
+phonograph. A representative of the _grams_ married into the
+_phone_ family, and we have gramophone. A representative of the
+_phones_ married into the _gram_ family, and we have phonogram.
+Of such unions children may be born. For example, from the marriage of Mr.
+Phone with Miss Graph were born phonography, phonographer, phonographist
+(a rather frail child), phonographic, phonographical, and
+phonographically.
+
+Intermarriage between the _phones_ and the _graphs_ or
+_grams_ is a wedding of equals. Some families of words, however, are
+of inferior social standing to other families, and may seek but not hope
+to be sought in marriage. Compare the _ex's_ with the _ports_.
+An _ex_, as a preposition, belongs to a prolific family but not one
+of established and unimpeachable dignity. Hence the _ex's_, though
+they marry right and left, lead the other words to the altar and are never
+led thither themselves. Witness exclude, excommunicate, excrescence,
+excursion, exhale, exit, expel, expunge, expense, extirpate, extract; in
+no instance does _ex_ fellow its connubial mate--it invariably
+precedes. The _ports_, on the other hand, are the peers of anybody.
+Some of them choose to remain single: port, porch, portal, portly, porter,
+portage. Here and there one marries into another family: portfolio,
+portmanteau, portable, port arms. More often, however, they are wooed than
+themselves do the pleading: comport, purport, report, disport, transport,
+passport, deportment, importance, opportunity, importunate, inopportune,
+insupportable. From our knowledge of the two families, therefore, we
+should surmise that if any marriage is to take place between them; an
+_ex_ must be the suitor. The surmise would be sound. There is such a
+term as _export_, but not as _portex_.
+
+Now it is oftentimes possible to do business with a man without knowing
+whether he is a man or a bridal couple. And so with a word. But the
+knowledge of his domestic state and circumstances will not come amiss, and
+it may prove invaluable. You may find that you can handle him to best
+advantage through a sagacious use of the influence of his wife.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Marriage
+
+1. For each word in the lists of EXERCISE - Dictionary and Activity 1 for
+EXERCISE - Past, determine (a) whether it is single or married; (b) if it
+is married, whether the wedding is one between equals.
+
+2. Make a list of the married words in the first three paragraphs of the
+selection from Burke (Appendix 2). For each of these words determine the
+exact nature and extent of the dowry brought by each of the contracting
+parties to the wedding.
+
+
+<Prying Into a Word's Relationships>
+
+Hitherto in our study of verbal relationships we have usually started with
+the family. Having strayed (as by good luck) into an assembly of kinsmen,
+we have observed the common strain and the general characteristics, and
+have then "placed" the individual with reference to these. But we do not
+normally meet words, any more than we meet men, in the domestic circle. We
+meet them and greet them hastily as they hurry through the tasks of the
+day, with no other associates about them than such as chance or momentary
+need may dictate. If we are to see anything of their family life, it must
+be through effort we ourselves put forth. We must be inquisitive about
+their conjugal and blood relationships.
+
+How, then, starting with the individual word, can you come into a
+knowledge of it, not in its public capacity, but in what is even more
+important, its personal connections? You must form the habit of asking two
+questions about it: (1) Is it married? (2) Of what family or families was
+it born? If you can get an understanding answer to these two questions, an
+answer that will tell you what its relations stand for as well as what
+their name is, your inquiries will be anything but bootless.
+
+Let us illustrate your procedure concretely. Suppose you read or hear the
+word _conchology_. It is a somewhat unusual word, but see what you
+can do with it yourself before calling on the dictionary to help you.
+Observe the word closely, and you will obtain the answer to your first
+question. _Conchology_ is no bachelor, no verbal old maid; it is a
+married pair.
+
+Your second and more difficult task awaits you; you must ascertain the
+meaning of the family connections. With Mr. Conch you are on speaking
+terms; you know him as one of the shells. But the utmost you can recall
+about his wife is that she is one of a whole flock of _ologies_. What
+significance does this relationship possess? You are uncertain. But do not
+thumb the dictionary yet. Pass in mental review all the _ologies_ you
+can assemble. Wait also for the others that through the unconscious
+operations of memory will tardily straggle in. Be on the lookout for
+_ologies_ as you read, as you listen. In time you will muster a
+sizable company of them. And you will draw a conclusion as to the meaning
+of the blood that flows through their veins. _Ology_ implies speech
+or study. _Conchology_, then, must be the study of conches.
+
+Your investigations thus far have done more than teach you the meaning of
+the word you began with. They have brought you some of the by-products of
+the study of verbal kinships. For you no longer pass the _ologies_ by
+with face averted or bow timidly ventured. You have become so well
+acquainted with them that even a new one, wherever encountered, would
+flash upon you the face of a friend. But now your desires are whetted. You
+wish to find out how much you _can_ learn. You at last consult the
+dictionary.
+
+Here a huge obstacle confronts you. The _ologies_, like the
+_ports_ (above), are a haughty clan; they are the wooed, rather
+than the wooing, members of most marital households that contain them. Now
+the marriage licenses recorded in the dictionary are entered under the
+name of the suitor, not of the person sought. Hence you labor under a
+severe handicap as you take the census of the _ologies_. Let us
+imagine the handicap the most severe possible. Let us suppose that no
+_ology_ had ever been the suitor. Even so, you would not be entirely
+baffled. For you could look up in the dictionary the _ologies_ you
+your self had been able to recall. To what profit? First, you could verify
+or correct your surmise as to what the _ological_ blood betokens.
+Secondly, you could perhaps obtain cross-references to yet other
+_ologies_ than those you remembered.
+
+But you are not reduced to these extremities. The _ologies_, arrogant
+as they are, sometimes are the applicants for matrimony, and the marriage
+registry of the dictionary so indicates. To be sure, they do not, when
+thus appearing at the beginning of words, take the form _ology_. They
+take the form _log_. But you must be resourceful enough to keep after
+your quarry in spite of the omission of a vowel or two. Also from some
+lexicons you may obtain still further help. You may find _ology, logy,
+logo_, or _log_ listed as a combining form, its meaning given, and
+examples of its use in compounds cited.
+
+By your zeal and persistence you have now brought together a goodly array
+of the _ologies_--all or most, let us say, of the following:
+conchology, biology, morphology, phrenology, physiology, osteology,
+histology, zoology, entomology, bacteriology, ornithology, pathology,
+psychology, cosmology, eschatology, demonology, mythology, theology,
+astrology, archeology, geology, meteorology, mineralogy, chronology,
+genealogy, ethnology, anthropology, criminology, technology, doxology,
+anthology, trilogy, philology, etymology, terminology, neologism,
+phraseology, tautology, analogy, eulogy, apology, apologue, eclogue,
+monologue, dialogue, prologue, epilogue, decalogue, catalogue, travelogue,
+logogram, logograph, logo-type, logarithms, logic, illogical. (Moreover
+you may have perceived in some of these words the kinship which exists in
+all for the _loquy_ group--see (1) Soliloquy below.) Of course you
+will discard some items from this list as being too learned for your
+purposes. But you will observe of the others that once you know the
+meaning of _ology_, you are likely to know the whole word. Thus from
+your study of _conchology_ you have mastered, not an individual term,
+but a tribe.
+
+In _conchology_ only one element, _ology_, was really dubious at
+the outset. Let us take a word of which both elements give you pause.
+Suppose your thought is arrested by the word _eugenics_. You perhaps
+know the word as a whole, but not its components. For by looking at it and
+thinking about it you decide that its state is married, that it comprises
+the household of Mr. Eu and his wife, formerly Miss Gen. But you cannot
+say offhand just what kind of person either Mr. Eu or the erstwhile Miss
+Gen is likely to prove.
+
+Have you met any of the _Eu's_ elsewhere? You think vaguely that you
+have, but cannot lay claim to any real acquaintance. To the dictionary you
+accordingly betake yourself. There you find that Mr. Eu is of a family
+quite respectable but not prone to marriage. _Euphony, eupepsia,
+euphemism, euthanasia_ are of his retiring kindred. The meaning of the
+_eu_ blood, so the dictionary informs you, is well. The _gen_
+blood, as you see exemplified in gentle, general, genital, engender,
+carries with it the idea of begetting, of producing, of birth, or (by
+extension) of kinship. _Eugenics_, then, is an alliance of well and
+begotten (or born).
+
+Your immediate purpose is fulfilled; but you resolve, let us say, to make
+the acquaintance of more of the _gens_, whose number you have
+perceived to be legion. You are duly introduced to the following: genus,
+generic, genre, gender, genitive, genius, general, Gentile, gentle,
+gentry, gentleman, genteel, generous, genuine, genial, congeniality,
+congener, genital, congenital, engender, generation, progeny, progenitor,
+genesis, genetics, eugenics, pathogenesis, biogenesis, ethnogeny,
+palingenesis, unregenerate, degenerate, monogeny, indigenous, exogenous,
+homogeneous, heterogeneous, genealogy, ingenuous, ingenious, ingenue,
+engine, engineer, hygiene, hydrogen, oxygen, endogen, primogeniture,
+philoprogeniture, miscegenation. Some of these are professional rather
+than social; you decide not to leave your card at their doors. Others have
+assumed a significance somewhat un_gen_-like, though the relationship
+may be traced if you are not averse to trouble, Thus _engine_ in its
+superficial aspects seems alien to the idea of born. But it is the child
+of _ingenious_ (innate, inborn); _ingenious_ is the inborn power
+to accomplish, and _engine_ is the result of the application of that
+power. Whether you care to bother with such subtleties or not, enough
+_gens_ are left to make the family one well worth your cultivation.
+
+Thus by studying two words, _conchology_ and _eugenics_, you
+have for the first time placed yourself on an intimate footing with three
+verbal families--the _ologies_, the _eu's,_ and the _gens_.
+Observe that though you studied the _ologies_ apart from the
+_eu's_ and the _gens_, your knowledge--once you have acquired
+it--cannot be kept pigeonholed, for the _ologies_ have intermarried
+with both the other families. Hence you on meeting _eulogy_ can
+exclaim: "How do you do, Mr. Eu? I am honored in making your acquaintance,
+Mrs. Eu--I was about to call you by your maiden name; for I am a friend of
+your sister, the Miss Ology who married Mr. Conch. And you too, Mr. Eu--I
+cannot regard you as a stranger. I have looked in so often on the family
+of your brother--the Euphony family, I mean. What a beautiful literary
+household it is! Yet it has been neglected by the world-yea, even by the
+people who write. Well, the loss is theirs who do the neglecting." And
+_genealogy_ you can greet with an equal parade of family lore: "Don't
+trouble to tell me who you are. I am hob and nob with your folks on both
+sides of the family, and my word for it, the relationship is written all
+over you. Mr. Gen, I envy you the pride you must feel in the prominence
+given nowadays to the _eugenics_ household. And it must delight you,
+Miss Ology-that-was, that connoisseurs are so keenly interested in
+_conchology_. How are Grandfather Gen and Grandmother Ology? They
+were keeping up remarkably the last time I saw them." Do you think words
+will not respond to cordiality like this? They will work their flattered
+heads off for you!
+
+
+EXERCISE - Relationships
+
+1. For each of the following words (a) determine what families are
+intermarried, (b) ascertain the exact contribution to the household by
+each family represented, and (c) make as complete a list as possible of
+cognate words.
+
+Reject Oppose Convent Defer Omit Produce Expel
+
+2. Test the extent of the intermarriages among these words by successively
+attaching each of the prefixes to each of the main (or key) syllables.
+(Thus re-ject, re-fer, re-pel, etc.)
+
+
+<Two Admonitions>
+
+In tracing verbal kinships you must be prepared for slight variations in
+the form of the same key-syllable. Consider these words: wise, wiseacre,
+wisdom, wizard, witch, wit, unwitting, to wit, outwit, twit, witticism,
+witness, evidence, providence, invidious, advice, vision, visit, vista,
+visage, visualize, envisage, invisible, vis-à-vis, visor, revise,
+supervise, improvise, proviso, provision, view, review, survey, vie, envy,
+clairvoyance. Perhaps the last six should be disregarded as too
+exceptional in form to be clearly recognized. And certainly some words, as
+_prudence_ from _providentia_, are so metamorphosed that they
+should be excluded from practical lists of this kind. But even in the
+words left to us there are fairly marked divergences in appearance. Why?
+Because the key-syllable has descended to us, not through one language,
+but through several. As good verbal detectives we should be able to
+penetrate the consequent disguises; for _wis, wiz, wit, vid, vic_,
+and _vis_ all embody the idea of seeing or knowing.
+
+On the other hand, you must take care not to be misled by a superficial
+resemblance into thinking two unrelated key-syllables identical. Let us
+consider two sets of words. The first, which is related to the _tain_
+group (see <Tain> below), has a key-syllable that means holding:
+tenant, tenement, tenure, tenet, tenor, tenable, tenacious, contents,
+contentment, lieutenant, maintenance, sustenance, countenance,
+appurtenance, detention, retentive, pertinacity, pertinent, continent,
+abstinence, continuous, retinue. The second has a key-syllable that means
+stretching: tend, tender, tendon, tendril, tendency, extend, subtend,
+distend, pretend, contend, attendant, tense, tension, pretence, intense,
+intensive, ostensible, tent, tenterhook, portent, attention, intention,
+tenuous, attenuate, extenuate, antenna, tone, tonic, standard. The form of
+the key-syllable for the first set of words is usually _ten, tent_,
+or _tin_; that for the second _tend, tens, tent_, or _ten_.
+You may therefore easily confuse the two groups until you have learned to
+look past appearances into meanings. Thenceforth the holdings and the
+stretchings will be distinct in your mind--will constitute two great
+families, not one. Of course individual words may still puzzle you. You
+will not perceive that _tender_, for example, belongs with the
+stretchings until you go back to its primary idea of something stretched
+thin, or that _tone_ has membership in that family until you connect
+it with the sound which a stretched chord emits.
+
+
+FIRST GENERAL EXERCISE FOR THE CHAPTER
+
+Each of the key-syllables given below is followed by (1) a list of fairly
+familiar words that embody it, (2) a list of less familiar words that
+embody it, (3) several sentences containing blank spaces, into each of
+which you are ultimately to fit the appropriate word from the first list.
+(The existence of the two lists will show you that learned words may have
+commonplace kinfolks.)
+
+First, however, you are to study each word in both lists for (1) its exact
+meaning, (2) the influence of the key-syllable upon that meaning, (3) any
+variation of the key-syllable from its ordinary form. (A few words have
+been introduced to show how varied the forms may be and yet remain
+recognizable.)
+
+Also, as an aid to your memory, you are to copy each list, underscoring
+the key-syllable each time you encounter it.
+
+(The lists are practical, not meticulously academic. In many instances
+they contain words derived, not from a single original, but from cognates.
+No list is exhaustive.)
+
+
+<Ag, act, ig> (carry on, do, drive): (1) agent, agitate, agile, act,
+actor, actuate, exact, enact, reaction, counteract, transact, mitigate,
+navigate, prodigal, assay, essay; (2) agenda, pedagogue, synagogue,
+actuary, redact, castigate, litigation, exigency, ambiguous, variegated,
+cogent, cogitate.
+
+_Sentences_ (inflect forms if necessary; for example, use the past
+tense, participle, or infinitive of a verb instead of its present tense):
+It was ____ into law. The legislators had been ____ by honest motives, but
+the popular ____ was immediate. The ____ of the mining company refused to
+let us proceed with the ____. Nothing could ____ the offense. The father
+was ____, the son ____. The student handed in his ____ at the ____ time
+designated. Though ____ enough on land, he could not ____ a ship.
+The ____ by missing his cue so ____ the manager that his good work
+thereafter could not ____ the ill impression.
+
+
+<Burn, brun, brand> (burn): (1 and 2 combined) burn, burnish,
+brunette, brunt, bruin, brand, brandish, brandy, brown.
+
+_Sentences_: He plucked a ____ from the ____. The ____ hair of
+the ____ was so glossy it seemed ____. He ____ his sword and bore
+the ____ of the conflict. After drinking so much ____ he saw snakes in his
+imagination, he staggered off into the woods and met Old ____ in reality.
+
+
+<Cad, cas, cid> (fall): (1) cadence, decadent, case, casual,
+casualty, occasion, accident, incident, mischance, cheat; (2) casuistry,
+coincide, occidental, deciduous.
+
+_Sentences_: The period was a ____ one. He gave but ____ attention
+to the ____ of the music. On this ____ an ____ befell him. To the general
+it was a mere ____ that his ____ were heavy. As a result of this ____ he
+was accused of trying to ____ them.
+
+
+<Cede, ceed, cess> (go): (1) cede, recede, secede, concede,
+intercede, procedure, precedent, succeed, exceed, success, recess,
+concession, procession, intercession, abscess, ancestor, cease, decease;
+(2) antecedent, precedence, cessation, accessory, predecessor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the existence of a ____ that justified
+such ____. The delegate ____ his authority when he consented to ____ the
+territory. He would not ____ from his position or ____ for mercy.
+At ____ the pupils ____ in forming a ____. His ____ was suffering from
+an ____ at the time the Southern states ____. His agony ____ only with
+his ____.
+
+
+<Ceive, ceit, cept, cip, cap(t)> (take): (1) receive, deceive,
+perceive, deceit, conceit, receipt, reception, perception, inception,
+conception, interception, accept, except, precept, municipal, participate,
+anticipate, capable, capture, captivate, case (chest, covering), casement,
+incase, cash, cashier, chase, catch, prince, forceps, occupy;
+(2) receptacle, recipient, incipient, precipitate, accipiter, capacious,
+incapacitate.
+
+_Sentences_: Though she ____ the officers, she did not prevent
+the ____ of the fugitive. He ____ that the man was very ____. The mayor
+skilfully ____ the alderman and proposed that ____ bonds be issued. The
+sight of the money ____ him and he quickly gave me a ____. He uttered
+musty ____, which were not always given a friendly ____. From the ____ of
+the movement he plotted to ____ the leadership in it. The ____ took part
+in the ____, but failed to ____ any of the game.
+
+
+<Cide, cis(e)> (cut, kill): (1) decide, suicide, homicide, concise,
+precise, decisive, incision, scissors, chisel, cement; (2) patricide,
+fratricide, infanticide, regicide, germicide, excision, circumcision,
+incisors, cesura.
+
+_Sentences_: He could not ____ whether to make the ____ with
+a ____ or a pair of ____. There was ____ evidence that he was the ____.
+In a few ____ sentences he explained why his friend could never have been
+a ____. The prim old lady had very ____ manners of speech.
+
+
+<Cur, course> (run): (1) current, currency, incur, concur,
+occurrence, cursory, excursion, course, discourse, intercourse, recourse;
+(2) curriculum, precursor, discursive, recurrent, concourse, courier,
+succor, corridor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ in the request that payment be made in ____.
+The ____ was so strong that the ____ by steamer had to be abandoned. In
+the ____ of his remarks he had ____ to various shifts and evasions. By his
+____ with one faction, though it was but ____, he ____ the enmity of the
+other. It was a disgraceful ____.
+
+
+<Dic, dict> (speak, say): (1) dedicate, vindicate, indication,
+predicament, predict, addict, verdict, indict, dictionary, dictation,
+jurisdiction, vindictive, contradiction, benediction, ditto, condition;
+(2) abdicate, adjudicate, juridical, diction, dictum, dictator,
+dictaphone, dictograph, edict, interdict, valedictory, malediction, ditty,
+indite, ipse dixit, on dit.
+
+_Sentences_: The man ____ to drugs was ____ for ____ treatment of his
+wife, and the ____ were that the ____ would be against him. He said, on
+the contrary, that his character would be ____. The attorney for the
+defense ____ that the judge would rule that the matter did not lie within
+his ____. This would leave the prosecution in a ____. But the prosecution
+issued a strong ____ of this theory, and said ____ were favorable for
+proving the man guilty.
+
+
+<Duce, duct> (lead): (1) induce, reduce, traduce, seduce, introduce,
+reproduce, education, deduct, product, production, reduction, conduct,
+conductor, abduct, subdue; (2) educe, adduce, superinduce, conducive,
+ducat, duct, ductile, induction, aqueduct, viaduct, conduit, duke, duchy.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ the company to ____ the fare. They ____ ten
+cents from the wages of each man, an average ____ of four per cent.
+They ____ us when they say we have wilfully lessened ____. The highwaymen
+____ the ____. If you have an ____, you can ____ an idea in other words.
+
+
+<Error> (wander): (1) error, erroneous, erratic, errand;
+(2) errata, knight errant, arrant knave, aberration.
+
+_Sentences_: That ____ fellow came on a special ____ to tell us we
+had made an ____. And his statement was ____ at that!
+
+
+<Fact, fic(e), fy, fect, feat, feit> (make, do): (1) fact, factory,
+faction, manufacture, satisfaction, suffice, sacrifice, office, difficult,
+pacific, terrific, significant, fortification, magnificent, artificial,
+beneficial, verify, simplify, stupefy, certify, dignify, glorify, falsify,
+beautify, justify, infect, perfect, effect, affection, defective, feat,
+defeat, feature, feasible, forfeit, surfeit, counterfeit, affair, fashion;
+(2) factor, factotum, malefaction, benefaction, putrefaction, facile,
+facsimile, faculty, certificate, edifice, efficacy, prolific, deficient,
+proficient, artifice, artificer, beneficiary, versification, unification,
+exemplification, deify, petrify, rectify, amplify, fructify, liquefy,
+disaffect, refection, comfit, pontiff, ipso facto, de facto, ex post
+facto, au fait, fait accompli.
+
+_Sentences_: The opposing ____ by incredible ____ had found
+it ____ to take over the ____ of the goods. By this ____ it ____ what
+goodwill the owner of the ____ had for it, but it won the ____ of the
+public. The owner, though seemingly ____ at first, soon ____ a scheme to
+make the success of the enterprise more ____. By an ____ lowering of the
+price of his own goods and by ____ that those of his rivals were ____,
+he hoped to ____ the public mind with unjust suspicions. But all this did
+not ____. In truth the ____ of it was the hastening of his own ____ and a
+____ heightening of the public ____ toward his rivals. His directors,
+seeing that his policy had failed to ____ itself, met in his ____ and
+urged him to take a more ____ attitude.
+
+
+<Fer> (bear, carry): (1) transfer, prefer, proffer, suffer, confer,
+offer, referee, deference, inference, indifferent, ferry, fertile; (2)
+referendum, Lucifer, circumference, vociferate, auriferous, coniferous,
+pestiferous.
+
+_Sentences_: With real ____ to their wishes he ____ to ____ the
+goods by ____. The ____ of the sporting writers was that the ____
+was ____ to his duties. After ____ apart, the farmers ____ the use of
+their most ____ acres for this experiment. To be mortal is to ____.
+
+
+<Fide> (trust, believe, have faith): (1) fidelity, confide,
+confident, diffident, infidel, perfidious, bona fide, defiance, affiance;
+(2) fiduciary, affidavit, fiancé, auto da fé, Santa Fé.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ that the man was an ____. He had ____ in
+a ____ rascal. He had been ____ for years and had proved his ____. Though
+we are somewhat ____ in making it, you may be sure it is a ____ offer. His
+attitude toward his father is one of gross ____.
+
+
+<Grade, gress> (walk, go): (1) grade, gradual, graduate, degrade,
+digress, Congress, aggressive, progressive, degree; (2) gradation,
+Centigrade, ingress, egress, transgression, retrogression, ingredient.
+
+_Sentences_: His failure to ____ from college made him feel ____
+especially as his cronies all received their ____. The engine lost
+speed ____ as it climbed the long ____. I ____ to remark that some members
+of ____ are more ____ than ____.
+
+
+<Hab, hib> (have, hold): (1) habit, habitation, inhabitant, exhibit,
+prohibition, ability, debit, debt; (2) habituate, habiliment, habeas
+corpus, cohabit, dishabille, inhibit.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the island ____ an ____ to live without
+permanent ____. It was his ____ to glance first at the ____ side of his
+ledger, as he was much worried about his ____. Most women favor ____.
+
+
+<Hale, heal, hol, whole> (sound): (1) hale, hallow, Hallowe'en, heal,
+health, unhealthy, healthful, holy, holiday, hollyhock, whole, wholesome;
+(2) halibut, halidom.
+
+_Sentences_: Though he lived in a ____ climate, he was ____. The food
+was ____, the man ____ and hearty. He did not think of a ____ as ____. We
+had ____ in our garden almost until ____. He wept at hearing the ____ name
+of his mother. For a ____ month the wound refused to ____.
+
+
+<It> (go): (1) exit, transit, transition, initial, initiative,
+ambition, circuit, perishable; (2) itinerant, transitory, obituary,
+sedition, circumambient.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was broken. It was his ____ shipment of ____
+goods, and they suffered a good deal in ____. His ____ was to be regarded
+as a man of great ____. His ____ was less effective than his entrance.
+
+
+<Ject> (throw): (1) eject, reject, subject, project, objection,
+injection, dejected, conjecture, jet, jetty; (2) abject, traject,
+adjective, projectile, interjection, ejaculate, jetsam, jettison.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ mien he watched the waves lash the ____.
+His scheme was ____ to much ridicule and then ____, and he himself
+was ____ from the room. From a pipe that ____ from the corner of the
+building came a ____ of dirty water. He could only ____ what their ____
+was. The ____ brought immediate relief.
+
+
+<Jud, jur, just> (law, right): (1) judge, judicious, judicial,
+prejudice, jurist, jurisdiction, just, justice, justify; (2) judicature,
+adjudicate, juridical, jurisprudence, justiciary, de jure.
+
+_Sentences_: The eminent ____ said the matter did not lie within
+his ____. Though ____ in most matters, he admitted to ____ in this.
+The ____ said he would comment in an unofficial rather than a ____ way.
+She could not ____ her suspicions. He was not only ____ himself, but
+devoted to ____.
+
+
+<Junct> (join): (1) junction, juncture, injunction, disjunctive,
+conjugal, adjust; (2) adjunct, conjunction, subjunctive, conjugate.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ force had entered their ____ relationships.
+At this ____ he gave the ____ that disturbances should cease. The tramp
+halted at the ____ to eat his lunch and ____ his knapsack.
+
+
+<Jure> (swear): (1 and 2 combined) juror, jury, abjure, adjure,
+conjurer, perjury.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ their loyalty. He ____ them to remember their
+duty as ____. The ____ held the ____ guilty of ____.
+
+
+<Leg, lig, lect> (read, choose, pick up): (1) elegant, illegible,
+college, negligent, diligent, eligible, elect, select, intellect,
+recollect, neglect, lecturer, collection, coil, cull; (2) legend, legion,
+legacy, legate, delegate, sacrilegious, dialect, lectern, colleague,
+lexicon.
+
+_Sentences_: In ____ he listened to the ____ and took an occasional
+note in an ____ hand. She ____ an ____ costume. They ____ the only man
+who was ____. He did not ____ to take up the ____. He was ____ rather
+than ____. Her mind was too ____ to ____ all the circumstances.
+
+
+<Lig> (bind): (1 and 2 combined) ligament, ligature, obligation,
+ally, alliance, allegiance, league, lien, liable, liaison, alloy.
+
+_Sentences_: It was a pleasure that knew no ____. To belong to
+the ____ carries ____. In studying anatomy you learn all about ____ and
+____. The two nations were in ____. We may be sure of their ____. We will
+take a ____ upon your property. As a ____ officer he was ____ for the
+equipment which our ____ reported lost.
+
+
+<Luc, lum, lus> (light): (1) lucid, translucent, luminous,
+illuminate, luminary, luster, illustrate, illustrious; (2) lucent,
+Lucifer, lucubration, elucidate, pellucid, relume, limn.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ author spoke very ____. He gave us a ____
+explanation of a very abstruse subject. The material was ____ even to the
+rays of the feeblest of the heavenly ____. He ____ his theory by the
+following anecdote. This deed added ____ to his fame.
+
+
+<Mand> (order): (1 and 2 combined) mandate, mandamus, mandatory,
+demand, remand, countermand, commandment.
+
+_Sentences_: The superior court issued a writ of ____. The case
+was ____ to the lower court. His instructions were not discretionary,
+but ____. At your ____ the ____ has been issued. The ____ promptly
+____ the orders of the offending officer.
+
+
+<Mit, mis, mise> (send): (1) permit, submit, commit, remit, transmit,
+mission, missile, missionary, remiss, omission, commission, admission,
+dismissal, promise, surmise, compromise, mass, message; (2) emit,
+intermittent, missive, commissary, emissary, manumission, inadmissible,
+premise, demise.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ could only ____ why so many of his people had
+not attended ____. The ____ contained a ____ that no one would be held
+____. The request was ____ that he would please ____. He ____ to his ____
+without a protest. A ____ was appointed to investigate whether the
+territory should be granted ____ as a state. His ____ was such as to ____
+him to tarry if he chose.
+
+
+<Move, mote, mob> (move): (1) move, movement, removal, remote,
+promote, promotion, motion, motive, emotion, commotion, motor, locomotive,
+mob, mobilize, automobile, moment; (2) immovable, motivate, locomotor
+ataxia, mobility, immobile, momentum.
+
+_Sentences_: The next ____ was his, and his ____ was profound.
+The ____ of the ____ from across the alley enabled the ____ to surge in a
+threatening ____ toward the rear of the building. At this ____ the ____
+was great. The officer whose ____ had seemed so ____ was now enabled
+to ____ strong forces for the campaign. The ____ began a slow ____
+forward. His exact ____ was not known.
+
+
+<Pass, path> (suffer): (1) passion, passive, impassive, impassioned,
+compassion, pathos, pathetic, impatient, apathy, sympathy, antipathy; (2)
+passible, impassible, dispassionate, pathology, telepathy, hydropathy,
+homeopathy, allopathy, osteopathy, neuropathic, pathogenesis.
+
+_Sentences_: With an ____ countenance he spoke of the ____ of our
+Lord. The ____ of the story moved her to ____. He allowed his ____ no
+further expression than through that one ____ shrug. With a ____ smile he
+settled back into dull ____. His plea was ____.
+
+
+<Ped, pod> (foot): (1) pedal, pedestrian, pedestal, expedite,
+expediency, expedition, quadruped, impediment, biped, tripod, chiropodist,
+octopus, pew; (2) centiped, pedicle, pedometer, velocipede,
+sesquipedalian, antipodes, podium, polypod, polyp, Piedmont.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ suggested that we could ____ matters by each
+mounting a ____. The loss of the ____ was a serious ____ to the rider of
+the bicycle. The ____ had me place my foot on an artist's ____. The
+purpose of this nautical ____ was to capture a live ____. The ____ of
+having so large a ____ for the statue had not occurred to us. A ____
+scarcely recognizable as human occupied my ____.
+
+
+<Pell, pulse> (drive): (1) dispel, compel, propeller, repellent,
+repulse, repulsive, impulse, compulsory, expulsion, appeal; (2) appellate,
+interpellate.
+
+_Sentences_: After the ____ of the attack the mists along the
+lowlands were ____. His manner was ____, even ____. The revolutions of the
+____ soon ____ the boatmen to shove farther off. After his ____ he ____
+for a rehearing of his case. The act was ____, but he felt an ____ toward
+it anyhow.
+
+
+<Pend, pense, pond> (hang, weigh): (1) pending, impending,
+independent, pendulum, perpendicular, expenditure, pension, suspense,
+expense, pensive, compensate, ponder, ponderous, preponderant, pansy,
+poise, pound; (2) pendant, stipend, appendix, compendium, propensity,
+recompense, indispensable, dispensation, dispensary, avoirdupois.
+
+_Sentences_: The veterans felt great ____ while action regarding
+their ____ was ____. We shall ____ you. An arm of it stood in a
+position ____ to the ____ mass. He knew that fate was ____, and he watched
+the ____ swing back and forth slowly. He gave a ____ argument in favor of
+the ____ of the money. There is ____, that's for thoughts. Let us ____ the
+question whether the ____ is needful. She was a woman of rare social ____.
+Penny-wise, ____ foolish.
+
+
+<Pet> (seek): (1 and 2 combined) petition, petulant, impetus,
+impetuous, perpetuate, repeat, compete, competent, appetite, centripetal.
+
+_Sentences_: A great ____ force keeps the planets circling about
+the sun. The complaints of a ____ woman led him to ____ for the prize. The
+sexual ____ leads men to ____ the race. The ____ was pronounced upon ____
+authority to be ill drawn up. With ____ wrath he ____ the assertion. The
+____ became noticeably weaker.
+
+
+<Ply, plic, plicate> (fold): (1) ply, reply, imply, plight,
+suppliant, explicit, implicit, implicate, supplicate, duplicate,
+duplicity, complicate, complicity, accomplice, application, plait,
+display, plot, employee, exploit, simple, supple; (2) pliant, pliable,
+replica, explication, inexplicable, multiplication, deploy, triple,
+quadruple, plexus, duplex.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ the thief's ____ with questions. He ____ that
+others were ____ with him. The king ____ to the ____ that such ____ must
+never be ____ in the realm thereafter. It would be a ____ matter to ____
+the order. The manager had ____ confidence in his ____. She admired his
+courage in this ____, perceived his ____ in the crime, and deplored his
+participation in the ____. They ____ him for an ____ promise that mercy
+would be shown. She was in a ____, for she had not had time to arrange her
+hair in its usual broad ____. He was ____ of body. The ____ was refused.
+
+
+<Pose, pone> (place): (1) expose, compose, purpose, posture,
+position, composure, impostor, postpone, post office, positive, deposit,
+disposition, imposition, deponent, opponent, exponent, component;
+(2) depose, impost, composite, apposite, repository, preposition,
+interposition, juxtaposition, decomposition.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ said he would ____ the manner in which the
+cashier had made away with the ____. The true ____ of the ____ was now
+known, yet he retained his ____. For you to make yourself an ____ of these
+wild theories is an ____ on your friends. The closing hour at the ____ is
+____ thirty minutes on account of the rush of Christmas mail. He
+was ____ that his ____ had ____ the letter. One of the ____ elements in
+his ____ was gloom.
+
+
+<Prise, prehend> (seize): (1) prize, apprise, surprise, comprise,
+enterprise, imprison, comprehend, apprehension; (a) reprisal, misprision,
+reprehend, prehensile, apprentice, impregnable, reprieve.
+
+_Sentences_: He had no ____ as to what the ____ would ____.
+His ____ was so great that he could scarcely ____ the fact that the ____
+was his. The judge ____ them of the likelihood that they would be ____.
+
+
+<Prob> (prove): (1 and 2 combined) probe, probation, probate,
+probity, approbation, reprobate, improbable.
+
+_Sentences_: The young ____ was placed on ____. The will was brought
+into the ____ court. It is ____ that such ____ as his will win the ____ of
+evil-doers.
+
+
+<Rupt> (break): (1 and 2 combined) rupture, abrupt, interrupt,
+disrupt, eruption, incorruptible, irruption, bankrupt, rout, route,
+routine.
+
+_Sentences_: The volcano was in ____. Though ____, he remained
+ ____. The ____ of the barbarians ____ these reforms. The organization was
+____ after having already been put to ____. The ____ he had chosen led to
+a ____ in their relationships. It was ____ work.
+
+
+<Sed, sid(e), sess> (seat): (1) sedulous, sedentary, supersede,
+subside, preside, reside, residue, possess, assessment, session, siege;
+(2) sediment, insidious, assiduous, subsidy, obsession, see (noun),
+assize.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was so small that he scarcely noticed he ____
+it. The officer was ____ in making the ____ upon every tax-payer fair.
+During the ____ Congress remained in ____. He ____ in the city and has a
+____ occupation. When the officer who ____ is firm, such commotions will
+quickly ____. He ____ the disgraced commander.
+
+
+<Sequ, secu, sue> (follow): (1) sequel, sequence, consequence,
+subsequent, consecutive, execute, prosecute, persecute, sue, ensue,
+suitor, suitable, pursuit, rescue, second; (2) obsequies, obsequious,
+sequester, inconsequential, non sequitur, executor, suite.
+
+_Sentences_: On the ____ day they continued the ____. In the ____
+chapter of the ____ the heroine is ____. The ____ of events is hard to
+follow. The ____ was that her brother began to ____ her ____. The district
+attorney ____ six ____ offenders, but thought it useless to bring any ____
+offender to trial. It was a ____ occasion.
+
+
+<Shear, share, shore> (cut, separate): (1 and 2 combined) shear,
+sheer, shred, share, shard, scar, score, (sea)shore, shorn, shroud, shire,
+sheriff.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ had on his face a ____ made by a ____ thrown at
+him. In that ____ an old custom for every one to ____ in the ____ the
+sheep. There was, instead of the usual ____, a cliff that rose from the
+sea. All ____ as the freshman was, he had hardly a ____ of his former
+dignity. The ____ was very one-sided. A ____ of mist was about him.
+
+
+<Sign> (sign): (1) sign, signal, signify, signature, consign, design,
+assign, designate, resignation, insignificant; (2) ensign, signatory,
+insignia.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ his approval of the ____. The disturbance
+caused by his ____ was ____. He ____ no reason for ____ those particular
+men. As he could not write his own ____, I ____ the document for him. It
+was a ____ defeat.
+
+
+<Solve, solu> (loosen): (r) solve, resolve, dissolve, solution,
+dissolute, resolute, absolute; (2) solvent, absolution, indissoluble,
+assoil.
+
+_Sentences_: On account of his ____ course he had given his parents
+many a problem to ____. He ____ the powder in a cupful of water and ____
+to give it to the patient. This ____ of the difficulty did not win the
+____ approval of his employer. The obstacles were many, but he was ____.
+
+
+<Spec(t), spic(e)</b/> (look): (1) spectator, spectacle, suspect,
+aspect, prospect, expect, respectable, disrespect, inspection, speculate,
+special, especial, species, specify, specimen, spice, suspicion,
+conspicuous, despise, despite, spite; (2) specter, spectrum, spectroscope,
+prospector, prospectus, introspection, retrospect, circumspectly,
+conspectus, perspective, specie, specification, specious, despicable,
+auspices, perspicacity, frontispiece, respite.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ was conducted in such a manner as to show the
+utmost ____. In ____ she noticed an odor of ____. From his ____ you would
+have taken him to be a ____ of wild animal. The ____ was better than we
+had ____ it to be. Though you have no ____ fondness for children, you will
+enjoy the ____ of them playing together. The ____ did not ____ what
+underhand tactics some of the players were resorting to. In ____ of all
+this, we made a ____ showing. The ____ is one you cannot ____. ____ this
+____ of matters, she did not ____ the cause of her ____, but let him ____
+what it might be.
+
+
+<Spire, spirit> (breathe, breath): (1 and 2 combined) spirit,
+spiritual, perspire, transpire, respire, aspire, conspiracy, inspiration,
+expiration, esprit de corps.
+
+_Sentences_: At the ____ of a few days it ____ that a ____ had
+actually been formed. The ____ of the division was such that every man
+____ to meet the enemy forthwith. He was a man of much ____ and marked
+powers of ____. As he lay there, he merely ____ and ____; he had no
+thought whatsoever of things ____.
+
+
+<Sta, sti(t), sist> (stand): (1) stand, stage, statue, stall,
+stationary, state, reinstate, station, forestall, instant, instance,
+distance, constant, withstand, understand, circumstance, estate,
+establish, substance, obstacle, obstinate, destiny, destination,
+destitute, substitute, superstition, desist, persist, resist, insist,
+assist, exist, consistent, stead, rest, restore, restaurant, contrast; (2)
+stature, statute, stadium, stability, instable, static, statistics,
+ecstasy, stamen, stamina, standard, stanza, stanchion, capstan, extant,
+constabulary, apostate, transubstantiation, status quo, armistice,
+solstice, interstice, institute, restitution, constituent, subsistence,
+pre-existence, presto.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the motion was that the student who had been
+expelled should be ____. He ____ in his ____ resolution to go on the ____.
+She could not ____ the pleas of ____ people. He ____ her to alight at the
+____. In an ____ you shall ____ what the ____ was that drove me to
+tempt ____ thus. We had gone but a little ____ when I perceived by the
+hungry working of his jaws that his ____ was the ____ in the next block.
+No ____ could cause him to ____. She was ____ in a ____ at the bazaar.
+
+
+<Stead> (place): (1 and 2 combined) stead, steadfast, instead,
+homestead, farmstead, roadstead, bestead.
+
+_Sentences_: ____ of resting in a harbor, the ships were tossed about
+in an open ____. Little did it ____ him to cling to the old ____. A ____
+nestled by the highway. To be known as ____ now stood him in good ____.
+
+
+<Strict, string, strain> (bind): (1) district, restrict, strictly,
+stringent, strain, restrain, constrain; (2) stricture, constriction, boa
+constrictor, astringent, strait, stress.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ them by means of ____ regulations. He ____ them
+to this course by his mere example. He attended ____ to his duties. You
+should not ____ your pleasures in this way. The ____ of long effort was
+telling on him.
+
+
+<Tact, tang, tain, ting, teg> (touch): (1) tact, contact, intact,
+intangible, attain, taint, stain, tinge, contingent, integrity, entire,
+tint; (2) tactile, tactual, tangent, distain, attaint, attainder, integer,
+disintegrate, contagion, contaminate, contiguous.
+
+_Sentences_: His appointment is ____ upon his removing this ____ from
+his name. His ____ is such that no ____ with evil could leave any ____
+upon him. The contents were ____. With ____ he hopes to ____ the ____
+approval of his auditors. It was a dark ____. The reason is ____.
+
+
+<Tail> (cut): (1 and 2 combined) detail, curtail, entail, retail,
+tailor, tally.
+
+_Sentences_: He held the property in ____. He kept the reckoning
+straight by means of ____ cut in a shingle. He resolved to ____ expenses
+by visiting the ____ less often. We need not go into ____. The profit lies
+in the difference between wholesale and ____ prices.
+
+
+<Tain> (hold--for related _ten_ group see above under Two
+Admonitions): (1 and 2 combined) detain, abstain, contain, obtain,
+maintain, entertain, pertain, appertain, sustain, retain.
+
+_Sentences_: Village life and things ____ thereto I shall willingly
+____ from. I ____ that precepts of this kind in no sense ____ to public
+morals. If the gentleman can ____ the consent of his second, the chair
+will ____ the motion as he restates it. Though your forces may ____ heavy
+losses, they must ____ their position and ____ the enemy.
+
+
+<Term, termin> (end, bound): (1 and 2 combined) term, terminus,
+terminal, terminate, determine, indeterminate, interminable, exterminate.
+
+_Sentences_: At the ____ of the railroad stands a beautiful ____
+station. The manner in which we may ____ the agreement remains ____.
+He ____ that rather than yield he would make the negotiations ____. During
+the second ____ they ____ all the rodents about the school.
+
+
+<Tort> (twist): (1) torture, tortoise, retort, contort, distortion,
+extortionate, torch, (apple) tart, truss, nasturtium; (2) tort, tortuous,
+torsion, Dry Tortugas.
+
+_Sentences_: By the light of the ____ he saw a ____ fowl by the
+fireside and a ____ in the cupboard. The ____ of his countenance was due
+to the ____ he was undergoing. ____ his face into a very knowing look, he
+____ that a man with a ____ in his buttonhole and ____ shell glasses on
+his nose had leered at the girls as he passed.
+
+
+<Tract, tra(i)> (draw): (1) tract, tractor, intractable, abstracted,
+retract, protract, detract, distract, attractive, contractor, trace,
+trail, train, trait, portray, retreat; (2) traction, tractate, distraught,
+extraction, subtraction.
+
+_Sentences_: In an ____ manner he drove the ____ across a large ____
+of ground. He ____ his gaze at the ____ girl. The ____ was now willing to
+____ his statement that in the house as it stood there was no ____ of
+departure from the specifications. Down the weary ____ of the pioneer
+dashes the palatial modern ____. To be ____ was one of his ____. The
+artist ____ her as in a ____ state. The ____ of his forces ____ but little
+from his fame.
+
+
+<Vene, vent> (come): (1) convene, convenient, avenue, revenue,
+prevent, event, inventor, adventure, convention, circumvent; (2) venire,
+venue, parvenu, advent, adventitious, convent, preventive, eventuate,
+intervention.
+
+_Sentences_: The legislature ____ in order to pass a measure
+regarding the public ____. At the ____ the wily old politician was able to
+____ his enemies. The ____ saw no means of ____ this infringement of his
+patent right. In that ____ we are likely to have an ____. Through the
+long, shaded ____ they strolled together.
+
+
+<Vert, vers(e)> (turn): (1) avert, divert, convert, invert, pervert,
+advertize, inadvertent, verse, aversion, adverse, adversity, adversary,
+version, anniversary, versatile, divers, diversity, conversation,
+perverse, universe, university, traverse, subversive, divorce;
+(2) vertebra, vertigo, controvert, revert, averse, versus, versification,
+animadversion, vice versa, controversy, tergiversation, obverse,
+transverse, reversion, vortex.
+
+_Sentences_: Though he carried a large ____ of goods, he was ____ to
+____ them. He had ____ forgotten that it was his wedding ____. The ____
+was on ____ subjects. They ____ a broad area where nothing had been done
+to ____ the danger that threatened them. With ____ stubbornness he held to
+his ____ of the story. He held that the reading of ____ is ____ of
+masculine qualities. His professors at the ____ soon ____ him to new
+social and economic theories. Her husband was such a ____ creature that
+she resolved to secure a ____. Americans are the most ____ people in the
+____. The anecdote ____ his ____ himself. Her answer not only was ____,
+it revealed her ____. He had undergone grave ____ in his time.
+
+
+<Vince, vict> (conquer): (1 and 2 combined) evince, convince,
+province, invincible, evict, convict, conviction, victorious.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ that the campaign against the rebels in
+the ____ could not be ____. He ____ a lively interest in my theory that
+the fugitive could not be ____. He felt an ____ repugnance to ____ the
+man, and this in spite of his ____ that the man was guilty.
+
+
+<Voc, voke> (call, voice): (1) vocal, vocation, advocate,
+irrevocable, vociferous, provoke, revoke, evoke, convoke;
+(2) vocable, vocabulary, avocation, equivocal, invoke, avouch, vouchsafe.
+
+_Sentences_: He was a ____ ____ of the measure, but no sooner was
+the order issued than he wished it ____. In ____ the assembly he ____ the
+enthusiasm of his followers. That he should give ____ utterance to this
+thought ____ me; but the words, once spoken, were ____.
+
+
+<Volve, volute> (roll, turn): (1) involve, devolve, revolver,
+evolution, revolutionary, revolt, voluble, volume, vault; (2) circumvolve,
+convolution, convolvulus.
+
+_Sentences_: It ____ upon me to put down the ____. In this ____ the
+heroine is ____ and the hero handy with a ____. He was ____ in a ____
+uprising. He had laid the papers away in a ____. The ____ of civilization
+is a tedious story.
+
+
+SECOND GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+Copy both sections (the first consists of fairly familiar terms, the
+second of less familiar terms) of each of the following word-groups.
+Find the key-syllable, underscore it in each word, observe any
+modifications in its form. Decide for yourself what its meaning is; then
+verify or correct your conclusion by reference to the dictionary. Study
+the influence of the key-syllable upon the meaning of each separate word;
+find the word's original signification, its present signification. Add to
+each word-group as many cognate words as you can (1) think of for
+yourself, (2) find in the dictionary by looking under the key-syllable.
+Fill the blanks in the sentences after each word-group with terms chosen
+from the first section of words in that group.
+
+
+(1) Animosity, unanimous, magnanimity;
+(2) animate, animadvert, equanimity.
+
+_Sentences_: It was the ____ opinion that to so noble a foe ____
+should be shown. The spiteful man continued to display his ____.
+
+
+(1) Annual, annuity, anniversary, perennial, centennial, solemn;
+(2) superannuate, biennial, millennium.
+
+_Sentences_: The amateur gardener made the ____ discovery that the
+plant was a ____. The ____ celebration of the great man's birth took a
+____ and imposing form in our city. By a happy coincidence the increase in
+his ____ came on his wedding ____.
+
+
+(1) Audit, auditor, auditorium, audience, inaudible, obey;
+(2) aurist, auricular, auscultation.
+
+_Sentences_: His voice may not have been ____, but it certainly did
+not fill the ____. Not one ____ in all that vast ____ but was willing to
+____ his slightest suggestion. He was not willing that they should ____
+his accounts.
+
+
+(1) Automatic, automobile, autocrat, autobiography;
+(2) autograph, autonomy.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ dictated to his secretary the third chapter
+of his ____. The habit of changing gear properly in an ____ becomes
+almost ____.
+
+
+(1) Cant, descant, incantation, chant, enchant, chanticleer, accent,
+incentive;
+(2) canto, canticle, cantata, recant, chantry, chanson, precentor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ upon this topic in a queer, foreign ____.
+Such utterances are mere sanctimonious ____; I had rather listen to the
+____ of a voodoo conjurer. The little girl from the city was ____ with the
+crowing of ____. The ____ of the choir somehow gave him the ____ to try
+again.
+
+
+(1) Cent, per cent, century, centennial;
+(2) centenary, centime, centurion, centimeter, centigrade.
+
+_Sentences_: For nearly a ____ this family has been living on a small
+____ of its income. I wouldn't give a ____ for ____ honors; I want my
+reward now.
+
+
+(1) Chronic, chronological, chronicle;
+(2) chronometer, synchronize, anachronism.
+
+_Sentences_: It is a ____ record of changing activities and ____
+ills. This page is a ____ of athletic news.
+
+
+(1) Corps, corpse, corporal, corpulent, corporation, incorporate;
+(2) corpus, habeas corpus, corporeal, corpuscle, Corpus Christi.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ gentleman said he did not believe in ____
+punishment. The hospital ____ carried the ____ into the office of a great
+____. He resolved to ____ this idea into the reforms he was introducing.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Creed, credulous, credential, credit, accredit,
+discredit, incredible.
+
+_Sentences_: He was not so ____ as to suppose that his ____ would be
+accepted and his statements ____ without some investigation. It is to his
+____ that he refused to be bound by his former religious ____. That such
+____ has been heaped upon him is ____.
+
+
+(1) Crescent, increase, decrease, concrete, recruit, accrue, crew;
+(2) crescendo, excrescence, accretion, increment.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ now had ____ evidence that military life was
+not altogether pleasant. In the olden days on the sea deaths from scurvy
+might bring about a dangerous ____ in the size of the ____. His courage
+____ with the profits that ____ to him. The ____ moon rode in the sky.
+
+
+(1) Cure, secure, procure, sinecure, curious, inaccurate;
+(2) curate, curator.
+
+_Sentences_: Occupying the position for a while will ____ you of the
+notion that it is a ____. He was ____ to know so a bookkeeper had managed
+to ____ so high a salary. He ____ the equipment required.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Indignity, indignation, undignified, condign, deign,
+dainty.
+
+_Sentences_: We must not be too ____ about visiting ____ punishment
+upon those responsible for this ____. He did not ____ to express his ____.
+It was an ____ act.
+
+
+(1) Durable, endure, during, duration, obdurate;
+(2) durance, duress, indurate, perdurable.
+
+_Sentences_: ____ the whole interview she remained ____. It is a
+____ cloth; it will ____ all sorts of weather. The session was one of
+prolonged ____.
+
+
+(1) Finite, infinite, define, definite, confine, final, in fine,
+unfinished;
+(2) definitive, infinitesimal.
+
+_Sentences_: One cannot ____ the ____. He ____ himself to purely ____
+topics. ____ it was a ____ offer and the ____ one he expected to make.
+The bridge is still ____.
+
+
+(1) Flexibility, inflexible, deflect, inflection, reflection, reflex;
+(2) circumflex, genuflection.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ influence of this act was great. I did not like
+the ____ of his voice. After some ____ he decided to remain ____. He was
+not to be ____ from his purpose. I could but admire the ____ of her tones.
+
+
+(1) Fluent, affluent, influence, influenza, superfluous, fluid, influx,
+flush (rush of water), fluctuate;
+(2) confluent, mellifluous, flux, reflux, effluvium, flume.
+
+_Sentences_: When you ____ the basin, an ____ of water fills it
+again. He is an ____ man and a ____ writer. When I had ____, the doctor
+gave me a disgusting ____ to drink. The wind must have an ____ in making
+the waves ____ as they do. Any more would be ____.
+
+
+(1) Fort, forte, effort, comfort, fortitude, fortify, fortress;
+(2) aqua fortis, pianoforte.
+
+_Sentences_: The defenders of the ____ held out with great ____.
+Though a ____ or two stood at important passes, the border was not really
+____. His ____ was not public speaking. It was the only by an ____ that he
+could ____ them.
+
+
+(1) Fraction, infraction, fracture, fragility, fragment, suffrage, frail,
+infringe;
+(2) diffract, refractory, frangible.
+
+_Sentences_: It was in the course of his ____ of the rules that he
+suffered the ____ of his collar-bone. He told the committee of ladies that
+he was as fond of ____ as of ____. It is hardly a proof of ____ that he is
+so willing to ____ upon the rights of others. The ____ scaffolding bent
+and swung as he trod it.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Fugitive, fugue, refuge, subterfuge, centrifugal.
+
+_Sentences_: Closing his eyes as if to listen better to the ____ was
+a little ____ of his. The upward movement of the missile was arrested by
+the ____ attraction of the earth. The ____ took ____ in an abandoned barn.
+
+
+(1) Refund, confound, foundry, confuse, suffuse, profuse, refuse, diffuse;
+(2) fusion, effusion, transfuse.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ cheeks and ____ utterance he made a ____
+apology. The amount we lost through the defective work at your ____ should
+be ____ to us. Such a blow might ____ but not ____ him. He ____ the
+appointment.
+
+
+(1) Belligerent, gesture, suggest, congested, digestion, register, jest;
+(2) gerund, congeries.
+
+_Sentences_: As he stopped before the cash ____ he gave a ____ which
+showed that his ____ was none too good. His look was ____, but he lightly
+made a ____. Amid the ____ traffic she stopped to ____ that pink would be
+more becoming than lavender.
+
+
+(1) Relate, translate, legislate, elation, dilated, dilatory;
+(2) collate, correlate, prelate, oblation, superlative, ablative.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ eyes he ____ the passage for me. The ____ was
+very ____ in agreeing upon the measure to be passed. He ____ the story
+with pride and ____.
+
+
+(1) Locate, locality, locomotive, dislocate;
+(2) locale, allocate, collocation.
+
+_Sentences_: In trying to ____ the mine as near the fissure as
+possible he fell and ____ his hip. It was only ____ in that entire ____.
+
+
+(1) Soliloquy, loquacious, loquacity, colloquial, eloquent, obloquy,
+circumlocution, elocution;
+(2) magniloquent, grandiloquent, ventriloquism, interlocutor, locutory,
+allocution. (For related _log_ and _ology_ words see above under
+Prying Into a Word's Relationships.)
+
+_Sentences_: ____ always, he indulged at this time in a great deal
+of ____. Though it was mere ____, yet there was something ____ about it.
+Amid all this ____ he managed to rid himself of a good deal of ____
+regarding Standish. Hamlet's ____ on suicide is a famous passage.
+
+(1) Allude, elude, delude, ludicrous, illusory, collusion;
+(2) prelude, postlude, interlude.
+
+_Sentences_: Such evidence is ____, and belief in it is ____.
+He ____ to a possible ____ between them. The more credulous ones he ____,
+and the skeptical he manages to ____.
+
+
+(1) Metrical, thermometer, barometer, pedometer, diametrically, geometry;
+(2) millimeter, chronometer, hydrometer, trigonometry, pentameter.
+
+_Sentences_: He was careful to consult both the ____ and the ____.
+He always wore a ____ on these trips. The two were ____ opposed to each
+other. The poet has great ____ skill. ____ is an exact science.
+
+(1) Monotone, monotonous, monoplane, monopoly, monocle, monarchy,
+monogram, monomania;
+(2) monosyllable, monochrome, monogamy, monorail, monograph, monolith,
+monody, monologue, monad, monastery, monk.
+
+_Sentences_: His eye held a ____, his gold ring bore a ____ seal,
+and his voice was a stilted ____. One thing I hate about a ____ is the
+____ reference to everything as his majesty's. He had a ____ of the trade
+in his town. He is suffering, not from madness, but from ____.
+
+(1) Mortal, immortality, mortify, postmortem, mortgage, morgue;
+(2) mortmain, moribund, À la mort.
+
+_Sentences_: After a hasty ____ examination, the body was taken to
+the ____. She was ____ at this reminder of the ____ on her father's
+property. The ____ shall put on ____.
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Mutual, mutation, permutation, commute, transmute,
+immutable, moult.
+
+_Sentences_: As he ____ that morning he reflected upon the ____ and
+combinations of fortune. We suffer the ____ of this worldly life, but
+ourselves are not ____. God's love is ____, and our love for each other
+should be ____. Birds when they ____ are weakened in body and depressed in
+spirit.
+
+(1) Native, prenatal, innate, nature, unnatural, naturalize, nation,
+pregnant, puny;
+(2) denatured, nativity, cognate, agnate, nascent, renascence, née.
+
+_Sentences_: It was some ____ influence, he thought, that gave him
+his ____ physique. It was a ____ reply, but its heartlessness was ____.
+He was not ____ to the country, but ____. ____ in his ____ was the love
+of his own ____.
+
+
+(1) Note, notion, notable, notice, notorious, cognizant, incognito,
+recognize, noble, ignoble, ennoble, ignore, ignorance, ignoramus,
+reconnoiter, quaint, acquaintance;
+(2) notary, notation, connotation, cognition, prognosticate,
+reconnaissance, connoisseur.
+
+_Sentences_: In complete ____ of the enemy's position, he decided
+that he would ____ it. ____ himself, he was ____ of what was going on
+about him. You must ____ the conduct of such an ____. His ____ with this
+____ gentleman ____ him. He ____ but would not ____ this ____ fellow.
+The ____ is a ____ one. He could but ____ how ____ his brother had become.
+
+
+(1) Panacea, panoply, panorama, pantomime, pan-American, pandemonium;
+(2) pantheist, pantheon.
+
+_Sentences_: Arrayed in all the ____ of savages, they acted the scene
+out in ____. From this point the ____ of the country-side unrolled itself
+before him. It is no ____ for human ills; any supposition that it is will
+lead to ____. It is a ____ movement.
+
+
+(1) Peter, petrify, petrol, stormy petrel, petroleum, saltpeter, pier;
+(2) petrology, parsley, samphire.
+
+_Sentences_: As he walked along the ____, he observed the flight of
+the ____. The English name for gasoline is ____. ____ is used in the
+manufacture of gunpowder. He was almost ____ at hearing of this enormous
+stock of ____. The crowing of the cock caused ____ to weep bitterly.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Petty, petite, petit jury, petit larceny, petticoat,
+pettifogger.
+
+_Sentences_: Charged with ____, he was tried by the ____. The
+contemptible ____ hid behind the ____ of his wife. She was a winsome
+maiden, dainty and ____. It is a ____ fault.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Philosophy, philanthropy, Philadelphia, bibliophile,
+Anglophile.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ was generous, but his ____ was not profound.
+That queer old ____ hangs to the library like a caterpillar. It was the
+love of humankind that caused Penn to name the city ____. Most Americans
+are not ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Cosmopolitan, metropolitan, politics, policy, police.
+
+_Sentences_: Those who engage in ____ lack, as a rule, a ____
+outlook. It is merely ____ intolerance of towns and villages. The ____ of
+the mayor was to increase the ____ force.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Potential, potency, potentate, impotent, omnipotent,
+plenipotentiary.
+
+_Sentences_: So far from being ____, we possess a ____ difficult to
+estimate. The ____ sent an ambassador ____. A ____ solution of the problem
+is this. ____ God.
+
+
+(1) Impute, compute, dispute, ill repute, reputation, disreputable;
+(2) putative, indisputable.
+
+_Sentences_: She could not ____ the cost. There was some ____ as to
+the cause of his ____. Let them ____ to me what motives they will. Though
+somewhat ____, he was extremely solicitous about his ____.
+
+
+(1) Abrogate, arrogate, interrogate, arrogant, derogatory, prerogative;
+(2) surrogate, rogation, prorogue.
+
+_Sentences_: In an ____ manner he ____ these ____ to himself. To ____
+authority is to give opportunity for remarks ____ to one's reputation. He
+skilfully ____ the witness.
+
+
+(1) Salmon, sally, assail, assault, insult, consult, result, exultation,
+desultory;
+(2) salient, salacious, resilient.
+
+_Sentences_: After the ____ the firing was ____. The defenders ____
+out and ____ us, but the ____ of this effort only added to our ____. We
+sat there watching the ____ leap over the waterfall and ____ about our
+arrangements for taking them. To accept the remark as an ____ is to
+acknowledge the speaker as an equal.
+
+
+(1) Science, conscience, unconscious, prescience, omniscience, nice;
+(2) sciolist, adscititious, plebiscite.
+
+_Sentences_: By his ____ understanding of the issues he was able to
+gain a reputation for ____. We thought he possessed ____, but he seemed
+____ of his erudition. Except under the sharp necessities of ____, he was
+ruled by a ____ thoroughly tender.
+
+
+(1) Sect, section, non-sectarian, dissect, insect, intersection, sickle,
+vivisection, segment;
+(2) bisect, trisect, insection, sector, secant.
+
+_Sentences_: He stood at the ____ of the roads, leaning on the shank
+of a sharp ____. The foreman of the ____ gang is a member of our ____. The
+boy was ____ an ____ with a butcher knife he had previously used to cut
+for himself a large ____ of the Sunday cake. It is a ____ movement. He
+defended the ____ of animals.
+
+
+(1) Sense, consent, assent, resent, sentimental, dissension, sensation,
+sensibility, sentence, scent, nonsense;
+(2) sentient, consensus, presentiment.
+
+_Sentences_: A woman of her ____ would shrink from a ____ of this
+sort. He ____ in a single, crisp ____. To be ____ is to be guilty of ____.
+He had the good ____ to ____ to this course. He ____ such ____ and the
+causes that produced them. A hound hunts by ____.
+
+
+(1) Despond, respond, correspond, corespondent, sponsor;
+(2) sponsion, spouse, espouse.
+
+_Sentences_: She ____ that her husband had been ____ with the ____.
+The ____ of the movement could as yet see no reason to ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Structure, instructor, construct, obstruct, instrument,
+destructive, misconstrue.
+
+_Sentences_: The student ____ the intentions of his ____. He resolved
+to ____ every effort to complete the ____. The ____ was one that might
+easily be turned to ____ work. They ____ a grandstand overlooking the
+racetrack.
+
+
+(1) Terrace, territory, subterranean, inter, terrier;
+(2) terrene, tureen, terrestrial, terra cotta, Mediterranean, terra firma,
+parterre.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was tearing a great hole in the ____ in order
+to ____ a bone. He found rich ____ deposits. The discoverers laid claim to
+the entire ____.
+
+
+(1) Thesis, parenthesis, antithesis, anathema, theme, epithet, treasure;
+(2) hypothesis, synthesis, metathesis.
+
+_Sentences_: To set two ideas in ____ to each other makes both more
+vivid. By way of ____ he informed me that the subject was ____ to his
+father. On this ____ he can summon a host of picturesque ____. The ____ is
+one you will find it hard to establish. He was seeking Captain Kidd's
+buried ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Tumor, tumidity, tumult, tumulus, contumacy.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of his joints was due to rheumatism. His ____
+led to a ____ of opposition. So excited was he at the discovery of the
+____ that he did not permit the ____ on his hand to restrain him from
+beginning the excavation.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Turbid, disturb, perturbation, turbulence, trouble,
+imperturbable.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ manner gave no hint of the ____ within him. The
+____ sweep of the stream caused her not the slightest ____. Do not ____
+yourself with the thought that you are putting me to any ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Pervade, invade, evasion, vade mecum.
+
+_Sentences_: He promised that there would be no ____ of payments.
+Byron's _Childe Harold_ was my ____ during my travels in Switzerland
+and Italy. The fragrance of heliotrope ____ the room. You must not ____ my
+privacy like this.
+
+
+(1) Avail, prevail, prevalent, equivalent, valiant, validity, invalid,
+invalidate; (2) valetudinarian, valediction, valence.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the agreement has been thoroughly
+established. Our cause is just, and must ____. It is ____ to admitting
+that the terms are now ____. It was a ____ act and ____ the concessions
+previously wrested from us. The ____ impression is that mere ingenuity
+will not ____.
+
+
+(1) Virtue, virile, virgin, virtually; (2) virago, virtuoso, triumvir.
+
+_Sentences_: It was ____ a new arrangement. It is ____ soil. To
+be ____ and daring is every boy's dream. ____ is its own reward.
+
+
+(1) Revive, survival, convivial, vivid, vivify, vivacious, vivisection;
+(2) vive (le roi), qui vive, bon vivant, tableau vivant.
+
+_Sentences_: He has a ____ manner, a ____ spirit. The ____ of the
+opposition to the ____ of animals is very marked. You cannot ____ a dead
+cause or scarcely ____ memories of it. The ____ coloring of her cheeks was
+a sure sign of health, or of skill.
+
+
+THIRD GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+Find the key-syllable (in a few instances the key-syllables) of each of
+the following words. How does it affect the meaning of the word? Does it
+appear, perhaps in disguised form, in any of the words immediately
+preceding or following? Can you bring to mind other words that embody it?
+
+Innovation Commonwealth Welfare Wayfarer
+Adjournment Rival Derivation Arrive
+Denunciation Denomination Ignominy Synonym
+Patronymic Parliament Dormitory Demented
+Presumptuous Indent Dandelion Trident
+Indenture Contemporary Disseminate Annoy
+Odium Desolate Impugn Efflorescent
+Arbor vitae Consider Constellation Disaster
+Suburb Address Dirigible Dirge
+Indirectly Desperate Inoperative Benevolent
+Voluntary Offend Enumerate Dilapidate
+Request Exquisite Exonerate Approximate
+Insinuate Resurgence Insurrection Rapture
+Exasperate Complacent Dimension Commensurate
+Preclude Cloister Turnpike Travesty
+Atone Incarnate Charnal Etiquette
+Rejuvenate Eradicate Quiet Requiem
+Acquiesce Ambidextrous Inoculate Divulge
+Proper Appropriate Omnivorous Voracious
+Devour Escritoire Mordant Remorse
+Miser Hilarious Exhilarate Rudiment
+Erudite Mark Marquis Libel
+Libretto Vague Vagabond Extravagant
+Souse Saucer Oyster Ostracize
+
+
+FOURTH GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+With a few exceptions like the Hale-heal group above under Verbal
+Families, most verbal families of straight English or of Germanic-
+Scandinavian-English descent are easily recognizable as families. Witness
+the _Good_ family and the _Stead_ family. The families in which
+kinship may be overlooked are likely to be of Latin or Greek ancestry,
+though perhaps with a subsequent infusion of blood from some other foreign
+language, as French. Hitherto our approach to verbal families has been
+through the descendants, or through that quality in their blood which
+holds them together. But we shall also profit from knowing something of
+the founders of these families--from having some acquaintance with them as
+individuals. Below (in separate lists) the more prominent of Latin and of
+Greek progenitors are named, their meaning is given, and two or three of
+their living representatives (not always direct descendants) are
+designated. Starred [*] words are those whose progeny has not been in good
+part assembled in the preceding pages; for these words you should assemble
+all the living representatives you can. (Inflectional forms are given only
+where they are needed for tracing English derivatives.)
+
+
+<Latin Ancestors of English Words>
+
+_Latin word Meaning English representatives_
+
+ Ago, actum do, rouse agile, transact
+*Alius other alias, inalienable
+*Alter other alteration, adultery
+*Altus high altitude, exalt
+*Ambulo walk perambulator, preamble
+*Amicus friend amicable, enemy
+*Amo, amatum love inamorata, amateur, inimical
+*Anima life animal, inanimate
+ Animus mind animosity, unanimous
+ Annus year annuity, biennial
+*Aqua water aquarium, aqueduct
+ Audio, auditum hear audience, audit
+*Bellum war rebel, belligerent
+*Bene well benefit, benevolence
+*Bonus good bonanza, bona fide
+*Brevis short abbreviate, unabridged
+ Cado, casum fall cadence, casual
+ Caedo, cecidi, caesum cut, kill suicide, incision
+ Cano, cantum sing recant, chanticleer
+ Capio, captum take, hold capacious, incipient
+*Caput, capitis head cape (Cape Cod), decapitate,
+ chapter, biceps
+ Cedo, cessum go concede, accessory
+ Centum hundred per cent, centigrade
+*Civis citizen civic, uncivilized
+*Clamo shout acclaim, declamation
+*Claudo, clausum close, shut conclude, recluse, cloister, sluice
+ Cognosco (see _Nosco_)
+*Coquo, coxi, coctum cook decoction, precocious
+*Cor, cordis heart core, discord, courage
+ Corpus body corpse, incorporate
+ Credo, credituin believe creed, discreditable
+ Cresco, cretum grow crescendo, concrete, accrue
+*Crux, crucis cross crucifix, excruciating
+ Cura care curate, sinecure
+ Curro, cursum run occur, concourse
+*Derigo, directum direct dirge, dirigible, address
+*Dexter right, right hand ambidextrous, dexterity
+ Dico speak, say abdicate, verdict
+*Dies day diary, quotidian
+ Dignus worthy, fitting dignity, condign
+ Do, datum give condone, data
+*Doceo, doctum teach document, doctor
+*Dominus lord dominion, danger
+*Domus house domicile, majordomo
+*Dormio sleep dormant, dormouse
+ Duco lead traduce, deduction
+*Duo two dubious, duet
+ Durus hard durable, obdurate
+ Eo, itum go exit, initial
+ Error, erratum wander erroneous, aberration
+ Facio, feci, factum make, do manufacture, affect, sufficient,
+ verify
+ Fero, latum carry transfer, relate
+ Fido trust, believe confide, perfidious
+ Finis end confine, infinity
+ Flecto, flexum bend reflection, inflexible
+ Fluo, fluxum flow influence, reflux
+ Fortis strong fortress, comfort
+ Frango, fractum break infringe, refraction
+*Frater brother fraternity, fratricide
+ Fugio, fugitum flee centrifugal, fugitive
+ Fundo, fusum pour refund, profuse, fusion
+ Gero, gestum carry belligerent, gesture, digestion
+ Gradior, gressus walk degrade, progress
+*Gratia favor, pleasure, ingratiate, congratulate,
+ good-will disgrace
+*Grex, gregis flock segregate, egregious
+ Habeo, habitum have, hold habituate, prohibit
+ Itum (see Eo)
+ Jacio, jeci, jactum throw, hurl reject, interjection
+ Jungo, junctum join conjugal, enjoin, juncture
+ Juro swear abjure, perjury
+ Jus, juris law, right justice, jurisprudence
+ Judex (from jusdico) judge judgment, prejudice
+*Juvenis young rejuvenate, juvenilia
+ Latum (see Fero)
+*Laudo, laudatum praise allow, laudatory
+ Lego, lectum read, choose elegant, lecture, dialect
+*Lex, legis law privilege, illegitimate,
+ legislature
+*Liber book libel, library
+*Liber free liberty, deliberate
+ Ligo bind obligation, allegiance, alliance
+*Linquo, lictum leave delinquent, relict, derelict
+*Litera letter illiterate, obliterate
+ Locus place collocation, dislocate
+ Loquor, locutus speak soliloquy, elocution
+ Ludo, lusum play prelude, illusory
+/Lux, lucis light\ lucid, luminary
+\Lumen, luminis /
+*Magnus great magnate, magnificent
+*Malus bad, evil malaria, malnutrition
+ Mando order mandatory, commandment
+ Manus hand manual, manufacture
+*Mare sea maritime, submarine
+*Mater mother maternal, alma mater
+*Medius middle mediocre, intermediate
+*Mens mind mental, demented
+*Miror wonder mirror, admirable
+ Mitto, missum send commit, emissary
+*Mordeo, morsum bite mordant, morsel, remorse
+ Mors, mortis death mortal, mortify
+ Moveo, motum move remove, locomotive
+*Multus many multiform, multiplex
+ Muto, mutatum change transmute, immutable, moult
+ Nascor, natus be born renascence, cognate
+*Nihil nothing nihilism, annihilate
+*Nomen, nominis name denomination, renown
+*Norma rule abnormal, enormous
+/Nosco, notum cognosco \
+\ cognitum know / notation, incognito
+*Novus new novelty, renovate
+*Nuntio announce denounce, renunciation
+*Opus, operis work magnum opus, inoperative
+*Pater father patrician, patrimony
+ Patior, passus suffer impatient, passion
+ Pello, pulsum drive propeller, repulse
+ Pendeo, pensum hang pendulum, appendix
+ Pendo, pensum weigh compendium, expense
+ Pes, pedis foot expedite, biped
+ Peto seek impetus, compete
+*Plaudo, plausum clap, applaud explode, plausible
+*Plecto, plexum braid perplex, complexion
+*Pleo, pletum fill complement, expletive
+*Plus, pluris more surplus, plural
+ Plico, plicatum fold reply, implicate
+ Pono, positum place opponent, deposit
+ Porto carry report, porter
+ Potens, potentis powerful impotent, potential
+ Prendo, prehensum seize comprehend, apprise
+*Primus, primatis first primary, primate
+ Probo, probatum prove improbable, reprobate
+*Pugno fight impugn, repugnant
+ Puto think impute, disreputable
+*Quaero, quaesitum seek require, inquest, exquisite
+*Rapio, raptum seize enraptured, surreptitious
+*Rego, rectum rule, lead region, erect
+*Rideo, risum laugh deride, risible
+ Rogo, rogatum ask prorogue, abrogate
+ Rumpo, ruptum break disrupt, eruption
+ Salio, saltum leap salient, insult
+*Sanguis blood sang froid, ensanguined
+ Scio, scitum know prescience, plebiscite
+ Scribo, scriptum write prescribe, manuscript, escritoire
+ Seco, sectum cut secant, dissect
+ Sedeo, sessum sit supersede, obsession
+ Sentio, sensum feel presentiment, consensus
+ Sequor, secutus follow sequence, persecute, ensue
+ Signum sign insignia, designate
+*Solus alone solitude, desolate
+ Solvo, solutum loosen solvent, dissolute
+*Somnus sleep somnambulist, insomnia
+*Sono sound consonant, resonance
+*Sors, sortis lot sort, assortment
+ Specio, spectum look despicable, suspect
+ Spiro, spiratum breathe perspire, conspiracy
+*Spondeo, sponsum promise respond, espouse
+ Sto, steti, statum stand constant, establish
+ Sisto, stiti, statum cause to stand consistent, superstition
+ Stringo, strictum bind stringent, restrict
+ Struo, structum build construe, destruction
+ Tango, tactum touch intangible, tact
+ Tempus, temporis time temporize, contemporary
+ Tendo, tensum stretch distend, intense
+ Teneo, tentuin hold tenure, detention
+*Tendo try tentative, attempt
+ Terminus end, boundary terminal, exterminate
+ Terra earth territory, inter
+ Torqueo, tortum twist distort, tortuous
+ Traho, tractum draw extract, subtraction
+ Tumeo, tumidum swell tumor, contumacy
+ Turba tumult, crowd turbulent, disturb
+*Unus one unify, triune, onion
+*Urbs city urbane, suburban
+ Vado, vasum go pervade, invasion
+ Valeo, validum be strong prevail, invalid
+ Venio, ventum come intervene, adventure
+ Verto, versum turn divert, adverse
+*Verus true verdict, veracity
+*Via way obviate, impervious, trivial
+ Video, visum see provide, revise
+ Vinco, victum conquer province, convict
+ Vir man triumvir, virtue
+ Vivo, victum live vivacious, vivisect
+ Voco, vocatum call revoke, avocation
+*Volo wish malevolent, voluntary
+ Volvo, volutum turn revolver, evolution
+ Vox voice equivocal, vociferate
+
+
+ <Latin Prefixes>
+
+_Prefix Meaning English embodiments_
+
+*A, ab from, away avert, abnegation, abstract
+*Ad to adduce, adjacent, affect, accede
+*Ante before antediluvian, anteroom
+*Bi two biped, bicycle
+*Circum around circumambient, circumference
+*Cum, com, with, together combine, consort, coadjutor
+ con, co
+*Contra against contradict, contrast
+*De from, negative deplete, decry, demerit, declaim
+ down, intensive
+*Di, dis asunder, away from, divert, disbelief
+ negative
+*E, ex from, out of evict, excavate
+*Extra beyond extraordinary, extravagant
+*In in, into, not innate, instil, insignificant
+*Inter among, between intercollegiate, interchange
+*Intro, into, within introduce, intramural
+ intra
+*Non negative nonage, nondescript
+*Ob against, before
+ (facing), toward obloquy, obstacle, offer
+*Per through, extremely persecute, perfervid, pursue,
+ pilgrim, pellucid
+*Post after postpone, postscript
+*Pre before prepay, preoccupy
+*Pro before proceed, proffer
+*Re back, again return, resound
+*Retro back, backward retroactive, retrospective
+*Se apart, aside seclude, secession
+*Semi half semiannual, semicivilized
+*Sub under, less than, subscribe, suffer, subnormal,
+ inferior subcommittee
+*Super above, extremely superfluous, supercritical, soprano
+*Trans across, through transfer, transparent
+*Ultra beyond, extremely ultramundane, ultraconservative
+
+
+ <Greek Ancestors of English Words>
+ (Scientific terms in English are largely derived from the Greek)
+
+_Greek word Meaning English representatives_
+
+*Aner, andros, man, stamen androgynous, philander,
+ anthropos philanthropy
+*Archos chief, primitive archaic, architect
+*Astron star asterisk, disaster
+ Autos self autograph, automatic, authentic
+*Barvs heavy baritone, barites
+*Biblos book Bible, bibliomania
+*Bios life biology, autobiography, amphibious
+*Cheir hand chiropody, chirurgical, surgeon
+*Chilioi a thousand kilogram, kilowatt
+*Chroma color chromo, achromatic
+ Chronos time chronic, anachronism
+*Cosmos world, order cosmopolitan, microcosm
+*Crypto hide cryptogam, cryptology
+*Cyclos wheel, circle encyclopedia, cyclone
+*Deca ten decasyllable, decalogue
+*Demos people democracy, epidemic
+*Derma skin epidermis, taxidermist
+*Dis, di twice, doubly dichromatic, digraph
+*Didonai, dosis give dose, apodosis, anecdote
+*Dynamis power dynamite, dynasty
+*Eidos form, thing seen idol, kaleidoscope, anthropoid
+*Ethnos race, nation ethnic, ethnology
+ Eu well euphemism, eulogy
+*Gamos marriage cryptogam, bigamy
+*Ge earth geography, geometry
+ Genos family, race gentle, engender
+ Gramma writing monogram, grammar
+ Grapho write telegraph, lithograph
+*Haima blood hematite, hemorrhage, anemia
+*Heteros other heterodox, heterogeneous
+*Homos same homonym, homeopathy
+*Hydor water hydraulics, hydrophobia, hydrant
+*Isos equal isosceles, isotherm
+*Lithos stone monolith, chrysolite
+ Logos word, study theology, dialogue
+ Metron measure barometer, diameter
+*Micros small microscope, microbe
+ Monos one, alone monoplane, monotone
+*Morphe form metamorphosis, amorphous
+*Neos new, young neolithic, neophyte
+*Neuron nerve neuralgia, neurotic
+ Nomos law, science, astronomy, gastronomy, economy
+ management
+*Onoma name anonymous, patronymic
+*Opsis view, sight synopsis, thanatopsis, optician
+*Orthos right orthopedic, orthodox
+*Osteon bone osteopathy, periosteum
+*Pais, paidos child paideutics, pedagogue,
+ encyclopedia
+ Pas, pan all diapason, panacea, pantheism
+ Pathos suffering allopathy, pathology
+ Petros rock petroleum, saltpeter
+*Phaino show, be visible diaphanous, phenomenon,
+ epiphany, fantastic
+ Philos loving bibliophile, Philadelphia
+*Phobos fear hydrophobia, Anglophobe
+ Phone sound telephone, symphony
+*Phos light phosphorous, photograph
+*Physis nature physiognomy, physiology
+*Plasma form cataplasm, protoplasm
+*Pneuma air, breath pneumatic, pneumonia
+ Polis city policy, metropolitan
+*Polys many polyandry, polychrome,
+ polysyllable
+ Pous, pados foot octopus, chiropodist
+*Protos first protoplasm, prototype
+*Pseudes false pseudonym, pseudo-classic
+*Psyche breath, soul, psychology, psychopathy
+ mind
+*Pyr fire pyrography, pyrotechnics
+*Scopos watcher scope, microscope
+*Sophia wisdom philosophy, sophomore
+*Techne art technicality, architect
+*Tele far, far off telepathy, telescope
+{*Temno cut }
+{*Tomos that which is } epitome, anatomy, tome
+{ cut off }
+*Theos god theosophy, pantheism
+*Therme heat isotherm, thermodynamics
+{Tithenai place } epithet, hypothesis,
+{Thesis a placing, } anathema
+{ arrangement }
+*Treis three trichord, trigonometry
+*Zoon animal zoology, protozoa, zodiac
+
+
+ <Greek Prefixes>
+
+_Prefix Meaning English embodiments_
+
+*A, an no, not aseptic, anarchy
+*Amphi about, around, ambidextrous, amphitheater
+ (Latin ambi) both
+*Ana up, again anatomy, Anabaptist
+*Anti against, opposite antidote, antiphonal, antagonist
+*Cata down catalepsy, cataclysm
+*Dia through, across diameter, dialogue
+*Epi upon epidemic, epithet, epode, ephemeral
+*Hyper over, extremely hypercritical, hyperbola
+*Hypo under, in smaller hypodermic, hypophosphate
+ measure
+*Meta after, over metaphysics, metaphor
+*Para beside paraphrase, paraphernalia
+*Peri around, about periscope, peristyle
+*Pro before proboscis, prophet
+*Syn together, with synthesis, synopsis, sympathy
+
+
+
+VI
+
+ WORDS IN PAIRS
+
+
+Our first task in this volume was the study of words in combination. Our
+second was the study of individual words in two of their aspects--first,
+as they are seen in isolation, next as they are seen in verbal families.
+Now our third task confronts us. It is the study of words as they are
+associated, not in actual blood kinship, but in meaning.
+
+Such an association in meaning may involve only two words (pairs) or
+larger groups. In this chapter we shall confine ourselves to the study of
+pairs.
+
+Of the relationship between pairs there are three types. In the first the
+words are hostile to each other. In the second they may easily be confused
+with each other. In the third they are parallel with each other. We shall
+examine the three types successively.
+
+But we must make an explanation first. Although we shall, in this and the
+following chapters, have frequent occasion to give the meanings of
+individual words, we shall give them without regard to dictionary methods.
+We shall not attempt formal, water-tight, or exhaustive definitions; our
+purpose is to convey, in the simplest and most human manner possible,
+brief general explanations of what the words stand for.
+
+
+<Opposites>
+
+Pairs of the first type are made up of words by nature opposite to each
+other, or else thought of as opposite because they are so often
+contrasted. Here is a familiar, everyday list:
+
+east, west straight, crooked myself, others
+large, small pretty, ugly major, minor
+laugh, cry walk, ride light, darkness
+top, bottom hard, soft friend, enemy
+sweet, sour clean, dirty temporal, spiritual
+meat, drink merry, sad means, extremes
+land, water private, public Jew, Gentile
+man, woman noisy, quiet independent, dependent
+old, new general, particular sublime, ridiculous
+age, youth wholesale, retail give, receive
+sick, well savage, civilized pride, humility
+brain, brawn wealth, poverty constructive, destructive
+soul, body positive, negative
+
+None of these words needs explaining. If you think of one of them, you
+will think of its opposite; at least its opposite will be lurking in the
+back of your mind. As proof of this fact you have only to glance at the
+following list, from which the second member of each pair is omitted:
+
+hot -- black -- boy -- in --
+off -- over -- love -- wrong --
+strong -- wet -- first -- day --
+long -- fast -- good -- hope --
+least -- asleep -- buy -- left --
+alive -- winter -- war -- succeed --
+creditor -- fat -- internal -- wise --
+drunk --
+
+Many words of a more difficult kind are thus pitted against each other,
+and we learn them, not singly, but in pairs. At least we should. As good
+verbal hunters we should be alert to the chance of killing two birds with
+one stone.
+
+_Allopath_ and _homeopath_, for example, are difficult
+opposites. We know of the existence of the two classes of medical
+practitioners; we know that they use different methods; but beyond this
+our knowledge is likely to be hazy. Let us set out, then, to _learn_
+the two words. The best way is to learn them together. _Allopathy_
+means other suffering, _homeopathy_ like suffering. An allopath uses
+remedies which create within the patient a condition that squarely
+conflicts with the further progress of the disease. A homeopath prescribes
+medicines (in small doses) which produce within the patient the same
+condition that the disease would produce; he "beats the disease to it," so
+to speak--takes the job himself and leaves the disease nothing to do. The
+allopath travels around a race-track in the opposite direction from the
+disease, and thwarts it through a head-on collision. The homeopath travels
+around the race-track in the same direction as the disease, and thwarts it
+by pulling at the reins. If we consider the two words together and get
+these ideas in mind, we shall have no further trouble with allopaths and
+homeopaths--except, perhaps, when they have rendered their services and
+presented their bills.
+
+_Objective_ and _subjective_ are also a troublesome pair. A
+thing is objective if it is an actual object or being, if it exists in
+itself rather than in our surmises. A thing is subjective if it is the
+creature of a state of mind, if it has its existence in the thought or
+imagination of some person or other. Thus if I meet a bear in the wilds,
+that bear is objective; whatever may be the state of my thoughts, _he is
+there_--and it would be to my advantage to reckon with this fact. But
+if a child who is sent off to bed alone says there is a bear in the room,
+the bear is subjective; it is not a living monster that will devour
+anybody, but a creature called into the mind of the child through dread.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Opposites
+
+Study the following words in pairs. Consult the dictionary for actual
+meanings. Then test your knowledge by embodying each word of each pair in
+a sentence, or in an illustration like those of the race-track and the
+bear in the preceding paragraphs.
+
+superior, inferior concord, discord
+export, import domestic, foreign
+fact, fiction prose, poetry
+verbal, oral literal, figurative
+predecessor, successor genuine, artificial
+positive, negative practical, theoretical
+optimism, pessimism finite, infinite
+longitude, latitude evolution, revolution
+oriental, occidental pathos, bathos
+sacred, profane military, civil
+clergy, laity capital, labor
+ingress, egress element, compound
+horizontal, perpendicular competition, coöperation
+predestination, freewill universal, particular
+extrinsic, intrinsic inflation, deflation
+dorsal, ventral acid, alkali
+synonym, antonym prologue, epilogue
+nadir, zenith amateur, connoisseur
+anterior, posterior stoic, epicure
+ordinal, cardinal centripetal, centrifugal
+stalagmite, stalactite orthodox, heterodox
+homogeneous, heterogeneous monogamy, polygamy
+induction, deduction egoism, altruism
+Unitarian, Trinitarian concentric, eccentric
+herbivorous, carnivorous deciduous, perennial
+esoteric, exoteric endogen, exogen
+vertebrate, invertebrate catalectic, acatalectic
+
+
+<Words Often Confused>
+
+Pairs of the second type are made up of words which are often confused by
+careless writers and speakers, and which should be accurately
+discriminated.
+
+Sometimes the words are actually akin to each other. _Continuous-
+continual_ and _enormity-enormousness_ are examples. Sometimes
+they merely look or sound much alike. _Mean-demean_ and _affect-
+effect_ are examples. Sometimes the things they designate are more or
+less related, so that the ideas behind the words rather than the words
+themselves are responsible for the confusion. _Contagious-infectious_
+and _knowledge-wisdom_ are examples. Let us distinguish between the
+two members of each of the pairs named.
+
+A thing is _continuous_ if it suffers no interruption whatever,
+_continual_ if it is broken at regular intervals but as regularly
+renewed. Thus "a continuous stretch of forest"; "the continual drip of
+water from the eaves."
+
+_Enormity_ pertains to the moral and sometimes the social,
+_enormousness_ to the physical. Thus "the enormity of the crime,"
+"the enormity of this social offense"; "the enormousness of prehistoric
+animals."
+
+_Demean_ is often used reproachfully because of its supposed relation
+to _mean_. But it has nothing to do with _mean_. The word with
+which to connect it is _demeanor_ (conduct). Thus "We observed how he
+demeaned himself" implies no adverse criticism of either the man or his
+deportment. Both may be debased to be sure, but they may be exemplary.
+
+To _affect_ means to feign or to have an influence upon, to
+_effect_ to bring to pass. Thus "He affects a fondness for classical
+music," "The little orphan's story affected those who heard it"; "We
+effected a compromise." _Affect_ is never properly used as a noun.
+_Effect_ as a noun means result, consequence, or practical operation.
+Thus "The shot took instant effect"; "He put this idea into effect."
+
+A disease is _contagious_ when the only way to catch it is through
+direct contact with a person already having it, or through contact with
+articles such a person has used. A disease is _infectious_ when it is
+presumably caused, not by contact with a person, but through widespread
+general conditions, as of climate or sanitation.
+
+Our _knowledge_ is our acquaintance with a fact, or the sum total of
+our information. Our _wisdom_ is our intellectual and spiritual
+discernment, to which our knowledge is one of the contributors.
+_Knowledge_ comprises the materials; _wisdom_ the ability to use
+them to practical advantage and to worthy or noble purpose.
+_Knowledge_ is mental possession; _wisdom_ is mental and moral
+power.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Confused
+
+1. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members of each
+of the following pairs. In each blank of the illustrative sentences insert
+the word appropriate in meaning.
+
+<Ability, capacity.> ____ to receive knowledge. ____ to impart
+knowledge.
+
+<Abstain, refrain.> He ____ from laughter. He steadfastly ____ from
+evil courses.
+
+<Abstinence, temperance.> Though he always displayed ____, he did not
+carry it to the point of ____.
+
+<Accept, except.> I shall ____ most of the suggestions, but must ____
+the one made by Mr. Wheeler.
+
+<Accept, receive>. When the package was ____ at the local post
+office, Bayard refused to ____ it.
+
+<Ache, pain>. The dull ____ of his head. A sharp ____ below
+shoulder-blade. I have known the ____ of cold hands. "My heart ____, and
+a drowsy numbness ____ My sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk."
+
+<Address, tact>. With firmness and ____ he set about reconciling the
+factions. Her ____ enabled her to perceive that something was amiss.
+
+<Adhere, cohere>. The magnetized iron filings ____. The cold iron
+____ to the boy's tongue.
+
+<Adherence, adhesion>. The ____ of the heated particles to each other
+was instantaneous. Amid these trials their ____ to the cause was unshaken.
+
+<Admission, admittance>. His ____ to the room was forced. He obtained
+____ into a fraternal order.
+
+<Admit, confess>. When he ____ that he had a weapon, he practically
+____ that he had slain the man.
+
+<Adverse, averse>. He was ____ to going. Their answer was ____.
+
+<Advice, counsel>. In this emergency he sought ____. He asked my ____
+as to the best place to hang the picture.
+
+<Aggravate, irritate>. To let these mishaps ____ you is to ____ your
+suffering.
+
+<Allusion, illusion>. It is an ____ to suppose that I made any ____
+to you.
+
+<Allusion, reference>. It was more than a possible ____; it was an
+unmistakable ____.
+
+<Amateur, novice>. Though we call him a(n) ____, he is in skill by no
+means the ____ you might think him.
+
+<Ambiguous, equivocal>. You are unintentionally ____. These words are
+deliberately ____.
+
+<Anticipate, expect>. Since we ____ the enemy to advance, would it
+not be wise to ____ him?
+
+<Appearance, aspect>. He was handsome in ____. The ____ of the sky
+was ominous.
+
+<Apprehend, comprehend>. "Lovers and madmen have such seething
+brains, Such shaping fantasies, that ____ More than cool reason ever
+____."
+
+<Ardor, fervor>. The ____ of the worshipers. The ____ of the
+soldiers.
+
+<Artist, artisan>. The ____ who was decorating the walls called to an
+____ who was mixing mortar.
+
+<Ascent, ascension>. We easily made the ____ of the slope, and from
+the summit witnessed the balloon ____.
+
+<Ascent, assent.> He gave his ____ when I proposed that we wait for
+the others to complete the ____ to this point.
+
+<Ascribe, impute.> I ____ it to you as a fault rather than ____ it to
+you as an honor.
+
+<Assembly, assemblage.> It was an informal ____. The ____ considered
+the matters it had been called to discuss.
+
+<Assent, consent.> When told that the measure would advance his
+interests, he ____; but he would not ____ to it.
+
+<Avenge, revenge.> The injury was slight, but he ____ it with
+unsparing malice. "____, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints."
+
+<Avocation, vocation.> The lawyer, besides his regular ____, had the
+collecting of birds' eggs as his ____.
+
+<Aware, conscious.> Though not ____ of the seriousness of his malady,
+he was ____ of the pain it caused him.
+
+<Balance, remainder.> Darrell added the ____ of the coins, but not
+even they brought about the ____ he sought between assets and obligations.
+
+<Bashful, modest.> Though ____ socially, he was not what you would
+term a ____ man.
+
+<Behavior, conduct.> His ____ in this time of trial was exemplary.
+She praised the ____ of the children at the party.
+
+<Belief, faith.> He possibly had ____, but not an active ____.
+
+<Benignant, benign.> Her social manner was ____. The ____ influence
+of sunlight.
+
+<Beside, besides.> ____ his personal friends, many people he had not
+even met stood ____ his sickbed.
+
+<Blanch, whiten.> At this threat the face of the heroine ____. With a
+pail of cheap paint he ____ the dingy wall.
+
+<Blessing, benediction.> After telling his parishioners to be mindful
+of their ____, the clergyman pronounced the ____.
+
+<Blockade, siege.> Daily attacks on exposed redoubts marked the
+progress of the ____. The fleet lay there in silent ____ of the port.
+
+<Bravery, bravado.> The incident proved that his ____ was not founded
+in real ____.
+
+<Bring, fetch.> When you come, ____ the official documents with you.
+____ me the scales you will find in the granary yonder.
+
+<Broad, wide.> A man with ____ shoulders stood in the ____, open
+doorway.
+
+<Bury, inter.> After they had solemnly ____ their comrade, they ____
+the treasure. They also ____ their comrade's dog.
+
+
+2. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members of each
+of the following pairs. Determine whether the words are correctly used in
+the illustrative sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Can, may.> Can I stay at home this afternoon, papa? Because of the
+floods, the train beyond doubt may not get through.
+
+<Character, reputation.> His character among them was very good. A
+man's reputation can never be taken from him.
+
+<Childish, childlike.> Your conduct is peevish; it is childishly so.
+Her innocence was childlike.
+
+<Cite, quote.> He was always citing snatches of Tennyson. We might
+quote Hamlet's soliloquy on suicide as an example of Shakespeare's ability
+to go to the heart of deep questions.
+
+<Claim, assert.> He claimed that Jefferson was our third President.
+He asserted that bears sleep through the winter.
+
+<Clothing, costume.> At the masquerade ball we each wore special
+clothing. The mariner who had swum from the wreck to the desert shore had
+not a shred of costume.
+
+<Comfort, ease.> Comfort after labor. The ease of owning a home.
+
+<Commercial, mercantile.> Petty commercial transactions. A mercantile
+treaty.
+
+<Common, mutual.> This pavilion was the common play-house for the
+children of the neighborhood. Ward and Aker held this property as their
+mutual possession.
+
+<Complement, compliment.> This addition is the complement of our
+quota. He paid his dancing partner a compliment.
+
+<Complement, supplement.> His downrightness is the complement of his
+uprightness. As a supplement to his wages he received an occasional bonus.
+
+<Complete, finish.> He put in the completing touches. He had finished
+the task.
+
+<Composure, equanimity.> His composure was not to be shaken. After
+this inner tumult came equanimity.
+
+<Comprehensible, comprehensive.> Numbers of such magnitude are
+scarcely comprehensible. That men by the million should die for a cause is
+a thing not really comprehensive.
+
+<Compulsion, obligation.> Who does not feel within him a compulsion
+to help the weak? It was through obligation, through having slave-drivers
+stand over them, that these wretched folk built the pyramids.
+
+<Congratulate, felicitate.> I congratulated my friend on his
+appointment to the commission. I also felicitated the stranger on his
+appointment.
+
+<Consecutive, successive.> Three consecutive convictions proved the
+ability of the prosecuting attorney. The quiet passing of successive
+summer days.
+
+<Contemptible, contemptuous.> Its size was insignificant, even
+contemptible. He won the prize by a contemptuous trick.
+
+<Continuation, continuance.> The investigator was surprised to find
+the tradition of such long continuation. We waited impatiently for the
+continuance of the story in the next issue.
+
+<Corporal, corporeal.> I am more and more amazed at the perfection of
+man's corporal frame. His corporeal vigor was unusual.
+
+<Correct, rectify.> A man may correct many of his false judgments on
+current affairs by studying history. The mistake is ours; it shall be
+rectified.
+
+<Cozy, snug.> The cozy fit of a garment. A snug place by the fire.
+
+<Crawl, creep.> We crawled forward at dawn to surprise their
+outposts. In his humility he fairly crept on the earth.
+
+<Credible, creditable.> I do not doubt it; it is entirely credible.
+The success of the antidote seemed scarcely creditable.
+
+<Credit, accredit.> Though he is the official and credited
+ambassador, his assertions are not accredited.
+
+<Cure, heal.> I cured the dog's wounds. The physician declared he
+could heal leprosy.
+
+<Custom, habit.> "A custom more honor'd in the breach than the
+observance." Is it your custom to watch the clock while you eat? The habit
+in that region was to rise at cockcrow.
+
+<Decided, decisive.> A decided battle. A decisive fault in manners.
+
+<Definite, definitive.> We still await a definite edition of this
+author's works. His answer was so definitive that we no longer doubted
+what he meant.
+
+<Demesne, domain.> Clive added India to the British demesne.
+The king went riding through his personal domain.
+
+<Deprecate, depreciate.> The German mark has deprecated in value. He
+depreciated the praise they were lavishing upon him.
+
+<Descent, dissent.> They tied themselves together with a rope in
+order to make their dissent safer. The dissent to a lower plane of
+conversation was what he most desired.
+
+<Discovery, invention.> The discovery of the wireless telegraph is
+Marconi's chief claim to remembrance. The invention of a water passage
+between Tierra del Fuego and the mainland was the work of Magellan.
+
+<Discriminate, distinguish.> He could not discriminate individuals at
+that distance. Any man can distinguish right from wrong.
+
+<Disinterested, uninterested.> His course was entirely generous and
+disinterested. Most visitors to art galleries have an uninterested manner.
+
+<Disposal, disposition.> This disposal of the matter is
+authoritative, final. His disposition of his forces was well-considered.
+
+<Dissatisfied, discontented.> Though the colonists were dissatisfied
+for the moment, they could hardly be called discontented.
+
+<Distinct, distinctive.> The distinct quality of his character was
+aggressiveness. There were four separate and distinctive calls.
+
+<Dramatic, theatrical.> An affected, dramatic manner. A truly
+theatrical situation.
+
+<Dry, arid.> A dry plain. An arid place to sleep in.
+
+<Dumb, mute.> The man stood dumb with surprise. Always be kind to
+mute animals.
+
+<Durable, lasting.> Our joy is durable. Oak is a lasting wood.
+
+3. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members
+of each of the following pairs. Frame sentences to illustrate
+the correct use of the words. (Some of the words in this list,
+as well as some in other parts of the chapter, are considered in
+larger groups in the chapters following.)
+
+earth, world efficiency, efficacy
+egoism, egotism eldest, oldest
+elemental, elementary elude, evade
+emigrate, immigrate enough, sufficient
+envy, jealousy equable, equitable
+equal, equivalent essential, necessary
+esteem, respect euphemism, euphuism
+evidence, proof exact, precise
+exchange, interchange excuse, pardon
+exempt, immune expect, suppose
+expedite, facilitate
+
+facsimile, copy familiar, intimate
+fancy, imagination farther, further
+feeling, sentiment feminine, effeminate
+fervent, fervid fewer, less
+fluid, liquid first (or last) two, two first (or last)
+food, feed foreign, alien
+force, strength forgive, pardon
+
+gayety, cheerfulness genius, talent
+gentle, tame genuine, authentic
+glance, glimpse grateful, thankful
+grieve, mourn
+
+hanged, hung happen, transpire
+happiness, pleasure healthy, healthful
+hear, listen heathen, pagan
+honorable, honorary horrible, horrid
+human, humane
+
+illegible, unreadable image, effigy
+imaginary, imaginative impending, approaching
+imperious, imperial imply, infer
+in, into inability, disability
+ingenious, ingenuous intelligent, intellectual
+insinuation, innuendo instinct, intuition
+involve, implicate irony, sarcasm
+irretrievable, irreparable
+
+judicious, judicial just, equitable
+justify, warrant
+
+lack, want languor, lassitude
+later, latter lawful, legal
+lax, slack leave, let
+lend, loan liable, likely
+libel, slander lie, lay
+like, love linger, loiter
+look, see loose, lose
+luxurious, luxuriant
+
+majority, plurality marine, maritime
+martial, military moderate, temperate
+mood, humor moral, ethical
+moral, religious mutual, reciprocal
+myth, legend
+
+natal, native nautical, naval
+near, close necessaries, necessities
+needy, needful noted, notorious
+novice, tyro
+
+observance, observation observe, perceive
+obsolete, archaic omnipresent, ubiquitous
+on, upon oppose, resist
+opposite, contrary oppress, depress
+
+palliate, extenuate passionate, impassioned
+pathos, pity patron, customer
+peculiar, unusual perspicuity, perspicacity
+permeate, pervade permit, allow
+perseverance, persistence pertain, appertain
+pictorial, picturesque pitiable, pitiful
+pity, sympathy pleasant, pleasing
+politician, statesman practicable, practical
+precipitous, precipitate precision, preciseness
+prejudice, bias prelude, overture
+pride, vanity principal, principle
+process, procedure procure, secure
+professor, teacher progress, progression
+propitious, auspicious proposal, proposition
+tradition, legend truth, veracity
+
+quiet, quiescent
+
+raise, rear raise, rise
+ransom, redeem rare, scarce
+reason, understanding reasonable, rational
+recollect, remember regal, royal
+reliable, trustworthy requirement, requisite
+restive, restless reverse, inverse
+ride, drive rime (or rhyme), rhythm
+
+sacred, holy salutation, salute
+scanty, sparse scholar, student
+science, art scrupulous, conscientious
+serf, slave shift, expedient
+sick, ill silent, taciturn
+sit, set skilled, skilful
+slender, slim smart, clever
+sociable, social solicitude, anxiety
+stay, stop stimulus, stimulation
+strut, swagger suppress, repress
+
+termination, terminus theory, hypothesis
+tolerate, permit torment, torture
+tradition, legend truth, veracity
+
+unbelief, disbelief unique, unusual
+
+varied, various variety, diversity
+venal, venial vengeance, revenge
+verse, stanza vindictive, revengeful
+visit, visitation visitant, visitor
+
+wander, stray warn, caution
+will, volition wit, humor
+witness, see womanish, womanlike
+worth, value
+
+
+ <Parallels>
+
+Pairs of the third type are made up of words parallel in meaning. This
+class somewhat overlaps the second; many terms that are frequently
+confused are parallels, and parallelism is of course a cause of confusion.
+
+Parallels are words that show likeness in meaning. Likeness, not sameness.
+Yet at one time actual sameness may have existed, and in many instances
+did. Nowadays this sameness has been lost, and the words have become
+differentiated. As a rule they still are closely related in thought;
+sometimes, however, the divergence between them is wide.
+
+Why did words having the same meaning find lodgment in the language in the
+first place? The law of linguistic economy forbids any such happening, and
+only through sheer good fortune did English come to possess duplications.
+The original Anglo-Saxon did not contain them. But the Roman Catholic
+clergy brought to England the language of religion and of scholarship,
+Latin. Later the Normans, whose speech as a branch of French was an
+offshoot of Latin, came to the island as conquerors. For a time,
+therefore, three languages existed side by side in the country--Anglo-
+Saxon among the common folk, Latin among the clergy, and Norman-French at
+the court and among the nobility. The coalescing of the three (or of the
+two if we count Latin in its direct and indirect contributions as one) was
+inevitable. But other (mostly cognate) languages also had a part in the
+speech that was ultimately evolved. The Anglo-Saxon element was
+augmented by words from Dutch, Scandinavian, and the Germanic tongues in
+general; and Latin was reinforced by Greek. Thus to imply, as is
+sometimes done, that modern English is simply a blend of Anglo-Saxon and
+Latin elements is misleading. _Native_ and _classic_ are the better
+terms to use, provided both are used broadly. _Native_ must include not
+only Anglo-Saxon but the other Germanic elements as well, and _classic_
+must include French and Greek as well as Latin.
+
+The welding of these languages made available two--in some instances more
+than two--words for a single object or idea. What became of these
+duplicates? Sometimes one of the words was dropped as needless.
+Oftentimes, however, both were retained--with such modifications in
+meaning that thereafter they designated, not the same object or idea, but
+different forms or aspects of it. Thus they became parallels, and the new
+language waxed rich with discriminations which neither of the component
+tongues had possessed.
+
+Scott in _Ivanhoe_ gives the basis upon which the unification of the
+languages proceeded. The jester Wamba in conversation with the swineherd
+Gurth explains how the Anglo-Saxon term took on the homelier, rougher,
+more workaday uses and left the more refined and fastidious uses for the
+Norman-French. A domestic animal, says Wamba, was cared for by the
+conquered people, and in consequence bore while living a "good Saxon"
+name--swine, ox, or calf; but it was served at the tables of the
+conquerors, and therefore when ready for consumption bore a "good
+Norman-French" name--pork, beef, or veal. "When the brute [a sow] lives,
+and is in charge of a Saxon slave, she goes by her Saxon name; but becomes
+Norman and is called pork, when she is carried into the castle hall to
+feast among the nobles.... He [a calf] is Saxon when he requires tendance,
+and takes a Norman name [Monsieur de Veau] when he becomes matter of
+enjoyment."
+
+Let us see how Scott's contention fares if we extend his list of terms
+relative to animal life. As throughout the rest of this chapter, with the
+single and necessary exception of List B, the first word in each pair is
+native, the second classic:
+
+
+<LIST A>
+
+sheep, mutton deer, venison horse, equine
+cow, bovine bull, taurine sheep, ovine
+wolf, lupine hog, porcine bear, ursine
+fox, vulpine cat, feline dog, canine
+fish, piscatorial mouse, vermin rat, rodent
+mankind, humanity man, masculine woman, feminine
+childish, infantile boyish, puerile
+
+A glance at this list will show that, at least as regards animal life, the
+native word is likely to be the more familiar and unpretentious. But we
+must not leap to the conclusion that, taking the language as a whole, the
+simple, easy word is sure to be native, the abstruse word classic. In the
+following list one word in each pair is simpler, oftentimes much simpler,
+than the other; yet both are of classic origin. (In some instances the two
+are doublets; that is, they spring from the same stem.)
+
+
+<LIST B>
+
+boil, effervesce plenty, abundance force, coerce
+clear, transparent sound, reverberate echo, reverberate
+toil, labor false, perfidious prove, verify
+join, unite join, annex try, endeavor
+carry, convey save, preserve save, rescue
+safe, secure poor, pauper poor, penurious
+poor, impecunious native, indigenous strange, extraneous
+excuse, palliate excusable, venial cannon, ordnance
+corpse, cadaverous parish, parochial fool, stultify
+fool, idiot rule, govern governor, gubernatorial
+wages, salary nice, exquisite haughty, arrogant
+letter, epistle pursue, prosecute use, utility
+use, utilize rival, competitor male, masculine
+female, feminine beauty, esthetics beauty, pulchritude
+beautify, embellish poison, venom vote, franchise
+vote, suffrage taste, gust tasteful, gustatory
+tasteless, insipid flower, floral count, compute
+cowardly, pusillanimous tent, pavilion money, finance
+monetary, pecuniary trace, vestige face, countenance
+turn, revolve bottle, vial grease, lubricant
+oily, unctuous revive, resuscitate faultless, impeccable
+scourge, flagellate power, puissance barber, tonsorial
+bishop, episcopal carry, portable fruitful, prolific
+punish, punitive scar, cicatrix hostile, inimical
+choice, option cry, vociferate ease, facility
+peaceful, pacific beast, animal chasten, castigate
+round, rotunda imprison, incarcerate bowels, viscera
+boil, ebullient city, municipal color, chromatics
+nervous, neurotic pleasing, delectable accidental, fortuitous
+change, mutation lazy, indolent fragrance, aroma
+pay, compensate face, physiognomy joy, rapture
+charitable, eleemosynary blame, blaspheme priest, presbyter
+coy, quiet prudent, provident pupil, disciple
+story, narrative pause, interval despise, abhor
+doctor, physician fate, destiny country, rustic
+aged, senile increase, increment gentle, genteel
+clear, apparent eagle, aquiline motion, momentum
+nourishment, nutrition pure, unadulterated closeness, proximity
+number, notation ancestors, progenitors confirm, corroborate
+convert, proselyte benediction, benison treasury, thesaurus
+egotism, megalomania
+
+Sometimes the native word is less familiar than the classic:
+
+
+<LIST C>
+
+seethe, boil loam, soil fare, travel
+abide, remain bestow, present bestow, deposit
+din, noise quern, mill learner, scholar
+shamefaced, modest hue, color tarnish, stain
+ween, expect leech, physician shield, protect
+steadfast, firm withstand, resist straightway, immediately
+dwelling, residence heft, gravity delve, excavate
+forthright, direct tidings, report bower, chamber
+rune, letter borough, city baleful, destructive
+gainsay, contradict cleave, divide hearten, encourage
+hoard, treasure
+
+
+Again, the native word is sometimes less emphatic than the classic:
+
+<LIST D>
+
+fly, soar old, venerable flood, cataclysm
+steep, precipitous wonder, astonishment speed, velocity
+sparkle, scintillate stir, commotion stir, agitate
+strike, collide learned, erudite small, diminutive
+scare, terrify burn, combustion fire, conflagration
+fall, collapse uproot, eradicate skin, excoriate
+hate, abominate work, labor bright, brilliant
+hungry, famished eat, devour twisted, contorted
+thin, emaciated sad, lugubrious mirth, hilarity
+
+Despite these exceptions, the native word is in general better known
+and more crudely powerful than the classic. Thus of the pair
+_sweat-perspiration_, _sweat_ is the plain-spoken, everyday member,
+_perspiration_ the polite, even learned member. The man of limited
+vocabulary says _sweat_; even the sophisticated person, unless there
+is occasion to soften effects, finds _sweat_ the more natural term.
+No one would say that a horse perspires. No one would say that human
+beings must eat their bread in the perspiration of their faces. But
+_sweat_ is a word of connotation too vigorous (though honest withal)
+for us to use the term in the drawing room. A questionable woman in _The
+Vicar of Wakefield_ betrays her lack of breeding by the remark that she
+is in a muck of sweat.
+
+The native word, besides being in itself simpler and starker than the
+classic, makes stronger appeal to our feelings and affections. In nearly
+every instance the objects and relationships that have woven themselves
+into the very texture of our lives are designated by native terms. Even if
+they are not so designated solely, they are so designated in their more
+cherished aspects. We warm more to the native _fatherly_ than to the
+classic _paternal_. We have a deeper sentiment for the native
+_home_ than for the classic _residence_.
+
+That the native is the more downright term may be seen from the following
+words. (These pairs are of course merely illustrative. With them might be
+grouped a few special pairs, like _devilish-diabolical_ and
+_church_-_ecclesiastical_, of which the first members are
+classic in origin but of such early naturalization into English that they
+may be regarded as native.)
+
+
+<LIST E>
+
+belly, stomach belly, abdomen navel, umbilicus
+suck, nurse naked, nude murder, homicide
+dead, deceased dead, defunct dying, moribund
+lust, salacity lewd, libidinous read, peruse
+lie, prevaricate hearty, cordial following, subsequent
+crowd, multitude chew, masticate food, pabulum
+eat, regale meal, repast meal, refection
+thrift, economy sleepy, soporific slumberous, somnolent
+live, reside rot, putrefy swelling, protuberant
+soak, saturate soak, absorb stinking, malodorous
+spit, saliva spit, expectorate thievishness, kleptomania
+belch, eructate sticky, adhesive house, domicile
+eye, optic walker, pedestrian talkative, loquacious
+talkative, garrulous wisdom, sapience bodily, corporeal
+name, appellation finger, digit show, ostentation
+nearness, propinquity wash, lave handwriting, chirography
+waves, undulations shady, umbrageous fat, corpulent
+muddy, turbid widow, relict horseback, equestrian
+weight, avoirdupois blush, erubescence
+
+The word of classic origin in many instances survives only or mainly in
+the form of an adjective; as a noun (or other part of speech) it has
+completely or largely disappeared. This fact may be observed in lists
+already given, particularly List A. It may also be observed in the
+following words:
+
+
+<LIST F>
+
+moon, lunar star, stellar star, sidereal
+sun, solar earth, terrestrial world, mundane
+heaven, celestial hell, infernal earthquake, seismic
+ear, aural head, capital hand, manual
+foot, pedal breast, pectoral heart, cardial
+hip, sciatic tail, caudal throat, guttural
+lung, pulmonary bone, osseous hair, hirsute
+tearful, lachrymose early, primitive sweet, dulcet,
+sweet, saccharine young, juvenile bloody, sanguinary
+deadly, mortal red, florid bank, riparian
+hard, arduous wound, vulnerable written, graphic
+spotless, immaculate sell, mercenary son, filial
+salt, saline meal, farinaceous wood, ligneous
+wood, sylvan cloud, nebulous glass, vitreous
+milk, lacteal water, aquatic stone, lapidary
+gold, aureous silver, argent iron, ferric
+honey, mellifluous loving, amatory loving, erotic
+loving, amiable wedded, hymeneal plow, arable
+priestly, sacerdotal arrow, sagittal wholesome, salubrious
+warlike, bellicose timely, temporary fiery, igneous
+ring, annular soap, saponaceous nestling, nidulant
+snore, stertorous window, fenestral twilight, crepuscular
+soot, fuliginous hunter, venatorial
+
+The fact that English is a double-barreled language, and that of parallel
+terms one is likely to be native and the other classic, is interesting in
+itself. Our lists of parallels, however, though (with the exception of
+List B) they are arranged to bring out this duality of origin, have other
+and more vital uses as material for exercises. For after all it matters
+little whether we know where a word comes from, provided we know
+thoroughly the meaning and implications of the word itself. The lists
+already given and those to follow show the more important words actually
+yoked as parallels. Your task must be to ascertain the differences in
+import between the words thus joined.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Parallels
+
+<LIST G>
+
+Study the discriminations between the members of the following pairs. At
+each blank in the illustrative sentences insert the appropriate word.
+
+<Brotherly, fraternal.> _Brotherly_ is used of actual blood
+kinship, or indicates close feeling, deep affection, or religious love.
+_Fraternal_ is used less personally and intimately; it normally
+betokens that the relations are at least in part formal (as relations
+within societies). "The sight of the button on the stranger's lapel caused
+Wilkes to give him the cabalistic sign and ask his ____ assistance."
+"Though the children of different parents, we bear for each other a true
+____ devotion." "Because we both are newspaper men I feel a ____ interest
+in him."
+
+<Daily, diurnal.> _Daily_, the popular word, is often used
+loosely. We may say that we eat three meals daily without implying that we
+have never gone dinnerless. _Diurnal_, the scientific term, is used
+exactly, whether applying to the period of daylight or to the whole
+twenty-four hours. A diurnal flower closes at night; a diurnal motion is
+precisely coincident with the astronomical day. In poetry, however,
+_diurnal_ is often used for _daily_. "Give us this day our ____
+bread." "The ____ rotation of the earth on its axis is the cause of our
+day and night." "Fred and I went for our ____ ramble through the hills."
+
+<Cold, frigid.> Which is the more popular word? Let us see. Would the
+man in the street be more likely to use one than the other? Which one?
+Does this answer our question? Another question: Which word is the more
+inclusive in meaning? Again, let us see. A blacksmith is beating iron;
+does the iron grow cold or frigid? Which term, then, approaches the closer
+in meaning to the idea of mere coolness? On the other hand, may that same
+term represent a temperature far beyond mere coolness? Would you speak of
+a morning as bitterly cold or bitterly frigid? Now think of the term you
+have not been using. _Can_ it convey as wide meanings, or is it
+limited in range? Does the word _frigid_ carry for you a geographical
+suggestion (to the frigid zone)? Do you yourself use the term? If so, do
+you use it chiefly (perhaps entirely) in connection with human temperament
+or demeanor? Is _cold_ used thus figuratively also? Which is the more
+often thus used? "I suffer from ____ hands and feet." "The slopes of Mont
+Blanc are ____ with eternal snow." "He did not warm to the idea at all.
+His inclinations are absolutely ____."
+
+<Manly, virile>. _Manly_ implies possession of traits or
+qualities a man should possess; it may be used of immature persons.
+_Virile_ implies maturity and robust masculinity; it is also used of
+the power to procreate. "A ____ lad." "A ____ reply." "____ energy."
+"____ and aggressive." "____ forbearance."
+
+<Inner, internal>. _Inner_ is somewhat within, or more within
+than something else is; it is also used in figurative and spiritual
+senses. _Internal_ is entirely within. "The ____ organs of the human
+body." "The ____ layer of the rind." "The injury was ____."
+"The ____ nature of man." "The ____ meaning of the occurrence."
+
+<Height, altitude>. "He was five feet, eleven inches in height."
+Can you substitute _altitude_? Is _altitude_ used of persons?
+"At an altitude of eleven feet from the ground." Would _height_ be
+more natural? Does _altitude_ betoken great height? If so, does
+Hamlet speak jestingly when he greets the player, "Your ladyship is nearer
+heaven than when I saw you last, by the altitude of a chopine?" What of
+the sentence: "The altitude of Galveston was not sufficient to protect it
+from the tidal wave"? Does the magnitude or importance of the object
+(Galveston) compensate for its lack of elevation and thus justify
+_altitude_? Could _height_ be substituted? If so, would the
+words _above sea-level_ have to follow it? Does this fact give you a
+further clue as to the distinction between the two words? You are
+comparing the elevation of two peaks, both plainly visible; you measure
+them merely by your eye. Do you say "This exceeds the other in height" or
+"This exceeds the other in altitude"? Suppose the peaks are so distant
+from each other that the two are not visible simultaneously, and suppose
+you are speaking from a knowledge of the scientific measurements. Do you
+say "This exceeds the other in height" or "This exceeds the other in
+altitude"?
+
+<Talk, conversation>. _Talk_ may be one-sided and empty.
+_Conversation_ requires that at least two shall participate, and it
+is not spoken of as empty, though it may be trivial. "Our ____ was
+somewhat desultory." "Thought is less general than ____."
+"His ____ was so lively that I had no chance to interrupt"
+"That is meaningless ____."
+
+<Homesickness, nostalgia>. All of us have heard physicians call
+commonplace ailments by extraordinary names. When homesickness reaches the
+stage where a physician is or might be called in, it becomes nostalgia.
+The latter term suggests morbid or chronic suffering. A healthy boy away
+from home for the first time is homesick. An exile who has wasted himself
+with pining for his native land is nostalgic. "His ____ was more than
+____; it had so preyed upon his thoughts that it had grown into ____."
+
+Rise, ascend. _Rise_ is the more general term, but it expresses less
+than _ascend_ in degree or stateliness. "He had foretold to them that
+he would ____ into heaven." "Do not ____ from your seat." "The diver
+slowly ____ to the surface." "The travelers ____ the mountain."
+
+<Sell, vend>. _Sell_ is the more dignified word socially, but
+may express greater moral degradation. _Vend_ is used of the petty
+(as that which can be carried about in a wagon), and may suggest the
+pettily dishonest. "That man would ____ his country." "We shall ____ a
+million dollars' worth of goods." "The hucksters ____ their wares."
+
+
+<LIST H>
+
+Study the discriminations between the members of the following pairs.
+Determine whether the words are correctly used in the illustrative
+sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Friendly, amicable>. _Friendly_ denotes goodwill positive in
+quality though perhaps limited in degree; we may be friendly to friends,
+enemies, or strangers. _Amicable_ is negative, denoting absence of
+open discord: it is used of those persons between whom some connection
+already exists. "The newcomer has an amicable manner." "Both sides were
+cautious, but at last they reached a friendly settlement." "I have only
+amicable feelings for an enemy who is thus merciful." "The two met, if not
+in a friendly, at least in an amicable way."
+
+<Willing, voluntary>. Both words imply an act of the will; but
+_willing_ adds positive good-nature, desire, or enthusiasm, whereas
+_voluntary_ conveys little or nothing of the emotional attitude.
+_Voluntary_ is often thought of in contrast with _mechanical_.
+"They made willing submission." "They rendered whole-hearted and voluntary
+service." "Though torn by desire to return to his mother, he willingly
+continued his journey away from her." "The sneeze was unwilling."
+
+<Greedy, voracious.> _Greedy_ denotes excessiveness (usually
+habitual) of appetite or, in its figurative uses, of desire; it nearly
+always carries the idea of selfishness. _Voracious_ denotes intense
+hunger or the hasty and prolonged consumption of great quantities of food;
+it may indicate, not habitual selfishness, but the stress of
+circumstances. "Nobody else I know is so greedy as he." "The young poet
+was voracious of praise." "Trench, though a capital fellow, was so hungry
+that he ate voraciously."
+
+<Offspring, progeny.> _Offspring_ is likely to be used when our
+thought is chiefly on the children, _progeny_ when our thought is
+chiefly on the parents. _Offspring_ may be used of one or many;
+_progeny_ is used in collective reference to many. "He was third
+among the progeny who won distinction." "They are the progeny of very rich
+parents." "Clayton left his offspring well provided for."
+
+<Ghost, spirit.> _Ghost_ is the narrower term. It never
+expresses, as _spirit_ does, the idea of soul or of animating mood or
+purpose. With reference to incorporeal beings, it denotes (except in the
+phrase "the Holy Ghost") the reappearance of the dead in disembodied form.
+_Spirit_ may denote a variety of incorporeal beings--among them
+angels, fairies (devoid of moral nature), and personalities returned from
+the grave and manifested--seldom visibly--through spiritualistic tappings
+and the like. "The superstitious natives thought the spirit of their chief
+walked in the graveyard." "The ghost of the ancestors survives in the
+descendants." "I can call spirits from the vasty deep."
+
+<Foe, enemy.> Nowadays the chief difference between the two terms is
+that _foe_ is the more used in poetry, _enemy_ in prose.
+But _foe_ tends to express the more personal and implacable
+hostility. We do not think of foes as bearing any friendship for each
+other; enemies may, or they may be enemies in public affairs but downright
+friends in their private relations. A man is hardly spoken of as being his
+own foe, but he may be his own enemy. "For the moment we found ourselves
+foes." "Suspicion is an enemy to content." "I paid a tribute to my friend,
+who was the dominant personality among the enemy."
+
+<Truth, veracity.> _Truth_ has to do with the accuracy of the
+statement, of the facts; _veracity_ with the intention of the person
+to say nothing false. "I cannot vouch for the veracity of the story, but I
+can for the truth of the teller." "Though he is not a man of veracity, I
+believe he is now speaking the truth." "Veracity, crushed to earth, will
+rise again."
+
+<Break, fracture>. _Break_ is the broader term. It need not
+refer clearly to the operation or result of external force, nor need it
+embody the idea that this force is brought against a hard substance. In
+these respects it differs from _fracture_, as also in the fact that
+it may designate a mere interruption. Furthermore it has figurative uses,
+whereas _fracture_ is narrowly literal. "There was a fracture in the
+chain of mountains." "The break in his voice was distinct." "The fracture
+of the bones of his wrist incapacitated him." "The fracture of the rope."
+
+<Hug, embrace>. To _hug_ is to clasp violently or
+enthusiastically, and perhaps ludicrously. To _embrace_ is to clasp
+in a more dignified, perhaps even in a formal, way; the term also means to
+include, to comprise. "This topic embraces the other." "Did you see that
+ardent bumpkin embracing his sweetheart?" "Her sister gave her a graceful
+but none too cordial hug." "The wounded bear hugged the hunter
+ferociously."
+
+<Shorten, abridge>. The two terms overlap; but there is a fairly
+strong tendency to use _shorten_ for reduction in length, and
+_abridge_ for reduction in quantity or mass. Both words are used
+figuratively as well as literally. "The tyrant shortened the privileges of
+his subjects." "We shortened the rope." "The teacher abridged the
+recitation." "The report of the committee appears in abridged form in
+Volume 2 of our records."
+
+
+<LIST I>
+
+With the help of the dictionary discriminate between the members of the
+following pairs. Determine whether the words are correctly used in the
+illustrative sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Fiery, inflammable>. "He delivered a fiery address." "The
+underbrush was dry and fiery." "Your disposition is too inflammable."
+
+<Lean, attenuated>. "The fat man had grown attenuated."
+"Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look." "The hot metal was then drawn
+into an attenuated wire." "Only a lean line of our soldiers faced the
+dense masses of the enemy."
+
+<Home-like, domestic>. "The scene was quiet and domestic." "It is
+home-like, inexpressibly dear." "To Waltham, heartsick from his
+wanderings, the room in all its arrangements was thoroughly domestic."
+
+<Vigilant, watchful>. "We must be vigilant if we would maintain our
+liberty." "He was wakeful, even watchful, though not from set purpose."
+"He was vigilant for evidences of friendship."
+
+<Building, edifice>. "It is a big, barn-like building." "Spare yonder
+sacred edifice." "This is the most imposing building I ever saw."
+
+<Hole, aperture>. "I poked a stick into the aperture which the
+crawfish had made." "Through the aperture of the partly open door I gazed
+out on the street." "The hole of the hornet's nest was black with the
+emerging and angry insects."
+
+<Farming, agriculture>. "Two hundred students graduated this year
+from the college of farming." "For long years he had devoted himself to
+the homely, grinding tasks of agriculture." "I have looked rather
+carefully into the theories of farming."
+
+<Rest, repose>. "He obtained some repose even while standing." "We
+wished for a moment's rest from our exertions." "Worn out, he was
+compelled to seek repose." "Lincoln's face in repose was very melancholy."
+
+<Help, aid>. "The man was so injured he could do nothing for himself;
+I had to aid him." "Help, help!" "Aid us, O God, in our sore distress."
+"The little fellow could not quite get the bundle to his shoulder; a
+passerby helped him."
+
+<Hide, conceal>. "By refraining from comment he hid his connection
+with the affair." "Wild creatures hide themselves by means of their
+protective coloring." "The frost on the panes conceals the landscape from
+you." "Do not hide your misdeeds from your mother."
+
+
+<LIST J>
+
+In the following list only the native member of each pair is given.
+Determine what the classic member is, and frame sentences to illustrate
+the correct use of the two words. (Make a conscientious effort to find the
+classic member by means of its parallelism with the native. If, and after,
+you definitely fail in any instance to find it, obtain a clue to it
+through study of the words in List G. Every pair in that list is clearly
+suggestive of one or more pairs in this list.)
+
+nightly,-- motherly,--
+breadth,-- buy,--
+hot,-- fall,--
+thought,-- sleeplessness,--
+fatherly,-- yearly,--
+outer,-- depth,--
+womanly,-- speech,--
+
+
+<LIST K>
+
+Discriminate between the members of each of the following pairs, and frame
+sentences to illustrate the correct use of the two words.
+
+freedom, liberty well, cistern
+freedom, independence give, donate
+free, acquit happen, occur
+door, portal lessen, abate
+begin, commence lessen, diminish
+behead, decapitate forefathers, ancestors
+belief, credence friend, acquaintance
+belief, credulity lead, conduct
+swear, vow end, finish
+curse, imprecate end, complete
+curse, anathema end, terminate
+die, expire warn, admonish
+die, perish warn, caution
+die, succumb rich, affluent
+lively, vivacious wealthy, opulent
+walk, ambulate help, assistance
+leave, depart help, succor
+leave, abandon answer, reply
+go with, accompany find out, ascertain
+go before, precede take, appropriate
+hasten, accelerate shrewd, astute
+quicken, accelerate breathe, respire
+speed, celerity busy, industrious
+hatred, animadversion growing, crescent
+fearful, timorous grow, increase
+
+
+<LIST L>
+
+Cover with a piece of paper the classic (right-hand) members of the
+following pairs, and if possible ascertain what they are by studying the
+native members. Frame sentences to illustrate the correct use of both
+words in each pair.
+
+neighborhood, vicinity hang, impend
+hang, suspend rash, impetuous
+flood, inundation drunk, intoxicated
+harmful, injurious tool, instrument
+mind, intellect mad, insane
+birth, nativity sail, navigate
+sailor, mariner ship, vessel
+lying, mendacious upright, erect
+early, premature upright, vertical
+first, primary shake, vibrate
+raise, elevate swing, oscillate
+lift, elevate leaves, foliage
+greet, salute beg, importune
+choose, select beggar, mendicant
+choose, elect smell, odor
+same, identical sink, submerge
+name, nominate dip, immerse
+follow, pursue room, apartment
+follow, succeed see, perceive
+teach, instruct see, inspect
+teach, inculcate sight, visibility
+teacher, pedagogue sight, vision
+tiresome, tedious sight, spectacle
+empty, vacant glasses, spectacles
+farewell, valediction
+
+
+<LIST M>
+
+Cover with a piece of paper the native (left-hand) members of the
+following pairs, and if possible ascertain what they are by studying the
+classic members. Frame sentences to illustrate the correct use of both
+words in each pair.
+
+skin, cuticle thunder, fulminate
+skin, integument sleep-walking, somnambulism
+hide, epidermis bird, ornithology
+fleshly, carnal bird, aviary
+hearer, auditor bee, apiary
+snake, serpent bending, flexible
+heap, aggregation wrinkle, corrugation
+laugh, cachinnation slow, dilatory
+laughable, risible lime, calcimine
+fear, trepidation coal, lignite
+live, exist man, anthropology
+bridal, nuptial winter, hibernate
+wed, marry gap, hiatus
+husband/wife, spouse right, ethical
+shore, littoral showy, ostentatious
+forswear, perjure spelling, orthography
+steal, peculate time, chronology
+steal, embezzle handbook, manual
+lockjaw, tetanus hole, cavity
+mistake, error dig, excavate
+mistake, erratum boil, tumor
+wink, nictation tickle, titillate
+blessing, benediction dry, desiccated
+wet, humid warm, tepid
+flirt, coquet forgetfulness, oblivion
+fiddle, violin sky, firmament
+sky, empyrean flatter, compliment
+flee, abscond flight, fugitive
+forbid, prohibit hinder, impede
+hold, contain
+
+
+<LIST N>
+
+For each of the following pairs frame a sentence which shall contain one
+of the members. Can the other member be substituted without affecting the
+meaning of the sentence? Read the discrimination of _Height-altitude_
+in EXERCISE - Parallels. Ask yourself similar questions to bring out the
+distinction between the two words you are considering.
+
+threat, menace call, summon
+talk, commune cleanse, purify
+short, terse short, concise
+better, ameliorate lie, recline
+new, novel straight, parallel
+lawful, legitimate law, litigation
+law, jurisprudence flash, coruscate
+late, tardy watch, chronometer
+foretell, prognosticate king, emperor
+winding, sinuous hint, insinuate
+burn, incinerate fire, incendiarism
+bind, constrict crab, crustacean
+fowls, poultry lean, incline
+flat, level flat, vapid
+sharpness, acerbity sharpness, acrimony
+shepherd, pastor word, vocable
+choke, suffocate stifle, suffocate
+clothes, raiment witness, spectator
+beat, pulsate mournful, melancholy
+beginning, incipient drink, imbibe
+light, illuminate hall, corridor
+stair, escalator anger, indignation
+fight, combat sleight-of-hand, prestidigitation
+build, construct tree, arbor
+ask, interrogate wench, virgin
+frisk, caper fill, replenish
+water, irrigate silly, foolish
+coming, advent feeling, sentiment
+old, antiquated forerunner, precursor
+sew, embroider unload, exonerate
+grave, sepulcher readable, legible
+tell, narrate kiss, osculate
+nose, proboscis striking, percussion
+green, verdant stroke, concussion
+grass, verdure bowman, archer
+drive, propel greed, avarice
+book, volume stingy, parsimonious
+warrior, belligerent bath, ablution
+owner, proprietor wrong, incorrect
+bow, obeisance top, summit
+kneel, genuflection food, nutrition
+work, occupation seize, apprehend
+shut, close field, agrarian
+
+Turn back to Lists A, B, C, D, E, and F. Discriminate between the members
+of each pair contained in these lists. Frame sentences to illustrate the
+correct use of the words.
+
+
+
+VII
+
+ SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (1)
+
+
+In considering pairs we have, without using the word, been studying
+synonyms. For most pairs are synonyms (or in some instances antonyms) that
+hunt in couples. We must now deal with synonyms, and incidentally
+antonyms, as they associate themselves in larger groups.
+
+A vocabulary is impoverished. Why? Nine times in ten, because of a
+disregard of synonyms. Listen to the talk of the average person. Whatever
+is pleasing is _fine_ or _nice_ or _all to the good_;
+whatever is displeasing is _bum_ or _awful_ or _a fright_.
+Life is reflected, not as noble and complex, but as mean and meager. Out
+of such stereotyped utterance only the general idea emerges. The precise
+meaning is lazily or incompetently left to the hearer to imagine. The
+precise meaning? There is none. A person who does not take the trouble to
+speak clearly has not taken the trouble to think clearly.
+
+But the master of synonyms expresses, instead of general, hazy,
+commonplace conceptions, the subtlest shadings of thought and feeling. He
+has so trained himself that he selects, it may be unconsciously, from a
+throng of possible words. One word may be strong, another weak. One may be
+broad, another narrow. One may present an alternative in meanings, another
+permit no liberty of choice. One may be suggestive, another literal or
+colorless. One may penetrate to the core of the idea, another strike only
+in the environs. With these possibilities the master of synonyms reckons.
+He must have the right word. He chooses it, not at haphazard, but in
+conformity with a definite purpose.
+
+For synonyms are not words that have the same meaning. They are words that
+have similar meanings. They may be compared to circles that overlap but do
+not coincide. Each embraces a common area, but each embraces also an area
+peculiar to itself. Though many words cluster about a given idea, rarely
+if ever are even two of these words entirely equivalent to each other. In
+scope, in suggestion, in emotional nuance, in special usage, or what not,
+is sure to lurk some denial of perfect correspondence. And of synonyms, so
+of antonyms. Antonyms are words opposite in meaning; but the opposition,
+for the same reasons as the likeness, is seldom or never absolute.
+
+In your study of synonyms you will find most of the dictionaries
+previously named of great help. You may also profitably consult the
+following books of synonyms (heavy, scholastic works not suited for
+ordinary use are omitted):
+
+
+<Books of Plain Synonyms and Antonyms>
+
+Edith B. Ordway: _Synonyms and Antonyms_. A compact, practical
+volume, with antonyms (in italics for contrast) immediately following
+synonyms.
+
+Louis A. Flemming: _Putnam's Word Book_. A book of the ordinarily
+used synonyms of words, with antonyms after some of them, and with lists
+of associated words wherever these are likely to be useful.
+
+Samuel Fallows: _100,000 Synonyms and Antonyms_. A handy little
+volume, with useful lists of various kinds in appendices.
+
+Richard Soule: _Dictionary of English Synonyms_ [revised and enlarged
+by George H. Howison]. A much larger and more expensive book than the
+others, and less practical for ordinary use, but fuller in treatment of
+material, with words of more than one meaning carefully divided into their
+various senses.
+
+
+<Synonyms with Word Discriminations>
+
+George Crabb: _English Synonyms_. A standard volume for over 100
+years. Has close distinctions, but is somewhat scholarly for ordinary use.
+Revised edition of 1917, omitting illustrative quotations from literature,
+not so good as editions before that date.
+
+James C. Fernald: _English Synonyms, Antonyms, and Prepositions_.
+A pleasing book to read, with much information about the use of words and
+their shades of meaning (with exercises), also with proper prepositions to
+follow words. Material taken from the _Standard Dictionary_.
+
+Peter Mark Roget: _Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases_. Issued in
+many editions and revisions. Words grouped under general ideas. An
+excellent book for serious and laborious study, but not for quick use.
+
+
+<How to Acquire Synonyms>
+
+The best principle for the extension of one's mastery of synonyms is the
+principle already used over and over in this book--that of proceeding from
+the known to the unknown. It is the fundamental principle, indeed, of any
+kind of successful learning. We should build on what we have, fit each new
+piece of material into the structure already erected. But normally it is
+our ill fortune to learn through chance rather than through system. We
+perceive elucidation here, draw an inference there. These isolated
+fragments of knowledge may mislead rather than inform us.
+
+The principle of proceeding from the known to the unknown may be applied
+to synonyms in various ways. Two of these--the two of most importance--we
+must consider here.
+
+First, you should reckon with your personal, demonstrated needs. Just as
+you have already analyzed your working vocabulary for its general limits
+and shortcomings, so should you analyze it with particular reference to
+your poverty in synonyms. Watch your actual speech; make a list of the
+words--nouns, verbs, and adjectives particularly--that you employ again
+and again. Make each of these words the starting-point for a linguistic
+exploring expedition. First, write the word down. Then under it write all
+the synonyms that come forthwith to your mind. These constitute your
+present available stock; in speaking or writing you could, if you kept
+yourself mentally alert, summon them on the moment. But the list, as you
+know, is not exhaustive. Draw a line under it and subjoin such synonyms as
+come to you after reflection. These constitute a second stock, not
+instantaneously available, yet to be tagged as among your resources. Next
+add a list of the synonyms you find through research, through a ransacking
+of dictionaries and books of synonyms. This third stock, but dimly
+familiar if familiar at all, is in no practical sense yours. And indeed
+some of the words are too abstruse, learned, or technical for you to
+burden your memory with them. But many--most--are worth acquiring. By
+writing down the words of these three classes you have done something to
+stamp them upon your memory as associates. You must now make it your
+business to bring them into use. Never call upon them for volunteers, but
+like a wise commander summon the individual that can rightly perform a
+particular service. Thus will your speech, perhaps vague and indolent now,
+become exact, discriminating, competent, vital.
+
+In the second place, you should obtain specific and detailed command of
+general ideas. Not of out-of-the-way ideas. But of the great basic ideas
+that are the common possession of all mankind. For through these basic
+ideas is the most natural and profitable approach to the study of
+synonyms. Each of them is represented by a generic word. So elementary are
+idea and word alike that a person cannot have the one in mind without
+having the other ready and a-quiver on his tongue. Every person is master
+of both. But it is unsafe to predicate the person's acquaintance with the
+shades and phases of the idea, or with the corresponding discriminations
+in language. He may not know them at all, he may know them partially, he
+may know them through and through. Let us suppose him ignorant of them but
+determined to learn. His progress, both in the thought and in the
+language, will be from the general to the specific. His acquaintance with
+the idea in the large he will gradually extend to an acquaintance with it
+in detail, and his command of the broad term for it he will little by
+little supplement with definite terms for its phases. An illustration will
+make this clear.
+
+We are aware that the world is made up of various classes and conditions
+of men. How did we learn this? Let us go back to the time when our minds
+were a blank, when we were babes and sucklings, when we had not perceived
+that men exist, much less that mankind is infinitely complex. A baby comes
+slowly to understand that all objects in the universe are divisible into
+two classes, human and non-human, and that a member of the former may be
+separated from the others and regarded as an individual. It has reached
+the initial stage of its knowledge on the subject; it has the basic idea,
+that of the individual human being. As soon as it can speak, it acquires a
+designating term--not of course the sophisticated _human being_, but
+the simpler _man_. It uses this word in the generic sense, to
+indicate _any_ member of the human race; for as yet it knows nothing
+and cares nothing about differences in species. With increasing
+enlightenment, however, it discerns five species, and distinguishes among
+them by swelling this branch of its vocabulary to five words: man (in the
+sense of adult male), woman, boy, girl, baby. (To be sure, it may chance
+to have acquired a specific term, as _boy_ or _baby_, before the
+generic term _man_; but if so, it has attached this term to some
+particular individual, as the grocer's boy or itself, rather than to the
+individuals of a species. Its understanding of the species as a species
+comes after its understanding of the genus.) As time passes, it divides
+mankind into yet further species by sundry other methods: according to
+occupation, for example, as doctors, chauffeurs, gardeners; to race or
+color, as white men; negroes, Malays, Chinese; to disposition, as heroes,
+gift-givers, teasers, talkers; and so on. It perceives moreover that
+species are made up of sub-species. Thus instead of lumping all boys
+together it begins to distinguish them as big boys, little boys,
+middle-sized boys, boys in long trousers, boys in short trousers, barefoot
+boys, schoolboys, poor boys, rich boys, sick boys, well boys, friends,
+enemies, bullies, and what not. It even divides the sub-species. Thus it
+classifies schoolboys as bright boys, dullards, workers, shirkers,
+teachers' favorites, scapegoats, athletes, note-throwers, truant-players,
+and the like. And of these classes it may make yet further sub-divisions,
+or at least it may separate them into the individuals that compose them.
+In fine, with its growing powers and experience, it abandons its old
+conception that all persons are practically alike, and follows human
+nature through the countless ramifications of man's status, temperament,
+activities, or fate. And it augments its vocabulary to keep pace, roughly
+at least, with its expanding ideas. In thought and terminology alike its
+growth is from genus to species.
+
+So it is with all our ideas and with all our words to cap them. We radiate
+from an ascertained center into new areas of knowledge; we proceed from
+the broad, fundamental, generic to the precise, discriminatory, specific.
+Upon this natural law are based the exercises in this chapter and the two
+to follow. The starting-point is always a word representative of an
+elementary idea--a word and an idea which everybody knows; the advance is
+into the unknown or the unused, at any rate into the particular. Now
+fundamental ideas are not very numerous, and these exercises include the
+commoner ones. Such a method of studying synonyms must therefore yield
+large and tangible results.
+
+One matter, however, should be explained. Most books of synonyms start
+with a word and list all the terms in any way related to it. The idea of
+the compilers is that the more they give the student the more they help
+him. But oftentimes by giving more than is strictly pertinent they
+actually hinder and confuse him. They may do this in various ways, of
+which two must be mentioned. First, they follow an idea too far afield.
+Thus in listing the synonyms of _love_ they include such terms as
+_kindness_ and _lenity_, words only through stretched usage
+connected with _love_. Secondly, they trace, not one meaning of a
+word, but two or more unrelated meanings when the word chances to possess
+them. Thus in listing the synonyms of _cry_ they include both the
+idea of weeping and the idea of calling or screaming. What are the results
+of these methods? The student finds a clutter where he expects
+rationalized order; he finds he must exclude many words which lie in the
+borders and fringes of the meaning. Moreover he finds mere chance
+associations mingled with marked kinships. In both cases he finds dulled
+distinctions.
+
+This book offers synonyms that are apropos and definite rather than
+comprehensive. Starting with a basic idea, it finds the generic term; it
+then disregards dim and distant relationships, confines itself rigorously
+to one of perhaps two or three legitimate senses, and refuses to consider
+the peculiar twists and devious ways of subsidiary words when they wander
+from the idea it is tracing. It thus deliberately blinds itself to much
+that is interesting. But this partial blindness enables it to concentrate
+attention upon the matter actually under study, to give sharper
+distinctions and surer guidance.
+
+
+EXERCISE A
+
+After three introductory groups (dealing with thoroughly concrete ideas
+and words) the synonyms in this exercise are arranged alphabetically
+according to the first word in each group.
+
+This first word is generic. It is immediately followed by a list of its
+synonyms. These are then informally discriminated or else (in a few
+instances) questions are asked about them. Perhaps a few less closely
+related synonyms are then listed for you to discriminate in a similar way.
+Finally, illustrative sentences are given. Each blank in these you are to
+fill with the word that conveys the meaning exactly. (To prevent monotony
+and inattention, the number of illustrative sentences varies. You may have
+to use a particular word more than once, and another word not at all.)
+
+
+<Walk, plod, trudge, tread, stride, stalk, strut, tramp, march, pace,
+toddle, waddle, shuffle, mince, stroll, saunter, ramble, meander,
+promenade, prowl, hobble, limp, perambulate.>
+
+Any one may be said to _walk_ who moves along on foot with moderate
+speed. He _plods_ if he walks slowly and heavily, and perhaps
+monotonously or spiritlessly as well. He _trudges_ if he walks
+toilsomely and wearily, as though his feet were heavy. He _treads_ if
+his walk is suggestive of a certain lightness and caution--if, for
+instance, he seems half-uncertain whether to proceed and sets one foot
+down carefully before the other. He _strides_ if he takes long steps,
+especially in a firm, pompous, or lofty manner. He _stalks_ if there
+is a certain stiffness or haughtiness in his walking. He _struts_ if
+he walks with a proud or affectedly dignified gait, especially if he also
+raises his feet high. He _tramps_ if he goes for a long walk, as for
+pleasure or enjoyment out-of-doors. He _marches_ if he walks in a
+measured, ordered way, especially in company with others. He _paces_
+if he engages in a measured, continuous walk, as from nervousness,
+impatience, or anger. He _toddles_ if his steps are short, uneven,
+and unsteady, like those of a child. He _waddles_ if his movement is
+ungainly, with a duck-like swaying from side to side. He _shuffles_
+if he drags his feet with a scraping noise. He _minces_ if he takes
+short steps in a prim, precise, or affectedly nice manner. He
+_strolls_ or _saunters_ if he goes along in an easy, aimless, or
+idle fashion. He _rambles_ if he wanders about, with no definite aim
+or toward no definite goal. He _meanders_ if he proceeds slowly and
+perhaps listlessly in an ever-changing course, as if he were following the
+windings of the crooked Phrygian river, Meander. He _promenades_ if
+he walks in a public place, as for pleasure or display. He _prowls_
+if he moves about softly and stealthily, as in search of prey or booty. He
+_hobbles_ if he jerks along unevenly, as from a stiff or crippled
+condition of body. He _limps_ if he walks lamely. He
+_perambulates_ when he walks through, perhaps for observation or
+inspection. _(Perambulates_ is of course a learned word.)
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <sneak, shamble, amble,
+wander, stamp, slouch, gad, gallivant, glide, hike>.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ down the lane in the moonlight. Rip Van
+Winkle loved to ____ about the mountains. "The plowman homeward ____ his
+weary way." The old man ____ down the street with his cane. The excavators
+____ about the ruins in search of relics. He ____ about the room, almost
+bursting with importance. The nervous man ____ up and down the station
+platform. They ____ along the beach at the sea resort. The baby learned to
+____ when it was eleven months old. The two of them ____ about the field
+all day hunting rabbits. A ghost, so they tell me, ____ about the
+haunted house at midnight. He carefully ____ the plank that spans the
+abyss. The baby ____ toward us with outstretched arms. The Chinaman ____
+out of the back room of the laundry in his carpet slippers. They caught
+glimpses of gaunt wolves ____ about their campfire. He was terrified when
+the giant ____ into the room. The fat lady ____ down the aisle of the
+street car. The sick man will ____ a few steps each day until he is
+stronger. A turkey cock ____ about the barnyard. A boy with a rag tied
+around his toe ____ painfully down the street. They reported to the police
+that a man had been ____ about the place. She held her skirts daintily and
+____ along as if she were walking on eggs. The lovers ____ along the banks
+of the stream. He ____ through the hall like a conqueror. The children
+wore themselves out by ____ through the snow to school. We ____ through
+the meadows, often stooping to pick flowers as we went. The soldiers ____
+into camp at nightfall.
+
+
+<Laugh, giggle, snicker, titter, chuckle, guffaw, cachinnate.>
+
+What differences in human nature, conditions, and disposition are revealed
+by laughter! If a person gives audible expression to mirth, gayety, or
+good-humor, the simplest word to apply to what he does is _laugh_.
+But suppose a girl, with slight or insufficient provocation, engages in
+silly or foolish though perhaps involuntary laughter. We should say she
+_giggles_. Suppose a youngster is amused at an inappropriate moment
+and but partly suppresses his laughter; or suppose he wilfully permits the
+breaking forth of just enough laughter to indicate disrespect. He
+_snickers_. Suppose a person gives a little, light laugh; or more
+especially, suppose a crowd gives such an one as the result of slight,
+simultaneous amusement. Our word now is _titters_. Suppose we laugh
+low or gently or to ourselves. We _chuckle_. Suppose some one laughs
+loudly, boisterously, even coarsely, in a manner befitting a lumber camp
+rather than a drawing room. That person _guffaws_. Suppose a man
+engages in explosive and immoderate laughter. He _cachinnates_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <chortle, roar>.
+
+_Second assignment_: Name all the words you can that designate
+inaudible laughter (for example, <smile, smirk, grin>).
+
+_Sentences_: The rough fellow ____ in the lecturer's face. "If you
+prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not ____?" He kept ____
+at the thought of the surprise he would give them. "The swain mistrustless
+of his smutted face, While secret laughter ____ round the place." The
+ill-bred fellow was ____ with strident, violent, irritating sounds. "The
+little dog ____ to see such sport." The audience ____ when the speaker's
+glasses began to slip from his nose. The girl kept ____ in a way that
+embarrassed us both. The small boy ____ when the preacher's notes
+fluttered out of the Bible to the floor. The rude fellows ____ at this
+evidence of my discomfiture. He ____ very kindly and told me not to feel
+any regrets. The little maids tried to be polite, but ____ irrepressibly.
+
+
+<Look, glance, gaze, stare, peer, scan, scrutinize, gloat, glare,
+glower, lower, peek, peep, gape, con, pore, ogle.>
+
+A person simply directs his eyes to see. He _looks_. But eyes may
+speak, we are told, and since this person undergoes many changes of mood
+and purpose, we shall let his eyes tell us all they will about his
+different manners of looking. At first he but looks momentarily (as from
+lack of time) or casually (as from lack of interest). He _glances_.
+Soon he makes a business of looking, and fastens his eyes for a long time
+on something he admires or wonders at. He _gazes_. Presently he looks
+with a blank, perhaps a rude, expression and with eyes opened widely; he
+may be for the moment overcome with incomprehension, surprise, or fright,
+or perhaps he wishes to be insolent. He _stares_. Now he is looking
+narrowly or closely at something that he sees with difficulty. He
+_peers_. The next moment he looks over something with care or with an
+encompassing sweep of vision. He _scans_ it. His interest thoroughly
+enlisted, he looks at it carefully point by point to see that it is right
+in each detail. He _scrutinizes_ it. He then alters his mood, and
+looks with scornful or malignant satisfaction upon something he has
+conquered or has power over. He _gloats_. Anger, perhaps fierceness,
+takes possession of him, and he looks with piercing eyes. He
+_glares_. Threat mingles with anger, and in all likelihood he looks
+scowlingly or frowningly. He _glowers_. An added expression of
+sullenness or gloom comes into his look. He _lowers_. He throws off
+his dark spirit and looks slyly and playfully, let us say through a small
+opening. He _peeks_. Playfulness gives place to curiosity; he looks
+quickly and furtively, perhaps through some tiny aperture, and probably at
+something he has no business to see. He _peeps_. The while he looks
+his mouth falls open, as from stupidity or wonder. He _gapes_. He
+looks at something a long time to study it. He _cons_ or
+_pores_. His study is not of the thing itself; it is meditation or
+reverie. He _pores_. A member of the opposite sex is present; he
+looks at her with the effort of a flirt to attract attention to himself,
+or less scrupulous, he directs toward her amorous or inviting glances. He
+_ogles_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <leer, view, survey,
+inspect, regard, watch, contemplate>.
+
+_Sentences_: The inspecting officer ____ the men's equipment. The
+student ____ his lessons carefully. At this unexpected proposal Dobbett
+merely ____. Jimmie ____ at the fellow who had kicked the pup. The
+inquisitive maid ____ into all the the closets. He ____ over his fallen
+adversary. The bookkeeper ____ over his ledger. In the darkened hallway he
+____ at the notices on the bulletin board. "The poet's eye, in a fine
+frenzy rolling, Doth ____ from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven."
+From the way her father ____ the foolish, young man should have known it
+was time to go. He ____ long and lovingly upon the scenes he was leaving.
+The newcomer ____ insolently at his host and ____ the young ladies.
+
+
+<Abandon, desert, forsake.>
+
+_Abandon_ denotes absolute giving up, as from force of circumstances
+or shirking of responsibility. _Desert_ refers to leaving or quitting
+in violation of obligation, duty, or oath. _Forsake_, which may
+involve no culpability, usually implies a breaking off of intimate
+association or attachment.
+
+_Sentences_: The sailor ____ his ship. Necessity compelled him to
+____ his friends in a time of sore trouble. They hated to ____ their old
+haunts. A brave man never ____ hope. An unscrupulous man will ____ his
+principles when it is to his advantage. "When my father and my mother ____
+me, then the Lord will take me up." We ____ our attempt to save the ship.
+
+
+<Abase, debase, degrade, humble, humiliate, disgrace.>
+
+To _abase_ is to bring down so that the victim feels himself lowered
+in estate or external condition. To _debase_ is to produce a marked
+decline in actual worth or in moral quality. To _degrade_ is to lower
+in rank or status. To _humble_ is to lower in dignity or self-esteem,
+or as used reflexively, to restrain one's own pride; the word often
+implies that the person has been over-proud or arrogant. To
+_humiliate_ is to deprive of self-esteem or to bring into ignominy.
+To _disgrace_ is to bring actual shame upon.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ the guilty officer from captain to lieutenant.
+A man should ____ himself before God. He had so ____ himself that I no
+longer expected good of him. His detection at cheating had ____ him before
+the students. By successive overlords they had been ____ into a condition
+of serfdom. The aristocratic old lady was ____ by her loss of social
+position. The conversion of so much bullion into money had ____ the
+coinage.
+
+
+<Answer, reply, response, rejoinder, retort, repartee.>
+
+An interesting thing about the _answer_ group is that the generic
+term has a somewhat strong rival in _reply_, itself fairly inclusive.
+We must therefore discriminate rather fully between _answer_ and
+_reply_. The former is a return in words to a question, a
+communication, or an argument. The latter suggests a more or less formal
+answer, as one carefully prepared or intelligently thought out. We might
+give an _answer_ offhand, but are less likely to give a _reply_
+so. We may give any kind of _answer_ to a question, but if we give a
+_reply_, the implication is that we have answered it definitely,
+perhaps satisfactorily. On the other hand, in controversial matters we
+may, though we by no means always do, imply a more conclusive meeting of
+objections through _answer_ than through _reply_. A
+_response_ is an expected answer, one in harmony with the question or
+assertion, or in some way carrying the thought farther. A _rejoinder_
+is a quick reply to something controversial or calling forth opposition.
+A _retort_ is a short, sharp reply, such as turns back censure or
+derision, or as springs from anger. A _repartee_ is an immediate and
+witty reply, perhaps to a remark of similar character which it is intended
+to surpass in cleverness.
+
+_Sentences_: The detailed ____ to our letter should reach us within a
+week. The plays of Oscar Wilde abound in brilliant ____. The speaker's
+____ to the heckler was incisive and scathing. My ____ to that third
+question in the examination in history was incorrect. The congregation
+read the ____ in unison. You have enumerated objections to my course; here
+is their ____. "This is no ____, thou unfeeling man, to excuse the current
+of thy cruelty." There was silence throughout the chamber as the old
+statesman rose to make his ____. To the tenderfoot's remark the guide
+mumbled an indifferent ____. Our appeal for the sufferers elicited but a
+poor ____.
+
+
+<Ask, inquire, question, interrogate, interpellate, query, quiz,
+catechize, request, beg, solicit, entreat, beseech, crave, implore,
+supplicate, importune, petition.>
+
+From the general tree of asking grow many branches, different in size, in
+the direction they take, in the shades of meaning they cast. What can we
+learn from a rapid scrutiny of each? That to _inquire_ is to ask for
+specific information. That to _question_ is to keep asking in order
+to obtain detailed or reluctantly given information. That to
+_interrogate_ is to question formally, systematically, or thoroughly.
+That to _interpellate_ is to question as of unchallenged right, as in
+a deliberative body. That to _query_ is to bring a thing into
+question because of doubt as to its correctness or truth. That to
+_quiz_ is to question closely and persistently, as from
+meddlesomeness, opposition, or curiosity. That to _catechize_ is to
+question in a minute, perhaps impertinent, manner in order to ascertain
+one's secrets or the amount of his knowledge or information. That to
+_request_ is to ask formally and politely. That to _beg_ is to
+ask for deferentially or humbly, especially on the ground of pity. That to
+_solicit_ is to ask with urgency. That to _entreat_ is to ask
+with strong desire and moving appeal. That to _beseech_ is to ask
+earnestly as a boon or favor. That to _crave_ is to ask humbly and
+abjectly, as though unworthy of receiving. That to _implore_ is to
+ask with fervor and intense earnestness. That to _supplicate_ is to
+ask with urgent or even desperate appeal. (Both _implore_ and
+_supplicate_ imply humility, as of a prayer to a superior being.)
+That to _importune_ is to ask for persistently, even wearyingly. That
+to _petition_ is to ask a superior, usually in writing, for some
+favor, grant, or right.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <plead, pray>.
+
+_Sentences_: The leader of the minority ____ the upholders of the
+measure sharply as to a secret understanding. I ____ you to keep your
+promise. I shall ____ that solution for the present. The colonists ____
+Great Britain for a redress of grievances. She ____ the governor to grant
+her husband a pardon. A child is naturally inquisitive and ____ many
+questions. I ____ you to show mercy. On bended knees he ____ God's
+forgiveness. "I'm stopp'd by all the fools I meet And ____ in every
+street." The policeman ____ the suspect closely. The prosecuting attorney
+____ the witness. We are ____ funds to aid the famine-stricken people of
+India. He ____ me about your health. You should ____ at the office about
+the lost package. She ____ your presence at the party. Every one resents
+being ____. I ____ you to care for the child after I am gone. A fool
+can ____ questions a wise man can't answer. She annoyed them by constantly
+____ them for favors. The reporter ____ into the causes of the riot. "____
+and it shall be given you." I ____ your pardon, though I well know I do
+not deserve it. The man ____ me to give him some money for food.
+
+
+<Burn, scorch, singe, sear, parch, char, incinerate, cremate,
+cauterize.>
+
+If you consume or injure something by bringing it in contact with fire or
+heat, you _burn_ it. If you do not consume it but burn it
+superficially so as to change the texture or color of its surface, you
+_scorch_ it. If you burn off ends or projections of it, you
+_singe_ it. If you burn its surface to dryness or hardness, you
+_sear_ it. If you dry or shrivel it with heat, you _parch_ it.
+If through heat you reduce it to a state of charcoal, or cinders, you
+_char_ it. If you burn it to ashes, you _incinerate_ it. (This
+word is learned and but little used in ordinary discourse.) If you burn a
+dead body to ashes, you _cremate_ it. If you burn or sear anything
+with a hot iron or a corrosive substance, you _cauterize_ it.
+
+_Sentences_: The hired girl ____ the cloth in ironing it. By getting
+too close to the fire he ____ the nap of his flannels. The doctor at once
+____ the wound. The cook had picked the chicken and now ____ its down over
+the coals. I used to ____ grains of field corn on the cookstove, while my
+mother prepared dinner. Shelley's body was ____ on a funeral pyre. The
+lecturer spoke of the time when the whole earth might be ____. The earth
+was ____ and all growing things were ____ by the intense summer heat.
+
+
+<Busy, industrious, diligent, assiduous, sedulous.>
+
+From much of the talk that we hear nowadays it might be supposed that the
+earnest devotion of one's self to a task is a thing that has disappeared
+from the earth. But a good many people are exhibiting this very devotion.
+Let us see in what different degrees. The man who actively applies himself
+to something, whether temporarily or habitually, is _busy_. The man
+who makes continued application to work a principle or habit of life, is
+_industrious_. The man who applies himself aggressively to the
+accomplishment of some specific undertaking or pursuit, is
+_diligent_. The man who quietly and determinedly sticks to a task
+until it is accomplished, no matter what its difficulties or length, is
+_assiduous_. The man who makes steady and painstaking application to
+whatever he is about, is _sedulous_.
+
+_Sentences_: Early in life he acquired ____ habits. By patient and
+____ study you may overcome those defects of your early education. "How
+doth the ____ little bee improve each shining hour." The manager gave such
+____ attention to details that he made few mistakes. He is ____ at
+present. Oh, yes, he is always ____. "Nowher so ____ a man has he ther
+has, And yet he seemed ____ than he was."
+
+
+<Concise, terse, succinct, compendious, compact, sententious, pithy,
+laconic, curt.>
+
+Words descriptive of brief utterance are, in nearly every instance, in
+their origin figurative. The brevity is brought out by comparison with
+something that is noticeably short or small. Let us examine the words of
+our list for their figurative qualities. A _concise_ statement is one
+that is _cut down_ until a great deal is said in a few words. A
+_terse_ statement is _rubbed off_, rid of unessentials.
+A _succinct_ statement has its important thoughts _bound_ into
+small compass, as by a girdle. A _compendious_ statement _weighs
+together_ the various thoughts and aspects of a subject; it shows by
+means of a few effective words just what these amount to, gives a summary
+of them. A _compact_ statement has its units of thought _fastened
+together_ into firmness of structure; its brevity is well-knit. A
+_sententious_ statement gives _feelings_ or _opinions_ in a
+strikingly pointed or axiomatic way, so that they can be easily grasped
+and remembered; if _sententious_ is unfavorably used, the statement
+may be filled with paraded platitudes. A _pithy_ statement gives the
+very _pith_, the heart of a matter; it is sometimes slightly quaint,
+always effective and arresting. A _laconic_ statement is made in the
+manner of _the Spartans_, who hated talk and used as few words as
+possible. A _curt_ statement is _made short_; its abruptness is
+oftentimes more or less rude.
+
+_Sentences_: "A tale should be judicious, clear, ____, the language
+plain, and incidents well link'd." "Charles Lamb made the most ____
+criticism of Spenser when he called him the poet's poet." With a ____,
+disdainful answer she turned away. The sermon was filled with ____
+sayings. By omitting all irrelevant details, he made his statement of the
+case ____. It requires great skill to give a ____ statement of what such a
+treatise contains. A proverb is a ____ statement of a truth.
+
+
+<Death, decease, demise.>
+
+Men are as mindful of rank and pretension in their terms for the cessation
+of life as in their choice of tombstones for the departed. _Death_ is
+the great, democratic, unspoilable word. It is not too good for a clown or
+too poor for an emperor. _Decease_ is a more formal word. Its
+employment is often legal--the death proves to be of sufficient importance
+for the law (and the lawyers) to take notice. _Demise_, however, is
+outwardly the most resplendent term of all. It implies that the victim cut
+a wide swath even in death. It is used of an illustrious person, as a
+king, who transmits his title to an heir. Ordinary people cannot afford a
+_demise_. If the term is applied to their shuffling off of this
+mortal coil, the use is euphemistic and likely to be stilted.
+
+_Sentences_: "The crown at the moment of ____ must descend to the
+next heir." "____ is a fearful thing." "In their ____ they were not
+divided." At the ____ of his father he inherited the estate. "Each shall
+take His chamber in the silent halls of ____." "Many a time I have been
+half in love with easeful ____."
+
+
+<Early, primitive, primeval, primordial, primal, pristine.>
+
+_Early_ is the simple word for that which was in, or toward, the
+beginning. That is _primitive_ which has the old-fashioned or simple
+qualities characteristic of the beginning. That is _primeval_ which
+is of the first or earliest ages. That is _primordial_ which is first
+in origin, formation, or development. That is _primal_ which is first
+or original. (The word is poetic.) That is _pristine_ which has not
+been corrupted from its original state.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <aboriginal,
+prehistoric.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was a hardy mountain folk that preserved the ____
+virtues. The ____ history of mankind is shrouded in uncertainty. "This is
+the forest ____." "It hath the ____ eldest curse upon 't, A brother's
+murder." "A ____ leaf is that which is immediately developed from the
+cotyledon." As the explorers penetrated farther into the country, they
+beheld all the ____ beauties of nature. Some countries still use the ____
+method of plowing with a stick.
+
+
+<Face, countenance, features, visage, physiognomy.>
+
+We hear some one say that he reads faces. How? Through long study of them
+and what they indicate. The human race as a whole has been reading faces
+through the centuries. It has felt such need to label certain recurring
+aspects of them that it has invented the designating terms. Of these terms
+the simple, inclusive one is of course _face_ itself. If, however, we
+are thinking of the face as its look or expression reveals thoughts,
+emotions, or state of mind, our term is _countenance_. If we are
+thinking of it as distinguished or individualized by the contour, lines,
+etc., we speak of the _features_. If we are thinking of its external
+appearance or aspect, we call it the _visage_. If, finally, we are
+thinking of it as indicative of mind, disposition, or fundamental
+character, we say _physiognomy._
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <lineaments>.
+
+_Sentences_: His grotesque ____ reminded one of a gargoyle. It is
+said that the ____ of persons living constantly together tend to become
+alike. "Behind a frowning providence He hides a smiling ____." The teacher
+told the students to wash their ____ every morning. "A ____ more in sorrow
+than in anger." The firm but kind ____ of the old statesman shone happily
+at this ovation. "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then ____ to
+____." She turned an eager ____ up to me as she spoke. One's ____ is
+moulded by one's thoughts. Cosmetics injure the ____. His clear-cut ____
+impressed his employer.
+
+
+<Financial, monetary, pecuniary, fiscal.>
+
+_Financial_ is usually applied to money matters of considerable size
+or moment. _Monetary_ applies to money, coin, or currency as such.
+_Pecuniary_ refers to practical matters in which money is involved,
+though not usually in large amounts. _Fiscal_ refers especially to
+the time when money, receipts, and accounts are balanced or reckoned.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ reward has been offered. We gave the unfortunate
+man ____ assistance. The ____ system of the country was sound. It was
+Hamilton who more than any one else shaped the ____ policies of the new
+government. Experts audit the company's accounts at the end of the ____
+year. The ____ interests of the country were behind the bill.
+
+
+<Flee, abscond, decamp.>
+
+To _flee_ is to run away from what one would avoid, as danger,
+arrest, or the like. To _abscond_ is to steal off secretly and hide
+one's self, as from some disgraceful reason or to avoid arrest. To
+_decamp_ is to leave suddenly in great haste to get away; the word is
+often used humorously.
+
+_Sentences_: They went to have their money refunded, but the swindler
+had ____. The bank teller ____ after having squandered most of the
+deposits. Yes, we were in proximity to a polecat, and without further
+parley we ____. "Resist the devil, and he will ____ from you." William
+Wallace, when pursued by the English, ____ into the Highlands.
+
+
+<Foretell, predict, prophesy, forecast, presage, forebode, portend,
+augur, prognosticate.>
+
+_Foretell_ is the general word for stating or perceiving beforehand
+that which will happen. _Predict_ implies foretelling based on
+well-founded or precise knowledge. _Prophesy_ often implies
+supernatural inspiration to foretell correctly. The word is especially so
+used in connection with the Scriptures; but in the Scriptures themselves
+it frequently expresses insight and admonition without the element of
+foretelling. _Forecast_ involves a marked degree of conjecture.
+_Presage_ usually means to give as a presentiment or warning.
+_Forebode_ expresses an uncertain foreknowledge of vague impending
+evil. _Portend_ indicates the likelihood that something will befall
+which is threatening or evil in its consequences. _Augur_ means
+foretelling from omens. _Prognosticate_ means foretelling through the
+study of signs or symptoms.
+
+_Sentences_: "For we know in part, and we ____ in part." (Insert
+in the blank, successively, the terms just distinguished. In each instance
+how is the meaning affected? Do any of the terms fail to make sense at
+all? Which term do you think the right one? Bearing in mind the
+distinctions we have made, frame sentences of your own to embody the
+terms.)
+
+
+<Get, acquire, obtain, procure, attain, gain, win, earn.>
+
+_Get_, the general term, may be used of whatever one comes by
+whatsoever means to possess, experience, or realize. To _acquire_ is
+to get into more or less permanent possession, either by some gradual
+process or by one's determined efforts. To _obtain_ is to get
+something desired by means of deliberate effort or request. To
+_procure_ is to get by definitely planned effort something which, in
+most instances, is of a temporary nature or the possession of which is
+temporary. To _attain_ is to get through striving that which one has
+set as a goal or end of his desire or ambition. To _gain_ is to get
+that which is advantageous. To _win_ is to get as the result of
+successful competition or the overcoming of opposition. To _earn_ is
+to get as a deserved reward for one's efforts or exertions.
+
+_Sentences_: With such wages as those, he can barely ____ a living.
+He ____ a pardon by appealing to the governor. The speaker ____ his point
+by forcing his opponent to admit that the figures were misleading. By
+buying in June I can ____ a good overcoat at half price. Did you ____ only
+seven thousand dollars for your house? Walpole believed in ____ one's
+ends in the surest and easiest way possible. It is illegal to ____ money
+through false pretences. A junior ____ the prize in the oratorical
+contest. Kirk ____ his advancement by taking a personal interest in the
+firm's welfare. The painter ____ a foreign accent while he was studying in
+Paris. He ____ their gratitude by loyally serving them. It was through
+sacrifices that he ____ an education.
+
+
+<Give, bestow, grant, confer, present>.
+
+We _give_ that which we transfer from our own to another's possession
+or ownership, usually without compensation. We _bestow_ that which we
+give gratuitously, or of which the recipient stands in especial need. We
+_grant_ that which has been requested by one dependent upon us or
+inferior to us, and which we give with some formality. From a position of
+superiority we _confer_ as a favor or honor that which we might
+withhold or deny. We _present_ that which is of importance or value
+and which we give ceremoniously.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <furnish, supply,
+impart>.
+
+_Sentences_: William the Conqueror ____ English estates upon his
+followers. The rich man ____ his wonderful art collection to the museum.
+My application for a leave of absence has been ____. The ticket agent ____
+us complete information. Every year he ____ alms upon the poor in that
+neighborhood. The school board may ____ an increase in the salaries of
+teachers. Many merchants ____ premiums with the articles they sell. The
+college ____ an honorary degree upon the distinguished visitor. The
+Pilgrims ____ thanks to God for their preservation. "Not what we ____, but
+what we share."
+
+
+<Haste, celerity, speed, hurry, expedition, despatch>.
+
+What did John Wesley mean by saying, "Though I am always in _haste_,
+I am never in a _hurry_"? Does Lord Chesterfield's saying "Whoever is
+in a _hurry_ shows that the thing he is about is too big for him"
+help explain the distinction? Explain the distinction (taking _speed_
+in the modern sense) in the saying "The more _haste_, ever the worse
+_speed_." "The tidings were borne with the usual _celerity_ of
+evil news." Give the well-known saying in four simple words that express
+the same idea. Which of the two statements is the more forceful? Which is
+the more literary? Why did Prescott use the former in his _Ferdinand and
+Isabella_? "_Despatch_," says Lord Chesterfield, "is the soul of
+business." What does _despatch_ suggest about getting work done that
+_haste_ or _speed_ does not? In which way would you prefer for
+your employee to go about his task--with _haste_, with _speed_,
+or with _despatch_? "With wingéd _expedition_, Swift as the
+lightning glance, he executes His errand on the wicked." Why is it that
+this use of _expedition_ in Milton's lines is apt? Would
+_despatch_ have served as well? If not, why not?
+
+
+<Hate, detest, abhor, loathe, abominate, despise>.
+
+To _hate_ involves deep or passionate dislike, sometimes bred of
+ill-will. To _detest_ involves an intense, vehement, or deep-seated
+antipathy. To _abhor_ involves utter repugnance or aversion, with an
+impulse to recoil. To _loathe_ involves disgust because of physical
+or moral offensiveness. To _abominate_ involves strong moral
+aversion, as of that which is odious or wicked. To _despise_ is to
+dislike and look down upon as inferior.
+
+_Sentences_: When he had explained his fell purpose, I could only
+____ him. Who would not ____ a slimy creature like Uriah Heep? It is
+natural for us to ____ our enemies. She ____ greasy food. There suddenly
+in my pathway was the venomous reptile, darting out its tongue; oh, I ____
+snakes! A wholesome nature must ____ such principles as these. A child
+____ to kiss and make up. The pampered young millionaire ____ those who
+are simply honest and kind. These daily practices of her associates she
+____.
+
+
+<Healthful, wholesome, salutary, salubrious, sanitary, hygienic>.
+(With this group contrast the _Disease_ group below.)
+
+The words of this group are assuredly blessed. Every one of them has to do
+with the giving, promotion, or preservation of health. But health is of
+various kinds, and therefore the words apply differently. _Healthful_
+is the most inclusive of them; it means that the thing it refers to is
+full of health for us. _Wholesome_ also is a very broad term; what is
+wholesome is good for us physically, mentally, or morally. _Salutary_
+is confined to that which affects for good our moral (including civic and
+social) welfare, especially if it counteracts evil influences or
+propensities. _Salubrious_ is confined to the physical; it is used
+almost solely of healthful air or climate. _Sanitary_ and
+_hygienic_ apply to physical well-being as promoted by the
+eradication of the causes for sickness, disease, or the like;
+_sanitary_, however, is used of measures and conditions affecting
+people in general, whereas _hygienic_ connects itself with personal
+habits.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: The word _healthy_ is
+often confused with _healthful_. You have already discriminated
+between these two terms, but you should renew your knowledge of the
+distinction between them.
+
+_Sentences_: Colorado is noted for its ____ air. He offered the young
+people some ____ advice. A person should brush his teeth every day for
+____ reasons. In spite of its horrors, the French Revolution has had a
+____ effect upon civilization. Damp, low places do not have a ____
+climate. Cities in the middle ages were not ____. His is a very ____ way
+of life. My doctor recommends buttermilk as ____.
+
+
+<Heavy, weighty, burdensome, onerous>.
+
+He knew that it was a ____ responsibility. (Insert the four words in the
+blank space in turn, and analyze the differences in meaning thus
+produced.)
+
+
+<Liberal, generous, bountiful, munificent>.
+
+He made a ____ donation to the endowment fund. (Insert the four words in
+the blank space in turn, and analyze the differences in meaning.)
+
+
+<Masculine, male, manly, manlike, manful, mannish, virile>.
+
+"A man's a man for a' that," sang the poet. So he is, but not all the
+adjectives allusive to his state are equally complimentary.
+_Masculine_ betokens the qualities and characteristics belonging to
+men. _Male_ designates sex and is used of animals as well as human
+beings. _Manly_ (used of boys as well as men) implies the possession
+of qualities worthy of a man, as strength, courage, sincerity, honesty,
+independence, or even tenderness. _Manlike_ refers to qualities,
+attributes, or foibles characteristically masculine. _Manful_
+suggests the valor, prowess, or resolution properly belonging to men.
+_Mannish_ (a derogatory word) indicates superficial or affected
+qualities of manhood, especially when inappropriately possessed by a
+woman. _Virile_ applies to the sturdy and intrepid qualities of
+mature manhood.
+
+_Sentences_: The Chinese especially prize ____ children. He was a
+____ little fellow. She walked with a ____ stride. With ____ courage he
+faced the crisis. It was a ____ defense of an unpopular cause. ____
+strength is the complement of female grace. The old sailor still retained
+the rugged and ____ strength of a man much younger. With ____ bluntness
+he told her what he thought. Such gentleness is not weak; it is ____. He
+made a ____ struggle against odds. "His ____ brow Consents to death, but
+conquers agony." Now isn't that assumption of omniscience ____?
+
+
+<Name, appellation, designation, denomination, title, alias>.
+
+A _name_ is the word or words by which a person or thing is called or
+known. If the name be descriptive or characterizing, even though in a
+fanciful way, it is an _appellation_. If it particularizes an
+individual through reference to distinctive quality or nature, perhaps
+without employing any word the individual is usually known by, it is a
+_designation_. If it specifies a class, especially a religious sect
+or a kind of coin, it is a _denomination_. If it is an official or
+honorary description of rank, office, place within a profession, or the
+like, it is a _title_. If it is assumed, as to conceal identity, it
+is an _alias_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <cognomen, patronymic, nom
+de plume, pseudonym>.
+
+_Sentences_: Yes, it is a five-dollar gold piece, though one doesn't
+often see a coin of that ____ nowadays. The Little Corporal is the ____
+applied to Napoleon by his soldiers. The eldest son of the king of England
+bears the ____ of the Prince of Wales. The government issues stamps in
+various ____. "That loafer" was his contemptuous ____ of the man who could
+not find work. "Duke" is the highest ____ of nobility in England. The
+crook was known to the police under many ____. At the battle of Bull Run
+Jackson received the ____ "Stonewall." "What's in a[n] ____? that which we
+call a rose By any other ____ would smell as sweet." The head of the
+American government bears the ____ of President. The Mist of Spring was
+the little Indian maiden's ____. His ____ was Thornberg.
+
+
+<Old, ancient, olden, antique, antiquated, archaic, obsolete, venerable,
+immemorial, elderly, aged, hoary, decrepit, senile, superannuated>.
+
+We reserve the right to judge for ourselves when told that something--
+especially a joke--is "the very latest." So may we likewise discriminate
+among degrees of age. _Old_ is applied to a person or thing that has
+existed for a long time or that existed in the distant past. The word may
+suggest a familiarity or sentiment not found in _ancient_, which is
+used of that which lived or happened in the remote past, or has come down
+from it. _Olden_ applies almost wholly to time long past.
+_Antique_ is the term for that which has come down from ancient times
+or is made in imitation of the style of ancient times, whereas
+_antiquated_ is the term for that which has gone out of style or
+fashion. _Archaic_ and _obsolete_ refer to words, customs, or
+the like, the former to such as savor of an earlier period though they are
+not yet completely out of use, the latter to such as have passed out of
+use altogether. _Immemorial_ implies that a thing is so old that it
+is beyond the time of memory or record. _Elderly_ is applied to
+persons who are between middle age and old age. _Aged_ is used of one
+who has lived for an unusually long time. _Hoary_ refers to age as
+revealed by white hair. _Venerable_ suggests the reverence to be paid
+to the dignity, goodness, or wisdom of old age. _Decrepit_ conveys a
+sense of the physical infirmities and weakness which attend old age;
+_senile_ of the lessening powers of both body and mind that result
+from old age. _Superannuated_ is applied to a person who on account
+of old age has been declared incapable of continuing his activities.
+
+_Sentences_: He liked to read romances of the ____ days. Dana records
+that he once saw a man so ____ that he had to raise his eyelids with his
+fingers. Many writers use ____ words to give quaintness to their work. He
+liked to sit around in his ____ clothes. "The moping owl does to the moon
+complain Of such as, wandering near her secret bower, Molest her ____
+solitary reign." Some of these ____ sequoia trees were old before the
+white man discovered this continent. They are building the church in the
+____ Roman style of architecture. "Be not ... the last to lay the ____
+aside." Many of Chaucer's words, being ____, cannot possibly be understood
+without a glossary. Most churches now have funds for ____ ministers. A man
+is as ____ as he feels; a woman is as ____ as she looks. The ____ old man
+could scarcely hobble across the room. What better proof that he is ____
+do you ask than that he babbles constantly about what happened when he was
+young? "I am a very foolish fond ____ man, Fourscore and upward." They
+revered the ____ locks of the old hero. At sixty a man is considered a[n]
+____ person. That the earth is flat is a[n] ____ idea. The young warriors
+listened respectfully to the ____ chief's advice. They unearthed a[n] ____
+vase. "____ wood best to burn, ____ wine to drink, ____ friends to trust,
+and ____ authors to read." His favorite study was ____ history. "Grow ____
+along with me." "The most ____ heavens, through thee, are fresh and
+strong."
+
+
+<Pay, compensate, recompense, remunerate, requite, reimburse,
+indemnify>.
+
+Most men are willing to receive what is due them. They might even be
+persuaded to receive a bit more. Why should they not be as scrupulous to
+receive what they are entitled to in the medium of language as of money?
+Sometimes they are. Offering to _pay_ some people instead of to
+_compensate_ them is like offering a tip to the wrong person. Why?
+Because there is a social implication in _compensate_ which is not
+contained in _pay_. To _pay_ is simply to give what is due, as
+in wages (or even salary), price, or the like. To _compensate_ is to
+make suitable return for service rendered. Does _compensate_ not
+sound the more soothing? But save in exceptional circumstances the
+downrightness of _pay_ has no hint of vulgarity. To _recompense_
+is to make a return, especially if it is not monetary, for work, pains,
+trouble, losses, or suffering; or some quality or blessing (as affection
+or happiness) may be said to recompense one. To _remunerate_ is to
+disburse a large amount to a person, or to give it to him as a reward, or
+otherwise to make him a return in a matter of importance. To
+_requite_ is to put a just value upon one's work, deeds, or merit and
+to make payment strictly in accordance with his deserts. To
+_reimburse_ is to make good what some one has spent for you. To
+_indemnify_ is to secure some one against loss or to make restitution
+for damages he has sustained.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <disburse, reward>.
+
+_Sentences_: Let us ____ him for his efforts in our behalf.
+Let us ____ their kindness with kindness, their cruelty with cruelty.
+To ____ them adequately for such patriotic sacrifices is of course
+impossible. The government demanded that it be ____ for the injury to its
+citizens. I shall ____ you for all sums expended. He ____ the bill by a
+check. The success of her children ____ a mother for her sacrifices for
+them. Wages are ____ to laborers; salaries are ____ to judges.
+
+
+<Proud, arrogant, presumptuous, haughty, supercilious, insolent,
+insulting>.
+
+Most persons feel in their hearts that their claims and merits are
+superior to those of other people. But they do not like for you, in
+describing them, to imply that their self-appraisal is too high.
+"Comparisons are odious," and therefore in comparing their fancied with
+their real selves you must choose your terms carefully. Of the words that
+suggest an exaggerated estimate of one's merits or privileges the
+broadest, as well as the least offensive, is _proud_. In fact this
+word need not carry the idea of exaggeration. A proud man may but hold
+himself in justifiable esteem, or wish to measure up to the demands of his
+station or to the expectations of others. On the other hand, he may
+overvalue his attainments, possessions, connections, etc. To say that the
+man is _arrogant_ means that he combines with pride a contempt for
+others, that he claims for himself greater attention, consideration, or
+respect than he is entitled to. To say that he is _presumptuous_
+makes him an inferior (or at least not a superior) who claims privileges
+or takes liberties improperly. To say that he is _haughty_ means that
+he assumes a disdainful superiority to others, especially through fancied
+or actual advantage over them in birth or social position. To say that he
+is _supercilious_ means that he maintains toward others an attitude
+of lofty indifference or sneering contempt. To say that he is
+_insolent_ means that he is purposely and perhaps coarsely
+disrespectful toward others, especially toward his superiors. To say that
+he is _insulting_ means that he gives or offers personal affront,
+probably in scornful or disdainful speech.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <scornful, imperious,
+contumelious, impudent, impertinent>.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ in replying to the questions. She paid no
+attention to his words, but kept looking at him with a[n] ____ smile. He
+was ____ in acting as if he were their equal. The hot-tempered fellow
+answered this ____ remark with a blow. She resented his presuming to speak
+to her, and turned away in a[n] ____ manner. The servant was ____ to her
+mistress. Are you not very ____ of your family connections? The old man
+was so ____ that he expected people to raise their hats to him and not to
+sit down till he gave permission.
+
+
+<Punish, chastise, chasten>.
+
+To _punish_ a person is to inflict pain or penalty upon him as a
+retribution for wrong-doing. There may be, usually is, no intention to
+improve the offender. To _chastise_ him is to inflict deserved
+corporal punishment upon him for corrective purposes. To _chasten_
+him is to afflict him with trouble for his reformation or spiritual
+betterment. The word is normally employed in connection with such
+affliction from God.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <castigate, scourge>.
+
+_Sentences_: "Hearing oftentimes The still, sad music of humanity,
+Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power To ____ and subdue." Ichabod
+Crane freely used his ferule in ____ his pupils. "Whom the Lord loveth he
+____." A naughty child should be ____.
+
+
+<Rich, wealthy, affluent, opulent>.
+
+"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a
+rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." Substitute _wealthy_ for
+_rich_. Is the meaning exactly the same? Is Goldsmith's description
+of the village preacher--"passing rich with forty pounds a year"--as
+effective if _wealthy_ is substituted? What is the difference between
+_riches_ and _wealth_? Which implies the greater degree of
+possession, which the more permanence and stability? Which word suggests
+the more personal relationship with money? Which word the more definitely
+denotes money or its immediate equivalent? Why do we say "get-rich-quick
+schemes" rather than "get-wealthy-quick schemes"? What besides the
+possession of wealth does _affluent_ suggest? Could we say that a
+rich miser lives in affluence? If not, why not? A poor clerk who has ten
+dollars to spend as he pleases may feel affluent. A rich banker may be a
+man of affluence in his town. What power does this suggest that he has
+besides the possession of a great deal of money? Explain all that Swift
+implies by the word _opulence_ in the quotation "There in full
+opulence a banker dwelt, Who all the joys and pangs of riches felt." If
+you substitute _affluence_, what different impression do you get?
+
+
+<Rural, rustic, pastoral, bucolic>.
+
+"The _rural_ inhabitants of a country." Are the people being spoken
+of favorably, unfavorably, or neutrally? How would the meaning be affected
+if they were called _rustic_ inhabitants? Would you ordinarily speak
+of the _rural_ or the _rustic_ population to distinguish it from
+the urban? Would you speak of _rural_ or _rustic_ activities?
+_rural_ or _rustic_ manners? When the two adjectives may be
+employed, is one of them unflattering? Is a _rustic_ bridge something
+to be ashamed of? a _rustic_ chair? a _rustic_ gate? What, then,
+is the degree of reproach that attaches to each of the two adjectives? the
+degree of commendation? Wherein do _pastoral_ scenes differ from
+_rural_? _pastoral_ amusements from _rustic_? Can you trace
+a connection between the _pastor_ of a church and a _pastoral_
+life? Do you often hear the word _bucolic_? In what mood is it
+oftenest uttered? Which of the four adjectives best fits into Goldsmith's
+dignified lament: "And ____ mirth and manners are no more"?
+
+
+<Silent, reserved, uncommunicative, reticent, taciturn>.
+(This group may be contrasted with the _Talkative_ group, below.)
+
+We pass through a crowded room and notice that some of its occupants are
+not adding their voices to the chatter. We resolve to study these
+unspeaking persons. Some of them merely have nothing to say, or are timid
+or preoccupied; or it may be they deliberately have set themselves not to
+talk. These are _silent_. Some plainly desire not to talk, it may be
+in general or it may be upon some particular topic; they may (but need
+not) regard themselves as superior to their associates, or for some other
+reason let aloofness or coldness creep into their manner. These are
+_reserved_. Others withhold information that persons about them are,
+or would be, interested in. These are _uncommunicative_. Others
+maintain their own counsel; they neglect opportunities to reveal their
+thoughts, plans, and the like. These are _reticent_. Others are
+disinclined--and habitually, we perceive--to talking. These are
+_taciturn_.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ prisoner evaded all questions. He was as ____
+as nature itself; he never gave his views upon any subject. He was ____
+about the firm's affairs, especially toward persons who seemed
+inquisitive. We knew there had been a love affair in his life, but he was
+____ on the subject. She sat ____ throughout the discussion. If to be ____
+is golden, Lucas should have been a billionaire.
+
+
+<Sing, chant, carol, warble, troll, yodel, croon, hum, chirp,
+chirrup>.
+
+You hear a "concord of sweet sounds," not instrumental but vocal, and wish
+to tell me so. You say that some person _sings_. Then you recall that
+I am something of an expert in music, and you cast about for the word that
+shall state specifically the kind of singing that is being done. Does the
+person sing solemnly in a more or less uniform tone? You tell me that he
+_chants_. Does he sing gladly, spontaneously, high-spiritedly, as if
+his heart were pouring over with joy? You say that he _carols_. Does
+he sing with vibratory notes and little runs, as in bird-music? You say
+that he _warbles_. Does he sing loudly and freely? You say that he
+_trolls_. Does he sing with peculiar modulations from the regular
+into a falsetto voice? You say that he _yodels_. Does he sing a
+simple, perhaps tender, song in a low tone (as a lullaby to an infant)?
+You say that he _croons_. Does he sing with his lips closed? You say
+that he _hums_. Does he utter the short, perhaps sharp, notes of
+certain birds and insects? You say that he _chirps_ or
+_chirrups_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <trill, pipe, quaver,
+peep, cheep, twitter>.
+
+_Sentences_: A cricket ____ in the grass outside the door. He
+abstractedly gazed out of the window and ____ a few strains of an old
+song. Listen, they are ____ the Te Deum. "And ____ still dost soar, and
+soaring ever ____." A strange, uncanny blending of false and true notes it
+is when the Swiss mountaineers are ____. Negroes, as a race, love to
+____. As she soothes the child to sleep she ____ a "rock-a-bye-baby."
+
+
+<Suave, bland, unctuous, fulsome, smug>.
+
+_Suave_ implies agreeable persuasiveness or smooth urbanity.
+_Bland_ suggests a soothing or coaxing kindness of manner, one that
+is sometimes lacking in sincerity. _Unctuous_ implies excessive
+smoothness, as though one's manner were oiled. The word carries a decided
+suggestion of hypocrisy. _Fulsome_ suggests such gross flattery as to
+be annoying or cloying. _Smug_ suggests an effeminate
+self-satisfaction, usually not justified by merit or achievement.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <complaisant, elegant,
+trim, dapper, spruce, genteel, urbane, well-bred, gracious, affable,
+benign>.
+
+_Sentences_: He thought his answer exceedingly brilliant and settled
+back into his chair with ____ complacency. "____ the smile that like a
+wrinkling wind On glassy water drove his cheek in lines." They were
+irritated by his ____ praise. Although he disliked them, he greeted them
+with ____ cordiality. "A bankrupt, a prodigal, ... that used to come so
+____ upon the mart; let him look to his bond." ____ as a diplomat.
+
+
+<Talkative, loquacious, garrulous, fluent, voluble, glib>.
+(This group may be contrasted with the _Silent_ group, above.)
+
+A little while ago you were in a crowded room and made a study of the
+persons disposed to silence. But your study was carried on under
+difficulties, for many of those about you showed a tendency to copious or
+excessive speech. One woman entered readily into conversation with you and
+convinced you that her natural disposition was to converse a great deal.
+She was _talkative_. From her you escaped to a man who soon proved
+that he talked too much and could run on with an incessant flow of words,
+perhaps employing many of them where a few would have sufficed. He was
+_loquacious_. The two of you were joined by an old gentleman who
+forthwith began to talk wordily, tediously, continuously, with needless
+repetitions and in tiresome detail; you suspected that he had suffered a
+mental decline from age, and that he might be excessively fond, in season
+and out of season, of talking about himself and his opinions. He was
+_garrulous_. You broke away from these two and fell into the hands of
+a much more agreeable interlocutor. He talked with a ready, easy command
+of words, so that his discourse _flowed_ smoothly. He was
+_fluent_. He introduced you to a lady whose speech possessed
+smoothness and ease in too great degree; it fairly _rolled_ along, as
+a hoop does downhill. The lady was _voluble_. Into your triangular
+group broke a newcomer whose speech had in it a flippant, or at least a
+superficially clever, fluency. He was _glib_. Leaving these three to
+fight (or talk) it out as best they might, you grabbed your hat and
+hurried outside for a fresh whiff of air.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <chattering, long-winded,
+prolix, wordy, verbose>.
+
+_Sentences_: The insurance agent was so ____ a talker that I was
+soothed into sleepiness by his voice. The ____ old man could talk forever
+about the happenings of his boyhood. Through ____ descriptions of life in
+the city the dapper summer boarder entranced the simple country girl. I
+met a ____ fellow on the train, and we had a long conversation. She was so
+____ that I spent half the afternoon with her and learned nothing.
+
+
+<Weak, debilitated, feeble, infirm, decrepit, impotent>.
+
+_Weak_ is the general word for that which is deficient in strength.
+_Debilitated_ is used of physical weakness, in most instances brought
+on by excesses and abuses. _Feeble_ denotes decided or extreme
+weakness, which may excite pity or contempt. _Infirm_ is applied to a
+person whose weakness or feebleness is due to age. _Decrepit_ is used
+in reference to a person broken down or worn out by infirmities, age, or
+sickness. _Impotent_ implies such loss or lack of strength or
+vitality as to render ineffective or helpless.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <enervated, languid,
+frail>.
+
+_Sentences_: "Here I stand, your slave, A poor, ____, weak, and
+despis'd old man." A[n] ____ old man shuffled along with the aid of a
+cane. Though still in his youth, he was ____ from intemperance and fast
+living. A fellow who does that has a[n] ____ mind. He staggered about
+trying to strike his opponent, but rage and his wound rendered him for the
+time ____. The grasp of the old man was so ____ that the cup trembled in
+his hand. "Like rich hangings in a homely house, So was his will in his
+old ____ body." After his long illness he was as ____ as a child. He made
+but a[n] ____ attempt to defend himself.
+
+
+<Wise, learned, erudite, sagacious, sapient, sage, judicious, prudent,
+provident, discreet>. (Compare the distinction between _knowledge_
+and _wisdom_ under Words Often Confused above.)
+
+_Wise_ implies sound and discriminating judgment, resulting from
+either learning or experience. _Learned_ denotes the past acquisition
+of much information through study. _Erudite_ means characterized by
+extensive or profound knowledge. _Sagacious_ implies far-sighted
+judgment and intuitive discernment, especially in practical matters.
+_Sapient_ is now of infrequent use except as applied ironically or
+playfully to one having or professing wisdom. _Sage_ implies deep
+wisdom that comes from age or experience. _Judicious_ denotes sound
+judgment or careful discretion in weighing a matter with reference to its
+merits or its consequences. _Prudent_ conveys a sense of cautious
+foresight in judging the future and planning for it upon the basis of the
+circumstances at hand. _Provident_ suggests practical foresight and
+careful economy in preparing for future needs. _Discreet_ denotes
+care or painstakingness in doing or saying the right thing at the right
+time, and the avoidance thereby of errors or unpleasant results.
+
+_Sentences_: Against the time when his children would be going to
+college he had been ____. "Most ____ judge!" The ____ old warrior could
+not be deceived by any such ruse. "Be ye therefore as ____ as serpents,
+and harmless as doves." The ____ advice of his elders was wasted on him.
+The course was ____, not rash. He was ____ in avoiding all reference to
+the subject. "Type of the ____, who soar but never roam, True to the
+kindred points of heaven and home." Even by those scholars, those
+specialists, he was deemed ____. How ____ the young man is! "Where
+ignorance is bliss, 'Tis folly to be ____." Is it ____ to spend money thus
+lavishly? He considered the matter well and gave a most ____ answer. To
+spend every cent of one's income is surely not to be ____.
+
+
+<Work, labor, toil, drudgery>.
+
+All of us, at times anyhow, get out of as much work as we can. We even use
+the word _work_ and its synonyms loosely and indolently. Perhaps this
+is a literary aspect of the labor problem. If, however, we can shake off
+our sluggishness and exert ourselves in discriminating our terms, we shall
+use _work_ as a general word for effort, physical or mental, to some
+purposive end; _labor_ for hard, physical work; _toil_ for
+wearying or exhaustive work; and _drudgery_ for tedious, monotonous,
+or distasteful work, especially of a low or menial kind.
+
+_Sentences_: It required the ____ of thousands of men to complete the
+tunnel. To be condemned to the galleys meant a life of unending ____. The
+man who enjoys his ____ will succeed. Twenty years of incessant ____ had
+extinguished in him every spark of ambition. He was weary after the
+____ of the day. All ____ and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Through the
+heart-breaking ____ of thousands the pyramids were built to commemorate a
+few. He was sentenced to hard ____.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+ SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (2)
+
+
+You have now seen enough of the method of discriminating synonyms to take
+more of the responsibility for such work upon yourself. In this chapter,
+therefore, the plan followed in Exercise A is abandoned and no
+discriminations are supplied you.
+
+
+EXERCISE B
+
+For some of the generic words in Exercise A you will find antonyms in
+Exercise C. Here is a list:
+
+In Exercise A: walk, laugh, busy, hate, masculine, old
+
+In Exercise C: run, cry, idle, love, feminine, young.
+
+Now each of the generic terms in C is followed by a list of its synonyms.
+But for the six generic terms just given let us see how many synonyms you
+can find for yourself. Simply study each word in turn, think of all the
+synonyms for it you can summon, strike out those you consider far-fetched.
+Then compare your list with the list under the antonym in Exercise A; if
+possible, improve your list by means of this comparison. Finally, compare
+your revised list with the list in Exercise C.
+
+In Exercise C are two generic terms that carry the same idea (but not in
+the same part of speech) as generic terms in Exercise A. They are as
+follows:
+
+In Exercise A: sing, death
+
+In Exercise C: song, die.
+
+Take _song_ and _die_. First, find all the satisfactory synonyms
+you can for yourself. Then if possible improve your list by studying the
+list under the corresponding word in Exercise A. Finally, compare your
+revised list with the one in Exercise C.
+
+
+EXERCISE C
+
+After three introductory groups (dealing with thoroughly concrete ideas
+and words) the synonyms in this exercise are arranged alphabetically
+according to the first word in each group.
+
+Discriminate the words in each group, and fill each blank in the
+illustrative sentences with the word that conveys the meaning exactly.
+
+
+<See, perceive, descry, distinguish, espy, discern, note, notice, watch,
+observe, witness, behold, view>.
+
+_Sentences_: The intruder he ____ in the early dawn-light might have
+been man or beast; he could not have ____ one from the other. After a long
+search I ____ on the map the name of the town. The teacher ____ the
+throwing of the paper wad, but thought best not to ____ it. "He that hath
+eyes to ____, let him ____." I ____ the encounter. "I hope to ____ my
+Pilot face to face When I have crossed the bar." "When my eyes turn to
+____ for the last time the sun in heaven." I sat by the flower and ____
+the bee plunder it. The scrawl on the paper was meaningless, but at length
+by close attention he ____ secret writing. "Your young men shall ____
+visions, and your old men shall dream dreams." He had ____ human nature
+manifesting itself under various conditions.
+
+
+<Kill, slay, slaughter, massacre, butcher, murder, assassinate, execute,
+hang, electrocute, guillotine, lynch, despatch, decimate, crucify>.
+
+_Sentences_: With the jawbone of an ass Samson ____ a thousand of his
+enemies. It was his duty as sheriff to ____ the criminal, and the method
+decreed by the state was that he should ____ him. Previously the method of
+carrying out a sentence of death had been to ____ the criminal. On our
+left wing we lost one man in ten: thus our lines were literally ____ On
+our right wing, where we advanced to the attack in the open, our men were
+simply ____. After the garrison had laid down its arms the Indians ____
+men, women, and children. "I would not ____ thy soul." During the French
+Revolution many of the nobility were ____. In the country late fall is the
+time to ____ hogs. Thinking that his accomplice was no longer of use, he
+quietly ____ him. The anarchist who had ____ the governor was taken by a
+mob and ____.
+
+
+<Sleep, slumber, repose, nap, doze, drowze, lethargy, dormancy, coma,
+trance, siesta>.
+
+_Sentences_: Since he had not exerted himself beforehand, his state
+was one of ____ rather than one of ____. The sultry heat of the day put
+him into a ____. "Not poppy, nor mandragora, Nor all the ____ syrops of
+the world, Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet ____ Which thou
+ow[n]edst yesterday." Light and pleasant be thy ____. "And still she slept
+an azure-lidded ____." From the ____ induced by his injury the physicians
+were unable to arouse him. "Oh ____! it is a gentle thing, Beloved from
+pole to pole!" "The poppied warmth of ____ oppress'd Her soothéd limbs,
+and soul fatigued away." In Spanish-speaking South American countries
+every one expects to take his ____. He lay down under the tree for a short
+____ and had just fallen into a preliminary ____ when the picnic party
+arrived. "Macbeth does murder ____, the innocent ____, ____ that knits up
+the ravel'd sleave of care."
+
+
+<Abolish, repeal, rescind, revoke, abrogate, annul, nullify, cancel,
+reverse>.
+
+_Sentences_: A declaration of war would of course ____ the treaty.
+The legislature has the right to ____ old laws as well as to enact new
+ones. Because they left his grounds littered with paper, he ____ their
+privilege of holding picnics there. The king ____ the decree that the
+conspirators should be exiled. Slavery was ____ by the Emancipation
+Proclamation. The emperor ____ many of the ancient rights of the people.
+They ____ the mortgage when he paid the money. The violation of these
+provisions has ____ the contract. It was an ill day for France when the
+Edict of Nantes was ____ by Louis XIV. The Supreme Court ____ the decision
+of the lower tribunal. The Mormons have officially ____ polygamy. The
+codicil ____ some of the earlier provisions in his will.
+
+
+<Acquit, exculpate, exonerate, absolve>.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ himself from all blame. The king ____ them from
+their allegiance. The teacher ____ the student who had been suspected of
+theft. The father confessor ____ the penitent. The jury ____ the man on
+the first ballot.
+
+
+<Afraid, fearful, frightened, alarmed, scared, aghast, terrified, timid,
+timorous.> (This group may be compared with the _Fear group_,
+below.)
+
+_Sentences_: One child was too ____ to speak to the strangers; the
+other too ____ to do anything but squall. "If Caesar hide himself, shall
+they not whisper 'Lo, Caesar is ____'?" Any one might have been ____ by
+this noise in a room said to be haunted; and for my part, I stood ____.
+
+
+<Allay, alleviate, mitigate, assuage, mollify, relieve.>
+
+_Sentences_: The judge ____ the severity of the punishment. They
+collected funds to ____ the sufferings of the poor. He could not ____ the
+wrath of the angry man. Shall we try to ____ their fears by telling them
+the accident may have been less calamitous than they have heard? A mustard
+plaster ____ the pain. The grief of the mother was ____ by the presence of
+her child. This experience had by no means ____ his temper.
+
+
+<Allow, permit, suffer, tolerate.>
+
+_Sentences_: Visitors are not ____ to see the king. The over-running
+of my yard by the neighbors' chickens is a nuisance I shall not ____. "____
+little children to come unto me." The use of bicycles and velocipedes
+on the pavement, though not ____ by the city, is good-naturedly ____ by
+most of the citizens. She ____ her children to play in the street.
+
+
+<Ascribe, attribute, impute.>
+
+_Sentences_: I ____ my failure to poor judgment. He ____ sinister
+motives for their actions. So many ideal characteristics have been ____ to
+Washington that it is difficult to think of him as a man.
+
+
+<Awkward, clumsy, ungainly, gawky, lanky.>
+
+_Sentences_: An elephant is ____ in its movements. Some ____
+countrymen hung around the circus entrance. He was tall and ____; he
+seemed to be a mere prop on which clothes were hung. Isn't that man ____
+in his carriage? The fingers of the ball-players might as well have been
+thumbs, so ____ were they from the cold. Girls throw a ball in a[n] ____
+manner.
+
+
+<Bite, nibble, gnaw, chew, masticate, champ>.
+
+_Sentences_: Fletcher taught people to ____ their food well. The
+mouse ____ the cheese, but the trap did not spring. A horse ____ his bits.
+When I ____ into the apple, I found that it was sour. The rat ____ a hole
+through the board.
+
+
+<Break, crack, fracture, sever, rend, burst, smash, shatter, shiver,
+splinter, sunder, rive, crush, batter, demolish, rupture>. (After
+discriminating these terms for yourself, see the treatment of _break,
+fracture_ under <Break, fracture> above under Parallels.)
+
+_Sentences_: "____ my timbers!" the old salt exclaimed. The anaconda
+is an immense serpent that wraps itself about its victim and ____ it.
+The child blew the soap bubble wider and wider till it ____. "You
+may ____, you may ____ the vase if you will." Looking closely at the eggs,
+she perceived that one of them was ____. With a board the thoughtless
+child ____ the anthill. During a violent fit of coughing he ____ a blood
+vessel. The thick cloud was ____ and the sunshine streamed through.
+
+
+<Careful, cautious, wary, circumspect, canny>.
+
+_Sentences_: A mouse must be ____ lest it be caught in a trap. He had
+learned to be ____ in advancing his radical opinions. The man was a Scot
+and therefore ____. With a ____ movement I opened the door to investigate
+the strange noise. He was ____ in checking up the accounts. Be extremely
+____ in your behavior, for they are watching to criticize you.
+
+
+<Condescend, deign, vouchsafe>.
+
+_Sentences_: The king ____ them safe conduct through the country. He
+would not ____ to touch the money that had been gained dishonestly. His
+____ manner irritated them. The master ____ to hear the complaints of the
+servants.
+
+
+<Confirm, corroborate, substantiate, verify_.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the charge with positive proof. The finding of
+Desdemona's handkerchief ____ Othello's belief that she was guilty. The
+other witnesses ____ his testimony. The doctor ____ the appointment his
+assistant had made for him. He ____ his results by repeating the
+experiment a number of times.
+
+
+<Courage, bravery, resolution, dauntlessness, gallantry, boldness,
+intrepidity, daring, valor, prowess, fortitude, heroism>. (With this
+group contrast the _Fear_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: It seemed they must be driven from their works but they
+held to them with the utmost ____. He had the ____ to fight an aggressive
+battle, but not the ____ to stand for long days upon the defensive; less
+still did he have the ____ to disregard unjust criticism. The silent ____
+of the women who bide at home surpasses the ____ the warriors who engage
+in battle. He had the dashing ____ of a cavalry officer.
+
+
+<Cruel, brutal, ferocious, fierce, savage, barbarous, truculent,
+merciless, unmerciful, pitiless, ruthless, fell>. (With this group
+contrast the _Kind_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: "But with the whiff and wind of his ____ sword
+The unnerved father falls." "Poor naked wretches, wheresoe'er you are,
+That bide the pelting of this ____ storm." The ____ fellow could cause
+suffering to a child without the least tinge of remorse. Such conduct is
+unheard of in civilized communities; it is ____, it is ____. "I must be
+____ only to be kind."
+
+
+<Cry, weep, sob, snivel, whimper, blubber, bawl, squall, howl, wail>.
+
+_Sentences_: "____ no more, woeful shepherds; ____ no more."
+The woman covered her face with her hands and ____, while the children
+____. He ____ a forced regret at the death of his uncle, and asked that
+the will be read, "Rachel ____ for her children." "Rejoice with them that
+do rejoice, and ____ with them that ____." "I could lie down like a tired
+child And ____ away this life of care Which I have borne and yet must
+bear." "An infant ____ in the night." "What's Hecuba to him or he
+to Hecuba That he should ____ for her?" I was disgusted at the sight of
+that overgrown boy standing in the corner ____. "You think I'll ____; No,
+I'll not ____: I have full cause of ____, but this heart Shall break into
+a hundred thousand flaws Or ere I'll ____."
+
+
+<Cut, cleave, hack, haggle, notch, slash, gash, split, chop, hew, lop,
+prune, reap, mow, clip, shear, trim, dock, crop, shave, whittle, slice,
+slit, score, lance, carve, bisect, dissect, amputate, detruncate,
+syncopate.>
+
+_Sentences_: "I'll ____ around your heart with my razor, And shoot
+you with my shotgun too." "O Hamlet! thou hast ____ my heart in twain." By
+the pressure of his hands he could ____ an apple. With his new hatchet
+George began ____ at the cherry tree. He carelessly ____ off a branch or
+two. The horses were ____ the rank grass. An old form of punishment was to
+____ the nose of the offender. The nobleman ordered the groom to ____ the
+tails of the carriage horses. You should ____ your meadows in the summer
+and ____ your grapevines in the late fall or early winter. "Do you," asked
+the barber, "wish your hair ____ or ____?" ____ to the line. It is painful
+to see Dodwell trying to ____ a turkey. In geometry we learned to ____
+angles, in biology to ____ cats. The bad man in the West ____ his gunstock
+each time he shot a tenderfoot. Betty, will you ____ this cucumber?
+"'Mark's way,' said Mark, and ____ him thro' the brain."
+
+
+<Deadly, mortal, fatal, lethal>.
+
+_Sentences_: He has a ____ disease. The spirit of Virgil guided Dante
+through the ____ shades. Cyanide of potassium is a ____ poison. He struck
+a ____ blow.
+
+
+<Defeat, subdue, conquer, overcome, vanquish, subjugate, suppress>.
+
+_Sentences_: Napoleon ____ his enemies in many battles, but he was
+not able to ____ them. The new governor general ____ the uprising. He was
+____ in the election. Caesar ____ many countries and made them swear
+allegiance to Rome. "Who ____ by force Hath ____ but half his foe." The
+militia ____ the rioters.
+
+
+<Deny, contravene, controvert, refute, confute>.
+
+_Sentences_: He produced evidence to ____ the charge. They could not
+____ the facts we presented. It is difficult to ____ those who are
+spreading these rumors, yet all right-minded people think the rumors
+false. "I put thee now to thy book-oath; ____ it if thou canst." Either
+admit or ____ the truth of this allegation. Such a law ____ the first
+principles of justice.
+
+
+<Destroy, demolish, raze, annihilate, exterminate, eradicate, extirpate,
+obliterate.>
+
+_Sentences_: All the ferocious wild animals are gradually being
+____. As weeds from a field, so is it difficult to ____ all the faults
+from man's nature. But how shall we ____ the cause of this disease? Fire
+____ the bank. The wrecking crew ____ the building. She tried to ____ the
+terrible scene from her memory. "____ all that's made To a green thought
+in a green shade." The cyclone ____ the church. The Spanish Inquisition
+tried to ____ heresy. "____ out the written troubles of the brain."
+The army was not only defeated; it was ____. "A bold peasantry, their
+country's pride, When once ____, can never be supplied."
+
+
+<Die, expire, perish, decease, succumb.>
+
+_Sentences_: All men are mortal and must ____. "As wax melteth before
+the fire, so let the wicked ____ at the presence of God." "I still had
+hopes, my long vexations past, Here to return, and ____ at home at last."
+The late ____ Mr. Brown left all his property to his family. "Cowards ____
+many times before their deaths." "The poor beetle, that we tread upon, In
+corporal sufferance finds a pang as great As when a giant giant ____."
+"Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not ____
+from the earth." "Thus on Maeander's flowery margin lies Th' ____ swan,
+and as he sings he dies." Over a thousand people ____ in the fire at the
+theater. "To ____, to sleep; to sleep: perchance to dream." He ____ to a
+lingering disease. "Aye, but to ____, and go we know not where; To lie in
+cold obstruction and to rot." "Wind my thread of life up higher, Up,
+through angels' hands of fire! I aspire while I ____."
+
+
+<Dip, douse, duck, plunge, immerge, immerse, submerge, sink, dive.>
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ his head under the hydrant. The Baptists ____ at
+baptism. She ____ the cloth into the dye. The sophomores ____ the freshmen
+into the icy water of the lake. Paul Jones could not ____ the enemy's
+ship; he therefore resolved to board it. The wreck lay ____ in forty
+fathoms of water. Uncle Tom ____ overboard to rescue the child. When the
+gun is discharged, the loon does not rise from the water; it ____. Lewis
+became badly strangled when the other boys ____ him.
+
+
+<Disease, sickness, illness, indisposition, ailment, affection,
+complaint, disorder, distemper, infirmity, malady.> (With this group
+contrast the _healthful_ group.)
+
+_Sentences_: He was suffering the ____ of age. Cancer is still in
+many instances an incurable ____ The ____ of the lady ended as soon as the
+maid told her the callers had gone away. It was an old ____ of the
+tonsils, but this time the child's ____ was slight. "To help me through
+this long ____, my life."
+
+
+<Disloyal, false, unfaithful, faithless, traitorous, treasonable,
+treacherous, perfidious.>
+
+_Sentences_: The king discovered many ____ schemes among those who
+pretended to be his loyal supporters. England's enemies have long called
+her "____ Albion." They were afraid the Indian guide would betray them by
+some ____ action. "O you beast! O ____ coward! O dishonest wretch!" He was
+____ to his adopted country. "Bloody, bawdy villain! Remorseless, ____,
+lecherous, kindless villain! O! vengeance!"
+
+
+<Do, perform, execute, accomplish, achieve, effect.>
+
+_Sentences_: An officer ____ the orders with despatch. He ____ a
+mighty name for himself. "If it were ____ when 'tis ____ then 'twere well
+It were ____ quickly." Constant efforts will ____ miracles. The student
+____ the problems quickly. The doctor hopes his new treatment will ____ a
+cure. "God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to ____." He persevered
+till he ____ his purpose. He always ____ more than was expected of him.
+
+
+<Dress, clothes, clothing, garments, apparel, raiment, habiliments,
+vestments, attire, garb, habit, costume, uniform.>
+
+_Sentences_: The spy concealed his identity by wearing the ____ of a
+monk. The soldiers wore blue ____. She was an excellent horsewoman, and
+rode in a fashionable ____. "No man putteth a piece of new cloth unto an
+old ____." Millions of men left farms and factories and shops to don the
+____ of war. The invitation specified that the men should wear evening
+____. The store specialized in women's wearing ____. A person should wear
+warm ____ in winter. The king appeared in his royal ____. He always wore
+expensive ____. The bishop entered in his clerical ____. "The ____ oft
+proclaims the man." The theatrical ____ was full of spangles. One's ____
+should never be conspicuous.
+
+
+<Drink, imbibe, sip, sup, swallow, quaff, tipple, tope, guzzle,
+swig.>
+
+_Sentences_: "She who, as they voyaged, ____ With Tristram that
+spiced magic draught." Plants ____ moisture through their roots. "A little
+learning is a dang'rous thing; ____ deep, or taste not the Pierian
+spring." He ____ down the liquor in a couple of huge draughts. On the fan
+was a picture of Japanese maidens daintily ____ tea. "____ to me only with
+thine eyes." His red nose betrayed the fact that he constantly ____.
+
+
+<Elicit, extract, exact, extort.>
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ payment to the last cent. The police ____ a
+confession from the prisoner by intimidating him. This terrible suffering
+____ our sympathy. His resolve to begin again after his failure ____ their
+admiration. "But lend it rather to thine enemy; Who if he break, thou
+mayst with better face ____ the penalty." They ____ all the information
+they could by questioning the child.
+
+
+<Embarrass, disconcert, discompose, discomfit, confuse, confound,
+agitate, abash, mortify, chagrin, humiliate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The annoying little raids ____ the enemy. Such
+conclusive proof of his lies completely ____ him. His sudden proposal ____
+her. He stood ____ in the presence of the king. The traveler was ____ by
+the many turns in the road. She was ____ by the delay in having dinner
+ready. She was ____ by her husband's ill manners. The possibility that her
+daughter might have been in the accident ____ her. I was ____ at being so
+cleverly outwitted.
+
+
+<Excuse, pardon, forgive, condone.>
+
+_Sentences_: We should ____ even those who do us wrong. "Father, ____
+them; for they know not what they do." I trust you will ____ my being
+late. Ignorance ____ no one before the law. The governor ____ the convict.
+He thought it better to ____ the offense than to try to punish it.
+
+
+<Explain, expound, interpret, elucidate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The minister ____ the doctrine of predestination.
+The tribesman ____ his chief's words for us. He ____ his meaning by giving
+clear examples. Joseph was called upon to ____ Pharaoh's dream. Can you
+____ the reason for your absence? Various scholars have ____ the passage
+differently.
+
+
+<Fat, fleshy, stout, plump, buxom, corpulent, obese, portly, pursy,
+burly, pudgy, chubby.>
+
+_Sentences_: "There live not three good men unhanged in England, and
+one of them is ____ and grows old." A[n] ____ rosy-faced child walking
+beside a girl just pleasantly ____ came past the garden. The ____ lady was
+talking with a[n] ____, ill-conditioned man. "So ____, blithe, and
+debonair." "He's ____ and scant of breath." The ruffian was a[n] ____
+fellow. They were ____ in varying degrees: one was ____, one ____, and one
+downright ____.
+
+
+<Fear, dread, fright, apprehension, affright, alarm, dismay, timidity,
+consternation, panic, terror, horror, misgiving, anxiety, scare, tremor,
+trepidation.> (With this group compare the _Afraid_ group, above,
+and contrast the _Courage_ group, also above.)
+
+_Sentences_: "Like one, that on a lonesome road Doth walk in ____ and
+____." "His scepter shows the force of temporal power, The attribute to
+awe and majesty, Wherein doth sit the ____ and ____ of kings." ____
+changed to ____ when we perceived the corpse. Washington felt some ____ as
+to the loyalty of Charles Lee, but was amazed to find his force retreating
+in ____, indeed almost in a[n] ____.
+
+
+<Feminine, female, womanly, womanlike, womanish, effeminate,
+ladylike.>
+
+_Sentences_: She possessed every ____ charm. He gave a[n] ____ start
+of curiosity. The pistil is considered the ____ organ of a flower. It was
+once not thought ____ for a woman to ride astride a horse. He inherited
+the throne through the ____ line. Patience is one of the greatest of ____
+virtues. The hired girl in her finery minced along with a[n] ____ step.
+Some people consider it ____ to wear a wrist watch. Her ____ heart was
+touched at the sight. It is ____ to jump at the sight of a mouse.
+
+
+<Fight, combat, struggle, scuffle, fray, affray, attack, engagement,
+assault, onslaught, brawl, melee, tournament, battle, conflict, strife,
+clash, collision, contest, skirmish, encounter, brush, bout, set-to.>
+
+_Sentences_: "A darkling plain Swept with confused alarms of ____ and
+flight." The ____ upon Fort Sumter was the direct cause of the Civil War.
+The ____ between our forces and theirs was brief and trivial; it was only
+a cavalry ____. There is an excellent account of a knightly ____ in
+_Ivanhoe_. We repelled their general ____; then ourselves advanced;
+the ____ of our lines with theirs soon resulted in an inextricable ____.
+A chance ____ of small forces at Gettysburg brought on a terrible ____.
+There had long been ____ between the two factions within the party.
+Angered by what had begun as a playful ____, one of the men challenged the
+other to ____.
+
+
+<Fleeting, transient, transitory, ephemeral, evanescent.>
+
+_Sentences_: It is the lot of every one to endure many sorrows in
+this ____ life. They saw for a short while a[n] ____ comet. The ____
+glories of dawn had merged into the sordid realities of daytime. The
+remark made but a[n] ____ impression upon him. The ____ moments sped away.
+"Art is long, and time is ____." Joy is ____. Much of the popular
+literature of the day is ____ in character.
+
+
+<Frank, candid, open, artless, guileless, ingenuous, unsophisticated,
+naive.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was a[n] ____ excuse. It was a pleasure to meet a
+person so simple and ____. He was ____ to say that he did not like the
+arrangement. "Who, mindful of the unhonored dead, Dost in these lines
+their ____ tale relate." "The Moor is of a free and ____ nature." He gave
+them his ____ opinion.
+
+
+<Frustrate, foil, thwart, counteract, circumvent, balk, baffle,
+outwit.>
+
+_Sentences_: The schemers were themselves ____. He was ____ by the
+many contradictory clues. Circumstances ____ all his plans to get rich.
+The parents ____ the attempt of the couple to elope. The guard ____ the
+prisoner's attempt to escape. He was ____ at every turn. They put forth a
+statement to ____ the influence of their opponents' propaganda. By
+slipping away during the night, Washington ____ the enemy. The politician
+by his shrewdness ____ the attempt to discredit him.
+
+
+<Glad, happy, cheerful, mirthful, joyful, joyous, blithe, gay,
+frolicsome, merry, jolly, sportive, jovial, jocular, jocose, jocund.>
+
+_Sentences_: "The milkmaid singeth ____." "And all went ____ as a
+marriage bell." "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel
+of peace, and bring ____ tidings of good things." A ____ Lothario. "So
+buxom, ____, and debonair." As ____ as a fawn. He kept smiling, for he was
+in ____ mood. "You are sad Because you are not ____; and 'twere as easy
+For you to laugh and leap, and say you are ____, Because you are not sad."
+He longed for the ____ life of a ____ English squire.
+
+
+<Habit, custom, usage, practice, wont.>
+
+_Sentences_: ____ makes perfect. The immigrants kept up many of the
+____ of their native land. "God fulfils himself in many ways, Lest one
+good ____ should corrupt the world." It was his ____ to walk among the
+ruins. An old ____ permits a man to kiss a girl who is standing under
+mistletoe. ____ establishes many peculiar idioms in a language. He
+acquired the ____ of smoking. "It is a ____ more honor'd in the breach
+than the observance." De Quincey was a victim of the opium ____. "Age
+cannot wither her, nor ____ stale Her infinite variety." "'Tis not his
+____ to be the hindmost man."
+
+
+<Harass, annoy, irritate, vex, fret, worry, plague, torment, molest,
+tease, tantalize.>
+
+_Sentences_: The merchant ____ about his financial losses. "Life's
+but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and ____ his hour upon
+the stage, And then is heard no more." The children never lost an
+opportunity to ____ the teacher. The other pupils ____ him because he was
+the teacher's favorite. The newcomer was ____ by their frequent questions.
+Don't ____ the child by holding the grapes beyond its reach. "He was met
+even now As mad as the ____ sea." Ah, but I am ____ by doubts and fears.
+"The moping owl does to the moon complain Of such as, wand'ring near her
+secret bower, ____ her ancient, solitary reign." The child ____ because
+the rain kept it indoors. When the joke was discovered, they almost ____
+the life out of him. I was ____ at their discovering my predicament. "You
+may as well forbid the mountain pines To wag their high tops, and to make
+no noise When they are ____ with the gusts of heaven."
+
+
+<Hinder, restrain, obstruct, impede, hamper, retard, check, curb, clog,
+encumber, forestall, suppress, repress, prevent.>
+
+_Sentences_: Baggage ____ the progress of an army. It is the purpose
+of modern medicine to ____ disease. The accumulations of dust and grease
+____ the machine. "My tears must stop, for every drop ____ needle and
+thread." By acknowledging his fault he hoped to ____ criticism. Though
+before she had been unable to ____ her tears, she could now scarcely ____
+a yawn. A fallen tree ____ his further progress. The horse was ____ with a
+heavy burden, and the unsure footing of the trail further ____ the
+ascent. His jealous colleagues ____ his plans in every way they could.
+
+
+<Hole, cavity, excavation, pit, cache, cave, cavern, hollow, depression,
+perforation, puncture, rent, slit, crack, chink, crevice, cranny, breach,
+cleft, chasm, fissure, gap, opening, interstice, burrow, crater, eyelet,
+pore, bore, aperture, orifice, vent, concavity, dent, indentation. >
+
+_Sentences_: The explorers, having eaten all the provisions they had
+carried with them, hurried back to their ____. The battering-ram at last
+made a[n] ____ in the walls. The ____ in the log had been caused by the
+intense heat. He tore off the check along the line of the ____. The ____
+in the earth gradually deepened and narrowed into a[n] ____. Pyramus and
+Thisbe made love to each other through a[n] ____ in a wall. "Once more
+unto the ____, dear friends, once more." The ____ in the mountain ranges
+of Virginia influenced strategy during the Civil War. Several ____ in the
+toe of one of his shoes apprised me that he had a sore foot. The supposed
+____ in the rock turned out to be a[n] ____ that led into a dark but
+spacious ____. He suffered a[n] ____ of one of his tires near the place
+where the laborers were making the ____. It was a gun of very large ____.
+The ____ in the percolator was made by a flatiron aimed at Mr. Wiggins'
+head.
+
+
+<Idle, inert, lazy, indolent, sluggish, slothful.>
+
+_Sentences_: "He also that is ____ in his work is brother to him
+that is a great waster." "The ____ singer of an empty day." Mighty, ____
+forces lie locked up in nature, waiting for man to release them. He was
+a[n] ____, good-for-nothing fellow whose whole business in life was to
+keep out of work. "For Satan finds some mischief still For ____ hands to
+do." He was too ____ to do his work well. "The ____ yawning drone." His
+steps were so ____ one would almost think he was not moving. "As ____ as a
+painted ship Upon a painted ocean." "I talk of dreams, Which are the
+children of an ____ brain, Begot of nothing but vain fantasy."
+
+
+<Ignorant, illiterate, uninformed, uneducated, untutored, unlettered,
+unenlightened.>
+
+_Sentences_: Without public schools most children would be ____;
+without missionaries many barbarous tribes would remain ____. Andrew
+Jackson was ____ that peace had been declared when he fought the battle of
+New Orleans. Even the wisest men are ____ upon some subjects. "Lo, the
+poor Indian, whose ____ mind Sees God in clouds or hears Him in the wind!"
+The mountain whites, though often totally ____, are nevertheless a shrewd
+folk. "Their name, their years, spelt by th' ____ muse, The place of fame
+and elegy supply." The percentage of ____ persons is constantly decreasing
+in America.
+
+
+<Incline, tip, lean, cant, slant, slope, tilt, list, careen, dip.>
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the bucket of water over. The vessel ____ to the
+stern and began to sink. The ship ____ to larboard. He ____ the top of the
+picture away from the wall. The sprinter ____ forward and touched the tips
+of his fingers against the ground. The gable ____ sharply. The hill ____
+gently. The cowboy had ____ his hat fetchingly.
+
+
+<Journey, voyage, tour, pilgrimage, trip, jaunt, excursion, junket,
+outing, expedition.>
+
+_Sentences_: The people protested the expenditure of money for a
+Congressional ____ to investigate the Philippine Islands. Each Sunday
+there is a[n] ____ at half fare between the two cities. He conducted a
+party on a summer ____ through Europe. Last summer I took a[n] ____ to the
+Yellowstone National Park. It was a long ____ from Philadelphia to Boston
+by stage coach. They hurriedly arranged for a[n] ____ to the woods.
+Magellan was the first man to make a[n] ____ around the globe. The
+scientific body organized a[n] ____ to explore the polar regions.
+Thousands of Mohammedans make an annual ____ to Mecca.
+
+
+<Kind, compassionate, merciful, lenient, benignant, benign, clement,
+benevolent, charitable, gracious, humane, sympathetic.> (With this
+group compare the _Cruel_ group, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: The weather was ____. She was as ____ as a queen. "Thou
+dost wear The Godhead's most ____ grace." Cowper was too ____ to tread
+upon a worm needlessly. A judge in sentencing a convicted man may be as
+____ as circumstances and the law allow. ____ neutrality. "Blessed are the
+____." "She was so ____ and so pitous She wolde wepe if that she sawe a
+mous Caught in a trappe." "____ hearts are more than coronets."
+
+
+<Love, affection, attachment, fondness, infatuation, devotion,
+predilection, liking.>
+
+_Sentences_: Between the two young people had grown a[n] ____ which
+now ripened into ____. "The course of true ____ never did run smooth." The
+mad ____ of Mark Antony for Cleopatra was the cause of his downfall. She
+had only a[n] ____ for him, but he an unqualified ____ for her. "Man's
+____ is of his life a thing apart; 'Tis woman's whole existence." He shows
+a marked ____ for the companionship of women. My ____ for the tart was
+enhanced by my ____ for the girl who baked it. That boy shows a[n] ____
+for horses, and a positive ____ for dogs.
+
+
+<Margin, edge, limit, border, boundary, bound, bourn, brim, rim, brink,
+verge, skirt, confine.>
+
+_Sentences_: He had reached the ____ of endurance. In writing, leave
+a wide ____ on the left side of the page. "Borrowing dulls the ____ of
+husbandry." "The extravagant and erring spirit hies To his ____." Within
+the ____ of reason. He stood on the ____ of ruin. The rock at the ____ of
+the cañon is called the ____ rock. I was on the ____ of doing a very
+indiscreet thing. "The undiscover'd country from whose ____ No traveler
+returns." Fill your glasses to the ____.
+
+
+<Matrimonial, conjugal, connubial, nuptial, marital.>
+
+_Sentences_: "However old a ____ union, it still garners some
+sweetness." A court of ____ relations. "Contented toil, and hospitable
+care, And kind ____ tenderness are there." "To the ____ bower I led her,
+blushing like the morn." She finally decided that he had no ____
+intentions. "And hears the unexpressive ____ song In the blest kingdoms
+meek of joy and love."
+
+
+<Occupation, employment, calling, pursuit, vocation, avocation,
+profession, business, trade, craft.>
+
+_Sentences_: He gave his life to literary ____. My brother found ____
+as a tutor in a rich family. Colleges are trying to direct their students
+into the ____ they are best fitted for. Andrew Johnson was a tailor by
+____. Medicine is a very ancient ____. The shoemaker was very skilled at
+his ____. After losing his hand he could no longer engage in his ____ as
+telegrapher. The grocer carries on only a wholesale ____. He considered
+his ____ to the ministry a sacred duty. "Sir, 'tis my ____ to be plain."
+Do you find collecting coins a pleasant ____?
+
+
+<Pacify, appease, placate, propitiate, conciliate, mollify>.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ our hunger when we reached the inn. In olden
+times men tried to ____ the offended gods by offering human sacrifices.
+They ____ the angry man by promising to hear his grievances immediately.
+The premier thought he could ____ this particular faction by offering its
+leader a seat in the cabinet. "Chiron ____ his cruel mind With art, and
+taught his warlike hands to wind The silver strings of his melodious
+lyre." A friendly word will usually ____ one's enemies.
+
+
+<Part, piece, portion, section, subdivision, fraction, instalment
+element, component, constituent, ingredient, share, lot, allotment>.
+
+_Sentences_: One ____ in his success was his courage. She was
+studying the ____ of the pie; he the chances of getting another ____. Is
+it ____ and ____ alike? "I live not in myself, but I become ____ of that
+around me." "Act well your ____; there all the honor lies." He owned a[n]
+____ of land near the city limits; a speculator bought a[n] ____ of this
+and divided it into city lots. "I am a[n] ____ of all that I have met."
+The purchaser, having only a[n] ____ of this sum in ready money, offered
+to pay in ____.
+
+
+<Pay, hire, salary, wages, fee, stipend, honorarium>.
+
+_Sentences_: Give the manager his ____, the workmen their ____. "The
+laborer is worthy of his ____." He received his weekly ____ from the
+parsimonious old man. The ____ for enrolment is ten dollars. "This is ____
+and ____, not revenge."
+
+
+<Polite, civil, obliging, courteous, courtly, urbane, affable,
+complaisant, gracious>.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ enough, but not definitely ____. "So ____
+that he ne'er ____." Though he had never lived in a city, much less in the
+circle of royalty, his manners were ____, even ____. Your desire to please
+is shown in your ____ greeting. "Damn with faint praise, assent with ____
+leer, And without sneering teach the rest to sneer."
+
+
+<Quarrel, altercation, disagreement, contention, controversy, breach,
+rupture, dispute, dissension, bickering, wrangle, broil, squabble, row,
+rumpus, ruction, spat, tiff, fuss, jar, feud.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was only a little ____ between lovers. The ____
+between the partners was over the right of the senior to make contracts
+for the firm; it grew into an angry ____. It was a long-drawn political
+____. At the meeting of our committee the chairman and one of the members
+had a sharp ____ over a point of order. A[n] ____ in some minor matters
+led to a[n] ____ in their friendship. "Thrice is he armed that hath his
+____ just." Those chattering, choleric fellows are always engaged in ____;
+last night they on meeting had a[n] ____ which brought on a long-drawn
+____, and when their friends joined in, there was a noisy ____. I have
+seen all sorts of ____, from a trivial childish ____ to a grim ____ of
+mountaineers.
+
+
+<Raise, lift, heave, hoist, erect, rear, elevate, exalt, enhance.>
+
+_Sentences_: Let the Lord be ____. "As some tall cliff that ____ its
+awful form." Because of this success his reputation was ____. The horse
+____ when the machine began to ____ the huge block of stone by means of a
+crane. "I will ____ up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my
+help." The load was too heavy for him to carry; in fact he just managed to
+____ it into the wagon.
+
+
+<Relinquish, waive, renounce, surrender, forego, resign, abdicate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The defense ____ objection to the first of these points.
+The refugee was willing to ____ his right to resist extradition. The
+teacher ____ her position at the end of the year. The king ____ when the
+people rose in revolt. He ____ his command of the army. Do you ____ your
+claim in this mine? The bankrupt ____ his property to the receiver to help
+pay his debts.
+
+
+<Renounce, abjure, forswear, recant, retract, repudiate>.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the statement. Thereupon Henry Esmond ____ his
+allegiance to the House of Stuart. It is a serious matter for a government
+to ____ its debts. Did the heretic ____? Do you ____ the devil and all his
+works? "The wounded gladiator ____ all fighting, but soon forgetting his
+former wounds resumes his arms." He had broken his solemn oath; he was
+____.
+
+
+<Reprove, rebuke, reprimand, admonish, chide, upbraid, reproach, scold,
+rate, berate>.
+
+_Sentences_: "He ____ their wanderings but relieved their pain."
+"Many a time and oft In the Rialto you have ____ me About my moneys and my
+usances." They ____ the man who had taken the savings of the poor, and
+____ him against such schemes thereafter. The general ____ his
+subordinate.
+
+
+<Robber, bandit, brigand, ladrone, desperado, buccaneer, freebooter,
+pirate, corsair, raider, burglar, footpad, highwayman, depredator,
+spoiler, despoiler, forager, pillager, plunderer, marauder, myrmidon>.
+(With this group compare the _Steal_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: Every boy has his period of wanting to be a ____.
+_Treasure Island_ is one of the best ____ stories ever written.
+The ____ lurks in dark passageways and steals upon his victim. The fierce
+followers of Achilles were called ____. The men sent out by the army as
+____ seemed to the people of the countryside more like ____. The fearless
+____ had soon gathered about him a band of ____. Robin Hood was no ____ of
+poor folk. The outcast became a ____ among the mountaineers of northern
+Italy. Every, boy likes to read of the bold ____ who sailed the Spanish
+Main. Union plans were often upset by daring Confederate ____, such as
+Stuart, Morgan, and Forrest.
+
+
+<Run, scamper, scurry, scuttle, scud, scour, pace, gallop, trot, lope,
+sprint, sweep>.
+
+_Sentences_: Swift horsemen ____ the country in search of the
+fugitive. Wherever they came, the inhabitants ____ for shelter. "The dish
+____ away with the spoon." For his horse to ____ made difficult riding, to
+____ made comfortable riding, to ____ made exhilarating riding. "He may
+____ that readeth it." The old sailing-boat ____ before the wind. "Haste
+me to know't, that I, with wings as swift As meditation or the thoughts of
+love, May ____ to my revenge." The rats ____ across the floor. "He who
+fights and ____ away May live to fight another day."
+
+
+<Say, utter, pronounce, announce, state, declare, affirm, aver,
+asseverate, allege, assert, avouch, avow, maintain, claim, depose,
+predicate, swear, suggest, insinuate, testify>. (With this group
+compare the _Speak_ and _Talk_ groups, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: It was something I merely ____ in passing; I would not
+____ to it. I could not ____ in court, and therefore had to ____ before a
+notary. The scientist ____ that a seismograph will infallibly record
+earthquakes. He solemnly ____ that he would not ____ exemption from the
+draft.
+
+
+<Shine, beam, gleam, glisten, glister, glitter, glare, flare, flash,
+sparkle, twinkle, dazzle, glimmer, glow, radiate, scintillate,
+coruscate>.
+
+_Sentences_: The gorgeous parade ____ the boy. "____, ____, little
+star." He was witty that night; he fairly ____. At this compliment the old
+lady ____. "Now fades the ____ landscape on the sight." A rocket ____ in
+the darkness. She ____ her elderly wooer a look of defiance; then her eyes
+softened and ____ with amusement. "All that ____ is not gold." "How far
+that little candle throws his beams! So ____ a good deed in a naughty
+world." The old man ____ into sudden anger.
+
+
+<Slander, defame, asperse, calumniate, traduce, vilify, malign, libel,
+backbite>.
+
+_Sentences_: A newspaper must be careful not to ____ any one. Too
+many supposedly religious people ____ their fellow believers. I do not
+____ your motives. He ____ the character of everybody who chances to
+possess one.
+
+
+<Smell, odor, savor, scent, fragrance, aroma, perfume, redolence, tang,
+stench>.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the flowers in the vase mingled with the
+____ of boiling cabbage in the kitchen. The ____ of spring is on the
+meadows. So keen was the hound's sense of ____ that he quickly picked up
+the ____ again. Any smoker likes the ____ of a good cigar. The ____ of
+the handkerchief was delicate. Though it was a disagreeable ____, I should
+hardly call it a[n] ____. The ____ of spices told him that his mother was
+baking his favorite cake, and he also detected the ____ of coffee. The
+____ of the ocean was in the air. He sniffed the ____ of frying bacon.
+
+
+<Song, ballad, ditty, lullaby, hymn, anthem, dirge, chant, paean, lay,
+carol, lilt>.
+
+_Sentences_: "They learn in suffering what they teach in ____."
+The mother crooned a[n] ____ to her babe. The Highland girl sang a moving
+old ____. The worshipers sang a[n] ____ of praise. Charles Wesley wrote many
+____. As I approached the cathedral, I could hear the ____ of larks
+outside and the ____ of the choir within. "Our sweetest ____ are those
+that tell of saddest thought." "A[n] ____ for her the doubly dead in that
+she died so young."
+
+
+<Speak, discourse, expatiate, descant, comment, argue, persuade, plead,
+lecture, preach, harangue, rant, roar, spout, thunder, declaim, harp>.
+(With this group compare the _Say_ group, above, and the _Talk_
+group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: "His virtues Will ____ like angels trumpet-tongu'd
+against The deep damnation of his taking-off." "Here, under leave of
+Brutus and the rest, ... Come I to ____ in Caesar's funeral." "Ay me! what
+act, That ____ so loud and ____ in the index?" "Hadst thou thy wits and
+didst ____ revenge, It could not move thus." "Thou canst not ____ of that
+thou dost not feel." "Nay, if thou'lt mouth, I'll ____ as well as thou."
+While the politician ____ in the senate chamber upon theoretical ills, the
+agitator outside ____ the mob about actual ones. "For murder, though it
+have no tongue, will ____ With most miraculous organ."
+
+
+<Spend, expend, disburse, squander, waste, lavish>.
+
+_Sentences_: Large sums were ____ in rebuilding the devastated
+regions of France. ____ your money, but do not ____ it. One should not
+____ more than one earns. The king ____ great sums upon his favorites. The
+political boss ____ the money among his henchmen. "The younger son ...
+____ his substance with riotous living."
+
+
+<Spot, blotch, speckle, fleck, dapple, smear, smutch, brand, defacement,
+blemish, stain, discoloration, speck, mark, smudge, flaw, defect,
+blot>.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ in the crystal. The ____ of Cain. A life free
+from ____. "Thou turn'st mine eyes into my very soul; And there I see such
+black and grained ____ As will not leave their tinct." From the standpoint
+of theatrical effectiveness _A ____ in the 'Scutcheon_ is one of the
+best of Browning's plays. An eruption of the skin made a yellow ____ on
+his right hand. Dragging my sleeve across the fresh ink had made a ____
+upon the page. The ____ of foam by the roadside proved that his horse had
+been going fast. The ____ at the end of his fingers told me he was a
+cigarette-smoker. On the left foreleg of the horse was a slight ____.
+
+
+<Stay, tarry, linger, stop, sojourn, remain, abide, live, reside, dwell,
+lodge.>
+
+_Sentences_: The Israelites ____ in Egypt. He ____ to chat with us,
+but could not ____ overnight. I ____ in a wretched tavern. "I can ____, I
+can ____ but a night." "I did love the Moor to ____ with him." "He that
+shall come will come, and will not ____." "I will ____ in the house of the
+Lord forever." "If ye ____ in me, and my words ____ in you, ye shall ask
+what ye will, and it shall be done unto you." "I would rather be a
+doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to ____ in the tents of
+wickedness." The guests ____ in the cheerful drawing-room.
+
+
+<Steal, abstract, pilfer, filch, purloin, peculate, swindle, plagiarize,
+poach>. (With this group, which excludes the idea of violence, compare
+the _Robber_ group, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: I am afraid that our son ____ the purse from the
+gentleman. No one knows how long the cashier has been ____ the funds of
+the bank. To take our money on such unsound security is to ____ us. He
+slyly ____ a handkerchief or two. This paragraph is clearly ____. "Thou
+shalt not ____." Many government employees seem to think that to ____ is
+their privilege and prerogative. The crown jewels have been ____. She ____
+a number of petty articles. A well-known detective story by Poe is called
+_The ____ Letter._ "Who ____ my purse ____ trash.... But he that ____
+from me my good name Robs me of that which not enriches him, And makes me
+poor indeed." "A cut-purse of the empire and the rule, That from a shelf
+the precious diadem ____, And put it in his pocket!"
+
+
+<Strike, hit, smite, thump, beat, cuff, buffet, knock, whack, belabor,
+pommel, pound, cudgel, slap, rap, tap, box.>
+
+_Sentences_: ____ him into the middle of next week. He ____ and ____
+the poor beast unmercifully. "As of some one gently ____, ____ at my
+chamber door." "Unto him that ____ thee on the one cheek offer also the
+other." "Bid them come forth and hear me, Or at their chamber door I'll
+____ the drum Till it cry sleep to death." "One whom I will ____ into
+clamorous whining." "____ for your altars and your fires!" By means of
+heavy stones the squaws ____ the corn into meal.
+
+
+<Sullen, surly, sulky, crabbed, cross, gruff, grum, glum, morose, dour,
+crusty, cynical, misanthropic, saturnine, splenetic.>
+
+_Sentences_: "Between us and our hame [home], Where sits our ____,
+____ dame, Gathering her brows like gathering storm, Nursing her wrath to
+keep it warm." A ____ old bachelor. A ____ Scotchman. He hated all men; he
+was truly ____. He sat ____ and silent all day; by nightfall he was truly
+____.
+
+
+<Talk, chat, chatter, prate, prattle, babble, gabble, jabber, tattle,
+twaddle, blab, gossip, palaver, parley, converse, mumble, mutter, stammer,
+stutter.> (With this group compare the _Say_ and _Speak_
+groups, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: It was a queer assembly, and from it arose a queer
+medley of sounds: the baby was ____, the old crone ____, the gossip ____,
+the embarrassed young man ____, the child ____ the tale-bearer ____, the
+hostess ____ with the most distinguished guest, and the trickster ____
+with his intended victim. "Blest with each talent and each art to please,
+And born to write, ____, and live with ease." "I wonder that you will
+still be ____, Signor Benedick; nobody marks you."
+
+
+<Tear, rend, rip, lacerate, mangle.>
+
+_Sentences_: The explosion of the shell ____ his flesh. The tailor
+____ the garment along the seam. I'll ____ this paper into bits. Those
+savages would ____ you limb from limb. She ____ her dress on a nail. The
+cogs caught his hand and ____ it. How could such reproaches fail to ____
+my feelings?
+
+
+<Throw, pitch, hurl, dash, fling, cast, toss, flip, chuck, sling, heave,
+launch, dart, propel, project.>
+
+_Sentences_: Suddenly he ____ the glittering coins away. Goliath
+learned to his cost that David could ____ a stone. The explosion of the
+gunpowder ____ the bullet from the gun. "____ down your cups of Samian
+wine!" The children amused themselves by ____ the ball back and forth. He
+____ himself dejectedly into a seat. The thief ____ a glance beside him.
+The mischievous boy ____ a stone through the window. They ____ some of the
+cargo overboard to lighten the boat. The eager fisherman ____ the fly for
+the trout. The untidy fellow ____ the towel in a corner.
+
+
+<Whip, chastise, castigate, flagellate, scourge, lash, trounce, thrash,
+flog, maul, drub, switch, spank, bastinado.> (This group limits the
+field of the _Punish_ group in Exercise A, and extends the list of
+synonyms.)
+
+_Sentences_: The drunken driver ____ the excited horses. The zealot
+was accustomed to ____ himself. The ruler bade that the Christians be
+____. The teacher ____ the small children gently, but he unsparingly ____
+the big ones. "My father hath ____ you with whips, but I will ____ you
+with scorpions." The bully was always ____ men smaller than himself till
+one of them turned on him and ____ him thoroughly.
+
+
+<Wicked, sinful, felonious, illegal, immoral, heinous, flagitious,
+iniquitous, criminal, vicious, vile.>
+
+_Sentences_: "I am fled From this ____ world, with ____ worms to
+dwell." A[n] ____ assault. "The ____ prize itself Buys out the law." It
+was, though not a[n] ____ act, a most ____ one. "There the ____ cease from
+troubling; and there the weary be at rest."
+
+
+<Young, youthful, boyish, girlish, juvenile, puerile, immature, callow,
+adolescent.>
+
+_Sentences_: The plan had all the faults of ____ judgment. Many great
+authors have written books of ____ fiction. The bird, which was still
+____, was of course unable to fly. "Such sights as ____ poets dream On
+summer eves by haunted stream." He was in that ____ stage of development
+when one is neither a boy nor a man. "I was so ____, I loved him so, I had
+No mother, God forgot me, and I fell." He made a[n] ____ attempt to
+impress them with his importance. "Bacchus ever fair, and ever ____."
+A red necktie gave him a more ____ appearance. The self-satisfied air of
+a[n] ____ youth is often trying to his elders.
+
+
+EXERCISE D
+
+In this exercise each group of synonyms is followed by quotations from
+authoritative writers in which the words are discriminatingly employed.
+Find the meaning of each italicized word in these quotations, and
+differentiate the word accurately from the others in that group.
+Substitute for it other words from the group, and observe precisely how
+the meaning is affected.
+
+(So many of the quotations are from poetry that these will be printed as
+verse rather than, as in the preceding exercises, in continuous lines like
+prose.)
+
+
+<Affront, insult, indignity.>
+
+ A moral, sensible, and well-bred man
+ Will not _affront_ me,--and no other can.
+ An old _affront_ will stir the heart
+ Through years of rankling pain.
+
+The way to procure _insults_ is to submit to them. A man meets
+with no more respect than he exacts.
+
+It is often better not to see an _insult_ than to avenge it.
+
+Even a hare, the weakest of animals, may _insult_ a dead lion.
+
+To a native of rank, arrest was not merely a restraint, but a foul
+personal _indignity_.
+
+
+<Dishonor, disgrace, ignominy, infamy, obloquy, opprobrium>.
+
+ His honor rooted in _dishonor_ stood,
+ And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.
+
+It is hard to say which of the two we ought most to lament,--the unhappy
+man who sinks under the sense of his _dishonor_, or him who survives
+it.
+
+ Could he with reason murmur at his case
+ Himself sole author of his own _disgrace_?
+
+Whatever _disgrace_ we may have deserved, it is almost always in our
+power to re-establish our character.
+
+ When in _disgrace_ with fortune and men's eyes
+ I all alone beweep my outcast state.
+
+Their generals have been received with honor after their defeat; yours
+with _ignominy_ after conquest.
+
+Wilful perpetuations of unworthy actions brand with most indelible
+characters of _infamy_ the name and memory to posterity.
+
+And when his long public life, so singularly chequered with good and evil,
+with glory and _obloquy_, had at length closed forever, it was to
+Daylesford that he retired to die.
+
+Great _opprobrium_ has been thrown on her name.
+
+
+<Fame, honor, renown, glory, distinction, reputation, repute, celebrity,
+eminence, notoriety>.
+
+ Let _fame_, that all hunt after in their lives,
+ Live register'd upon our brazen tombs.
+
+Men have a solicitude about _fame_; and the greater share
+they have of it, the more afraid they are of losing it.
+
+ _Fame_ is no plant that grows on mortal soil,
+ . . . . . . . .
+ But lives and spreads aloft by those pure eyes
+ And perfect witness of all-judging Jove;
+ As he pronounces lastly on each deed,
+ Of so much _fame_ in heaven expect thy meed.
+
+ When faith is lost, when _honor_ dies,
+ The man is dead.
+
+ Act well your part; there all the _honor_ lies.
+
+The Athenians erected a large statue of Aesop, and placed him, though a
+slave, on a lasting pedestal, to show that the way to _honor_ lies
+open indifferently to all.
+
+ I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not _honor_ more.
+
+That nation is worthless which does not joyfully stake everything on her
+_honor_.
+
+ By heaven methinks it were an easy leap
+ To pluck bright _honor_ from the pale-fac'd moon.
+
+That merit which gives greatness and _renown_ diffuses its influence
+to a wide compass, but acts weakly on every single breast.
+
+ Speak no more of his _renown_,
+ Lay your earthly fancies down,
+ And in the vast cathedral leave him,
+ God accept him, Christ receive him.
+
+The young warrior did not fly; but met death as he went forward in his
+strength. Happy are they who dies in youth, when their _renown_ is
+heard!
+
+ The paths of _glory_ lead but to the grave.
+
+_Glory_ long has made the sages smile; 'tis something, nothing,
+words, illusion, wind.
+
+ Not once or twice in our rough island-story
+ The path of duty was the way to _glory_.
+
+He was a charming fellow, clever, urbane, free-handed, with all that
+fortunate quality in his appearance which is known as _distinction._
+
+Never get a _reputation_ for a small perfection if you are trying for
+_fame_ in a loftier area.
+
+One may be better than his _reputation_ or his conduct, but never
+better than his principles.
+
+ I see my _reputation_ is at stake
+ My _fame_ is shrewdly gor'd.
+
+CASSIO. _Reputation, reputation, reputation!_ O! I have lost my
+reputation. I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is
+bestial. My reputation, Iago, my reputation!
+IAGO. As I am an honest man, I thought you had received some bodily wound.
+
+You have a good _repute_ for gentleness and wisdom.
+_Celebrity_ sells dearly what we think she gives.
+
+ Kings climb to _eminence_
+ Over men's graves.
+
+_Notoriety_ is short-lived; _fame_ is lasting.
+
+
+<Hatred, hate, animosity, ill-will, enmity, hostility, bitterness,
+malice, malevolence, malignity, rancor, resentment, dudgeon, grudge,
+spite>.
+
+The _hatred_ we bear our enemies injures their happiness less than
+our own.
+
+_Hate_ is like fire; it makes even light rubbish deadly.
+
+He generously forgot all feeling of _animosity_, and determined to go
+in person to his succor.
+
+ That thereby he may gather
+ The ground of your _ill-will_, and so remove it.
+
+No place is so propitious to the formation either of close friendships or
+of deadly _enmities_ as an Indiaman.
+
+There need be no _hostility_ between evolutionist and theologian.
+
+ Shall we be thus afflicted in his wreaks,
+ His fits, his frenzy, and his _bitterness?_
+
+ Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,
+ Nor set down aught in _malice_.
+
+Every obstacle which partisan _malevolence_ could create he has had
+to encounter.
+
+His flight is occasioned rather by the _malignity_ of his countrymen
+than by the enmity of the Egyptians.
+
+ Where the soul sours, and gradual _rancor_ grows,
+ Imbitter'd more from peevish day to day.
+
+Peace in their mouthes, and all _rancor_ and vengeance in their
+hartes [hearts].
+
+ For them the gracious Duncan have I murder'd;
+ Put _rancors_ in the vessel of my peace
+ Only for them.
+
+Her _resentment_ against the king seems not to have abated.
+
+Mrs. W. was in high _dudgeon_; her heels clattered on the red-tiled
+floor, and she whisked about the house like a parched pea upon a
+drum-head.
+
+ If I can catch him once upon the hip,
+ I will feed fat the ancient _grudge_ I bear him.
+
+Men of this character pursue a _grudge_ unceasingly, and never forget
+or forgive.
+
+ And since you ne'er provoked their _spite_,
+ Depend upon't their judgment's right.
+
+
+<Marriage, matrimony, wedlock>. (With this group compare the
+_matrimonial_ group in Exercise C, above.)
+
+_Marriages_ are made in heaven.
+
+Hasty _marriage_ seldom proveth well.
+
+A man finds himself seven years older the day after his _marriage_.
+
+ Let me not to the _marriage_ of true minds
+ Admit impediments.
+
+_Marriage_ is the best state for man in general; and every man is a
+worse man in proportion as he is unfit for the married state.
+
+_Matrimony_--the high sea for which no compass has yet been invented.
+
+_Wedlock's_ a lane where there is no turning.
+
+ What is _wedlock_ forced, but a hell,
+ An age of discord and continual strife?
+
+
+<Mercy, clemency, lenity, leniency, lenience, forbearance>.
+
+ Teach me to feel another's woe,
+ To hide the fault I see;
+ That _mercy_ I to others show,
+ That _mercy_ show to me.
+
+ The quality of _mercy_ is not strain'd,
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath: it is twice bless'd;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes;
+ * * * * *
+ And earthly power doth then show likest God's
+ When _mercy_ seasons justice.
+
+_Clemency_ is the surest proof of a true monarch.
+
+_Lenity_ will operate with greater force, in some instances, than
+vigor.
+
+All the fellows tried to persuade the Master to greater _leniency_,
+but in vain.
+
+It will be necessary that this acceptance should be followed up by
+measures of the utmost _lenience_.
+
+There is however a limit at which _forbearance_ ceases to be a
+virtue.
+
+
+<Pity, sympathy, compassion, commiseration, condolence>.
+
+ Careless their merits or their faults to scan,
+ His _pity_ gave ere charity began.
+
+For _pity_ melts the mind to love.
+
+For _pitee_ renneth [runneth] soon in gentle herte [heart].
+
+Our _sympathy_ is cold to the relation of distant misery.
+
+Man may dismiss _compassion_ from his heart, but God will never.
+
+It is unworthy a religious man to view an irreligious one either with
+alarm or aversion; or with any other feeling than regret, and hope, and
+brotherly _commiseration_.
+
+Their congratulations and their _condolences_ are equally words of
+course.
+
+
+<Poverty, want, need, destitution, indigence, penury>.
+
+ Is there for honest _poverty_
+ That hings [hangs] his head, and a' that?
+
+Not to be able to bear _poverty_ is a shameful thing, but not to know
+how to chase it away by work is a more shameful thing yet.
+
+ Stitch! stitch! stitch!
+ In _poverty_, hunger, and dirt,
+ And still with a voice of dolorous pitch,
+ Would that its tone could reach the Rich,
+ She sang this "Song of the Shirt!"
+
+_Poverty_ is dishonorable, not in itself, but when it is a proof of
+laziness, intemperance, luxury, and carelessness; whereas in a person that
+is temperate, industrious, just and valiant, and who uses all his virtues
+for the public good, it shows a great and lofty mind.
+
+ _Want_ is a bitter and hateful good,
+ Because its virtues are not understood;
+ Yet many things, impossible to thought,
+ Have been by _need_ to full perfection brought.
+
+Hundreds would never have known _want_ if they had not first known
+waste.
+
+ O! reason not the _need_; our basest beggars
+ Are in the poorest thing superfluous:
+ Allow not nature more than nature needs,
+ Man's life is cheap as beast's.
+
+The Christian inhabitants of Thessaly would be reduced to
+_destitution_.
+
+It is the care of a very great part of mankind to conceal their
+_indigence_ from the rest.
+
+ Chill _penury_ repress'd their noble rage,
+ And froze the genial current of the soul.
+
+Chill _penury_ weighs down the heart itself; and though it sometimes
+be endured with calmness, it is but the calmness of despair.
+
+ Where _penury_ is felt the thought is chain'd,
+ And sweet colloquial pleasures are but few.
+
+
+<Regret, compunction, remorse, contrition, penitence, repentance>.
+
+_Regrets_ over the past should chasten the future.
+
+He acknowledged his disloyalty to the king with expressions of great
+_compunction_.
+
+ Through no disturbance of my soul,
+ Or strong _compunction_ in me wrought,
+ I supplicate for thy control.
+
+God speaks to our hearts through the voice of _remorse_.
+
+To err is human; but _contrition_ felt for the crime distinguishes
+the virtuous from the wicked.
+
+Christian _penitence_ is something more than a thought or an emotion
+or a tear; it is action.
+
+_Repentance_ must be something more than mere _remorse_ for
+sins; it comprehends a change of nature befitting heaven.
+
+
+<Stubborn, obstinate, pertinacious, intractable, refractory,
+contumacious>.
+
+ For fools are _stubborn_ in their way,
+ As coins are harden'd by th' allay;
+ And _obstinacy's_ ne'er so stiff
+ As when 'tis in a wrong belief.
+
+They may also laugh at their _pertinacious_ and incurable obstinacy.
+
+He who is _intractable_, he whom nothing can persuade, may boast
+himself invincible.
+
+ There is a law in each well-order'd nation
+ To curb those raging appetites that are
+ Most disobedient and _refractory_.
+
+He then dissolved Parliament, and sent its most _refractory_ members
+to the Tower.
+
+If he were _contumacious_, he might be excommunicated, or, in other
+words, be deprived of all civil rights and imprisoned for life.
+
+
+EXERCISE E
+
+The following list of synonyms is given for the convenience of those who
+wish additional material with which to work. This is a selected list and
+makes no pretense to completeness. It is suggested that you discriminate
+the words within each of the following groups, and use each word
+accurately in a sentence of your own making.
+
+Abettor, accessory, accomplice, confederate, conspirator.
+Acknowledge, admit, confess, own, avow.
+Active, agile, nimble, brisk, sprightly, spry, bustling.
+Advise, counsel, admonish, caution, warn.
+Affecting, moving, touching, pathetic.
+Agnostic, skeptic, infidel, unbeliever, disbeliever.
+Amuse, entertain, divert.
+Announce, proclaim, promulgate, report, advertise, publish, bruit, blazon,
+trumpet, herald.
+Antipathy, aversion, repugnance, disgust, loathing.
+Artifice, ruse, trick, dodge, manoeuver, wile, stratagem, subterfuge,
+finesse.
+Ascend, mount, climb, scale.
+Associate, colleague, partner, helper, collaborator, coadjutor, companion,
+helpmate, mate, team-mate, comrade, chum, crony, consort, accomplice,
+confederate.
+Attach, affix, annex, append, subjoin.
+Attack, assail, assault, invade, beset, besiege, bombard, cannonade,
+storm.
+
+Begin, commence, inaugurate, initiate, institute, originate, start, found.
+Belief, faith, persuasion, conviction, tenet, creed.
+Belittle, decry, depreciate, disparage.
+Bind, secure, fetter, shackle, gyve.
+Bit, jot, mite, particle, grain, atom, speck, mote, whit, iota, tittle,
+scintilla.
+Bluff, blunt, outspoken, downright, brusk, curt, crusty.
+Boast, brag, vaunt, vapor, gasconade.
+Body, corpse, remains, relics, carcass, cadaver, corpus.
+Bombastic, sophomoric, turgid, tumid, grandiose, grandiloquent,
+magniloquent.
+Boorish, churlish, loutish, clownish, rustic, ill-bred.
+Booty, plunder, loot, spoil.
+Brittle, frangible, friable, fragile, crisp.
+Building, edifice, structure, house.
+
+Call, clamor, roar, scream, shout, shriek, vociferate, yell, halloo,
+whoop.
+Calm, still, motionless, tranquil, serene, placid.
+Care, concern, solicitude, anxiety.
+Celebrate, commemorate, observe.
+Charm, amulet, talisman.
+Charm, enchant, fascinate, captivate, enrapture, bewitch, infatuate,
+enamor.
+Cheat, defraud, swindle, dupe.
+Choke, strangle, suffocate, stifle, throttle.
+Choose, pick, select, cull, elect.
+Coax, wheedle, cajole, tweedle, persuade, inveigle.
+Color, hue, shade, tint, tinge, tincture.
+Combine, unite, consolidate, merge, amalgamate, weld, incorporate,
+confederate.
+Comfort, console, solace.
+Complain, grumble, growl, murmur, repine, whine, croak.
+Confirmed, habitual, inveterate, chronic.
+Connect, join, link, couple, attach, unite.
+Continual, continuous, unceasing, incessant, endless, uninterrupted,
+unremitting, constant, perpetual, perennial.
+Contract, agreement, bargain, compact, covenant, stipulation.
+Copy, duplicate, counterpart, likeness, reproduction, replica, facsimile.
+Corrupt, depraved, perverted, vitiated.
+Costly, expensive, dear.
+Coterie, clique, cabal, circle, set, faction, party.
+Critical, judicial, impartial, carping, caviling, captious, censorious.
+Crooked, awry, askew.
+Cross, fretful, peevish, petulant, pettish, irritable, irascible, angry.
+Crowd, throng, horde, host, mass, multitude, press, jam, concourse.
+Curious, inquisitive, prying, meddlesome.
+
+Dainty, delicate, exquisite, choice, rare.
+Danger, peril, jeopardy, hazard, risk.
+Darken, obscure, bedim, obfuscate.
+Dead, lifeless, inanimate, deceased, defunct, extinct.
+Decay, decompose, putrefy, rot, spoil.
+Deceit, deception, double-dealing, duplicity, chicanery, guile, treachery.
+Deceptive, deceitful, misleading, fallacious, fraudulent.
+Decorate, adorn, ornament, embellish, deck, bedeck, garnish, bedizen,
+beautify.
+Decorous, demure, sedate, sober, staid, prim, proper.
+Deface, disfigure, mar, mutilate.
+Defect, fault, imperfection, disfigurement, blemish, flaw.
+Delay, defer, postpone, procrastinate.
+Demoralize, deprave, debase, corrupt, vitiate.
+Deportment, demeanor, bearing, port, mien.
+Deprive, divest, dispossess, strip, despoil.
+Despise, contemn, scorn, disdain.
+Despondency, despair, desperation.
+Detach, separate, sunder, sever, disconnect, disjoin, disunite.
+Determined, persistent, dogged.
+Devout, religious, pious, godly, saintly.
+Difficulty, hindrance, obstacle, impediment, encumbrance, handicap.
+Difficulty, predicament, perplexity, plight, quandary, dilemma, strait.
+Dirty, filthy, foul, nasty, squalid.
+Discernment, perception, penetration, insight, acumen.
+Disgraceful, dishonorable, shameful, disreputable, ignominious,
+opprobrious, scandalous, infamous.
+Disgusting, sickening, repulsive, revolting, loathsome, repugnant,
+abhorrent, noisome, fulsome.
+Dispel, disperse, dissipate, scatter.
+Dissatisfied, discontented, displeased, malcontent, disgruntled.
+Divide, distribute, apportion, allot, allocate, partition.
+Doctrine, dogma, tenet, precept.
+Dream, reverie, vision, fantasy.
+Drip, dribble, trickle.
+Drunk, drunken, intoxicated, inebriated.
+Dry, arid, parched, desiccated.
+
+Eat, bolt, gulp, gorge, devour.
+Encroach, infringe, intrench, trench, intrude, invade, trespass.
+End, conclude, terminate, finish, discontinue, close.
+Enemy, foe, adversary, opponent, antagonist, rival.
+Enough, adequate, sufficient.
+Entice, inveigle, allure, lure, decoy, seduce.
+Erase, expunge, cancel, efface, obliterate.
+Error, mistake, blunder, slip.
+Estimate, value, appreciate.
+Eternal, everlasting, endless, deathless, imperishable, immortal.
+Examination, inquiry, inquisition, investigation, inspection,
+scrutiny, research, review, audit, inquest, autopsy.
+Example, sample, specimen, instance.
+Exceed, excel, surpass, transcend, outdo.
+Expand, dilate, distend, inflate.
+Expel, banish, exile, proscribe, ostracize.
+Experiment, trial, test.
+Explicit, exact, precise, definite.
+
+Faculty, gift, endowment, aptitude, attribute, talent, predilection, bent.
+Failing, shortcoming, defect, fault, foible, infirmity.
+Famous, renowned, celebrated, noted, distinguished, eminent, illustrious.
+Fashion, mode, style, vogue, rage, fad.
+Fast, rapid, swift, quick, fleet, speedy, hasty, celeritous, expeditious,
+instantaneous.
+Fasten, tie, hitch, moor, tether.
+Fate, destiny, lot, doom.
+Fawn, truckle, cringe, crouch.
+Feign, pretend, dissemble, simulate, counterfeit, affect, assume.
+Fiendish, devilish, diabolical, demoniacal, demonic, satanic.
+Fertile, fecund, fruitful, prolific.
+Fit, suitable, appropriate, proper.
+Flame, blaze, flare, glare, glow.
+Flat, level, even, plane, smooth, horizontal.
+Flatter, blandish, beguile, compliment, praise.
+Flexible, pliable, pliant, supple, limber, lithe, lissom.
+Flit, flutter, flicker, hover.
+Flock, herd, bevy, covey, drove, pack, brood, litter, school.
+Flow, pour, stream, gush, spout.
+Follow, pursue, chase.
+Follower, adherent, disciple, partisan, henchman.
+Fond, loving, doting, devoted, amorous, enamored.
+Force, strength, power, energy, vigor, might, potency, cogency, efficacy.
+Force, compulsion, coercion, constraint, restraint.
+Free, liberate, emancipate, manumit, release, disengage, disentangle,
+disembarrass, disencumber, extricate.
+Freshen, refresh, revive, renovate, renew.
+Friendly, amicable, companionable, hearty, cordial, neighborly, sociable,
+genial, complaisant, affable.
+Frighten, affright, alarm, terrify, terrorize, dismay, appal, daunt,
+scare.
+Frown, scowl, glower, lower.
+Frugal, sparing, saving, economical, chary, thrifty, provident,
+prudent.
+
+Game, play, amusement, pastime, diversion, fun, sport, entertainment.
+Gather, accumulate, amass, collect, levy, muster, hoard.
+Ghost, spirit, specter, phantom, apparition, shade, phantasm.
+Gift, present, donation, grant, gratuity, bequest, boon, bounty, largess,
+fee, bribe.
+Grand, magnificent, gorgeous, splendid, superb, sublime.
+Greet, hail, salute, address, accost.
+Grief, sorrow, distress, affliction, trouble, tribulation, woe.
+Grieve, lament, mourn, bemoan, bewail, deplore, rue.
+Guard, defend, protect, shield, shelter, screen, preserve.
+
+Habitation, abode, dwelling, residence, domicile, home.
+Harmful, injurious, detrimental, pernicious, deleterious, baneful,
+noxious.
+Have, possess, own, hold.
+Headstrong, wayward, wilful, perverse, froward.
+Help (noun), aid, assistance, succor.
+Help (verb), assist, aid, succor, abet, second, support, befriend.
+Hesitate, falter, vacillate, waver.
+Hide, conceal, secrete.
+High, tall, lofty, elevated, towering.
+Hint, intimate, insinuate.
+Hopeful, expectant, sanguine, optimistic, confident.
+Hopeless, despairing, disconsolate, desperate.
+Holy, sacred, hallowed, sanctified, consecrated, godly, pious, saintly,
+blessed.
+
+Impolite, discourteous, inurbane, uncivil, rude, disrespectful, pert,
+saucy, impertinent, impudent, insolent.
+Importance, consequence, moment.
+Impostor, pretender, charlatan, masquerader, mountebank, deceiver,
+humbug, cheat, quack, shyster, empiric.
+Imprison, incarcerate, immure.
+Improper, indecent, indecorous, unseemly, unbecoming, indelicate.
+Impure, tainted, contaminated, polluted, defiled, vitiated.
+Inborn, innate, inbred, congenital.
+Incite, instigate, stimulate, impel, arouse, goad, spur, promote.
+Inclose, surround, encircle, circumscribe, encompass.
+Increase, grow, enlarge, magnify, amplify, swell, augment.
+Indecent, indelicate, immodest, shameless, ribald, lewd, lustful,
+lascivious, libidinous, obscene.
+Insane, demented, deranged, crazy, mad.
+Insanity, dementia, derangement, craziness, madness, lunacy, mania,
+frenzy, hallucination.
+Insipid, tasteless, flat, vapid.
+Intention, intent, purpose, plan, design, aim, object, end.
+Interpose, intervene, intercede, interfere, mediate.
+Irreligious, ungodly, impious, godless, sacrilegious, blasphemous,
+profane.
+Irritate, exasperate, nettle, incense.
+
+Join, connect, unite, couple, combine, link, annex, append.
+
+Kindle, ignite, inflame, rouse.
+
+Lack, want, need, deficiency, dearth, paucity, scarcity, deficit.
+Lame, crippled, halt, deformed, maimed, disabled.
+Large, great, big, huge, immense, colossal, gigantic, extensive, vast,
+massive, unwieldy, bulky.
+Laughable, comical, comic, farcical, ludicrous, ridiculous, funny, droll.
+Lead, guide, conduct, escort, convoy.
+Lengthen, prolong, protract, extend.
+Lessen, decrease, diminish, reduce, abate, curtail, moderate, mitigate,
+palliate.
+Lie (noun), untruth, falsehood, falsity, fiction, fabrication, mendacity,
+canard, fib, story.
+Lie (verb), prevaricate, falsify, equivocate, quibble, shuffle, dodge,
+fence, fib.
+Likeness, resemblance, similitude, similarity, semblance, analogy.
+Limp, flaccid, flabby, flimsy.
+List, roll, catalogue, register, roster, schedule, inventory.
+Loud, resonant, clarion, stentorian, sonorous.
+Low, base, abject, servile, slavish, menial.
+Loyal, faithful, true, constant, staunch, unwavering, steadfast.
+Lurk, skulk, slink, sneak, prowl.
+
+Make, create, frame, fashion, mold, shape, form, forge, fabricate, invent,
+construct, manufacture, concoct.
+Manifest, plain, obvious, clear, apparent, patent, evident, perceptible,
+noticeable, open, overt, palpable, tangible, indubitable, unmistakable.
+Many, various, numerous, divers, manifold, multitudinous, myriad,
+countless, innumerable.
+Meaning, significance, signification, import, purport.
+Meet, encounter, collide, confront, converge.
+Meeting, assembly, assemblage, congregation, convention, conference,
+concourse, gathering, mustering.
+Melt, thaw, fuse, dissolve, liquefy.
+Memory, remembrance, recollection, reminiscence, retrospection.
+Misrepresent, misinterpret, falsify, distort, warp.
+Mix, compound, amalgamate, weld, combine, blend, concoct.
+Model, pattern, prototype, criterion, standard, exemplar, paragon,
+archetype, ideal.
+Motive, incentive, inducement, desire, purpose.
+Move, actuate, impel, prompt, incite.
+
+Near, nigh, close, neighboring, adjacent, contiguous.
+Neat, tidy, orderly, spruce, trim, prim.
+Needful, necessary, requisite, essential, indispensable.
+Negligence, neglect, inattention, inattentiveness, inadvertence,
+remissness, oversight.
+New, novel, fresh, recent, modern, late, innovative, unprecedented.
+Nice, fastidious, dainty, finical, squeamish.
+Noisy, clamorous, boisterous, hilarious, turbulent, riotous, obstreperous,
+uproarious, vociferous, blatant, brawling.
+Noticeable, prominent, conspicuous, salient, signal.
+
+Order (noun), command, mandate, behest, injunction, decree.
+Order (verb), command, enjoin, direct, instruct.
+Oversight, supervision, direction, superintendence, surveillance.
+
+Pale, pallid, wan, colorless, blanched, ghastly, ashen, cadaverous.
+Patience, forbearance, resignation, longsuffering.
+Penetrate, pierce, perforate.
+Place, office, post, position, situation, appointment.
+Plan, design, project, scheme, plot.
+Playful, mischievous, roguish, prankish, sportive, arch.
+Plentiful, plenteous, abundant, bounteous, copious, profuse, exuberant,
+luxuriant.
+Plunder, rifle, loot, sack, pillage, devastate, despoil.
+Pretty, beautiful, comely, handsome, fair.
+Profitable, remunerative, lucrative, gainful.
+Prompt, punctual, ready, expeditious.
+Pull, draw, drag, haul, tug, tow.
+Push, shove, thrust.
+Puzzle, perplex, mystify, bewilder.
+
+Queer, odd, curious, quaint, ridiculous, singular, unique, bizarre,
+fantastic, grotesque.
+
+Rash, incautious, reckless, foolhardy, adventurous, venturous,
+venturesome.
+Rebellion, insurrection, revolt, mutiny, riot, revolution, sedition.
+Recover, regain, retrieve, recoup, rally, recuperate.
+Reflect, deliberate, ponder, muse, meditate, ruminate.
+Relate, recount, recite, narrate, tell.
+Replace, supersede, supplant, succeed.
+Repulsive, unsightly, loathsome, hideous, grewsome.
+Requital, retaliation, reprisal, revenge, vengeance, retribution.
+Responsible, answerable, accountable, amenable, liable.
+Reveal, disclose, divulge, manifest, show, betray.
+Reverence, veneration, awe, adoration, worship.
+Ridicule, deride, mock, taunt, flout, twit, tease.
+Ripe, mature, mellow.
+Rise, arise, mount, ascend.
+Rogue, knave, rascal, miscreant, scamp, sharper, villain.
+Round, circular, rotund, spherical, globular, orbicular.
+Rub, polish, burnish, furbish, scour.
+
+Sad, grave, sober, moody, doleful, downcast, dreary, woeful, somber,
+unhappy, woebegone, mournful, depressed, despondent, gloomy, melancholy,
+heavy-spirited, sorrowful, dismal, dejected, disconsolate, miserable,
+lugubrious.
+Satiate, sate, surfeit, cloy, glut, gorge.
+Scoff, jeer, gibe, fleer, sneer, mock, taunt.
+Secret, covert, surreptitious, furtive, clandestine, underhand, stealthy.
+Seep, ooze, infiltrate, percolate, transude, exude.
+Sell, barter, vend, trade.
+Shape, form, figure, outline, conformation, configuration, contour,
+profile.
+Share, partake, participate, divide.
+Sharp, keen, acute, cutting, trenchant, incisive.
+Shore, coast, littoral, beach, strand, bank.
+Shorten, abridge, abbreviate, curtail, truncate, syncopate.
+Show (noun), display, ostentation, parade, pomp, splurge.
+Show, exhibit, display, expose, manifest, evince.
+Shrink, flinch, wince, blench, quail.
+Shun, avoid, eschew.
+Shy, bashful, diffident, modest, coy, timid, shrinking.
+Sign, omen, auspice, portent, prognostic, augury, foretoken, adumbration,
+presage, indication.
+Simple, innocent, artless, unsophisticated, naive.
+Skilful, skilled, expert, adept, apt, proficient, adroit, dexterous, deft,
+clever, ingenious.
+Skin, hide, pelt, fell.
+Sleepy, drowsy, slumberous, somnolent, sluggish, torpid, dull, lethargic.
+Slovenly, slatternly, dowdy, frowsy, blowzy.
+Sly, crafty, cunning, subtle, wily, artful, politic, designing.
+Smile, smirk, grin.
+Solitary, lonely, lone, lonesome, desolate, deserted, uninhabited.
+Sour, acid, tart, acrid, acidulous, acetose, acerbitous, astringent.
+Speech, discourse, oration, address, sermon, declamation, dissertation,
+exhortation, disquisition, harangue, diatribe, tirade, screed, philippic,
+invective, rhapsody, plea.
+Spruce, natty, dapper, smart, chic.
+Stale, musty, frowzy, mildewed, fetid, rancid, rank.
+Steep, precipitous, abrupt.
+Stingy, close, miserly, niggardly, parsimonious, penurious, sordid,
+Storm, tempest, whirlwind, hurricane, tornado, cyclone, typhoon
+Straight, perpendicular, vertical, plumb, erect, upright.
+Strange, singular, peculiar, odd, queer, quaint, outlandish.
+Strong, stout, robust, sturdy, stalwart, powerful.
+Stupid, dull, obtuse, stolid, doltish, sluggish, brainless, bovine.
+Succeed, prosper, thrive, flourish, triumph.
+Succession, sequence, series.
+Supernatural, preternatural, superhuman, miraculous.
+Suppose, surmise, conjecture, presume, imagine, fancy, guess, think,
+believe.
+Surprise, astonish, amaze, astound.
+Swearing, cursing, profanity, blasphemy, execration, imprecation.
+
+Teach, instruct, educate, train, discipline, drill, inculcate, instil,
+indoctrinate.
+Thoughtful, contemplative, meditative, reflective, pensive, wistful.
+Tire, weary, fatigue, exhaust, jade, fag.
+Tool, implement, instrument, utensil.
+Trifle, dally, dawdle, potter.
+Try, endeavor, essay, attempt.
+Trust, confidence, reliance, assurance, faith.
+Turn, revolve, rotate, spin, whirl, gyrate.
+
+Ugly, homely, uncomely, hideous.
+Unwilling, reluctant, disinclined, loath, averse.
+
+Watchful, vigilant, alert.
+Wave (noun), billow, breaker, swell, ripple, undulation.
+Wave (verb), brandish, flourish, flaunt, wigwag.
+Weariness, languor, lassitude, enervation, exhaustion.
+Wearisome, tiresome, irksome, tedious, humdrum.
+Wet (adjective), humid, moist, damp, dank, sodden, soggy.
+Wet (verb), moisten, dampen, soak, imbrue, saturate, drench
+Whim, caprice, vagary, fancy, freak, whimsey, crotchet.
+Wind, breeze, gust, blast, flaw, gale, squall, flurry.
+Wind, coil, twist, twine, wreathe.
+Winding, tortuous, serpentine, sinuous, meandering.
+Wonderful, marvelous, phenomenal, miraculous.
+Workman, laborer, artisan, artificer, mechanic, craftsman.
+Write, inscribe, scribble, scrawl, scratch.
+
+Yearn, long, hanker, pine, crave.
+
+
+EXERCISE F
+
+Write three synonyms for each of the following words. Discriminate the
+three, and embody each of them in a sentence.
+
+Accomplish Conduct (noun) Humble Scream
+Agree Conspicuous Indifferent Shrewd
+Anger Cringe Misfortune Shudder
+Attempt Difficult Obey Skill
+Big Disconnect Object (noun) Soft
+Brute Erratic Object (verb) Splash
+Business Flash Obligation Success
+Careless Fragrant Occupied Sweet
+Climb Gain Oppose Trick
+Collect Generous Persist Wash
+Commanding Grim Revise Worship
+Compel Groan Room
+
+
+EXERCISE G
+
+Supply eight or ten intervening words between each of the following pairs.
+Arrange the intervening words in an ascending scale.
+
+Dark, bright Wet, dry
+Savage, civilized Beautiful, ugly
+Friend, enemy Hope, despair
+Wise, foolish Love, hate
+Enormous, minute Admirable, abominable
+Curse, bless Pride, humility
+
+
+
+IX
+
+ MANY-SIDED WORDS
+
+
+In Chapter VII you made a study of printed distinctions between synonyms.
+In Chapter VIII you were given lists of synonyms and made the distinctions
+yourself. Near the close of Chapter VIII you were given words and
+discovered for yourself what their synonyms are. This third stage might
+seem to reveal to you the full joys and benefits of your researches in
+this subject. Certainly to find a new word for an old one is an
+exhilarating sort of mental travel. And to find a new word which expresses
+exactly what an old one expressed but approximately is a real acquisition
+in living. But you are not yet a perfectly trained hunter of synonyms.
+Some miscellaneous tasks remain; they will involve hard work and call your
+utmost powers into play.
+
+Of these tasks the most important is connected with the hint already given
+that many words, especially if they be generic words, have two or more
+entirely different meanings. Let us first establish this fact, and
+afterwards see what bearing it has on our study of synonyms.
+
+My friend says, "I hope you will have a good day." Does he mean an
+enjoyable one in general? a profitable or lucrative one, in case I have
+business in hand? a successful one, if I am selling stocks or buying a
+house? Possibly he means a sunshiny day if I intend to play golf, a snowy
+day if I plan to go hunting, a rainy day if my crops are drying up. The
+ideas here are varied, even contradictory, enough; yet _good_ may be
+used of every one of them. _Good_ is in truth so general a term that
+we must know the attendant circumstances if we are to attach to it a
+signification even approximately accurate. This does not at all imply that
+_good_ is a term we may brand as useless. It implies merely that when
+our meaning is specific we must set _good_ aside (unless
+circumstances make its sense unmistakable) in favor of a specific word.
+
+_Things_ is another very general term. In "Let us wash up the things"
+it likely means dishes or clothes. In "Hang your things in the closet" it
+likely means clothes. In "Put the things in the tool-box" it likely means
+tools. In "Put the things in the sewing-basket" it likely means thread,
+needles, and scissors. In "The trenches are swarming with these things" it
+likely means cooties. A more accurate word is usually desirable. Yet we
+may see the value of the generality in the saying "A place for everything,
+and everything in its place."
+
+_Good_ and _things_ are not alone in having multitudinous
+meanings. There are in the language numerous many-sided words. These words
+should be studied carefully. True, they are not always employed in
+ambiguous ways. For example, _right_ in the sense of correct is
+seldom likely to be mistaken for _right_ in the sense of not-left,
+but a reader or hearer may frequently mistake it for _right_ in the
+sense of just or of honorable. In the use of such words, therefore, we
+cannot become too discriminating.
+
+
+EXERCISE H
+
+This exercise concerns itself with common words that have more than one
+meaning. Make your procedure as follows. First, look up the word itself.
+Under it you will find a number of defining words. Then look up each of
+these in turn, until you have the requisite number and kind of synonyms.
+(The word is sure to have more synonyms than are called for.) You will
+have to use your dictionary tirelessly.
+
+<Bare.> Find three synonyms for _bare_ as applied to the body;
+three for it as applied to a room.
+
+<Bear.> Give three other words that might be used instead of
+_bear_ in the sentence "The pillar bears a heavy weight"; three in
+the sentence "He bore a heavy load on his back"; three in the sentence "He
+bore the punishment that was unjustly meted out to him"; three in the
+sentence "He bore a grudge against his neighbor"; two in the sentence "The
+field did not bear a crop last year."
+
+<Bold.> Give ten synonyms for _bold_ as applied to a warrior;
+ten as applied to a young girl. Observe that the synonyms in the first
+list are favorable in import and suggest the idea of bravery, whereas
+those in the second list are unfavorable and suggest the idea of
+brazenness. How do you account for this fact? Can you think of
+circumstances in which a young girl might be so placed that the favorable
+synonyms might be applied to her?
+
+<Bright.> Give as many words as you can, at least twelve, that can be
+used instead of _bright_ as applied to a light, a diamond, a wet
+pavement, or a live coal. Give three words for _bright_ as applied to
+a child of unusual intelligence; two as applied to an occasion that
+promises to turn out well; two as applied to a career that has been
+signally successful.
+
+<Clear.> Give five synonyms for clear as applied to water; ten as
+applied to a fact or a statement; three as applied to the sky or
+atmosphere; three as applied to the voice; two as applied to a passageway
+or a view; three as applied to one's judgment or thinking.
+
+<Close.> Give three words that could be substituted for _close_
+as applied to the atmosphere in a room; four as applied to a person who is
+uninclined to talk about a matter; three as applied to something not far
+off; four as applied to a friend; five as applied to a person who is
+reluctant to spend money; five as applied to a translation; five as
+applied to attention or endeavor.
+
+<Discharge.> Substitute in turn four words for _discharge_ in
+the sentence "The judge discharged the prisoner"; two in the sentence "The
+foreman discharged the workman"; two in the sentence "The hunter
+discharged the gun"; three in the sentence "The sore discharged pus"; two
+in the sentence "My neighbor discharged the debt"; two in the sentence "He
+discharged his duty."
+
+<Dull>. Name three words besides _dull_ that could be applied to
+a blade or a point; five to a person with slow intellect; three to
+indifference toward others; two to a color; three to a day that is not
+cheerful; five to talk or discourse that is not interesting.
+
+<Fair>. Substitute five words for _fair_ in the sentence "He
+gave a fair judgment in the case"; three in the sentence "The son made a
+fair showing in his studies"; four in the sentence "She had a fair face";
+two in the sentence "Her complexion was fair"; three in the sentence "Let
+no shame ever fall upon your fair name."
+
+<False>. Find two words that you can substitute for _false_ as
+applied to a signature, to a report or a piece of news, to jewels or
+money, to a friend.
+
+<Fast>. Name two words I might substitute for _fast_ in the
+sentence "Drive the stake until it is fast in the ground"; three in the
+sentence "He made a fast trip for the doctor"; six in the sentence "By
+leading a fast life he soon squandered his inheritance."
+
+<Firm>. Substitute four words for _firm_ in the sentence "I made
+the board firm by nailing it to the wall"; three in the sentence "The
+water froze into a firm mass"; five in the sentence "He was firm in his
+determination to proceed."
+
+<Flat>. Instead of _flat_ use in turn four other words in the
+sentence "This is a flat piece of ground"; five in the sentence "It was as
+flat a story as ever wearied company"; three in the sentence "The cook
+having forgotten the salt, the soup was flat"; four in the sentence "I am
+surprised by your flat refusal."
+
+<Free>. _Free_ may be applied to a person not subject to a tax
+or a disease, to a person who has been released from confinement or
+restraint, to a person who is not reserved or formal in his relations to
+others, to a person who is willing to give. Out of your own resources
+substitute as many words as you can for _free_ in each of these
+sentences. Now look up _free_ in a dictionary or book of synonyms.
+What proportion of its synonyms were you able to think up unaided?
+
+<Great>. Give three synonyms for _great_ as applied to size, to
+number, to a man widely known for notable achievement, to an error or
+crime, to price.
+
+<Hard>. Give six synonyms for _hard_ as applied to a rock; six
+as applied to a task or burden; six as applied to a problem or situation;
+ten as applied to one's treatment of others.
+
+<Harsh>. Give three words that can be applied instead of _harsh_
+to a sound; three that can be applied instead of _harsh_ to the
+voice; five that can be applied to one's treatment of others; five that
+can be applied to one's disposition or nature.
+
+<Just>. Substitute five words for _just_ in the sentence "You
+are just in your dealings with others"; three in the sentence "A just
+punishment was meted out to him"; three in the sentence "They made a just
+division of the property"; two in the sentence "He had a just claim to the
+title."
+
+<Plain>. Give six words that can be substituted for _plain_, as
+applied to a fact or statement; four as applied to the decorations of a
+room; two as applied to the countenance; four as applied to a surface;
+three as applied to a statement or reply.
+
+<Poor>. Give five words that can be used instead of _poor_ as
+applied to a person who is without money or resources; ten as applied to a
+person lacking in flesh; three as applied to clothing that is worn out;
+five as applied to land that will bear only small crops or no crops at
+all; two as applied to an occasion that does not promise to turn out well.
+
+<Quick>. Give six words that could be used instead of _quick_
+as applied to a train or a horse in travel; six as applied to the
+movements of a person about a room or to his actions in the performance of
+his work; four to a disposition or temper that is easily irritated.
+
+<Serious>. Give five synonyms for _serious_ as applied to one's
+countenance or expression; three as applied to a problem or undertaking;
+two as applied to a disease or to sickness.
+
+<Sharp>. Give two synonyms for _sharp_ as applied to a blade or
+a point; six as applied to a pain or to grief; four as applied to a remark
+or reply; ten as applied to one's mind or intellect; three as applied to
+temper or disposition; three as applied to an embankment; three as applied
+to the seasoning of food; three as applied to a cry or scream.
+
+<Stiff>. Give six synonyms for _stiff_ as applied to an iron
+rod; three as applied to an adversary; six as applied to one's manner or
+bearing; two as applied to one's style of writing or speaking.
+
+<Strong>. Give three synonyms for _strong_ as applied to a
+person in regard to his health; ten as applied to him in regard to his
+muscularity of physique; four as applied to a fortress; three as applied
+to a plea or assertion; three as applied to an argument or reason; three
+as applied to determination; two as applied to liquor; three as applied to
+a light; two as applied to corrective measures; two as applied to an odor.
+
+<Vain>. Give five synonyms for vain as applied to a man who
+overvalues himself or his accomplishments; six as applied to an attempt
+that comes to nothing; three as applied to hopes that have little chance
+of fulfilment.
+
+<Weak>. Substitute five synonyms for _weak_ in the sentence "I
+was very weak after my illness"; four in the sentence "The fortress was
+especially weak on the side toward the plain"; three in the sentence "He
+made a weak attempt to defend his actions"; three in the sentence "Many of
+these arguments are weak"; three in the sentence "Hamlet is usually
+interpreted as being weak of will"; three in the sentence "The liquor was
+so weak it had no taste"; three in the sentence "The lace was weak and
+soon tore."
+
+<Wild>. Give two words instead of _wild_ as applied to animals;
+two as applied to land; three as applied to people who have not been
+civilized; three as applied to a storm, an uncontrolled temper, or a mob;
+three as applied to a scheme that has no basis in reason or practicality.
+
+
+EXERCISE I
+
+In Exercise H you started with ideas and objects, and had to find words of
+a given meaning that could be applied to them. In this exercise you start
+with the words, and must find the ideas and objects.
+
+<Base>. To what is _base_ applied when inferior, cheap,
+worthless could be used as its synonyms? To what is it applied when
+debased, impure, spurious, alloyed, counterfeit could be used? When mean,
+despicable, contemptible, shameful, disgraceful, dishonorable,
+discreditable, scandalous, infamous, villainous, low-minded could be used?
+When ignoble, servile, slavish, groveling, menial could be used? When
+plebeian, obscure, untitled, vulgar, lowly, nameless, humble, unknown
+could be used?
+
+<Mortal>. Can you properly contrast mortal with immortal existence?
+mortal with porcine existence? Is porcine existence also mortal? Is mortal
+existence also porcine? What adjective pertaining to mankind forms a true
+contrast to _porcine_? What is a synonym for _mortal_ in its
+broad sense? in its narrow sense?
+
+<Severe>. To what is _severe_ applied when harsh, stern,
+rigorous, drastic, austere, hard could be substituted for it? When plain,
+unembellished, unadorned, chaste could be substituted? When acute,
+violent, extreme, intense, sharp, distressing, afflictive could be
+substituted? When keen, cutting, biting, stinging, caustic, critical,
+trenchant could be substituted?
+
+
+EXERCISE J
+
+Reread the discussion of _good_ and _things_ in Many-sided
+Words. Then for each of the words listed below collect or compose twenty
+or more sentences in which the word is used. As largely as possible, take
+them from actual experience. In doing this you must listen to the use of
+the word in everyday talk. After you have made your list of sentences as
+varied and extensive as you can, try to substitute synonyms that will
+express the idea more accurately. Note whether a knowledge of the
+attendant circumstances is necessary to an understanding of the original
+word, to an understanding of the word substituted for it.
+
+Bad Fine Matter Affair
+Nice Common Case Boost
+
+
+EXERCISE K
+
+Analyze each of the words given below into its various uses or
+applications. Then for it in each of these applications assemble as many
+synonyms as you can unaided. Finally, have recourse to a dictionary or
+book of synonyms for the further extension of your lists.
+
+(By way of illustration, let us take the word _quiet_. Through
+meditation and analysis we discover that it may be applied (a) to water or
+any liquid not in motion, (b) to a place that is without sound, (c) to a
+place shut off from activity or bustle, (d) to a person who is not
+demonstrative or forward in manner. We then think of all the words we can
+that can be substituted for it in each of these uses. No matter how
+incompletely or unsatisfactorily we feel we are performing this task, we
+must not give it over until we have found every word we can summon. Then
+we turn to a dictionary or book of synonyms. Thus for _quiet_ we
+shall assemble such synonyms as (a) calm, still, motionless, placid,
+tranquil, serene, smooth, unruffled, undisturbed, pacific, stagnant;
+(b) silent, still, noiseless, mute, hushed, voiceless; (c) secluded,
+sequestered, solitary, isolated, unfrequented, unvisited, peaceful,
+untrodden, retired; (d) demure, sedate, staid, reserved, meek, gentle,
+retiring, unobtrusive, modest, unassuming, timid, shrinking, shy.)
+
+Barren Keep Pure Solid
+Certain Liberal Rare Sorry
+Cold Light (adjective) Rich Spread
+Cool Light (noun) Right Straight
+Deep Long Rude Still
+Dry Low Short Sure
+Easy Mean Simple Thick
+Foul Narrow Slow Thin
+Full New Small Tender
+Gentle Obscure Smooth True
+Grand Odd Sober Warm
+Heavy Particular Soft Yield
+Keen
+
+
+<Literal vs. Figurative Applications>
+
+One of the most interesting things to watch in the study of words is their
+development from a literal to a figurative application. The first man who
+broke away from the confines of the literal meaning of a word and applied
+the word to something that only in a figurative sense had qualities
+analogous to the original meaning, was creating poetry. He was making an
+imaginative flight comparable in daring to the Wright brothers' first
+aeronautic flight. But as the word was used over and over in this
+figurative way the imaginative flight became more and more commonplace. At
+last it ceased to be imaginative at all; through frequent repetition it
+had settled into the matter of course. A glance back at the _Concise_
+group above will show you that with time the comparison which was once the
+basis and the life of the figurative use of words is dulled, obscured,
+even lost.
+
+As a further enforcement of this fact, let us analyze the word
+_rough_. In its literal application, it may designate any surface
+that has ridges, projections, or inequalities and is therefore uneven,
+jagged, rugged, scraggy, or scabrous. Now frequently a man's face or head
+is rough because unshaved or uncombed; also the fur of an animal is rough.
+Hence the term could be used for unkempt, disheveled, shaggy, hairy,
+coarse, bristly. "The child ran its hand over its father's rough cheek"
+and "The bear had a rough coat" are sentences that even the most
+unimaginative mind can understand. We speak of rough timber because its
+surface has not been planed or made smooth. We speak of a rough diamond
+because it is unpolished, uncut. Note that all these uses are literal,
+that in each instance some unevenness of surface is referred to.
+
+But man, urged on by the desire to say what he means with more novelty,
+strikingness, or force, applied the word to ideas that have no surfaces to
+be uneven. He imagined what these ideas would be like if they had
+surfaces. Of course in putting these conceptions into language he was
+creating figures of speech, some of them startlingly apt, some of them
+merely far-fetched. He said a man had a _rough_ voice, as though the
+voice were like a cactus in its prickly irregularities. By _rough_ he
+meant what his fellows meant when they spoke of the voice as harsh,
+grating, jarring, discordant, inharmonious, strident, raucous, or
+unmusical. Going farther, that early poet said the weather was
+_rough_. He thought of clement weather as being smooth and even, but
+of inclement, severe, stormy, tempestuous, or violent weather as being
+full of projections to rend and harass one. Thus an everyday use of the
+term today was once wrenched and immoderate speech. Possibly the first man
+who heard of rough weather was puzzled for a moment, then amused or
+delighted as he caught the figure. It did not require great originality to
+think of a crowd as _rough_ in its movements. But our poet applied
+the idea to an individual. To him a rude, uncivil, impolite, ungracious,
+uncourteous, unpolished, uncouth, boorish, blunt, bluff, gruff, brusk, or
+burly person was as the unplaned lumber or the unpolished gem; and we
+imitative moderns still call such a man _rough_. But we do not think
+of the man as covered with projections that need to be taken off, unless
+forsooth we receive _rough_ treatment at his hands. And note how far
+we have journeyed from the original idea of the word when we say "I gave
+the report a _rough_ glance," meaning cursory, hasty, superficial, or
+incomplete consideration.
+
+Many very simple words, including several of those already treated in this
+chapter, are two-sided in that they are both literal and figurative.
+
+
+EXERCISE L
+
+Trace each of the following words from its literal to its figurative
+applications, giving synonyms for each of its uses.
+
+Open Bright Stiff Hard
+Low Cool Sharp Flat
+Keen Strong Dull Raw
+Small Odd Warm Deep
+Eccentric
+
+
+<Imperfectly Understood Facts and Ideas>
+
+Thus far in this chapter we have been considering many-sided words. We
+must now turn to a certain class of facts and ideas that deserve better
+understanding and closer analysis than we usually accord them.
+
+These facts and ideas are supposed to be matters of common knowledge. And
+in their broad scope and purport they are. Because acquaintance with them
+is taken for granted it behooves us to know them. Yet they are in reality
+complicated, and when we attempt to deal with them in detail, our
+assurance forsakes us. All of us have our "blind sides" intellectually--
+quake to have certain areas of discussion entered, because we foresee that
+we must sit idly by without power to make sensible comment. Unto as many
+as possible of these blind sides of ourselves we should pronounce the
+blessed words, "Let there be light." We have therefore to consider certain
+matters and topics which are supposed to belong to the common currency of
+social information, but with which our familiarity is less thoroughgoing
+than it should be.
+
+What are these facts and topics? Take for illustration the subject of
+aeronautics. Suppose we have but the vaguest conception of the part played
+or likely to be played by aircraft in war, commerce, and pleasure. Suppose
+we are not aware that some craft are made to float and others to be driven
+by propellers. Suppose such terms as Zeppelin, blimp, monoplane, biplane,
+hydroplane, dirigible have no definite import for us. Does not our
+knowledge fall short of that expected of well-informed men in this present
+age?
+
+Or take military terms. Everybody uses them--clergymen, pacifists,
+clubmen, social reformers, novelists, tramps, brick-layers, Big-Stickers.
+We cannot escape them if we would. We ourselves use them. But do we use
+them with precise and masterly understanding? You call one civilian
+colonel and another major; which have you paid the higher compliment? You
+are uncertain whether a given officer is a colonel or a major, and you
+wish to address him in such fashion as will least offend his sensitiveness
+as to rank and nomenclature; which title--colonel or major--is the less
+perilous? You are told that a major has command of a battalion; does that
+tell you anything about him? You are told that he has command of a
+squadron, of a brigade, of a platoon; do these changes in circumstances
+have any import for you? If not, you have too faltering a grasp upon
+military facts and terminology.
+
+The best remedy for such shortcomings is to be insatiably curious on all
+subjects. This of course is the ideal; nobody ever fully attains it.
+Nevertheless Exercise M will set you to groping into certain broad matters
+relevant to ordinary needs. Thereafter, if your purpose be strong enough,
+you will carry the same methods there acquired into other fields of
+knowledge.
+
+You may object that all this is as much mental as linguistic--that what is
+proposed will result in as large accessions of general information as of
+vocabulary. Let this be admitted. Deficiencies of language are often,
+perhaps almost invariably, linked with deficiencies of knowledge.
+To repair the one we must at the same time repair the other. This may seem
+a hard saying to those who seek, or would impart, mere glibness of phrase
+without regard for the substance--who worship "words, words, words"
+without thought of "the matter." There is such a thing as froth of
+utterance, but who has respect therefor or is deceived thereby? Speech
+that is not informed is like a house without a foundation. You should not
+desire to possess it. Abroad in this world of ours already are too many
+people who darken counsel by words without knowledge.
+
+
+EXERCISE M
+
+A second lieutenant is the commissioned officer of lowest grade in the
+United States army. Name all the grades from second lieutenant to the
+grade that is highest.
+
+An admiral is the officer of highest grade in the United States navy. Name
+all the grades down to that which is lowest.
+
+Name as many as possible of the different ranks of the clergy in the Roman
+Catholic Church, in the Church of England.
+
+Give ascendingly the five titles in the British nobility.
+
+Name the different kinds of vehicles.
+
+Name the different kinds of schools.
+
+Name all the different kinds of boats and ships (both ancient and modern)
+you can think of.
+
+Give the nautical term for the right side of a ship, for the left side of
+a ship, for the front, for the rear, for the forward portion, for the rear
+portion.
+
+Name the various kinds of bodies of water (oceans, rivers, lagoons, etc.)
+
+Give all the terms of relationship of persons, both by blood and by
+marriage. What relation to you is your grandfather's brother? your
+cousin's daughter?
+
+Name all the bones of the human head.
+
+Give the names of the different parts of a typical flower.
+
+Name as many elements as you can. What is the number usually given? What
+was the last element discovered, and by whom?
+
+Name the elements of which water is composed. Name the principal elements
+in the composition of the air.
+
+Make as long a list as possible (up to thirty) of words that appeal to the
+sense of sight (especially color words and motion words), to the sense of
+hearing, of smell, of taste, of touch.
+
+Find words descriptive of various expressions in the human face.
+
+Name all the terms you can associated with law, with medicine, with
+geology.
+
+Name the planets, the signs of the zodiac, as many constellations as you
+can.
+
+Name the seven colors of the spectrum, and for each name give all the
+synonyms you can. What are the primary colors? the secondary colors?
+
+Give the various races into which mankind has been divided, and the color
+of each.
+
+Name every kind of tree you can think of, every kind of flower, every kind
+of animal, every kind of bird.
+
+
+
+X
+
+ SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF WORDS
+
+
+You have already mastered many words, but a glance at any page of the
+dictionary will convince you that you have not mastered all. Nor will you,
+ever. Their number is too great, and too many of them are abstrusely
+technical.
+
+Nevertheless there remain many words that you should bring into your
+vocabulary. Most of them are not extremely usual; on the other hand they
+are not so unusual that you would encounter them but once in a lifetime.
+The majority of them are familiar to you, perhaps; that is, you will have
+a general feeling that you have seen them before. But this is not enough.
+Do you know exactly what they mean? Can you, when the occasion comes, use
+them?-use them promptly and well? This is the test.
+
+Many of the words are absolutely new so far as this book is concerned.
+They have not been discussed or attached to any list. Many are not
+entirely new. They have appeared, but not received such emphasis that they
+are sure to stand fast in your memory. Or some cognate form of them may
+have been mastered, yet they themselves may remain unknown. Thus you may
+know _commendation_ but not _commendatory_, _credulous_ but not
+_incredulity_, _invalid_ but not _invalidate_ or
+_invalidity_. One of the best of all ways to extend your vocabulary
+is to make each word of your acquaintance introduce you to its immediate
+kinsmen, those grouped with it on the same page of the dictionary.
+
+This chapter puts you on your mettle. Hitherto you have been given
+instructions as to the way to proceed, Now you must shift for yourself.
+The words, to be sure, are corraled for you. But you must tame them and
+break them, in order that on them you may ride the ranges of human
+intercourse. If you have not yet learned how to subdue them to your will
+and use, it would be futile to tell you how. You have been put in the way
+of mastering words. The task that henceforth confronts you is your own.
+You must have at it unaided.
+
+It is true that, in the exercise that follows, specific help is given you
+on a limited number of the words. But this help is only toward discovering
+the words for yourself before you have seen them in a list. And for most
+of the words not even this meager assistance is given.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Supplementary
+
+Each of the following groups of words is preceded by sentences in which
+blanks should be filled by words from that group. But do your best to fill
+these blanks properly before you consult the group at all. You must learn
+to think of, or think up, the right word instead of having it pointed out
+to you.
+
+These benefits were not inherent in the course he had taken; they were
+purely ____. Anything which existed before Noah's flood is called ____.
+His left hand, which had ceased to grow during his childhood, was now
+withered from its long ____. Certain books once belonging to the Bible
+have been discarded by the Protestants as ____. When Shakespeare makes
+Hector quote Aristotle, who lived long after the siege of Troy, he is
+guilty of an ____. Whatever causes the lips to pucker, as alum or a green
+persimmon, is spoken of as ____.
+
+Abash, abbreviate, abduct, aberrant, aberration, abeyance, abhorrent,
+abject, abjure, aboriginal, abortive, abrade, abrasion, abrogate,
+absolution, abstemious, abstention, abstruse, accelerate, accentuate,
+acceptation, accessary, accession, accessory, acclamation, acclivity,
+accolade, accomplice, accost, acerbity, acetic, achromatic, acidulous,
+acme, acolyte, acoustics, acquiescence, acquisitive, acrimonious, acumen,
+adage, adamantine, addict, adduce, adhesive, adipose, adjudicate,
+adolescence, adulation, adulterate, advent, adventitious, aerial,
+affability, affidavit, affiliate, affinity, agglomerate, agglutinate,
+aggrandizement, agnostic, alignment, aliment, allegorical, alleviate,
+altercation, altruistic, amalgamate, amatory, ambiguity, ambrosial,
+ameliorate, amenable, amenity, amity, amnesty, amulet, anachronism,
+analytical, anathema, anatomy, animadversion, annotate, anomalous,
+anonymous, antediluvian, anterior, anthology, anthropology, antinomy,
+antiquarianism, antiseptic, aphorism, apocryphal, aplomb, apostasy,
+apparatus, apparition, appellate, appertain, appetency, apposite,
+approbation, appurtenance, aquatic, aqueous, aquiline, arbitrary, archaic,
+arduous, aromatic, arrear, articulate, ascetic, asperity, asphyxiate,
+asseverate, assiduity, assimilate, astringent, astute, atrophy, attenuate,
+auditory, augury, auscultation, austerity, authenticate, authenticity,
+auxiliary, avidity.
+
+The man wished to fight; he was in ____ mood. There is only a handful of
+these things; yes, a mere ____. Slight mishaps like these lead to quips
+and mutual ____. His conduct is odd, grotesque, ____.
+
+Baccalaureate, badinage, bagatelle, baleful, ballast, banality, baneful,
+beatitude, bellicose, belligerent, benefaction, beneficent, benison,
+betide, bibulous, bigotry, bizarre, bombastic, burlesque.
+
+This effect was not obtained all at once; it was ____. These subjects
+belong to the same general field of knowledge as those; the two sets
+are ____. He is a skilled judge of art, a ____. The Southern states were
+unwilling to remain in the Union; they could be kept only by ____. Monks
+take upon themselves the vow of ____. No, this animal does not live on
+vegetation; it is a ____ animal.
+
+Cacophonous, cadaverous, cadence, callow, calumny, capillary, captious,
+cardinal, carnal, carnivorous, castigate, cataclysm, catastrophe,
+category, causality, cavernous, celebrity, celibacy, censorious, ceramics,
+cerebration, certitude, cessation, charlatan, chimerical, chronology,
+circuitous, circumlocution, citation, clandestine, clarify, clemency,
+coadjutor, coagulate, coalesce, coercion, cogency, cognizant, cohesion,
+coincidence, collusion, colossal, comatose, combustible, commendatory,
+commensurate, commiserate, communal, compatibility, compendium,
+complaisant, comport, composite, compulsive, compulsory, computation,
+concatenate, concentric, concessive, concomitant, condign, condiment,
+condolence, confiscatory, confute, congeal, congenital, conglomerate,
+congruity, connivance, connoisseur, connubial, consensus, consistence,
+consort, constriction, construe, contentious, context, contiguity,
+contiguous, contingent, contortion, contravene, contumacious, contumacy,
+contumelious, convergent, conversant, convivial, correlate, corrigible,
+corroborate, corrosive, cosmic, covenant, crass, credence, crescent,
+criterion, critique, crucial, crucible, cryptic, crystalline, culmination,
+culpable, cumulative, cupidity, cursive, cursory, cutaneous, cynosure.
+
+His course was not prescribed for him by superiors; his powers were ____.
+The suppression of these anarchistic tendencies has required ____
+measures. She was just entering society, and was proving herself a popular
+____. Yes, this tree loses its leaves every year; it is a ____ tree. He
+pretends that his ____ are sound, because he can read the stars.
+
+Debilitate, debonair, debutante, decadence, decapitate, deciduous,
+declivity, decompose, decorous, dedicatory, deduction, deferential,
+deficiency, deglutition, dehiscence, delectable, delete, deleterious,
+delineate, deliquescent, demarcation, demimonde, demoniac, denizen,
+denouement, deprecate, depreciate, derelict, derogatory, despicable,
+desuetude, desultory, deteriorate, diacritical, diagnosis, diaphanous,
+diatribe, didactic, diffusive, dilatory, dilettante, dipsomania,
+dirigible, discommode, discretionary, discursive, disintegrate, disparity,
+dispensable, disseminate, dissimulation, dissonant, distain, divagation,
+divination, divulge, dolor, dorsal, drastic, dubiety, duress, dynamic.
+
+These facts do not circulate except among a limited group of people; they
+are therefore ____. The departure of the children of Israel from Egypt was
+a general ____. His philosophy, instead of conforming to a single system,
+was ____. Lamb wrote admirable letters; he has a delightful ____ style.
+The period at which our days and nights are of equal length is the ____
+period.
+
+Ebullient, ecclesiastical, echelon, eclectic, ecstatic, edict, eerie,
+effervescent, efficacious, effrontery, effulgence, effusion, egregious,
+eleemosynary, elicit, elite, elucidate, embellish, embryonic, emendation,
+emissary, emission, emollient, empiric, empyreal, emulous, encomium,
+endue, enervate, enfilade, enigmatic, ennui, enunciate, environ, epicure,
+epigram, episode, epistolary, epitome, equestrian, equilibrium,
+equinoctial, equity, equivocate, eradicate, erosion, erotic, erudition,
+eruptive, eschew, esoteric, espousal, estrange, ethereal, eulogistic,
+euphonious, evanescent, evangelical, evict, exacerbate, excerpt,
+excommunicate, excoriate, excruciate, execrable, exegesis, exemplary,
+exhalation, exhilarate, exigency, exodus, exonerate, exorbitant, exotic,
+expectorate, expeditious, explicable, explicit, expunge, extant,
+extemporaneous, extrinsic.
+
+He deceives himself by this argument, for the argument is utterly ____.
+No complicated action can be planned in absolute detail; much must depend
+on ____ circumstance.
+
+Fabricate, fabulous, facetious, factitious, fallacious, fallible,
+fastidious, fatuous, feasible, feculence, fecundity, felicitous,
+felonious, fetid, feudal, fiducial, filament, filtrate, finesse, flaccid,
+flagitious, floriculture, florid, fluctuate, foible, forfeiture,
+fortuitous, fractious, franchise, frangible, frontal, froward, furtive.
+
+The advice was both unasked and unwelcome; it was purely ____. Throughout
+the World War the ____ of Germany over the other Central European powers
+was unquestioned. Buffaloes naturally go together in herds; they are ____.
+
+Galaxy, galleon, garrulity, gesticulate, gormand, granivorous,
+grandiloquent, gravamen, gratuitous, gregarious, habitue, hallucination,
+harbinger, hardihood, heckle, hectic, hedonist, hegemony, heinous,
+herbivorous, heretic, hermaphrodite, heterodox, heterogeneous, hibernate.
+histrionic, hoidenism, homiletics, homogeneous, hydraulic, hypothesis.
+
+We cannot understand God's ways; they are ____. Nor need we expect to
+change them; they are ____. If an animal has no backbone, it is ____. A
+boy so confirmed in his faults that we cannot correct them is ____.
+
+Idiosyncrasy, illicit, immaculate, immanent, imminent, immobile, immure,
+immutable, impalpable, impeccable, impecunious, imperturbable, impervious,
+implacable, implicit, impolitic, imponderable, importunate, imprecation,
+impromptu, improvise, imputation, inadvertent, inamorata, inanity,
+incarcerate, inchoate, incidence, incision, incongruent, inconsequential,
+incontinent, incorporeal, incorrigible, incredulity, incumbent,
+indecorous, indigenous, indigent, indite, indomitable, ineluctable,
+inexorable, inexplicable, inferential, infinitesimal, infinitude,
+infraction, infusion, inhibit, innocuous, innuendo, inopportune,
+insatiable, inscrutable, insidious, inspissated, insulate, intangible,
+integral, integument, interdict, internecine, intractable, intransigent,
+intrinsic, inure, invalidate, inveigh, inveigle, invertebrate, invidious,
+irrefragable, irrefutable, irrelevant, irreparable, irrevocable, iterate.
+
+He overpraised people; he was always engaged in extravagant ____ of
+somebody or other. The small man who has written a book becomes
+pretentious at once and regards himself as one of the ____. Thatcher is
+always engaged in lawsuits; he is the most ____ man I ever saw.
+
+Jocose, jocund, jurisprudence, juxtaposition, kaleidoscopic, labyrinth,
+lacerate, lackadaisical, lacrimal, laity, lambent, lampoon, largess,
+lascivious, laudable, laudation, lavation, legionary, lethargic,
+licentious, lineal, lingual, literati, litigious, loquacity, lubricity,
+lucent, lucre, lucubration, lugubrious.
+
+Those soldiers are fighting, not for principle, but for pay; they are
+____. Iron that is not heated cannot be hammered into shape; it is not
+____.
+
+Machination, macrocosm, magisterial, magniloquent, maladroit, malfeasance,
+malignity, malleable, mandate, matutinal, medieval, mephitic, mercenary,
+mercurial, meretricious, metamorphose, meticulous, microcosm,
+misanthropic, misogyny, misprision, mitigate, monitor, mortuary,
+mundane, mutable.
+
+It is a government by the few; therefore an ____. All the men of influence
+in the state give offices to their kinsmen; the system is one of ____.
+Yes, grandfather is eighty years old today; he has become an ____.
+
+Nebulous, nefarious, negation, neophyte, nepotism, neurotic, noisome,
+nomenclature, nonchalant, non sequitur, nucleus, nugatory, obdurate,
+objurgation, obligatory, obloquy, obsequious, obsession, obsolete,
+obstreperous, obtrusive, obtuse, obverse, obviate, occult, octogenarian,
+officious, olfactory, oleaginous, oligarchy, ominous, onomatopceia,
+opacity, opaque, opprobrious, oracular, orthodox, oscillate, osculate,
+ostensible, ostentation, ostracize, outré, ovation, overture.
+
+In England the eldest son inherits the title and the estate, but Americans
+do not take to a system of ____. You are always putting off until tomorrow
+what you could do today; do you think it pays to ____ thus? An ambassador
+whose powers are unlimited is called an ambassador ____. Beasts or men
+that are given to plundering are ____.
+
+Pabulum, pageantry, paginate, palatial, palliate, palpable, panacea,
+panegyric, panorama, paradoxical, paramount, parasite, parochial,
+paroxysm, parsimonious, parturition, patois, patriarchal, patrician,
+patrimony, peccadillo, pecuniary, pedantic, pellucid, pendulous,
+penultimate, penurious, peregrination, perfunctory, peripatetic,
+periphery, persiflage, perspicacious, perspicuity, pertinacious,
+pharmaceutic, phenomenal, phlegmatic, phraseology, pictorial, piquant,
+pique, plagiarize, platitudinous, platonic, plebeian, plenipotentiary,
+plethora, pneumatic, poignant, polity, poltroon, polyglot, pontifical,
+portentous, posterior, posthumous, potent, potential, pragmatic, preamble,
+precarious, precocious, precursor, predatory, predestination, predicament,
+preemptory, prelate, preliminary, preposterous, prerequisite, prerogative,
+presentiment, primogeniture, probation, probity, proclivity,
+procrastinate, prodigal, prodigious, prodigy, profligate, progenitor,
+proletarian, prolific, prolix, promiscuous, promissory, propaganda,
+propensity, prophylactic, propinquity, propitiatory, propitious,
+proprietary, prorogue, proselyte, prototype, protuberant, provender,
+proximity, prurient, psychical, psychological, puerile, pugnacious,
+puissant, punctilious, pungent, punitive, pusillanimous, putrescent,
+pyrotechnics.
+
+The coil of wire, being ____, instantly resumed its original shape. Some
+one must arrange these papers for publication; will you be their ____?
+Poe's mind had a bent toward ____: it could reason out a whole chain of
+circumstances from one or two known facts. He showed a disposition not to
+comply with these instructions; yes, he was ____.
+
+Rabbinical, rancorous, rapacious, ratiocination, rational, raucous,
+recalcitrant, recant, recapitulate, recession, reciprocal, reciprocate,
+recluse, recondite, recreant, recrudescence, rectilinear, rectitude,
+recumbent, redactor, redress, redound, refractory, refulgent, rejuvenate,
+relevant, rendezvous, rendition, reparation, repercussion, repertory,
+replenish, replete, replevin, reprehend, reprobate, repulsive, requisite,
+rescind, residue, residuum, resilient, resplendent, resurgence,
+resuscitate, reticulate, retribution, retrograde, retrospect, rigorous,
+risible, rodomontade, rudimentary, ruminate.
+
+His position carries no responsibility; it is a ____. The moon revolves
+about the earth, and is therefore the earth's ____. His work keeps him at
+his desk all day; it is ____ work. Your words incite men to disorder and
+rebellion; they are ____.
+
+Saccharine, sacerdotal, sacrament, sacrilege, salient, salubrious,
+sardonic, satellite, saturnine, schism, scurrilous, sectarian, secular,
+sedative, sedentary, seditious, sedulous, segregate, seismograph,
+senescent, sententious, septuagenarian, sequester, sibilant, similitude,
+sinecure, sinuous, solicitous, solstice, somnolent, sophisticated,
+sophistry, sorcery, spasmodic, specious, spirituelle, splenetic,
+spontaneity, sporadic, spurious, stipend, stipulate, stoical, stricture,
+stringency, stultify, stupendous, sublimity, suborn, subpoena, subsidiary,
+subsidy, substratum, subtend, subterfuge, subterranean, subvention,
+subvert, sudorific, supercilious, supernal, supervene, supine,
+supposititious, surreptitious, surrogate, surveillance, susceptible,
+sustenance, sycophantic, syllogism, sylvan, symmetrical, symposium,
+synchronize, synonymous, synopsis, synthesis.
+
+The small stream flows into the larger one and is its ____. The thick
+glass roof lets through sufficient light for us to see by; it is ____. You
+will not find him hard to manage; he has spirit enough, yet is ____.
+
+Tactile, tangible, tantamount, temerity, tenable, tenacious, tentative,
+tenuous, termagant, terrestrial, testimentary, thaumaturgic, therapeutic,
+titular, torso, tortuous, tractable, traduce, transcendent,
+transfiguration, transient, transitory, translucent, transverse, travesty,
+tribulation, tributary, truculent, truncate, turbid, turpitude, tyro.
+
+He is so extravagantly fond of his wife that I should call him ____.
+Christ died for others; it was a ____ death. The most notable quality in
+Defoe's narrative is its likeness to actual facts, or in a word, its ____.
+
+Ubiquity, ulterior, ululation, umbrage, unanimous, undulate, urbanity,
+usurious, uxorious, vacillate, vacuous, vandalism, variegate, velocity,
+venal, venereal, venial, venous, veracious, verdant, verisimilitude,
+vernacular, versatile, vestal, vibratory, vicarious, vicissitude,
+virulence, viscid, viscous, vitiate, vitreous, vituperate, vivacious,
+volatile, volition, voluminous, voluptuary, voluptuous, voracious, votive,
+vulnerable, whimsical, zealot.
+
+
+
+XI
+
+ RETROSPECT
+
+
+DO you never, while occupying a dental chair and deploring the necessity
+that drives you to that uncomfortable seat, admire the skill of the
+dentist in the use of his instruments? A great many of these instruments
+lie at his hand. To you they appear bewildering, so slightly different are
+they from each other. Yet with unerring readiness the dentist lays hold of
+the one he needs. Now this facility of his is not a blessing with which a
+gracious heaven endowed him. It is the consequence and reward of hard
+study, and above all of work, hard work.
+
+You have been ambitious of like skill in the manipulation of words. Had
+you not been, you would never have undertaken this study. You have
+perceived that when you speak or write, words are your instruments. You
+have wished to learn how to use them. Now for every idea you shall ever
+have occasion to express await throngs of vocables, each presenting its
+claims as a fit medium. These you must pass in instantaneous review, these
+you must expertly appraise, out of these you must choose the words that
+will best serve your purpose. With practice, you will make your selections
+unconsciously. You will never, of course, quite attain the infallibility
+of the dentist; for linguistic instruments are more numerous than dental,
+and far more complex. But you will more and more nearly approximate the
+ideal, will more and more nearly find that right expression has become
+second nature with you.
+
+All this is conditioned upon labor faithful and steadfast. Without labor
+you will never be adept. At the outset of our study together we warned you
+that, though we should gather the material and point the way, you yourself
+must do the work. This book is not one to glance through. It is one to
+dwell with, to toil with. It exacts much of you--makes you, for each page
+you turn, pay with the sweat of your brain.
+
+But, assuming that you have done your part, what have you gained? Without
+answering this question at all fully, we may at this juncture engage in a
+brief retrospect.
+
+First of all, you have rid yourself of the notion that words are dead
+things, unrealities worthy of no more than wooden and mechanical
+employment. As much as anything else in the world, words are alive and
+responsive, are fraught with unmeasured possibilities of good or ill.
+You have taken due cognizance of the fact that words must be considered in
+the aggregate as well as individually, and have reckoned with the pitfalls
+and dangers as well as with the advantages of their use in combination.
+But the basis of everything is a keener knowledge of words severally. You
+have therefore come to study words with the zest and insight you exhibit
+(or should exhibit) in studying men. Incidentally, you have acquired the
+habit of looking up dictionary definitions, not merely to satisfy a
+present need, but also to add permanently to your linguistic resources.
+
+You have carried the study of individuals farther. You have come to know
+words inside and out. Such knowledge not only assists you in your dealings
+with your contemporaries; it illuminates for you great literature of the
+past that otherwise would remain obscure. How much keener, for example, is
+your understanding of Shakespeare's passage on the Seven Ages of Man
+because of your thorough acquaintance with the single word
+_pantaloon_! How quickly does the awe for big words slip from you
+when you perceive that _precocious_ is in origin the equivalent of
+_half-baked_! What intimacy of insight into words you feel when you
+find that a _companion_ is a _sharer of one's bread_! What a
+linking of language with life you discover when you learn the original
+signification of _presently_, of _idiot_, of _rival_, of
+_sandwich_, of _pocket handkerchief_! And what revelations as
+into a mystic fraternalism with words do you obtain when you confront
+such a phrase as "the bank _teller_" or "cut to the _quick_"!
+
+Not only have words become more like living beings to you; you have
+learned to think of them in relations analogous to the human. You can
+detect the blood kinship, for example, between _prescribe_ and
+_manuscript_, and know that the strain of _fact_ or _fie_ or _fy_ in
+a word is pretty sure to betoken making or doing. You know that there are
+elaborate intermarriages among words. You recognize _phonograph_, for
+example, as a married couple; you even have confidential word as to the
+dowry brought by each of the contracting parties to the new verbal
+household.
+
+You have discovered, further, that the language actually swarms with
+"pairs"--words joined with each other not in blood or by marriage but
+through meaning. You have so familiarized yourself with hundreds of these
+pairs that to think of one word is to call the other to mind.
+
+Finally, and in many respects most important of all, you have acquired a
+vast stock of synonyms. You have had it brought to your attention that the
+number of basic ideas in the world is surprisingly small; that for each of
+these ideas there is in our language one generic word; that most people
+use this one word constantly instead of seeking the subsidiary term that
+expresses a particular phase of the idea; and that you as a builder of
+your vocabulary must, while holding fast to the basic idea with one hand,
+reach out with the other for the fit, sure material of specific words. Nor
+have you rested in the mere perception of theory. You have had abundant
+practice, have yourself covered the ground foot by foot. You can therefore
+proceed with reasonable freedom from the commoner ideas of the human mind
+to that expression of definite aspects of them which is anything but
+common.
+
+You have not, of course, achieved perfection. There still is much for you
+to do. There always will be. Nevertheless in the ways just reviewed, and
+in various other ways not mentioned in this chapter, you have made
+yourself verbally rich. You are one of the millionaires of language. When
+you speak, it is not with stammering incompetence, but with confident
+readiness. When you write, it is with energy and assurance in the very
+flow of the ink. Where you had long been a slave, you have become a
+freeman and can look your fellows in the eye. You have the best badge of
+culture a human being can possess. You have power at your tongue's end.
+You have the proud satisfaction of having wrought well, and the
+inspiration of knowing that whatever verbal need may arise, you are
+trained and equipped to grapple with it triumphantly.
+
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+
+_Appendix I_
+
+ THE DRIFT OF OUR RURAL POPULATION CITYWARD
+ (An editorial)
+
+To an individual who from whatever motives of personal advantage or mere
+curiosity has made himself an observer of current tendencies, the drift of
+our rural population cityward gives food for serious reflection. This
+drift is one of the most pronounced of the social and economic phenomena
+of the day. Its consequences upon the life, welfare, and future of the
+great nation to which we are proud to acknowledge our whole-hearted
+allegiance are matters of such paramount importance to all concerned that
+we should turn aside more often than we do from the distracting exactions
+of our ordinary activities to give them prolonged and earnest
+consideration.
+
+A generation or so ago human beings were content to spend the full term of
+their earthly existence amid rural surroundings, or if in their declining
+days they longed for more of the comforts and associations which are among
+the cravings of mortality, it was an easy proposition to move to the
+nearest village or, if they were too high and mighty for this simple
+measure to satisfy them, they could indulge in the more grandiose
+performance of residing in the county seat. But nowadays our people want
+more. Rich or poor, tall or dumpy, tottering grandmothers or babies in
+swaddling-clothes, they long for ampler pastures. Their brawny arms or
+hoary heads must bedeck nothing less than the metropolis itself, and
+perchance put shoulders to the wheel in the incessant grind of the urban
+treadmill. Can you beat it? Unquestioned profit does not attend the
+migration. It stands to reason that some of the very advantages sought
+have been sacrificed on the altar of the drift cityward. Let us say you
+have your individual domicile or the cramped and sunless apartment you dub
+your habitation within corporate limits. Does that mean that the
+privileges of the city are at your disposal, so that you have merely to
+reach forth your hand and pluck them? Well, hardly! You certainly do not
+reside in the downtown section, or if you do, you wish to heaven you
+didn't. And you can reach this section only with delay and inconvenience,
+whether in the hours of business or in the subsequent period devoted to
+the glitter of nocturnal revelry and amusement.
+
+But whatever the disadvantages of the city, the people who endure them are
+convinced that to go back to the vines and figtrees of their native heath
+would be jumping out of the frying pan into the fire. Why? Well, for one
+thing, there is no such thing as leisure in the areas that lie beyond
+those vast aggregations of humanity which constitute our cities. Not only
+are there innumerable and seemingly interminable chores that must follow
+the regular occupations of the day, but a thousand emergencies due to
+chance, weather, or the natural cussedness of things must be disposed of
+as they arise, regardless of what plans the rustic swain cherishes for the
+use of his spare time. Urban laborers have contrived by one means or
+another to bring about a limitation of the number of hours per diem they
+are forced to toil. To the farmers such an alleviation of their hardships
+is not within the realm of practicability. They kick about it of course.
+They say it's a blooming nuisance. But neither their heartburnings nor
+their struggles can efface it as a fact.
+
+Again, the means of entertainment are more limited, and that by a big lot,
+with the farmer than with those who dwell in the cities. It is all very
+well to talk about the blessings of the rural telephone, rural free
+delivery, and the automobile. These things do make communication easier
+than it used to be, but after all they're only a drop in the bucket and do
+little to stop the drift cityward. We may remark just here that if you
+live a thousand miles from nowhere and are willing to drive your Tin
+Lizzie into town for "the advantages," you aren't likely to get much even
+along the line of the movies, and you'll get less still if what you're
+after is an A-1 school for your progeny.
+
+Finally, the widespread impression that the farmer is a bloated and
+unscrupulous profiteer has done much to disgust him with his station and
+employment in life. We don't say he's the one and only when it comes to
+the virtues. Maybe he hasn't sprouted any wings yet. What if he hasn't?
+The cities, with their brothels, their big business, and their municipal
+governments--you wouldn't have the face to say that there's anything wrong
+with them, now would you? Oh, no! Of course not! The farmer pays high for
+his machinery and goes clear to the bottom of his pocketbook when he has
+to buy shoes or a sack of flour, but let him have a steer's hide or a
+wagon load of wheat to sell, and it's somebody else's ox that's gored.
+Consumers pay big prices for farm products, goodness knows, but they don't
+pay them to the farmer. Not on your tintype. The middleman gets his, you
+needn't question that. We beg pardon a thousand times. We mean the
+middle_men_. There's no end to those human parasites.
+
+And so farmer after farmer breaks up the old homestead and contributes his
+mite to the drift cityward. What will be the result that comes out of it
+all? The effect upon the farmer deserves an editorial all to itself. Here
+we must limit ourselves to the effects on the future of our beloved
+American nation. And even these we can now do no more than mention; we
+lack space to elaborate them. One effect, if the tendency continues, will
+be such a reduction in home-produced foodstuffs that we shall have to
+import from other countries lying abroad a good portion of the means of
+our physical sustenance, and shall face such an increase in the cost of
+the same that thousands and thousands of our people will find it
+increasingly harder as the years pass by to maintain their relative
+economic position. Another effect will be that our civilization, which to
+this point has sprawled over broad acres, will become an urban
+civilization, penned in amid conditions, restraints, privations, and
+perhaps also opportunities unprecedented in our past history and unknown
+to the experience we have had hitherto. A final effect will be that our
+most conservative class, the rural populace, will no longer present
+resistance that is formidable to the innovations which those who hold
+extreme views are forever exhorting us to embrace; and the result may well
+be that the disintegration of this staying and stabilizing element in our
+citizenship--one that retards and mollifies if it does not inhibit
+change--will produce consequences in its train which may be as dire as
+they are difficult to foretell.
+
+
+_Appendix_ 2
+
+ CAUSES FOR THE AMERICAN SPIRIT OF LIBERTY
+ (From the _Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies_)
+ By EDMUND BURKE
+
+In this character of the Americans, a love of freedom is the predominating
+feature which marks and distinguishes the whole; and as an ardent is
+always a jealous affection, your Colonies become suspicious, restive, and
+untractable whenever they see the least attempt to wrest from them by
+force, or shuffle from them by chicane, what they think the only advantage
+worth living for. This fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English
+Colonies probably than in any other people of the earth, and this from a
+great variety of powerful causes; which, to understand the true temper of
+their minds and the direction which this spirit takes, it will not be
+amiss to lay open somewhat more largely.
+
+First, the people of the Colonies are descendants of Englishmen. England,
+Sir, is a nation which still, I hope, respects, and formerly adored, her
+freedom. The Colonists emigrated from you when this part of your character
+was most predominant; and they took this bias and direction the moment
+they parted from your hands. They are therefore not only devoted to
+liherty, but to liberty according to English ideas, and on English
+principles. Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be
+found. Liberty inheres in some sensible object; and every nation has
+formed to itself some favorite point, which by way of eminence becomes the
+criterion of their happiness. It happened, you know, Sir, that the great
+contests for freedom in this country were from the earliest times chiefly
+upon the question of taxing. Most of the contests in the ancient
+commonwealths turned primarily on the right of election of magistrates; or
+on the balance among the several orders of the state. The question of
+money was not with them so immediate. But in England it was otherwise. On
+this point of taxes the ablest pens, and most eloquent tongues, have been
+exercised; the greatest spirits have acted and suffered. In order to give
+the fullest satisfaction concerning the importance of this point, it was
+not only necessary for those who in argument defended the excellence of
+the English Constitution to insist on this privilege of granting money as
+a dry point of fact, and to prove that the right had been acknowledged in
+ancient parchments and blind usages to reside in a certain body called a
+House of Commons. They went much farther; they attempted to prove, and
+they succeeded, that in theory it ought to be so, from the particular
+nature of a House of Commons as an immediate representative of the people,
+whether the old records had delivered this oracle or not. They took
+infinite pains to inculcate, as a fundamental principle, that in all
+monarchies the people must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately,
+possess the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty can
+subsist. The Colonies draw from you, as with their life-blood, these ideas
+and principles. Their love of liberty, as with you, fixed and attached on
+this specific point of taxing. Liberty might be safe, or might be
+endangered, in twenty other particulars, without their being much pleased
+or alarmed. Here they felt its pulse; and as they found that beat, they
+thought themselves sick or sound. I do not say whether they were right or
+wrong in applying your general arguments to their own case. It is not
+easy, indeed, to make a monopoly of theorems and corollaries. The fact is,
+that they did thus apply those general arguments; and your mode of
+governing them, whether through lenity or indolence, through wisdom or
+mistake, confirmed them in the imagination that they, as well as you, had
+an interest in these common principles.
+
+They were further confirmed in this pleasing error by the form of their
+provincial legislative assemblies. Their governments are popular in an
+high degree; some are merely popular; in all, the popular representative
+is the most weighty; and this share of the people in their ordinary
+government never fails to inspire them with lofty sentiments, and with a
+strong aversion from whatever tends to deprive them of their chief
+importance.
+
+If anything were wanting to this necessary operation of the form of
+government, religion would have given it a complete effect. Religion,
+always a principle of energy, in this new people is no way worn out or
+impaired; and their mode of professing it is also one main cause of this
+free spirit. The people are Protestants; and of that kind which is the
+most adverse to all implicit submission of mind and opinion. This is a
+persuasion not only favorable to liberty, but built upon it. I do not
+think, Sir, that the reason of this averseness in the dissenting churches
+from all that looks like absolute government is so much to be sought in
+their religious tenets, as in their history. Every one knows that the
+Roman Catholic religion is at least coeval with most of the governments
+where it prevails; that it has generally gone hand in hand with them, and
+received great favor and every kind of support from authority. The Church
+of England too was formed from her cradle under the nursing care of
+regular government. But the dissenting interests have sprung up in direct
+opposition to all the ordinary powers of the world, and could justify that
+opposition only on a strong claim to natural liberty. Their very existence
+depended on the powerful and unremitted assertion of that claim. All
+Protestantism, even the most cold and passive, is a sort of dissent. But
+the religion most prevalent in our Northern Colonies is a refinement on
+the principle of resistance; it is the dissidence of dissent, and the
+protestantism of the Protestant religion. This religion, under a variety
+of denominations agreeing in nothing but in the communion of the spirit of
+liberty, is predominant in most of the Northern Provinces, where the
+Church of England, notwithstanding its legal rights, is in reality no more
+than a sort of private sect, not composing most probably the tenth of the
+people. The Colonists left England when this spirit was high, and in the
+emigrants was the highest of all; and even that stream of foreigners which
+has been constantly flowing into these Colonies has, for the greatest
+part, been composed of dissenters from the establishments of their several
+countries, who have brought with them a temper and character far from
+alien to that of the people with whom they mixed.
+
+Sir, I can perceive by their manner that some gentlemen object to the
+latitude of this description, because in the Southern Colonies the Church
+of England forms a large body, and has a regular establishment. It is
+certainly true. There is, however, a circumstance attending these Colonies
+which, in my opinion, fully counterbalances this difference, and makes the
+spirit of liberty still more high and haughty than in those to the
+northward. It is that in Virginia and the Carolinas they have a vast
+multitude of slaves. Where this is the case in any part of the world,
+those who are free are by far the most proud and jealous of their freedom.
+Freedom is to them not only an enjoyment, but a kind of rank and
+privilege. Not seeing there, that freedom, as in countries where it is a
+common blessing and as broad and general as the air, may be united with
+much abject toil, with great misery, with all the exterior of servitude;
+liberty looks, amongst them, like something that is more noble and
+liberal. I do not mean, Sir, to commend the superior morality of this
+sentiment, which has at least as much pride as virtue in it; but I cannot
+alter the nature of man. The fact is so; and these people of the Southern
+Colonies are much more strongly, and with an higher and more stubborn
+spirit, attached to liberty than those to the northward. Such were all the
+ancient commonwealths; such were our Gothic ancestors; such in our days
+were the Poles; and such will be all masters of slaves, who are not slaves
+themselves. In such a people the haughtiness of domination combines with
+the spirit of freedom, fortifies it, and renders it invincible.
+
+Permit me, Sir, to add another circumstance in our Colonies which
+contributes no mean part towards the growth and effect of this untractable
+spirit. I mean their education. In no country perhaps in the world is the
+law so general a study. The profession itself is numerous and powerful;
+and in most provinces it takes the lead. The greater number of the
+deputies sent to the Congress were lawyers. But all who read, and most do
+read, endeavor to obtain some smattering in that science. I have been told
+by an eminent bookseller, that in no branch of his business, after tracts
+of popular devotion, were so many books as those on the law exported to
+the Plantations. The Colonists have now fallen into the way of printing
+them for their own use. I hear that they have sold nearly as many of
+Blackstone's Commentaries in America as in England. General Gage marks out
+this disposition very particularly in a letter on your table. He states
+that all the people in his government are lawyers, or smatterers in law;
+and that in Boston they have been enabled, by successful chicane, wholly
+to evade many parts of one of your capital penal constitutions. The
+smartness of debate will say that this knowledge ought to teach them more
+clearly the rights of legislature, their obligations to obedience, and the
+penalties of rebellion. All this is mighty well. But my honorable and
+learned friend on the floor, who condescends to mark what I say for
+animadversion, will disdain that ground. He has heard, as well as I, that
+when great honors and great emoluments do not win over this knowledge to
+the service of the state, it is a formidable adversary to government. If
+the spirit be not tamed and broken by these happy methods, it is stubborn
+and litigious. _Abeunt studia in mores_. This study renders men
+acute, inquisitive, dexterous, prompt in attack, ready in defence, full of
+resources. In other countries, the people, more simple, and of a less
+mercurial cast, judge of an ill principle in government only by an actual
+grievance; here they anticipate the evil, and judge of the pressure of the
+grievance by the badness of the principle. They augur misgovernment at a
+distance, and snuff the approach of tyranny in every tainted breeze.
+
+The last cause of this disobedient spirit in the Colonies is hardly less
+powerful than the rest, as it is not merely moral, but laid deep in the
+natural constitution of things. Three thousand miles of ocean lie between
+you and them. No contrivance can prevent the effect of this distance in
+weakening government. Seas roll, and months pass, between the order and
+the execution; and the want of a speedy explanation of a single point is
+enough to defeat a whole system. You have, indeed, winged ministers of
+vengeance, who carry your bolts in their pounces to the remotest verge of
+the sea. But there a power steps in that limits the arrogance of raging
+passions and furious elements, and says, _So far shalt thou go, and no
+farther_. Who are you, that you should fret and rage, and bite the
+chains of nature? Nothing worse happens to you than does to all nations
+who have extensive empire; and it happens in all the forms into which
+empire can be thrown. In large bodies the circulation of power must be
+less vigorous at the extremities. Nature has said it. The Turk cannot
+govern Egypt and Arabia and Kurdistan as he governs Thrace; nor has he the
+same dominion in Crimea and Algiers which he has at Brusa and Smyrna.
+Despotism itself is obliged to truck and huckster. The Sultan gets such
+obedience as he can. He governs with a loose rein, that he may govern at
+all; and the whole of the force and vigor of his authority in his center
+is derived from a prudent relaxation in all his borders. Spain, in her
+provinces, is, perhaps, not so well obeyed as you are in yours. She
+complies, too; she submits; she watches times. This is the immutable
+condition, the eternal law of extensive and detached empire.
+
+Then, Sir, from these six capital sources--of descent, of form of
+government, of religion in the Northern Provinces, of manners in the
+Southern, of education, of the remoteness of situation from the first
+mover of government-from all these causes a fierce spirit of liberty has
+grown up. It has grown with the growth of the people in your Colonies, and
+increased with the increase of their wealth; a spirit that unhappily
+meeting with an exercise of power in England which, however lawful, is not
+reconcilable to any ideas of liberty, much less with theirs, has kindled
+this flame that is ready to consume us.
+
+
+_Appendix 3_
+
+ PARABLE OF THE SOWER
+ (Matthew 13:3,8 and 18-23)
+
+And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying,
+Behold, a sower went forth to sow;
+
+And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side,
+and the fowls came and devoured them up:
+
+Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth:
+and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:
+
+And when the sun was up, they were scorched;
+and because they had no root, they withered away.
+
+And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:
+
+But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit,
+some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.
+
+Hear ye therefore the parable of the sower.
+
+When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not,
+then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his
+heart. This is he which received seed by the way side.
+
+But he that received the seed into stony places, the same is he
+that heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it.
+
+Yet he hath not root in himself, but dureth for a while: for when
+tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by he is
+offended.
+
+He also that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word;
+and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the
+word, and he becometh unfruitful.
+
+But he that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the
+word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth,
+some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.
+
+
+_Appendix 4_
+
+ THE SEVEN AGES OF MAN
+ _(As You Like It, II, vii, 139-166)_
+ By WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
+
+
+All the world's a stage,
+And all the men and women merely players:
+They have their exits and their entrances;
+And one man in his time plays many parts,
+His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
+Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms.
+And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel,
+And shining morning face, creeping like snail
+Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
+Sighing like furnace, with a woful ballad
+Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then a soldier,
+Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard
+Jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel,
+Seeking the bubble reputation
+Even in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice,
+In fair round belly with good capon lin'd,
+With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut,
+Full of wise saws and modern instances;
+And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
+Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon,
+With spectacles on nose and pouch on side,
+His youthful hose well say'd, a world too wide
+For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
+Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
+And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
+That ends this strange eventful history,
+Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
+Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
+
+
+_Appendix 5_
+
+ THE CASTAWAY
+ (From _Robinson Crusoe_)
+ By Daniel Defoe
+
+And now our case was very dismal indeed; for we all saw plainly that the
+sea went so high that the boat could not escape, and that we should be
+inevitably drowned. As to making sail, we had none, nor, if we had, could
+we have done anything with it; so we worked at the oar towards the land,
+though with heavy hearts, like men going to execution; for we all knew
+that when the boat came near the shore, she would be dashed in a thousand
+pieces by the beach of the sea. However, we committed our souls to God in
+the most earnest manner; and the wind driving us towards the shore, we
+hastened our destruction with our own hands, pulling as well as we could
+towards land.
+
+What the shore was, whether rock or sand, whether steep or shoal, we knew
+not; the only hope that could rationally give us the least shadow of
+expectation, was if we might happen into some bay or gulf, or the mouth of
+some river, where by great chance we might have run our boat in, or got
+under the lee of the land, and perhaps made smooth water. But there was
+nothing of this appeared; but as we made nearer and nearer the shore, the
+land looked more frightful than the sea.
+
+After we had rowed, or rather driven, about a league and a half, as we
+reckoned it, a raging wave, mountain-like, came rolling astern of us, and
+plainly bade us expect the _coup de grâce_. In a word, it took us
+with such a fury that it overset the boat at once; and separating us as
+well from the boat as from one another, gave us not time hardly to say,
+"O God!" for we were all swallowed up in a moment.
+
+Nothing can describe the confusion of thought which I felt, when I sank
+into the water; for though I swam very well, yet I could not deliver
+myself from the waves so as to draw breath, till that wave having driven
+me, or rather carried me, a vast way on towards the shore, and having
+spent itself, went back, and left me upon the land almost dry, but half
+dead with the water I took in. I had so much presence of mind, as well as
+breath left, that seeing myself nearer the mainland than I expected, I got
+upon my feet, and endeavored to make on towards the land as fast as I
+could, before another wave should return and take me up again; but I soon
+found it was impossible to avoid it; for I saw the sea come after me as
+high as a great hill, and as furious as an enemy, which I had no means or
+strength to contend with: my business was to hold my breath, and raise
+myself upon the water, if I could; and so by swimming to preserve my
+breathing, and pilot myself towards the shore if possible; my greatest
+concern now being that the wave, as it would carry me a great way toward
+the shore when it came on, might not carry me back again with it when it
+gave back towards the sea.
+
+The wave that came upon me again buried me at once twenty or thirty feet
+deep in its own body, and I could feel myself I carried with a mighty
+force and swiftness towards the shore a very great way; but I held my
+breath, and assisted myself to swim still forward with all my might. I was
+ready to burst with holding my breath, when as I felt myself rising up,
+so, to my immediate relief, I found my head and hands shoot out above the
+surface of the water; and though it was not two seconds of time that I
+could keep myself so, yet it relieved me greatly, gave me breath and new
+courage. I was covered again with water a good while, but not so long but
+I held it out; and finding the water had spent itself, and began to
+return, I struck forward against the return of the waves, and felt ground
+again with my feet. I stood still a few moments to recover breath, and
+till the waters went from me, and then took to my heels, and ran with what
+strength I had, farther towards the shore. But neither would this deliver
+me from the fury of the sea, which came pouring in after me again; and
+twice more I was lifted up by the waves and carried forwards as before,
+the shore being very flat.
+
+The last time of these two had well-nigh been fatal to me; for the sea
+having hurried me along, as before, landed me, or rather dashed me,
+against a piece of a rock, and that with such force as it left me
+senseless, and indeed helpless, as to my own deliverance; for the blow,
+taking my side and breast, beat the breath as it were quite out of my
+body; and had it returned again immediately, I must have been strangled in
+the water; but I recovered a little before the return of the waves, and
+seeing I should be covered again with the water, I resolved to hold fast
+by a piece of the rock, and so to hold my breath, if possible, till the
+wave went back. Now, as the waves were not so high as at first, being
+nearer land, I held my hold till the wave abated, and then fetched another
+run, which brought me so near the shore that the next wave, though it went
+over me, yet did not so swallow me up as to carry me away; and the next
+run I took I got to the mainland; where, to my great comfort, I clambered
+up the cliffs of the shore, and sat me down upon the grass, free from
+danger and quite out of the reach of the water. I was now landed, and safe
+on shore, and began to look up and thank God that my life was saved, in a
+case wherein there was some minutes before scarce any room to hope. I
+believe it is impossible to express, to the life, what the ecstasies and
+transports of the soul are when it is so saved, as I may say, out of the
+very grave: and I do not wonder now at that custom, when a malefactor, who
+has the halter about his neck, is tied up, and just going to be turned
+off, and has a reprieve brought to him--I say, I do not wonder that they
+bring a surgeon with it, to let him blood that very moment they tell him
+of it, that the surprise may not drive the animal spirits from the heart,
+and overwhelm him.
+
+ "For sudden joys, like griefs, confound at first."
+
+I walked about on the shore, lifting up my hands, and my whole being, as I
+may say, wrapt up in a contemplation of my deliverance; making a thousand
+gestures and motions, which I cannot describe; reflecting upon all my
+comrades that were drowned, and that there should not be one soul saved
+but myself; for, as for them, I never saw them afterwards, or any sign of
+them, except three of their hats, one cap, and two shoes that were not
+fellows.
+
+I cast my eyes to the stranded vessel, when, the breach and froth of the
+sea being so big, I could hardly see it, it lay so far off; and
+considered, Lord! how was it possible I could get on shore?
+
+After I had solaced my mind with the comfortable part of my condition, I
+began to look round me, to see what kind of place I was in, and what was
+next to be done: and I soon found my comforts abate, and that, in a word,
+I had a dreadful deliverance: for I was wet, had no clothes to shift me,
+nor anything either to eat or drink, to comfort me; neither did I see any
+prospect before me but that of perishing with hunger, or being devoured by
+wild beasts: and that which was particularly afflicting to me was, that I
+had no weapon, either to hunt and kill any creature for my sustenance, or
+to defend myself against any other creature that might desire to kill me
+for theirs. In a word, I had nothing about me but a knife, a tobacco-pipe,
+and a little tobacco in a box. This was all my provision; and this threw
+me into terrible agonies of mind, that for awhile I ran about like a
+madman. Night coming upon me, I began with a heavy heart, to consider what
+would be my lot if there were any ravenous beasts in that country, seeing
+at night they always come abroad for their prey.
+
+All the remedy that offered to my thoughts, at that time, was to get up
+into a thick busby tree, like a fir, but thorny, which grew near me, and
+where I resolved to sit all night, and consider the next day what death I
+should die, for as yet I saw no prospect of life. I walked about a furlong
+from the shore, to see if I could find any fresh water to drink, which I
+did to my great joy; and having drunk, and put a little tobacco in my
+mouth to prevent hunger, I went to the tree, and getting up into it,
+endeavored to place myself so that if I should sleep I might not fall. And
+having cut me a short stick, like a truncheon, for my defense, I took up
+my lodging; and being excessively fatigued, I fell fast asleep, and slept
+as comfortably as, I believe, few could have done in my condition, and
+found myself more refreshed with it than I think I ever was on such an
+occasion.
+
+When I waked it was broad day, the weather clear, and the storm abated, so
+that the sea did not rage and swell as before; but that which surprised me
+most was, that the ship was lifted off in the night from the sand where
+she lay, by the swelling of the tide, and was driven up almost as far as
+the rock which I at first mentioned, where I had been so bruised by the
+wave dashing me against it. This being within about a mile from the shore
+where I was, and the ship seeming to stand upright still, I wished myself
+on board, that at least I might save some necessary things for my use.
+
+When I came down from my apartment in the tree, I looked about me again,
+and the first thing I found was the boat, which lay, as the wind and sea
+had tossed her up, upon the land, about two miles on my right hand. I
+walked as far as I could upon the shore to have got to her; but found a
+neck, or inlet, of water between me and the boat, which was about half a
+mile broad; so I came back for the present, being more intent upon getting
+at the ship, where I hoped to find something for my present subsistence.
+
+A little after noon I found the sea very calm and the tide ebbed so far
+out, that I could come within a quarter of a mile of the ship. And here I
+found a fresh renewing of my grief; for I saw evidently that if we had
+kept on board, we had been all safe: that is to say, we had all got safe
+on shore, and I had not been so miserable as to be left entirely destitute
+of all comfort and company, as I now was. This forced tears to my eyes
+again; but as there was little relief in that, I resolved, if possible, to
+get to the ship-, so I pulled off my clothes, for the weather was hot to
+extremity, and took the water. But when I came to the ship, my difficulty
+was still greater to know how to get on board; for, as she lay aground,
+and high out of the water, there was nothing within my reach to lay hold
+of. I swam round her twice, and the second time I espied a small piece of
+rope, which I wondered I did not see at first, hanging down by the
+fore-chains so low that, with great difficulty, I got hold of it, and by
+the help of that rope got up into the forecastle of the ship. Here I found
+that the ship was bulged, and had a great deal of water in her hold; but
+that she lay so on the side of a bank of hard sand, or rather earth, that
+her stern lay lifted up upon the bank, and her head low, almost to the
+water. By this means all her quarter was free, and all that was in that
+part was dry; for you may be sure my first work was to search, and to see
+what was spoiled and what was free. And, first, I found that all the
+ship's provisions were dry and untouched by the water, and being very well
+disposed to eat, I went to the bread-room, and filled my pockets with
+biscuit, and ate it as I went about other things, for I had no time to
+lose. I also found some rum in the great cabin, of which I took a large
+dram, and which I had, indeed, need enough of to spirit me for what was
+before me. Now I wanted nothing but a boat, to furnish myself with many
+things which I foresaw would be very necessary to me.
+
+It was in vain to sit still and wish for what was not to be had; and this
+extremity roused my application. We had several spare yards, and two or
+three large spars of wood, and a spare topmast or two in the ship: I
+resolved to fall tp work with these, and I flung as many of them overboard
+as I could manage for their weight, tying every one with a rope, that they
+might not drive away. When this was done I went down the ship's side, and
+pulling them to me I tied four of them together at both ends, as well as I
+could, in the form of a raft, and laying two or three short pieces of
+plank upon them, crossways, I found I could walk upon it very well, but
+that it was not able to bear any great weight, the pieces being too light.
+So I went to work, and with the carpenter's saw I cut a spare topmast into
+three lengths, and added them to my raft, with a great deal of labor and
+pains. But the hope of furnishing myself with necessaries encouraged me to
+go beyond what I should have been able to have done upon another occasion.
+
+My raft was now strong enough to bear any reasonable weight. My next care
+was what to load it with, and how to preserve what I laid upon it from the
+surf of the sea: but I was not long considering this. I first laid all the
+planks or boards upon it that I could get, and having considered well what
+I most wanted, I first got three of the seamen's chests, which I had
+broken open and emptied, and lowered them down upon my raft; the first of
+these I filled with provisions--viz., bread, rice, three Dutch cheeses,
+five pieces of dried goat's flesh (which we lived much upon), and a little
+remainder of European corn, which had been laid by for some fowls which we
+brought to sea with us, but the fowls were killed. There had been some
+barley and wheat together; but, to my great disappointment, I found
+afterwards that the rats had eaten or spoiled it all. As for liquors, I
+found several cases of bottles belonging to our skipper, in which were
+some cordial waters; and, in all, about five or six gallons of arrack.
+These I stowed by themselves, there being no need to put them into the
+chest, nor any room for them. While I was doing this, I found the tide
+began to flow, though very calm; and I had the mortification to see my
+coat, shirt, and waistcoat, which I had left on shore upon the sand, swim
+away. As for my breeches, which were only linen, and open-kneed, I swam on
+board in them and my stockings. However, this put me upon rummaging for
+clothes, of which I found enough, but took no more than I wanted for
+present use, for I had other things which my eye was more upon; as, first,
+tools to work with on shore: and it was after long searching that I found
+out the carpenter's chest, which was indeed a very useful prize to me, and
+much more valuable than a ship-lading of gold would have been at that
+time. I got it down to my raft, whole as it was, without losing time to
+look into it, for I knew in general what it contained.
+
+My next care was for some ammunition and arms. There were two very good
+fowling-pieces in the great cabin, and two pistols. These I secured first,
+with some powder-horns, a small bag of shot, and two old rusty swords. I
+knew there were three barrels of powder in the ship, but knew not where
+our gunner had stowed them; but with much search I found them, two of them
+dry and good, the third had taken water. Those two I got to my raft, with
+the arms. And now I thought myself pretty well freighted, and began to
+think how I should get to shore with them, having neither sail, oar, nor
+rudder; and the least capful of wind would have overset all my navigation.
+
+I had three encouragements: first, a smooth, calm sea; secondly, the tide
+rising, and setting in to the shore; thirdly, what little wind there was
+blew me towards the land. And thus, having found two or three broken oars,
+belonging to the boat, and besides the tools which were in the chest, two
+saws, an axe, and a hammer, with this cargo I put to sea. For a mile, or
+thereabouts, my raft went very well, only that I found it drive a little
+distant from the place where I had landed before: by which I perceived
+that there was some indraught of the water, and consequently, I hoped to
+find some creek or river there, which I might malze use of as a port to
+get to land with my cargo.
+
+As I imagined, so it was. There appeared before me a little opening of the
+land. I found a strong current of the tide set into it; so I guided my
+raft as well as I could, to keep in the middle of the stream.
+
+But here I had like to have suffered a second shipwreck, which, if I had,
+I think verily would have broken my heart; for, knowing nothing of the
+coast, my raft ran aground at one end of it upon a shoal, and not being
+aground at the other end, it wanted but a little that all my cargo had
+slipped off towards the end that was afloat, and so fallen into the water.
+I did my utmost, by setting my back against the chests, to keep them in
+their places, but could not thrust off the raft with all my strength;
+neither durst I stir from the posture I was in; but holding up the chests
+with all my might, I stood in that manner near half an hour, in which time
+the rising of the water brought me a little more upon a level; and a
+little after, the water still rising, my raft floated again, and I thrust
+her off with the oar I had into the channel, and then driving up higher, I
+at length found myself in the mouth of a little river, with land on both
+sides, and a strong current or tide running up. I looked on both sides for
+a proper place to get to shore, for I was not willing to be driven too
+high up the river; hoping in time to see some ship at sea, and therefore
+resolved to place myself as near the coast as I could.
+
+At length I spied a little cove on the right shore of the creek, to which,
+with great pain and difficulty, I guided my raft, and at last got so near,
+that reaching ground with my oar, I could thrust her directly in. But here
+I had like to have dipped all my cargo into the sea again; for that shore
+lying pretty steep-that is to say, sloping--there was no place to land but
+where one end of my float, if it ran on shore, would lie so high, and the
+other sink lower, as before, that it would endanger my cargo again. All
+that I could do was to wait till the tide was at the highest, keeping the
+raft with my oar like an anchor, to hold the side of it fast to the shore,
+near a flat piece of ground, which I expected the water would flow over;
+and so it did. As soon as I found water enough, for my raft drew about a
+foot of water, I thrust her upon that flat piece of ground, and there
+fastened or moored her, by sticking my two broken oars into the ground-one
+on one side, near one end, and one on the other side, near the other end;
+and thus I lay till the water ebbed away, and left my raft and all my
+cargo safe on shore.
+
+
+
+_Appendix 6_
+
+ READING LISTS
+
+One of the best ways to _know_ words is through seeing them used by
+the masters. For this reason, as well as for many others, you should read
+extensively in good literature. The following lists of prose works may
+prove useful for your guidance. They are not intended to be exclusive, not
+intended to designate "the hundred best books." Rather do they name some
+good books of fairly varied types. These are not all of equal merit, even
+in their use of words. Some use words with nice discrimination, some with
+splendid vividness and force. For each author only one or two books are
+named, but in many instances you will wish to read further in the author,
+perhaps indeed his entire works.
+
+<Biography and Autobiography>
+
+Boswell, James: _Life of Samuel Johnson_
+Bradford, Gamaliel: _Lee the American; American Portraits, 1875-1900_
+Franklin, Benjamin: _Autobiography_
+Grant, U. S.: _Personal Memoirs_
+Irving, Washington: _Life of Goldsmith_
+Paine, A. B.: _Life of Mark Twain_
+Walton, Izaak: _Lives_
+
+<Essays, Adventure, etc.>
+
+Addison, Joseph: _Spectator Papers_
+Bryce, Sir James: _The American Commonwealth_
+Burke, Edmund: _Speech on Conciliation_
+Burroughs, John: _Wake Robin_
+Chesterton, G. K.: _Heretics_
+Crothers, S. M.: _The Gentle Reader_
+Dana, R. H., Jr.: Two _Years Before the Mast_
+Darwin, Charles: _Origin of Species_
+Emerson, R. W.: _Essays_
+Irving, Washington: _Sketch Book_
+Lincoln, Abraham: _Speeches and Addresses_
+Lucas, E. V.: _Old Lamps for New_
+Macaulay, T. B.: _Essays_
+Muir, John: _The Mountains of California_
+Thoreau, H. D.: _Walden_
+Twain, Mark: _Life on the Mississippi_
+
+<Fiction>
+
+Allen, James Lane: _The Choir Invisible_
+Austen, Jane: _Pride and Prejudice_
+Barrie, Sir James M.: _Sentimental Tommie_
+Bennett, Arnold: _The Old Wives' Tale_
+Blackmore, R. D.: _Lorna Doone_
+Bunyan, John: _Pilgrim's Progress_
+Cable, G. W.: _Old Creole Days_
+Conrad, Joseph: _The Nigger of the Narcissus_
+Defoe, Daniel: _Robinson Crusoe_
+Dickens, Charles: _David Copperfield_
+Eliot, George: _Adam Bede_
+Galsworthy, John: _The Patrician_
+Goldsmith, Oliver: _The Vicar of Wakefield_
+Hardy, Thomas: _The Return of the Native_
+Harte, Bret: _The Luck of Roaring Camp_ (short story)
+Hawthorne, Nathaniel: _The Scarlet Letter_
+Hergesheimer, Joseph: _Java Head_
+Hudson, W. H.: _Green Mansions_
+Kingsley, Charles: _Westward Ho_!
+Kipling, Rudyard: _Plain Tales from the Hills_ (short stories)
+London, Jack: _The Call of the Wild_
+Merrick, Leonard: _The Man Who Understood Women (volume of short
+stories); _The Actor Manager_
+Mitchell, S. Weir: _Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker_
+Norris, Frank: _The Octopus_
+Poe, Edgar Allan: _The Fall of the House of Usher_ (short story)
+Poole, Ernest: _The Harbor_
+Scott, Sir Walter: _Ivanhoe_
+Smith, F. Hopkinson: _Colonel Carter of Cartersville_
+Stevenson, R. L.: _Treasure Island_
+Tarkington, Booth: _Monsieur Beaucaire_
+Thackeray, W. M.: _Vanity Fair_
+Twain, Mark: _Huckleberry Finn_
+Wells, H. G.: _Tono Bungay_
+Wharton, Edith: _Ethan Frome_
+Wister, Owen: _The Virginian_
+
+
+ INDEX.
+
+The index comprises, besides miscellaneous items, four large classes of
+matter: (1) topics, including many minor ones not given separate textual
+captions; (2) all individual words and members of pairs explained or
+commented on in the text; (3) the key syllables, but not the separate
+words, of family groups; (4) the first or generic term, but not the other
+terms, in all assemblies of synonyms; hence, this book can be used as a
+handbook of ordinarily used synonyms.
+
+_Abandon_, Synonyms of,
+_Abase_, Synonyms of,
+_Abettor_, Synonyms of,
+_Abolish_, Synonyms of,
+_Abridge_
+Abstract vs. concrete terms. Also see _Words_
+_Absurd_
+_Accumulate_
+_Acknowledge_, Synonyms of,
+_Acquit_, Synonyms of,
+_Act_ family
+_Active_, Synonyms of,
+_Advise_, Synonyms of,
+Aeronautics, Familiar terms in,
+_Affair_
+_Affect_
+_Affecting_, Synonyms of,
+_Affront_, Synonyms of,
+_Afraid_, Synonyms of,
+_Ag_ family
+_Agnostic_, Synonyms of,
+_Allay_, Synonyms of,
+_Allopath_
+_Allow_, Synonyms of,
+_Altitude_
+_Amicable_
+_Amuse_, Synonyms of,
+Analysis. See _Vocabulary_ and _Synonyms_
+Analysis, Rhetorical,
+Anglo-Saxon words in modern English. See _Native words_
+_Anim_ family
+_Anni, annu_ family
+_Announce_, Synonyms of,
+_Answer_, Synonyms of,
+_Antipathy_, Synonyms of,
+Antonyms
+_Appreciate_
+_Apprehend_
+_Apricot_
+_Ardor_
+_Argument_
+_Artful_
+_Artifice_, Synonyms of,
+_Ascend_
+_Ascend_, Synonyms of,
+_Ascribe_
+_Ascribe_, Synonyms of,
+_Ask_, Synonyms of,
+_Assail_
+_Associate_, Synonyms of,
+_Attach_, Synonyms of,
+_Attack_; Synonyms of,
+_Attention_
+_Audi, auri_ family
+Audience, Adapting discourse to,
+_Auto_ family
+_Avert_
+_Awkward_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Backhanded_
+_Bald heads_
+_Bare_
+_Base_
+_Bear_
+_Bedlam_
+_Beef_
+_Begin_, Synonyms of,
+_Belief_, Synonyms of,
+_Belittle_, Synonyms of,
+_Bind_, Synonyms of,
+_Bit_, Synonyms of,
+_Bite_, Synonyms of,
+Blood relationships between words.
+ Small groups of words so related. Also see _Words_
+_Bluff_, Synonyms of,
+_Boast_, Synonyms of,
+_Body_, Synonyms of,
+_Bold_
+_Bombastic_, Synonyms of, Books of synonyms, List of,
+_Boor_
+_Boorish_, Synonyms of,
+_Booty_, Synonyms of,
+Boys, Kinds of,
+_Brand, brun_ family
+_Break_
+_Break_, Synonyms of,
+_Breakfast_
+_Bridegroom_
+_Bright_
+_Brittle_, Synonyms of,
+_Brotherly_
+_Building_, Synonyms of,
+Burke, Edmund. See _Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty_
+_Burn_ family
+_Burn_, Synonyms of,
+_Burn with indignation_
+_Busy_, Synonyms of,
+_By and by_
+
+_Cad_ family
+_Calf_
+_Call_, Synonyms of,
+_Calm_, Synonyms of,
+_Cant_ family
+_Cap(t)_ family
+_Capricious_
+_Care_, Synonyms of,
+_Careful_, Synonyms of,
+_Cart before the horse_,
+_Cas_ family
+"Castaway, The" (Defoe). Comments and assignments on,
+"Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty" (Burke).
+ Comments and assignments on,
+_Cede, ceed, cess_ family
+_Ceive, ceit, cept_ family
+_Celebrate_, Synonyms of, Celibates, Verbal,
+_Censure_
+_Cent_ family
+_Cent_ family
+_Charm_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Charm_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Chant_ family
+_Cheat_, Synonyms of,
+Child. See _How a child becomes acquainted_, etc.
+_Choke_, Synonyms of,
+_Choose_, Synonyms of,
+_Chron_ family
+_Church_
+_Churl_
+_Cid_ family
+_Cide_ family
+_Cigar_
+_Cip_ family
+_Circumstances_
+_Cis(e)_ family
+Classes of words, in general, (also see _Words_);
+ in your own vocabulary,
+Classic words, distinguished from native; in modern English,
+_Clear_
+_Clodhopper_
+_Close_
+_Close the door to_,
+_Coax_, Synonyms of,
+_Cold_
+Coleridge, S. T., Quotation from,
+_Color_, Synonyms of,
+_Combine_, Synonyms of,
+_Comfort_, Synonyms of,
+_Common_
+_Companion_
+_Complain_, Synonyms of,
+_Conchology_
+_Concise_, Synonyms of,
+_Condescend_, Synonyms of,
+_Condition_
+_Confirm_, Synonyms of,
+_Confirmed_, Synonyms of,
+_Confound_
+_Congregate_
+_Connect_, Synonyms of,
+Connotation
+_Constable_
+_Contagious_
+_Continual_, Synonyms of,
+_Continuous, continual_
+_Contract_, Synonyms of,
+_Conversation_
+_Copy_, Synonyms of,
+_Cordiality_
+_Corp(s)_ family
+_Corrode_
+_Corrupt_, Synonyms of,
+_Costly_, Synonyms of,
+_Coterie_, Synonyms of,
+_Counterfeit_
+_Courage_, Synonyms of,
+_Course_ family
+_Coxcomb_
+_Crafty_
+_Crease, cresce, cret, crue_ family
+_Cred, creed_ family
+_Crestfallen_
+_Crisscross_
+_Critical_, Synonyms of,
+_Criticism_
+_Crooked_, Synonyms of,
+_Cross_
+_Cross_, Synonyms of,
+_Crowd_, Synonyms of,
+_Crowsfeet_
+_Crude_
+_Cruel_, Synonyms of,
+_Cry_
+_Cry_, Synonyms of,
+_Cunning_
+_Cur_ family
+_Cure_ family
+_Curious_, Synonyms of,
+_Cut_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Daily_
+_Dainty_, Synonyms of,
+_Daisy_
+_Dandelion_
+_Danger_, Synonyms of,
+_Darken_, Synonyms of,
+_Dead_, Synonyms of,
+_Deadly_, Synonyms of,
+_Death_, Synonyms of,
+_Decay_, Synonyms of,
+_Deceit_, Synonyms of,
+_Deceptive_, Synonyms of,
+_Decorate_, Synonyms of,
+_Decorous_, Synonyms of,
+_Deface_, Synonyms of,
+_Defeat_, Synonyms of,
+_Defect_, Synonyms of,
+Definitions, of words; Dictionary vs. informal;
+ How to look up in a dictionary,
+Defoe, Daniel. See _The Castaway_
+_Degrade_
+_Delay_, Synonyms of,
+_Demean_
+_Democrat_
+_Demon_
+_Demoralize_, Synonyms of,
+_Deny_, Synonyms of,
+_Deportment_, Synonyms of,
+_Deprive_, Synonyms of,
+Description
+_Despise_, Synonyms of,
+_Despondency_, Synonyms of,
+_Destroy_, Synonyms of,
+_Detach_, Synonyms of,
+_Determined_, Synonyms of,
+_Deviate_
+_Devilish_
+_Devout_, Synonyms of,
+_Dexterity_
+_Dic, dict_ family
+Dictionaries, List of; How to use,
+_Die_, Synonyms of,
+_Differ_
+_Difficulty_, Synonyms of,
+_Dign_ family
+_Dilapidated_
+_Dip_, Synonyms of,
+_Dirty_, Synonyms of,
+_Disaster_
+_Discernment_, Synonyms of,
+_Discharge_
+Discords, Verbal
+Discourse, at first hand; adapted to audience,
+_Disease_, Synonyms of,
+_Disgraceful_, Synonyms of,
+_Disgusting_, Synonyms of,
+_Dishonor_, Synonyms of,
+_Disloyal_, Synonyms of,
+_Dispel_, Synonyms of,
+_Dissatisfied_, Synonyms of,
+_Diurnal_
+_Divide_, Synonyms of,
+_Do_, Synonyms of,
+_Doctrine_, Synonyms of,
+_Doom, Doomsday_
+_Dream_, Synonyms of,
+_Dress_, Synonyms of,
+"Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward, The" (Editorial),
+ Comments and assignments,
+_Drink_, Synonyms of,
+_Drip_, Synonyms of,
+_Drunk_, Synonyms of,
+_Dry_, Synonyms of,
+_Duc, duct_ family
+_Dull_
+_Dur(e)_ family
+
+_Early_, Synonyms of,
+_Eat_, Synonyms of,
+Editorial. See _The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward_
+_Effect_
+_Egregious_
+_Ejaculate_
+_Elicit_, Synonyms of,
+_Embarrass_, Synonyms of,
+_Embrace_
+_Encroach_, Synonyms of,
+_End_, Synonyms of,
+_Enemy_
+_Enemy_, Synonyms of,
+_Engine_
+_Enni_ family
+_Enormity, enormousness_
+_Enough_, Synonyms of,
+_Entice_, Synonyms of,
+_Erase_, Synonyms of,
+_Error_ family
+_Error_, Synonyms of,
+_Estimate_, Synonyms of,
+_Eternal_, Synonyms of,
+_Eu_ family
+_Eugenics_
+_Ex_ family
+_Examination_
+_Example_, Synonyms of,
+_Exceed_, Synonyms of,
+_Exclude_
+_Excuse_, Synonyms of,
+_Expand_, Synonyms of,
+_Expel_, Synonyms of,
+_Experiment_, Synonyms of,
+_Explain_, Synonyms of,
+Explanation (Exposition)
+_Explicit_, Synonyms of,
+_Expression_
+
+_Face_, Synonyms of,
+_Fact_ family
+_Faculty_, Synonyms of,
+_Failing_, Synonyms of,
+_Fair_
+_False_
+_Fame_, Synonyms of,
+Families, Verbal,
+_Famous_, Synonyms of,
+_Fashion_, Synonyms of,
+_Fast_
+_Fast_, Synonyms of,
+_Fasten_ Synonyms of,
+_Fat_, Synonyms of,
+_Fate_, Synonyms of,
+_Fatherly_
+_Fawn_, Synonyms of,
+_Fear_, Synonyms of,
+_Feat, fect, feit_ family
+_Feign_, Synonyms of,
+_Fellow_
+_Feminine_, Synonyms of,
+_Fer_ family
+_Fertile_, Synonyms of,
+_Fic(e)_ family
+_Fiddle_
+_Fiendish_, Synonyms of,
+_Fight_, Synonyms of,
+_Financial_, Synonyms of,
+_Fin(e)_ family
+_Firm_
+_Fit_, Synonyms of,
+_Flag, The_
+_Flame_, Synonyms of,
+_Flat_
+_Flat_, Synonyms of,
+_Flatter_, Synonyms of,
+_Flect, flex_ family
+_Flee_, Synonyms of,
+_Fleeting_, Synonyms of,
+_Flexible_, Synonyms of,
+_Flit_, Synonyms of,
+_Flock_, Synonyms of,
+_Flock together_
+_Flow_, Synonyms of,
+_Flu, fluence, flux_ family
+_Foe_
+_Follow_, Synonyms of,
+_Follower_, Synonyms of,
+_Fond_
+_Fond_, Synonyms of,
+_Force_, Synonyms of,
+_Foretell_, Synonyms of,
+_Fort_ family
+Fossils in modern English, List of,
+_Found_ family
+_Fract, frag_ family
+_Fracture_
+_Frank_, Synonyms of,
+Franklin, Benjamin, and _Spectator Papers_,
+_Fraternal_
+_Free_
+_Free_, Synonyms of
+French and Norman-French words occurring in modern English
+_Freshen_, Synonyms of,
+_Fret_
+_Friendly_
+_Friendly_, Synonyms of,
+_Frighten_, Synonyms of,
+_Frigid_
+_Frown_, Synonyms of,
+_Frugal_, Synonyms of,
+_Frustrate_, Synonyms of,
+_Fug(e)_ family
+_Fuse_ family
+_Fy_ family
+
+_Game_, Synonyms of,
+_Gather_, Synonyms of,
+_Gen_ family
+General facts and ideas with which acquaintance assumed,
+General ideas, as best basis for study of synonyms,
+General vs. specific terms. Also see _Words_
+Genus and species
+_Ger, gest_ family
+Germanic words in modern English
+_Get_, Synonyms of,
+_Get on to_
+"Gettysburg Address" (Lincoln); Comments on,
+_Ghost_
+_Ghost_, Synonyms of,
+_Gift_, Synonyms of,
+_Give_, Synonyms of,
+_Glad_, Synonyms of,
+_Go out of one's way_
+_Good_
+_Good_ family
+_Goodby_
+_Grade_ family
+_Gram_ family
+_Grand_, Synonyms of,
+_Graph_ family
+_Gray hair_
+_Great_
+_Greedy_
+Greek prefixes List of,
+Greek stems, List of,
+Greek words in modern English
+_Greet_, Synonyms of,
+_Gress_ family
+_Grief_, Synonyms of,
+_Grieve_, Synonyms of,
+_Groom_
+_Grudgingly_
+_Guard_, Synonyms of,
+_Guileless_
+
+_Hab_ family
+_Habit_, Synonyms of,
+_Habitation_, Synonyms of,
+_Hale_ family
+_Half-baked_
+_Harass_, Synonyms of,
+_Hard_
+_Harmful_, Synonyms of,
+_Harsh_
+_Haste_, Synonyms of,
+_Hate_, Synonyms of,
+_Hatred_, Synonyms of,
+_Have_, Synonyms of,
+_Hayseed_
+_Head foremost_
+_Headstrong_, Synonyms of,
+_Heal_ family
+_Healthful_, Synonyms of,
+_Heathen_
+_Heavy_, Synonyms of,
+_Height_
+_Help_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Help_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Hesitate_, Synonyms of,
+_Hib_ family
+_Hide_, Synonyms of,
+_High_, Synonyms of,
+_Highstrung_
+_Hinder_ Synonyms of,
+_Hint_, Synonyms of,
+_Hot_ family
+_Hole_, Synonyms of,
+_Holy_, Synonyms of,
+_Home_
+_Homeopath_
+_Homesickness_
+_Hopeful,_ Synonyms of,
+_Hopeless_, Synonyms of,
+_Hose_
+_House_
+How a child becomes acquainted with the complexity of life and language
+_Hug_,
+_Humor_
+_Hussy_
+_Idiot_
+_Idle_
+_Ig_ family
+_Ignorant_, Synonyms of,
+_Imp_
+Imperfectly understood facts and ideas
+_Impolite_, Synonyms of,
+_Importance_, Synonyms of,
+_Imposter_, Synonyms of,
+_Imprison_, Synonyms of,
+_Improper_, Synonyms of,
+_Impure_, Synonyms of,
+_In a minute_
+_Inborn_, Synonyms of,
+_Incense_
+_Incite_, Synonyms of,
+_Incline_, Synonyms of,
+_Inclose_, Synonyms of,
+_Increase_, Synonyms of,
+_Indecent_, Synonyms of,
+_Infantry_
+_Infectious_
+_Ingenious_
+_Inner_
+_Innocent_
+_Innuendo_
+_Insane_, Synonyms of,
+_Insanity_, Synonyms of,
+_Insinuate_
+_Insipid_, Synonyms of,
+_Instances_
+_Instigate_
+_Insult_
+_Intention_, Synonyms of,
+_Internal_
+_Interpose_, Synonyms of,
+_Investigate_
+_Irreligious_, Synonyms of,
+_Irritate_, Synonyms of,
+_It_ family
+"Ivanhoe" (Scott), Quotation from,
+_Ject_ family
+_Join_, Synonyms of,
+_Journey_, Synonyms of,
+_Jud_ family
+_Jump on_
+_Junct_ family
+_Jur, jus_ family
+_Jure_ family
+_Just_
+
+Key-syllables, Variations in form of; Misleading resemblance between;
+ Lists of,
+_Kick_
+_Kill_, Synonyms of,
+_Kind_, Synonyms of,
+_Kindle_, Synonyms of,
+Kinships between words. See _Blood relationships between words;
+ Marriages between words; Words_
+_Knave_
+_Knowledge_
+
+_Lack_, Synonyms of,
+_Lame_, Synonyms of,
+_Large_, Synonyms of,
+_Late_ family
+Latin prefixes, List of,
+Latin stems, List of,
+Latin words in modern English. See _Classic words_
+_Laugh_, Synonyms of,
+_Laughable_, Synonyms of,
+_Lead_, Synonyms of,
+_Lect, leg_ family
+_Lengthen_, Synonyms of,
+_Lessen,_ Synonyms of,
+_Lewd_
+_Liberal_, Synonyms of,
+_Lie_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Lie_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Lig_ family
+_Likeness_, Synonyms of,
+_Limp_, Synonyms of,
+_List_, Synonyms of,
+Literal vs. figurative terms and applications. Also see _Words_
+_Loc, loco, local, locate_ family
+_Locu_ family
+_Log_ family
+_Look_, Synonyms of,
+Loose use of words
+_Loquy_ family
+_Lord_
+_Lose steam_
+_Loud_, Synonyms of,
+_Love_
+_Love_, Synonyms of,
+_Low,_ Synonyms of,
+_Loyal_, Synonyms of,
+_Luc, lum, lus_ family
+_Lude, lus_ family
+_Lunatic_
+_Lurk_, Synonyms of,
+_Lust_
+
+_Make_, Synonyms of,
+_Make one's pile_
+_Man_, as a generic term,
+_Man, manu_ family
+_Mand_ family
+_Manifest_, Synonyms of,
+_Manly_
+_Many_, Synonyms of,
+Many-sided words
+_Margin_, Synonyms of,
+_Marriage_, Synonyms of,
+Marriages between words. Also see _Words_
+_Marshal_
+_Masculine_, Synonyms of,
+_Matinée_
+_Matrimonial_, Synonyms of,
+_Meaning_, Synonyms of,
+_Meet_, Synonyms of,
+_Meeting_, Synonyms of,
+_Melt_, Synonyms of,
+_Memory_, Synonyms of,
+_Mercy_, Synonyms of,
+_Mere, merely_
+_Meter, metri_ family
+Military terms, Familiar
+_Mis(e), mit_ family
+_Misrepresent_, Synonyms of,
+_Mix_, Synonyms of,
+_Mob_ family
+_Model_, Synonyms of,
+_Modern_
+_Mono_ family
+_Mort_ family
+_Mortal_
+_Mortify_
+_Mot(e)_ family
+_Mother_
+_Motive_, Synonyms of,
+_Move_ family
+_Move_, Synonyms of,
+_Mot(e)_ family
+
+_Name_, Synonyms of,
+Narration
+_Nasturtium_
+_Nat(e)_ family
+Native words, distinguished from classic; in modern English,
+_Near_, Synonyms of,
+_Neat_, Synonyms of,
+_Needful_, Synonyms of,
+_Negligence_, Synonyms of,
+_New_, Synonyms of,
+_Nice_, Synonyms of,
+_Nickname_
+_Noble_ family
+_Noise_
+_Noisy_, Synonyms of,
+_Nostalgia_
+_Nostril_
+_Nostrum_
+_Not(e), nor(e)_ family
+_Noticeable_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Objective_
+_Occupation_, Synonyms of,
+_Offspring_
+_Old_, Synonyms of,
+_Ology_ family
+_Omen, ominous_
+Opposites
+_Order_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Order_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Oversight_, Synonyms of,
+_Ox_
+
+_Pacify_, Synonyms of,
+_Pagan_
+Pairs, Three types of; Lists of or assignments in; as Synonyms,
+_Pale_, Synonyms of,
+_Pan_ family
+_Pantaloon_
+"Parable of the Sower"; Comments and assignments on,
+"Parable of the Prodigal Son"; Comments on,
+Parallels
+Paraphrasing
+_Pard_
+_Parlor_
+_Parson_
+_Part_, Synonyms of,
+Parts of Speech, Wrong,
+_Pass, path_ family
+_Pastor_
+_Paternal_
+_Patience_, Synonyms of,
+_Patter_
+_Pay_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Pay_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Ped_ family
+_Pen_
+_Pend, pense_ family
+_Penetrate_, Synonyms of,
+_Perspiration_
+_Pet_ family
+_Petit, petty_ family
+_Petr, peter_ family
+_Phil(e)_ family
+_Phone_ family
+_Pin-money_
+_Pity_, Synonyms of,
+_Place_, Synonyms of,
+_Plain_
+_Plan_, Synonyms of,
+_Playful_, Synonyms of,
+_Plentiful_, Synonyms of,
+_Plic(ate), ply_ family
+_Plunder_, Synonyms of,
+_Pocket handkerchief_
+_Pod_ family
+_Poli_ family
+_Polite_
+_Polite_, Synonyms of,
+_Pond_ family
+_Ponder_
+_Pone, pose_ family
+_Poor_
+_Porcine_
+_Pork_
+_Port_ family
+_Portent, portentous_
+_Poten(t)_ family
+_Poverty_, Synonyms of,
+_Precocious_
+_Prehend_ family
+_Preposterous_
+_Presbyterian_
+_Presently_
+_Pretty_, Synonyms of,
+_Prise_ family
+_Prob_ family
+_Prod up_
+_Profitable_, Synonyms of,
+_Progeny_
+_Prompt_, Synonyms of,
+_Proud_, Synonyms of,
+_Pull_, Synonyms of,
+_Pulse_ family
+_Punish_, Synonyms of,
+_Push_, Synonyms of,
+_Put(e)_ family
+_Puzzle_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Qualm_
+_Quarrel_, Synonyms of,
+_Quean_
+_Queer_, Synonyms of,
+_Quick_
+Quickly, Dame
+_Quiet_
+Quotations from literature, embodying old senses of words
+
+_Raise_, Synonyms of,
+_Rash_, Synonyms of,
+Reading Lists
+_Rebellion_, Synonyms of,
+_Recant_
+_Recover_, Synonyms of,
+_Recrudescence_
+_Reflect_, Synonyms of,
+_Refuse_
+_Regret_, Synonyms of,
+_Relate_, Synonyms of,
+_Relinquish_, Synonyms of,
+_Renounce_, Synonyms of,
+_Replace_, Synonyms of,
+_Reprove_, Synonyms of,
+_Republican_
+_Repulsive_, Synonyms of,
+_Requital_, Synonyms of,
+_Residence_
+_Responsible_, Synonyms of,
+_Reveal_, Synonyms of,
+_Reverence_, Synonyms of,
+_Rich_, Synonyms of,
+_Ridicule_, Synonyms of,
+_Right_
+_Ripe_, Synonyms of,
+_Rise_
+_Rise_, Synonyms of,
+_Rival_
+_Robber_, Synonyms of,
+_Rog, rogate_ family
+_Rogue_, Synonyms of,
+_Rough_
+_Round_, Synonyms of,
+_Routine_
+_Rub_, Synonyms of,
+_Ruminate_
+_Run_, Synonyms of,
+_Rapt_ family
+_Rural_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Sabotage_
+_Sad_, Synonyms of,
+_Sal, sail_ family
+_Salary_
+_Sandwich_
+_Sans_
+_Sarcasm_
+_Satiate_, Synonyms of,
+_Saws_
+_Say_, Synonyms of,
+Scandinavian words in modern English
+_Science, scit(e)_ family
+_Scoff_, Synonyms of,
+Scott, Sir Walter, Quotation from,
+_Scribe, script_ family
+_Secret_, Synonyms of,
+_Sect_ family
+_Secu, sequ_ family
+_Sed_ family
+_See_, Synonyms of,
+_Seep_, Synonyms of,
+_Sell_
+_Sell_, Synonyms of,
+_Sens(e), sent_ family
+_Serious_
+"Seven Ages of Man, The" (Shakespeare); Comments and assignments on,
+_Severe_
+Shakespeare, William. See _The Seven Ages of Man_
+_Shamefaced_
+_Shape_, Synonyms of,
+_Share_, Synonyms of,
+_Sharp_
+_Sharp_, Synonyms of,
+_Shear_ family
+_Shine_, Synonyms of,
+_Shore_ family
+_Shore_, Synonyms of,
+_Shorten_
+_Shorten_, Synonyms of,
+_Show_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Show_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Shrink_, Synonyms of,
+_Shun_, Synonyms of,
+_Shy_, Synonyms of,
+_Side_
+_Sid(e)_ family
+_Sidetrack_
+_Sign_ family
+_Sign_, Synonyms of,
+_Silent_, Synonyms of,
+_Silly_
+_Simple_, Synonyms of,
+_Sing_, Synonyms of,
+_Sing another tune_
+_Sinister_
+_Sist_ family
+_Skilful_, Synonyms of,
+_Skin_, Synonyms of,
+_Slander_, Synonyms of,
+Slang
+_Sleep_, Synonyms of,
+_Sleepy_, Synonyms of,
+Slovenliness
+_Slovenly_, Synonyms of,
+_Sly_, Synonyms of,
+_Smell_, Synonyms of,
+_Smile_, Synonyms of,
+_Smoke in one's pipe_
+_Solitary_, Synonyms of,
+_Solve, solu_ family
+_Song_, Synonyms of,
+_Soon_
+Sources for modern English, Variety of,
+_Sour_, Synonyms of,
+_Sow_
+_Speak_, Synonyms of,
+_Spect, spic(e)_ family
+"Spectator Papers, The" (Addison)
+_Speech_, Synonyms of,
+_Spend_, Synonyms of,
+_Spire, spirit_ family
+_Spirit_
+_Spond, spons(e)_ family
+_Spot_, Synonyms of,
+_Spruce_, Synonyms of,
+_Sta, sti_ family
+_Stale_, Synonyms of,
+_Stay_, Synonyms of,
+_Stead_ family
+_Steal_, Synonyms of,
+_Steep_, Synonyms of,
+_Stiff_
+_Stingy_, Synonyms of,
+_Stirrup_
+_Storm_, Synonyms of,
+_Straight_, Synonyms of,
+_Strain, string, strict_ family
+_Strange_, Synonyms of,
+_Strike_, Synonyms of,
+_Strong_
+_Strong_, Synonyms of,
+_Struct, stru(e)_ family
+_Stubborn_, Synonyms of,
+_Stupid_, Synonyms of,
+_Suave_, Synonyms of,
+_Subjective_
+_Succeed_, Synonyms of,
+_Succession_, Synonyms of,
+_Sue_ family
+_Sullen_, Synonyms of,
+_Sult_ family; Superfluous details,
+_Supernatural_, Synonyms of,
+_Suppose_, Synonyms of,
+_Surprise_, Synonyms of,
+_Swearing_, Synonyms of,
+_Sweat_
+_Swine_
+Synonyms, Necessity for; Similar not identical in meaning;
+ List of books of; How to acquire; Analysis of your use of;
+ Progress from the general to the specific;
+ Pertinent rather than comprehensive; Lists of, or assignments in,
+ (also see _Pairs_)
+
+_Tact_ family
+_Tail_ family
+_Tain_ family
+_Take down a notch_
+_Take hold of_
+_Take the hide off_
+_Take umbrage_
+_Talk_ (noun)
+_Talk_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Talkative_, Synonyms of; Tameness,
+_Tang_ family
+_Teach_, Synonyms of,
+_Tear_, Synonyms of,
+Telegrams and night letters
+_Ten, tent_ family
+_Tend, tens, tent, ten_ family
+_Tender_
+Tennyson, Alfred, Quotation from,
+_Tension_
+_Term, termin_ family
+_Ter(re), terra_ family
+_Thank your lucky stars_
+_Thesis, theme_ family
+Thing(s)
+_Thoughtful_, Synonyms of,
+_Throw_, Synonyms of,
+_Throw in the shade_
+_Throw out a remark_
+_Tin_ family
+_Tire_, Synonyms of,
+_Tool_, Synonyms of,
+_Tone_
+Tone, Unity of. See _Discords, Verbal_
+_Tort_ family
+_Track_
+_Tract, tra(i)_ family
+Translation
+_Trifle_, Synonyms of,
+Triteness
+_Trivial_
+_Trust_, Synonyms of,
+_Truth_
+_Try_, Synonyms of,
+_Tum_ family
+_Turb_ family
+_Turn_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Ugly_, Synonyms of,
+_Umpire_
+_Understood_
+_Unsophisticated_
+_Unwilling_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Vade, vasion_ family
+_Vail, vol(e)_ family
+_Vain_
+_Vapid_
+_Veal, veau_
+_Vend_
+_Vene, vent_ family
+_Veracity_
+_Vers(e), vert_ family
+_Vid_ family
+_Villain_
+_Vince, vict_ family
+_Vinegar_
+_Violin_
+_Vir_ family
+_Virile_
+_Virtue_
+_Vis_ family
+_Viv(e)_ family
+_Voc, voke_ family
+Vocabulary, Ready, wide, or accurate; Speaking or writing;
+ Analysis of your own
+_Volve, volute_ family
+_Voluntary_
+_Voracious_
+Vulgar
+
+_Walk_. Synonyms of,
+_Watchful_, Synonyms of,
+Wave (noun), Synonyms of,
+Wave (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Weak_
+_Weak_, Synonyms of,
+_Weariness_, Synonyms of,
+_Wearisome_, Synonyms of,
+_Classes of words, Abstract vs.
+_Wench_
+_Wet_ (adjective), Synonyms of,
+_Wet_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Wheedle_
+Whim,_ Synonyms of,
+Whip, Synonyms of,
+Whole_ family
+_Wicked_, Synonyms of,
+_Wild_
+_Willing_
+_Wind_, Synonyms of,
+_Wind_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Winding_, Synonyms of,
+_Wis, wit_ family
+Wisdom
+_Wise_, Synonyms of,
+_Wizard_
+_Wonderful_, Synonyms of,
+Wordiness
+Words, as realities; as instruments; to be learned in various ways;
+ like people; in combination; Individual; to learn first; The past of;
+ Buried meanings of; Poetry of; Dignified and unassuming;
+ Literal, concrete, and specifc; General; Exaggerative; Debased;
+ as celibates; related in blood or by marriage;
+ examined for relationships; related in meaning; often confused;
+ Native and classic; Many-sided; Supplementary list of.
+ Also see _concrete terms, Literal vs. figurative terms,
+ General vs. specific terms, Slang, Vocabulary, Synonyms, Fossils,
+ Loose use of words
+_Work_, synonyms of,
+_Workman_, Synonyms of,
+_Worm in_
+_Write_, Synonyms of,
+Writing as an aid to memory
+_Wrong_
+
+_Yearn_, Synonyms of,
+Young, Synonyms of,
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Century Vocabulary Builder
+by Creever & Bachelor
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10073 ***
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..649adba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10073 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10073)
diff --git a/old/10073-8.txt b/old/10073-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6f099ed
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/10073-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,12783 @@
+Project Gutenberg's The Century Vocabulary Builder, by Creever & Bachelor
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Century Vocabulary Builder
+
+Author: Creever & Bachelor
+
+Release Date: November 13, 2003 [EBook #10073]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Stan Goodman, Charles M. Bidwell and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+Note: Italics indicated by _
+ Bold print by <...>
+
+ THE CENTURY HANDBOOK SERIES
+
+THE CENTURY HANDBOOK OF WRITING.
+By Garland Greever and Easley S. Jones.
+
+THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+THE CENTURY DESK BOOK OF GOOD ENGLISH.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+A BUSINESS MAN'S DESK BOOK.
+By Garland Greever and Joseph M. Bachelor.
+
+THE FACTS AND BACKGROUNDS OF LITERATURE, English and American.
+By George F. Reynolds, University of Colorado, and Garland Greever.
+
+PARLIAMENTARY PRACTICE.
+By General Henry M. Robert.
+
+_Other Volumes To Be Arranged_
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER.
+
+ By GARLAND GREEVER
+
+ and
+
+ JOSEPH M. BACHELOR
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+DANA H. FERRIN
+
+WHOM THIS BOOK OWES MORE
+THAN A MERE DEDICATION CAN ACKNOWLEDGE
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+You should know at the outset what this book does _not_ attempt to
+do. It does not, save to the extent that its own special purpose requires,
+concern itself with the many and intricate problems of grammar, rhetoric,
+spelling, punctuation, and the like; or clarify the thousands of
+individual difficulties regarding correct usage. All these matters are
+important. Concise treatment of them may be found in THE CENTURY HANDBOOK
+OF WRITING and THE CENTURY DESK BOOK OF GOOD ENGLISH, both of which
+manuals are issued by the present publishers. But this volume confines
+itself to the one task of placing at your disposal the means of adding to
+your stock of words, of increasing your vocabulary.
+
+It does not assume that you are a scholar, or try to make you one. To be
+sure, it recognizes the ends of scholarship as worthy. It levies at every
+turn upon the facts which scholarship has accumulated. But it demands of
+you no technical equipment, nor leads you into any of those bypaths of
+knowledge, alluring indeed, of which the benefits are not immediate. For
+example, in Chapter V it forms into groups words etymologically akin to
+each other. It does this for an end entirely practical--namely, that the
+words you know may help you to understand the words you do not know. Did
+it go farther--did it account for minor differences in these words by
+showing that they sprang from related rather than identical originals, did
+it explain how and how variously their forms have been modified in the
+long process of their descent--it would pass beyond its strict utilitarian
+bounds. This it refrains from doing. And thus everything it contains it
+rigorously subjects to the test of serviceability. It helps you to bring
+more and more words into workaday harness--to gain such mastery over them
+that you can speak and write them with fluency, flexibility, precision,
+and power. It enables you, in your use of words, to attain the readiness
+and efficiency expected of a capable and cultivated man.
+
+There are many ways of building a vocabulary, as there are many ways of
+attaining and preserving health. Fanatics may insist that one should be
+cultivated to the exclusion of the others, just as health-cranks may
+declare that diet should be watched in complete disregard of recreation,
+sanitation, exercise, the need for medicines, and one's mental attitude to
+life. But the sum of human experience, rather than fanaticism, must
+determine our procedure. Moreover experience has shown that the various
+successful methods of bringing words under man's sway are not mutually
+antagonistic but may be practiced simultaneously, just as health is
+promoted, not by attending to diet one year, to exercise the next, and to
+mental attitude the third, but by bestowing wise and fairly constant
+attention on all. Yet it would be absurd to state that all methods of
+increasing one's vocabulary, or of attaining vigor of physique, are
+equally valuable. This volume offers everything that helps, and it yields
+space in proportion to helpfulness.
+
+Aside from a brief introductory chapter, a chapter (number X) given over
+to a list of words, and a brief concluding chapter, the subject matter of
+the volume falls into three main divisions. Chapters II and III are based
+on the fact that we must all use words in combination--must fling the
+words out by the handfuls, even as the accomplished pianist must strike
+his notes. Chapters IV and V are based on the fact that we must become
+thoroughly acquainted with individual words--that no one who scorns to
+study the separate elements of speech can command powerful and
+discriminating utterance. Chapters VI, VII, VIII, and IX are based on the
+fact that we need synonyms as our constant lackeys--that we should be able
+to summon, not a word that will do, but a word that will express the idea
+with precision. Exercises scattered throughout the book, together with
+five of the six appendices, provide well-nigh inexhaustible materials for
+practice.
+
+For be it understood, once for all, that this volume is not a machine
+which you can set going and then sit idly beside, the while your
+vocabulary broadens. Mastery over words, like worthy mastery of any kind
+whatsoever, involves effort for yourself. You can of course contemplate
+the nature and activities of the mechanism, and learn something thereby;
+but also you must work--work hard, work intelligently. As you cannot
+acquire health by watching a gymnast take exercise or a doctor swallow
+medicine or a dietician select food, so you cannot become an overlord of
+words without first fighting battles to subjugate them. Hence this volume
+is for you less a labor-saving machine than a collection and arrangement
+of materials which you must put together by hand. It assembles everything
+you need. It tags everything plainly. It tells you just what you must do.
+In these ways it makes your task far easier. _But the task is yours_.
+Industry, persistence, a fair amount of common sense--these three you must
+have. Without them you will accomplish nothing.
+
+Even with them--let the forewarning be candid--you will not accomplish
+everything. You cannot learn all there is to be learned about words, any
+more than about human nature. And what you do achieve will be, not a
+sudden attainment, but a growth. This is not the dark side of the picture.
+It is an honest avowal that the picture is not composed altogether of
+light. But as the result of your efforts an adequate vocabulary will some
+day be yours. Nor will you have to wait long for an earnest of ultimate
+success. Just as system will speedily transform a haphazard business into
+one which seizes opportunities and stops the leakage of profits, so will
+sincere and well-directed effort bring you promptly and surely into an
+ever-growing mastery of words.
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTERS
+
+I. REASONS FOR INCREASING YOUR VOCABULARY.
+
+
+II. WORDS IN COMBINATION: SOME PITFALLS.
+Tameness
+Exercise
+Sovenliness
+Exercises
+Wordiness
+Exercises
+Verbal Discords
+Exercise
+ 1. Abstract vs. Concrete Terms; General vs. Specific Terms
+ Exercise
+ 2. Literal vs. Figurative Terms
+ Exercise
+ 3. Connotation
+ Exercise
+
+
+III. WORDS IN COMBINATION: HOW MASTERED
+Preliminaries: General Purposes and Methods
+1. A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?
+2. A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?
+The Mastery of Words in Combination
+ 1. Mastery through Translation
+ Exercise
+ 2. Mastery through Paraphrasing
+ Exercise
+ 3. Mastery through Discourse at First Hand
+ Exercise
+ 4. Mastery through Adapting Discourse to Audience
+ Exercise
+
+
+IV. INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS VERBAL CELIBATES
+What Words to Learn First
+The Analysis of Your Own Vocabulary
+Exercise
+The Definition of Words
+Exercise
+How to Look up a Word in the Dictionary
+Exercise
+Prying into a Word's Past
+Exercise
+
+
+V. INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS MEMBERS OF VERBAL FAMILIES
+Words Related in Blood
+Exercise
+Words Related by Marriage
+Exercise
+Prying into a Word's Relationships
+Exercise
+Two Admonitions
+General Exercise for the Chapter (with Lists of
+Words Containing the Same Key-Syllables)
+Second General Exercise (with Additional Lists)
+Third General Exercise
+Fourth General Exercise
+Latin Ancestors of English Words
+Latin Prefixes
+Greek Ancestors of English Words
+Greek Prefixes
+
+
+VI. WORDS IN PAIRS.
+Opposites
+Exercise
+Words Often Confused
+Exercise
+Parallels (with Lists)
+Exercise
+
+
+VII. SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (1)
+How to Acquire Synonyms
+Exercise (with Lists)
+
+
+VIII. SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (2)
+Exercise (with Lists)
+
+
+IX. MANY-SIDED WORDS
+Exercise
+Literal vs. Figurative Applications
+Exercise
+Imperfectly Understood Facts and Ideas
+Exercise
+
+
+X. SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF WORDS
+Exercise
+
+
+XI. RETROSPECT
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+1. The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward (an Editorial)
+2. Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty (by Edmund Burke)
+3. Parable of the Sower (Gospel of St. Matthew)
+4. The Seven Ages of Man (by William Shakespeare)
+5. The Castaway (by Daniel Defoe)
+6. Reading Lists
+
+INDEX
+
+
+
+
+CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER
+
+
+I
+
+ REASONS FOR INCREASING YOUR VOCABULARY
+
+
+Sometimes a dexterous use of words appears to us to be only a kind of
+parlor trick. And sometimes it _is_ just that. The command of a wide
+vocabulary is in truth an accomplishment, and like any other
+accomplishment it may be used for show. But not necessarily. Just as a man
+may have money without "flashing" it, or an extensive wardrobe without
+sporting gaudy neckties or wearing a dress suit in the morning, so may he
+possess linguistic resources without making a caddish exhibition of them.
+Indeed the more distant he stands from verbal bankruptcy, the less likely
+he is to indulge in needless display.
+
+Again, glibness of speech sometimes awakens our distrust. We like actions
+rather than words; we prefer that character, personality, and kindly
+feelings should be their own mouthpiece. So be it. But there are thoughts
+and emotions properly to be shared with other people, yet incapable of
+being revealed except through language. It is only when language is
+insincere--when it expresses lofty sentiments or generous sympathies, yet
+springs from designing selfishness--that it justly arouses misgivings.
+Power over words, like power of any other sort, is for use, not abuse.
+That it sometimes is abused must not mislead us into thinking that it
+should in itself be scorned or neglected.
+
+Our contempt and distrust do not mean that our fundamental ideas about
+language are unsound. Beneath our wholesome dislike for shallow facility
+and insincerity of speech, we have a conviction that the mastery of words
+is a good thing, not a bad. We are therefore unwilling to take the vow of
+linguistic poverty. If we lack the ability to bend words to our use, it is
+from laziness, not from scruple. We desire to speak competently, but
+without affectation. We know that if our diction rises to this dual
+standard, it silently distinguishes us from the sluggard, the weakling,
+and the upstart. For such diction is not to be had on sudden notice, like
+a tailor-made suit. Nor can it, like such a suit, deceive anybody as to
+our true status. A man's utterance reveals what he is. It is the measure
+of his inward attainment. The assertion has been made that for a man to
+express himself freely and well in his native language is the surest proof
+of his culture. Meditate the saying. Can you think of a proof that is
+surer?
+
+But a man's speech does more than lend him distinction. It does more than
+reveal to others what manner of man he is. It is an instrument as well as
+an index. It is an agent--oftentimes indeed it is _the_ agent--of his
+influence upon others. How silly are those persons who oppose words to
+things, as if words were not things at all but air-born unrealities! Words
+are among the most powerful realities in the world. You vote the
+Republican ticket. Why? Because you have studied the issues of the
+campaign and reached a well-reasoned conclusion how the general interests
+may be served? Possibly. But nine times in ten it will be because of that
+_word_ Republican. You may believe that in a given instance the
+Republican cause or candidate is inferior; you may have nothing personally
+to lose through Republican defeat; yet you squirm and twist and seek
+excuses for casting a Republican ballot. Such is the power--aye, sometimes
+the tyranny--of a word. The word _Republican_ has not been selected
+invidiously. _Democrat_ would have served as well. Or take religious
+words--_Catholic, Methodist, Presbyterian, Episcopalian, Baptist,
+Lutheran,_ or what not. A man who belongs, in person or by proxy, to
+one of the sects designated may be more indifferent to the institution
+itself than to the word that represents it. Thus you may attack in his
+presence the tenets of Presbyterianism, for example, but you must be wary
+about calling the Presbyterian name. _Mother, the flag_--what sooner
+than an insult coupled with these terms will rouse a man to fight? But
+does that man kiss his mother, or salute the flag, or pay much heed to
+either? Probably not. Words not realities? With what realities must we
+more carefully reckon? Words are as dangerous as dynamite, as beneficent
+as brotherhood. An unfortunate word may mean a plea rejected, an
+enterprise baffled, half the world plunged into war. A fortunate word may
+open a triple-barred door, avert a disaster, bring thousands of people
+from jealousy and hatred into coöperation and goodwill.
+
+Nor is it solely on their emotional side that men may be affected by
+words. Their thinking and their esthetic nature also--their hard sense and
+their personal likes and dislikes--are subject to the same influence. You
+interview a potential investor; does he accept your proposition or not? A
+prospective customer walks into your store; does he buy the goods you show
+him? You enter the drawing room of one of the elite; are you invited again
+and again? Your words will largely decide--your words, or your verbal
+abstinence. For be it remembered that words no more than dollars are to be
+scattered broadcast for the sole reason that you have them. The right word
+should be used at the right time--and at that time only. Silence is
+oftentimes golden. Nevertheless there are occasions for us to speak.
+Frequent occasions. To be inarticulate _then_ may mean only
+embarrassment. It may--some day it will--mean suffering and failure. That
+we may make the most of the important occasions sure to come, we must have
+our instruments ready. Those instruments are words. He who commands words
+commands events--commands men.
+
+
+
+II
+
+ WORDS IN COMBINATION: SOME PITFALLS
+
+
+You wish, then, to increase your vocabulary. Of course you must become
+observant of words and inquisitive about them. For words are like people:
+they have their own particular characteristics, they do their work well or
+ill, they are in good odor or bad, and they yield best service to him who
+loves them and tries to understand them. Your curiosity about them must be
+burning and insatiable. You must study them when they have withdrawn from
+the throng of their fellows into the quiescence of their natural selves.
+You must also see them and study them in action, not only as they are
+employed in good books and by careful speakers, but likewise as they fall
+from the lips of unconventional speakers who through them secure vivid and
+telling effects. In brief, you must learn word nature, as you learn human
+nature, from a variety of sources.
+
+Now in ordinary speech most of us use words, not as individual things, but
+as parts of a whole--as cogs in the machine of utterance by which we
+convey our thoughts and feelings. We do not think of them separately at
+all. And this instinct is sound. In our expression we are like large-scale
+manufacturing plants rather than one-man establishments. We have at our
+disposal, not one worker, but a multitude. Hence we are concerned with our
+employees collectively and with the total production of which they are
+capable. To be sure, our understanding of them as individuals will
+increase the worth and magnitude of our output. But clearly we must have
+large dealings with them in the aggregate.
+
+This chapter and the following, therefore, are given over to the study of
+words in combination. As in all matters, there is a negative as well as a
+positive side to be reckoned with. Let us consider the negative side
+first.
+
+
+<Tameness>
+
+Correct diction is too often insipid. There is nothing wrong with it, but
+it does not interest us--it lacks character, lacks color, lacks power. It
+too closely resembles what we conceive of the angels as having--
+impeccability without the warmth of camaraderie. Speech, like a man,
+should be alive. It need not, of course, be boisterous. It may be intense
+in a quiet, modest way. But if it too sedulously observes all the _Thou
+shalt not's_ of the rhetoricians, it will refine the vitality out of
+itself and leave its hearers unmoved.
+
+That is why you should become a disciple of the pithy, everyday
+conversationalist and of the rough-and-ready master of harangue as well as
+of the practitioner of precise and scrupulous discourse. Many a speaker or
+writer has thwarted himself by trying to be "literary." Even Burns when he
+wrote classic English was somewhat conscious of himself and made, in most
+instances, no extraordinary impression. But the pieces he impetuously
+dashed off in his native Scotch dialect can never be forgotten. The man
+who begins by writing naturally, but as his importance in the publishing
+world grows, pays more and more attention to felicities--to "style"--and
+so spoils himself, is known to the editor of every magazine. Any editorial
+office force can insert missing commas and semicolons, and iron out
+blunders in the English; but it has not the time, if indeed the ability,
+to instil life into a lifeless manuscript. A living style is rarer than an
+inoffensive one, and the road of literary ambition is strewn with failures
+due to "correctness."
+
+Cultivate readiness, even daring, of utterance. A single turn of
+expression may be so audacious that it plucks an idea from its shroud or
+places within us an emotion still quivering and warm. Sustained discourse
+may unflaggingly clarify or animate. But such triumphs are beyond the
+reach of those, whether speakers or writers, who are constantly pausing to
+grope for words. This does not mean that scrutiny of individual words is
+wasted effort. Such scrutiny becomes the basis indeed of the more
+venturesome and inspired achievement. We must serve our apprenticeship to
+language. We must know words as a general knows the men under him--all
+their ranks, their capabilities, their shortcomings, the details and
+routine of their daily existence. But the end for which we gain our
+understanding must be to hurl these words upon the enemy, not as
+disconnected units, but as battalions, as brigades, as corps, as armies.
+Dr. Johnson, one of the most effective talkers in all history, resolved
+early in life that, always, and whatever topic might be broached, he
+would on the moment express his thoughts and feelings with as much vigor
+and felicity as if he had unlimited leisure to draw on. And Patrick Henry,
+one of the few really irresistible orators, was wont to plunge headlong
+into a sentence and trust to God Almighty to get him out.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Tameness
+
+1. Study Appendix I (The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward).
+Do you regard it as written simply, with force and natural feeling? Or
+does it show lack of spontaneity?--suffer from an unnatural and self-
+conscious manner of writing? Is the style one you would like to cultivate
+for your own use?
+
+2. Express, if you can, in more vigorous language of your own, the thought
+of the editorial.
+
+3. Think of some one you have known who has the gift of racy colloquial
+utterance. Make a list of offhand, homely, or picturesque expressions you
+have heard him employ, and ask yourself what it is in these expressions
+that has made them linger in your memory. With them in mind, and with your
+knowledge of the man's methods of imparting his ideas vividly, try to make
+your version of the editorial more forceful still.
+
+4. Study Appendix 2 (Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty) as an
+example of stately and elaborate, yet energetic, discourse. The speech
+from which this extract is taken was delivered in Parliament in a vain
+effort to stay England from driving her colonies to revolt. Some of
+Burke's turns of phrase are extremely bold and original, as "The religion
+most prevalent in our northern colonies is a refinement on the principle
+of resistance; it is the dissidence of dissent and the Protestantism of
+the Protestant religion." Moreover, with all his fulness of diction, Burke
+could cleave to the heart of an idea in a few words, as "Freedom is to
+them [the southern slave-holders] not only an enjoyment, but a kind of
+rank and privilege." Find other examples of bold or concise and
+illuminating utterance.
+
+5. Read Appendix 3 (Parable of the Sower). It has no special audacities of
+phrase, but escapes tameness in various ways--largely through its simple
+earnestness.
+
+6. Make a list of the descriptive phrases in Appendix 4 (The Seven Ages of
+Man) through which Shakespeare gives life and distinctness to his
+pictures.
+
+7. Study Appendix 5 (The Castaway) as a piece of homely, effective
+narrative. (Defoe wrote for the man in the street. He was a literary
+jack-of-all-trades whom dignified authors of his day would not
+countenance, but who possessed genius.) It relies upon directness and
+plausibility of substance and style rather than temerity of phrase. Yet it
+never sags into tameness. Notice how everyday expressions ("My business
+was to hold my breath," "I took to my heels") add subtly to our belief
+that what Defoe is telling us is true. Notice also that such expressions
+("the least capful of wind," "half dead with the water I took in," "ready
+to burst with holding my breath") without being pretentious may yet be
+forceful. Notice finally the naturalness and lift of the sinewy idioms ("I
+fetched another run," "I had no clothes to shift me," "I had like to have
+suffered a second shipwreck," "It wanted but a little that all my cargo
+had slipped off").
+
+8. Once or twice at least, make a mental note of halting or listless
+expressions in a sermon, a public address, or a conversation. Find more
+emphatic wording for the ideas thus marred.
+
+9. To train yourself in readiness and daring of utterance, practice
+impromptu discussion of any of the topics in Activity 1 for EXERCISE -
+Discourse.
+
+
+<Slovenliness>
+
+Though we are to recognize the advantage of working in the undress of
+speech rather than in stiffly-laundered literary linens, though we are not
+to despise the accessions of strength and of charm which we may obtain
+from the homely and familiar, we must never be careless. The man whose
+speech is slovenly is like the man who chews gum--unblushingly
+commonplace.
+
+We must struggle to maintain our individuality. We must not be a mere copy
+of everybody else. We must put into our words the cordiality we put into
+our daily demeanor. If we greeted friend or stranger carelessly,
+conventionally, we should soon be regarded as persons of no force or
+distinction. So of our speech and our writing. Nothing, to be sure, is
+more difficult than to give them freshness without robbing them of
+naturalness and ease. Yet that is what we must learn to do. We shall not
+acquire the power in a day. We shall acquire it as a chess or a baseball
+player acquires his skill--by long effort, hard practice.
+
+One thing to avoid is the use of words in loose, or fast-and-loose,
+senses. Do not say that owning a watch is a fine proposition if you mean
+that it is advantageous. Do not say that you trembled on the brink of
+disaster if you were threatened with no more than inconvenience or
+comparatively slight injury. Do not say you were literally scared to death
+if you are yet alive to tell the story.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness I
+
+Give moderate or accurate utterance to the following ideas:
+
+The burning of the hen-coop was a mighty conflagration.
+The fact that the point of the pencil was broken profoundly surprised me.
+We had a perfectly gorgeous time.
+It's a beastly shame that I missed my car.
+It is awfully funny that he should die.
+The saleslady pulled the washlady's hair.
+A cold bath is pretty nice of mornings.
+To go a little late is just the article.
+
+Another thing to avoid is the use of words in the wrong parts of speech,
+as a noun for a verb, or an adjective for an adverb. Sometimes newspapers
+are guilty of such faults; for journalistic English, though pithy, shows
+here and there traces of its rapid composition. You must look to more
+leisurely authorities. The speakers and writers on whom you may rely will
+not say "to burglarize," "to suspicion," "to enthuse," "plenty rich,"
+"real tired," "considerable discouraged," "a combine," or "humans." An
+exhaustive list of such errors cannot be inserted here. If you feel
+yourself uncertain in these details of usage, you should have access to
+such a volume as _The Century Desk Book of Good English_.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness II
+
+1. For each quoted expression in the preceding paragraph compose a
+sentence which shall contain the correct form, or the grammatical
+equivalent, of the expression.
+
+2. Correct the following sentences:
+
+The tramp suicided.
+She was real excited.
+He gestured angry.
+He was some anxious to get to the eats.
+All of us had an invite.
+Them boys have sure been teasing the canine.
+
+Another thing to avoid is triteness. The English language teems with
+phrases once strikingly original but now smooth-worn and vulgarized by
+incessant repetition. It can scarcely be said that you are to shun these
+altogether. Now and then you will find one of them coming happily as well
+as handily into your speech. But you must not use them too often. Above
+all, you must rid yourself of any dependence upon them. The scope of this
+book permits only a few illustrations of the kinds of words and phrases
+meant. But the person who speaks of "lurid flames," or "untiring efforts,"
+or "specimens of humanity"--who "views with alarm," or has a "native
+heath," or is "to the manner born"--does more than advertise the
+scantness of his verbal resources. He brands himself mentally indolent; he
+deprives his thought itself of all sharpness, exactness, and power.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness III
+
+Replace with more original expressions the trite phrases (italicized)
+in the following sentences:
+
+_Last but not least_, we have _in our midst_ one who began life
+_poor but honest_.
+
+After we had _done justice to a dinner_ and gathered in the drawing
+room, we listened _with bated breath_ while she _favored us with a
+selection_.
+
+_A goodly number_ of _the fair sex_, perceiving that _the
+psychological moment_ had come, _applauded him to the echo_.
+
+We were _doomed to disappointment; the grim reaper_ had already
+gathered unto himself _all that was mortal_ of our comrade.
+
+_No sooner said than done_. I soon found myself _the proud
+possessor_ of that for which I had acknowledged _a long-felt
+want_.
+
+After _the last sad rites_ were over and her body was _consigned to
+earth_, we began talking _along these lines_.
+
+With _a few well-chosen words_ he _brought order out of chaos_.
+
+The way my efforts were _nipped in the bud_ simply _beggars
+description_. I am somewhat _the worse for wear. Hoping you are the
+same_, I remain Yours sincerely, Ned Burke.
+
+Finally, to the extent that you use slang at all, be its master instead of
+its slave. You have many times been told that the overuse of slang
+disfigures one's speech and hampers his standing with cultivated people.
+You have also been told that slang constantly changes, so that one's
+accumulations of it today will be a profitless clutter tomorrow. These
+things are true, but an even more cogent objection remains. Slang is
+detrimental to the formation of good intellectual habits. From its very
+nature it cannot be precise, cannot discriminate closely. It is a vehicle
+for loose-thinking people, it is fraught with unconsidered general
+meanings, it moves in a region of mental mists. It could not flourish as
+it does were fewer of us content to express vague thoughts and feelings
+instead of those which are sharply and specifically ours. Unless,
+therefore, you wish your intellectual processes to be as hazy and
+haphazard as those of mental shirkers and loafers, you must eschew, not
+necessarily all slang, but all heedless, all habitual use of it. Now and
+then a touch of slang, judiciously chosen, is effective; now and then it
+fulfils a legitimate purpose of language. But normally you should express
+yourself as befits one who has at his disposal the rich treasuries of the
+dictionary instead of a mere stock of greasy counterfeit phrases.
+
+EXERCISE - Slovenliness IV
+
+Replace the following slang with acceptable English:
+
+We pulled a new wrinkle.
+He's an easy mark.
+Oh, you're nutty.
+Beat it.
+I have all the inside dope.
+You can't bamboozle me.
+What a phiz the bloke has!
+You're talking through your hat.
+We had a long confab with the gink.
+He's loony over that chicken.
+The prof. told us to vamoose.
+Take a squint at the girl with the specs.
+Ain't it fierce the way they swipe umbrellas?
+Goodnight, how she claws the ivory!
+Nix on the rough stuff.
+And there I got pinched by a cop for parking my Tin Lizzie.
+
+
+<Wordiness>
+
+As a precaution against tameness you should cultivate spontaneity and
+daring. As a precaution against slovenliness you should cultivate
+freshness and accuracy. But to display spontaneity, daring, freshness,
+accuracy you must have or acquire a large stock, a wide range, of words.
+Now this possession, like any other, brings with it temptation. If we have
+words, we like to use them. Nor do we wait for an indulgence in this
+luxury until we have consciously set to work to amass a vocabulary.
+
+Verbosity is, in truth, the besetting linguistic sin. Most people are
+lavish with words, as most people are lavish with money. This is not to
+say that in the currency of language they are rich. But even if they lack
+the means--and the desire--to be extravagant, they yet make their
+purchases heedlessly or fail to count their linguistic change. The degree
+of our thrift, not the amount of our income or resources, is what marks us
+as being or not being verbal spendthrifts. The frugal manager buys his
+ideas at exactly the purchase price. He does not expend a twenty-dollar
+bill for a box of matches.
+
+Have words by all means, the more of them the better, but use them
+temperately, sparingly. Do not think that a passage to be admirable must
+be studded with ostentatious terms. Consider the Gettysburg Address or the
+Parable of the Prodigal Son. These convey their thought and feeling
+perfectly, yet both are simple--exquisitely simple. They strike us indeed
+as being inevitable--as if their phrasing could not have been other than
+it is. They have, they are, finality. What could glittering phraseology
+add to them? Nothing; it could only mar them. Yet Lincoln and the
+Scriptural writers were not afraid to use big words when occasion
+required. What they sought was to make their speech adequate without
+carrying a superfluous syllable.
+
+"The sun set" is more natural and effective than "The celestial orb that
+blesses our terrestrial globe with its warm and luminous rays sank to its
+nocturnal repose behind the western horizon." Great writers--the true
+masters--have often held "fine writing" and pretentious speaking up to
+ridicule. Thus Shakespeare has Kent, who has been rebuked for his
+bluntness, indulge in a grandiloquent outburst:
+
+ "Sir, in good sooth, in sincere verity,
+ Under the allowance of your grand aspect,
+ Whose influence, like the wreath of radiant fire
+ On flickering Phoebus' front,--"
+
+No wonder Kent is interrupted with a "What meanest by this?" Sometimes
+great writers use ornate utterance for humorous effects. Thus Dickens
+again and again has Mr. Micawber express a commonplace idea in sounding
+terms which at length fail him, so that he must interject an "in short"
+and summarize his meaning in a phrase amusing through its homely contrast.
+But humor based on ponderous diction is too often wearisome. Better say
+simply "He died," or colloquially "He kicked the bucket," than "He
+propelled his pedal extremities with violence against the wooden pail
+which is customarily employed in the transportation of the aquatic fluid."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness I
+
+Express these ideas in simpler language:
+
+The temperature was excessive.
+The most youthful of his offspring was not remarkable for personal
+pulchritude.
+Henry Clay expressed a preference for being on the right side of public
+questions to occupying the position of President of the United States of
+America.
+He who passes at an accelerated pace may nevertheless be capable of
+perusing.
+A masculine member of the human race was mounted on an equine quadruped.
+
+But the number of the terms we employ, as well as their ostentatiousness,
+must be considered. Most of us blunder around in the neighborhood of our
+meaning instead of expressing it briefly and clearly. We throw a handful
+of words at an idea when one word would suffice; we try to bring the idea
+down with a shotgun instead of a rifle. Of course one means of correction
+is that we should acquire accuracy, a quality already discussed. Another
+is that we should practice condensation.
+
+First, let us learn to omit the words which add nothing to the meaning.
+Thus in the sentence "An important essential in cashing a check is that
+you should indorse it on the back," several words or groups of words
+needlessly repeat ideas which are expressed elsewhere. The sentence is as
+complete in substance, and far terser in form, when it reads "An essential
+in cashing a check is that you should indorse it."
+
+Next, let us, when we may, reduce phrases and even clauses to a word. Thus
+the clause at the beginning and the phrase at the close of the following
+sentence constitute sheer verbiage: "Men who have let their temper get the
+better of them are often in a mood to do harm to somebody." The sentence
+tells us nothing that may not be told in five words: "Angry men are often
+dangerous."
+
+Finally, let us substitute phrases or clauses for unnecessary sentences.
+The following series of independent assertions contains avoidable
+repetitions: "One morning I was riding on the subway to my work. It was
+always my custom to ride to my work on the subway. This morning I met
+Harry Blake." The full thought may better be embodied in a single
+sentence: "One morning, while I was, as usual, riding on the subway to my
+work, I met Harry Blake."
+
+By applying these instructions to any page at hand--one from your own
+writing, one from a letter some friend has sent you, one from a book or
+magazine--you will often be able to strike out many of the words without
+at all impairing the meaning. Another means of acquiring succinct
+expression is to practice the composition of telegrams and cable messages.
+You will of course lessen the cost by eliminating every word that can
+possibly be spared. On the other hand, you must bear it in mind that your
+punctuation will not be transmitted, and that the recipient must be
+absolutely safeguarded against reading together words meant to be
+separated or separating words meant to be read together. That is, your
+message must be both concise and unmistakably clear.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness II
+
+1. Condense the editorial (Appendix 1) by eliminating unnecessary words
+and finding briefer equivalents for roundabout expressions.
+
+2. Try to condense similarly the Parable of the Sower (Appendix 3) and the
+Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). (The task will largely or altogether
+baffle you, but will involve minute study of tersely written passages.)
+
+3. Condense the following:
+
+A man whose success in life was due solely to his own efforts rose in his
+place and addressed the man who presided over the meeting.
+
+A girl who sat in the seat behind me giggled in an irritating manner.
+
+We heard the wild shriek of the locomotive. Any sound in that savage
+region seemed more terrible than it would in civilized surroundings. So as
+we listened to the shriek of the locomotive, it sounded terrible too.
+
+I heard what kind of chauffeur he was. A former employer of his told me.
+He was a chauffeur who speeded in reckless fashion because he was fond of
+having all the excitement possible.
+
+4. Condense the following into telegrams of ten words or less:
+
+Arrived here in Toledo yesterday morning talked with the directors found
+them not hostile to us but friendly.
+
+Detectives report they think evidence now points to innocence of man
+arrested and to former employee as the burglar.
+
+5. The following telegrams are ambiguous. Clarify them.
+
+Jane escaped illness I feared Charley better.
+
+Buy oil if market falls sell cotton.
+
+6. Base a telegraphic night letter of not more than fifty words
+upon these circumstances:
+
+(a) You have been sent to buy, if possible and as cheaply as possible, a
+majority of the stock in a given company. You find that many of the
+stockholders distrust or dislike the president and are willing to sell.
+Some of these ask only $50 a share for their holdings; the owners of 100
+shares want as much as $92; the average price asked is $76. By buying out
+all the president's enemies, which you can now do beyond question, you
+would secure a bare majority of the stock. But $92 a share seems to you
+excessive; that is, you think that by working quietly among the
+president's friends you can get 100 shares at $77 or thereabouts and thus
+save approximately $1500. On the other hand, should your dealings with the
+friends of the president give him premature warning, he might stop the
+sales by these friends and himself begin buying from his enemies, and thus
+make your purchase of a majority of the stock impossible. Is the $1500 you
+would save worth the risk you would be obliged to take? You call for
+instructions.
+
+(b) You are telegraphing a metropolitan paper the results of a
+Congressional election. Philput, the Republican candidate, leads in the
+cities, from which returns are now complete. Wilkins, the Democratic
+candidate, leads in the country, from only certain districts of which--
+those nearest the cities--returns have been heard. If the present
+proportionate division of the rural vote is maintained for the total,
+Philput will be elected by a plurality of three hundred votes. Philput
+asserts that the proportions will hold. Wilkins points out, however, that
+he is relatively stronger in the more remote districts and predicts that
+he will have a plurality of seven hundred votes. Smallbridge, an
+independent candidate, is apparently making a better race in the country
+than in the city, but he is so weak in both places that the ballots cast
+for him can scarcely affect the outcome unless the margin of victory is
+infinitesimal.
+
+7. Compress 6a and 6b each into a telegram of not more than ten words.
+
+8. (Do not read this assignment until you have composed the night letters
+and telegrams called for in 6 and 7.) Compare your first night letter in 6
+and your first telegram in 7 with the versions given below. Decide where
+you have surpassed these versions, where you have fallen short of them.
+
+_Night letter_: Two factions in company I can buy from enemies
+president bare majority stock at average seventy-six but hundred of these
+shares held at ninety-two I could probably get hundred quietly from
+friends president about seventy-seven but president might detect move and
+buy majority stock himself wire instructions. (Fifty words.)
+
+_Telegram_: Wire whether buy safe or risk control saving fifteen
+hundred. (Ten words.)
+
+A final device for escaping wordiness you will have discovered for
+yourself while composing telegrams and telegraphic night letters. It is to
+pass over details not vital to your purpose. Of course you must have due
+regard for circumstances; details needed for one purpose may be
+superfluous for another. But all of us are familiar with the person who
+loses her ideas in a rigmarole of prosaic and irrelevant facts. Such a
+person is Shakespeare's scatter-brained Dame Quickly. On one occasion this
+voluble woman is shrilly reproaching Sir John Falstaff for his
+indebtedness to her. "What is the gross sum that I owe thee?" he inquires.
+She might answer simply: "If thou wert an honest man, thyself and the
+money too. Thou didst promise to marry me. Deny it if thou canst."
+Instead, she plunges into a prolix recital of the circumstances of the
+engagement, so that the all-important fact that the engagement exists has
+no special emphasis in her welter of words. "If thou wert an honest man,"
+she cries, "thyself and the money too. Thou didst swear to me upon a
+parcel-gilt goblet, sitting in my Dolphin-chamber, at the round table, by
+a sea-coal fire, upon Wednesday in Wheeson week, when the prince broke thy
+head for liking his father to a singing-man of Windsor, thou didst swear
+to me then, as I was washing thy wound, to marry me and make me my lady
+thy wife. Canst thou deny it? Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher's wife,
+come in then and call me gossip Quickly? coming in to borrow a mess of
+vinegar; telling us she had a good dish of prawns; whereby thou didst
+desire to eat some, whereby I told thee they were ill for a green wound?
+And didst thou not, when she was gone down stairs, desire me to be no more
+so familiarity with such poor people; saying that ere long they should
+call me madam? And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty
+shillings? I put thee now to thy book-oath; deny it if thou canst."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Wordiness III
+
+1. Study the following paragraph, decide which ideas are important,
+and strike out the details that merely clog the thought:
+
+As I stepped into the room, I heard the clock ticking and that caused me
+to look at it. It sits on the mantelpiece with some layers of paper under
+one corner where the mantel is warped. When the papers slip out or we move
+the clock a little as we're dusting, the ticking stops right away. Of
+course the clock's not a new one at all, but it's an old one. It has been
+in the family for many a long year, yes, from even before my father's
+time. Let me see, it was bought by my grandfather. No, it couldn't have
+been grandfather that bought it; it was his brother. Oh, yes, I remember
+now; my mother told me all about it, and I'd forgotten what she said till
+this minute. But really my grandfather's brother didn't exactly buy it. He
+just traded for it. He gave two pigs and a saddle, that's what my mother
+said. You see, he was afraid his hogs might take cholera and so he wanted
+to get rid of them; and as for the saddle, he had sold his riding-horse
+and he didn't have any more use for that. Well, it isn't a valuable clock,
+like a grandfather clock or anything of that sort, though it is antique.
+As I was saying, when I glanced at it, it read seven minutes to six. I
+remember the time very well, for just then the factory whistle blew and I
+remember saying to myself: "It's seven minutes slow today." You see, it's
+old and we don't keep it oiled, and so it's always losing time. Hardly a
+day passes but I set it up--sometimes twice a day, as for the matter of
+that--and I usually go by the factory whistle too, though now and then I
+go by Dwight's gold watch. Well, anyhow, that tells me what time it was.
+I'm certain I can't be wrong.
+
+2. Study, on the other hand, The Castaway (Appendix 5) for its judicious
+use of details. Defoe in his stories is a supreme master of verisimilitude
+(likeness to truth). As we read him, we cannot help believing that these
+things actually happened. More than in anything else the secret of his
+lifelikeness lies in his constant faithfulness to reality. He puts in the
+little mishaps that would have befallen a man so situated, the things he
+would have done, the difficulties he might have avoided had he exercised
+forethought. Though Defoe had little insight into the complexities of
+man's inner life, he has not been surpassed in his accumulations of
+naturalistic outer details. These do not cumber his narrative; they
+contribute to its purpose and add to its effectiveness. In this selection
+(Appendix 5) observe how plausible are such homely details as Crusoe's
+seeing no sign of his comrades "except three of their hats, one cap, and
+two shoes that were not fellows"; as his difficulty in getting aboard the
+ship again; and as his having his clothes washed away by the rising of the
+tide. Find half a dozen other such incidents that You consider especially
+effective.
+
+
+<Verbal Discords>
+
+We may pitch our talk or our writing in almost any key we choose. Our
+mood may be dreamy or eager or hilarious or grim or blustering or somber
+or bantering or scornful or satirical or whatever we will. But once we
+have established the tone, we should not--except sometimes for broadly
+humorous effects--change it needlessly or without clear forewarning. If we
+do, we create one or the other of two obstacles, or both of them, for
+whoever is trying to follow what we say. In the first place, we obscure
+our meaning. For example, we have been speaking ironically and suddenly
+swerve into serious utterance; or we have been speaking seriously and then
+incongruously adopt an ironic tone. How are our listeners, our readers to
+take us? They are puzzled; they do not know. In the second place, we
+offend--perhaps in insidious, indefinable fashion--the esthetic
+proprieties; we violate the natural fitness of things. For example, we
+have been speaking with colloquial freedom, sprinkling our discourse with
+_shouldn't_ and _won't;_ suddenly we become formal and say
+_should not_ and _will not_. Our meaning is as obvious as
+before, but the verbal harmony has been interrupted; our hearers or
+readers are uneasily aware of a break in the unity of tone.
+
+A speaker or writer is a host to verbal guests. When he invites them to
+his assembly, he gives each the tacit assurance that it will not be
+brought into fellowship with those which in one or another of a dozen
+subtle ways will be uncongenial company for it. He must never be forgetful
+of this unspoken promise. If he is to avoid a linguistic breach, he must
+constantly have his wits about him; must study out his combinations
+carefully, and use all his knowledge, all his tact. He will make due use
+of spontaneous impulse; but that this may be wise and disciplined, he will
+form the habit of curiosity about words, their stations, their savor,
+their aptitudes, their limitations, their outspokenness, their reticences,
+their affinities and antipathies. Thus when he has need of a phrase to
+fill out a verbal dinner party, he will know which one to select.
+
+Certain broad classifications of words are manifest even to the most
+obtuse user of English. _Shady_, _behead_, and _lying_ are
+"popular" words, while their synonyms _umbrageous,_ decapitate,_
+and _mendacious_ are "learned" words. _Flabbergasted_ and
+_higgledy-piggledy_ are "colloquial," while _roseate_ and
+_whilom_ are "literary." _Affidavit_, _allegro_, _lee shore_,
+and _pinch hit_ are "technical," while _vamp_, _savvy_, _bum
+hunch_, and _skiddoo_ are "slang." It would be disenchanting
+indeed were extremes of this sort brought together. But offenses of a less
+glaring kind are as hard to shut out as February cold from a heated house.
+Unusual are the speeches or compositions, even the short ones, in which
+every word is in keeping, is in perfect tune with the rest.
+
+For the attainment of this ultimate verbal decorum we should have to
+possess knowledge almost unbounded, together with unerring artistic
+instinct. But diction of a kind only measurably inferior to this is
+possible to us if we are in earnest. To attain it we must study the
+difference between abstract and concrete terms, and let neither intrude
+unadvisedly upon the presence or functions of the other; do the same by
+literal and figurative terms and instruct ourselves in the nature and
+significance of connotation.
+
+Before considering these more detailed matters, however, we may pause for
+a general exercise on verbal harmony.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Discords
+
+1. Study the editorial in Appendix 1 for unforewarned changes in mood and
+assemblages of mutually uncongenial words. Rewrite the worst two
+paragraphs to remove all blemishes of these kinds.
+
+2. Compare Burke's speech (Appendix 2) with Defoe's narrative (Appendix 5)
+for the difference in tone between them. Does each keep the tone it adopts
+(that is, except for desirable changes)?
+
+3. Note the changes in tone in the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). Do the
+changes in substance make these changes in tone desirable?
+
+4. In the following passages, make such changes and omissions as are
+necessary to unify the tone:
+
+How I loved to stroll, on those long Indian summer afternoons, into the
+quiet meadows where the mild-breathed kine were grazing! An old cow that
+switches her tail at flies and puts her foot in the bucket when you milk
+her, I absolutely loathe. How I loved to hear the birds sing, to listen to
+the fall of ripe autumnal apples!
+
+It wasn't the girl yclept Sally. This girl was not so vivacious as Sally,
+but she had a mug on her that was a lot less ugly to look at. Gee, when
+she stood there in front of me with those mute, ineffable, sympathetic
+eyes of hers, I was ready to throw a duck-fit.
+
+ Old Grimes is dead, that dear old soul;
+ We'll never see him more;
+ He wore a great long overcoat,
+ All buttoned down before.
+
+
+<I. Abstract vs. Concrete Terms; General vs. Specific Terms>
+
+Abstract terms convey ideas; concrete terms call up pictures. If we say
+"Honesty is the best policy," we speak abstractly. Nobody can see or hear
+or touch the thing _honesty_ or the thing _policy_; the
+apprehension of them must be purely intellectual. But if we say "The
+rat began to gnaw the rope," we speak concretely. _Rat_, _gnaw_,
+and _rope_ are tangible, perceptible things; the words bring to us
+visions of particular objects and actions.
+
+Now when we engage in explanations and discussions of principles,
+theories, broad social topics, and the like--when we expound, moralize, or
+philosophize,--our subject matter is general. We approach our readers or
+hearers on the thinking, the rational side of their natures. Our
+phraseology is therefore normally abstract. But when, on the other hand,
+we narrate an event or depict an appearance, our subject matter is
+specific. We approach our readers or hearers on the sensory or emotional
+side of their natures. Our phraseology is therefore normally concrete.
+
+You should be able to express yourself according to either method. You
+should be able to choose the words best suited to make people understand;
+also to choose the words best suited to make people realize vividly and
+feel. Now to some extent you will adopt the right method by intuition. But
+if you do not reinforce your intuition with a careful study of words, you
+will vacillate from one method to the other and strike crude discords of
+phrasing. Of course if you switch methods intelligently and of purpose,
+that is quite another matter. An abstract discussion may be enlivened by a
+concrete illustration. A concrete narrative or portrayal may be given
+weight and rationalized by generalization. Moreover many things lie on the
+borderland between the two domains and may properly be attached to either.
+Thus the abstraction is legitimate when you say or write: "A man wishes to
+acquire the comforts and luxuries, as well as the necessaries, of life."
+The concreteness is likewise legitimate when you say or write: "John Smith
+wishes to earn cake as well as bread and butter."
+
+In most instances general terms are the same as abstract, and specific the
+same as concrete. Some subtle discriminations may, however, be made. Of
+these the only one that need concern us here is that the wording of a
+passage may not be abstract and yet be general. Suppose, for example, you
+were telling the story of the prodigal son and should say: "He was very
+hungry, and could not obtain food anywhere. When he had come to his
+senses, he thought, 'I should be better off at home.'" This language is
+not abstract, but it is general rather than specific. When Jesus told the
+story, he wished to put the situation as poignantly as possible and
+therefore avoided both abstract and general terms: "And he would fain have
+filled his belly with the husks that the swine did eat: and no man gave
+unto him. And when he came to himself, he said, How many hired servants of
+my father's have bread enough and to spare, and I perish with hunger!"
+Many a person who shuns abstractions and talks altogether of the concrete
+things of life, yet traps out circumstance in general rather than specific
+terms. To do this is always to sacrifice force.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Abstract
+
+1. Discuss as abstractly as possible such topics as those listed in
+Activity 1 for EXERCISE - Discourse, or as the following:
+
+Is there any such thing as luck?
+Is the Golden Rule practicable in the modern business world?
+Is modesty rather than self-assertion regarding his own merits and
+abilities the better policy for an employee?
+Are substantial, home-keeping girls or girls rather fast and frivolous the
+more likely to obtain good husbands?
+Is it desirable for a young man to take out life insurance?
+Is self-education better than collegiate training?
+Should one always tell the truth?
+
+2. Discuss as concretely as possible the topics you have selected from 1.
+Use illustrations drawn from life.
+
+3. Restate in concrete terms such generalizations as the following:
+
+Experience is the best teacher.
+Self-preservation is the first law of nature.
+To him who in the love of nature holds
+Communion with her visible forms, she speaks
+A various language.
+Necessity is the mother of invention.
+The bravest are the tenderest.
+Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.
+Pride goeth before destruction.
+The evil that men do lives after them.
+
+4. Compare the abstract statement "Truths and high ethical principles are
+received by various men in various ways" with the concrete presentation of
+the same idea in Appendix 3. Which expression of the thought would be the
+more easily understood by the average person? Why? Which would you
+yourself remember the longer? Why?
+
+5. Compare the statement "The second period of a human being's life is
+that of his reluctant attendance at school" with Shakespeare's picture of
+the schoolboy in Appendix 4.
+
+6. Burke, near the close of his speech (Appendix 2), presents an idea,
+first in general terms, and then in specific terms, thus: "No contrivance
+can prevent the effect of...distance in weakening government. Seas roll,
+and months pass, between the order and the execution, and the want of a
+speedy explanation of a single point is enough to defeat a whole system."
+Find elsewhere in Burke's speech and in the editorial (Appendix I) general
+assertions which may be made more forceful by restatement in specific
+terms, and supply these specific restatements.
+
+7. State in your own words the general thought or teaching of the Parable
+of the Prodigal Son. (_Luke_ 15: 11-24.)
+
+8. Make the following statements more concrete:
+
+In front of our house was a tree that at a certain season of the year
+displayed highly colored foliage.
+
+A celebrated orator said: "Give me liberty, or give me death!"
+
+On the table were some viands that assailed my nostrils agreeably and
+others that put into my mouth sensations of anticipated enjoyment.
+
+From this window above the street I can hear a variety of noises by day
+and a variety of different noises by night.
+
+As he groped through the pitch-dark room he could feel many articles of
+furniture.
+
+9. State in general terms the thought of the following sentences:
+
+A burnt child dreads the fire.
+A stitch in time saves nine.
+A cat may look at a king.
+A barking dog never bites.
+If his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
+If two men ride a horse, one must ride behind.
+Stone walls do not a prison make.
+A merry heart goes all the day.
+Thrice is he armed that hath his quarrel just.
+As the twig is bent, so the tree is inclined.
+
+10. Describe a town as seen from a particular point of view, or at a
+particular time of day, or under particular atmospheric conditions. Make
+your description as concrete as possible.
+
+11. Compare your description with this from Stevenson: "The town came down
+the hill in a cascade of brown gables, bestridden by smooth white roofs,
+and spangled here and there with lighted windows." Stevenson's sentence
+contains twenty-five words. How many of them are "color" words? How many
+"motion" words? How many of the first twenty-five words in your
+description appeal to one or another of the five senses?
+
+12. Narrate as vividly as possible an experience in your own life. Compare
+what you have written with the account of Crusoe's escape to the island
+(Appendix 5). Which narrative is the more concrete? How much?
+
+
+<2. Literal vs. Figurative Terms>
+
+Phraseology is literal when it says exactly what it means; is figurative
+when it says one thing, but really means another. Thus "He fought bravely"
+is literal; "He was a lion in the fight" is figurative. Literal
+phraseology as a rule appeals to our scientific or understanding
+faculties; figurative to our emotional faculties. Here again, as with
+abstraction and concreteness, you should learn to express yourself by
+either method.
+
+Both have their advantages and their drawbacks. We all admire the man who
+has observed, and can state, accurately. It is upon this belief of ours in
+the literal that Defoe shrewdly traffics. (See Appendix 5.) He does not
+stir us as some writers do, but he gains our implicit confidence. Dame
+Quickly, on the contrary, makes egregious use of the literal. (See
+paragraph above EXERCISE - Wordiness III above.) Her facts are accurate,
+yes; but how strictly, how unsparingly accurate! And how many of them are
+beside the point! She quite convinces us that the devotee of the literal
+may be dull.
+
+An advantage of the figurative also is that it may make meanings lucid.
+Thus when Burke near the close of his discussion (Appendix 2) wishes to
+make it clear that by a law of nature the authority of extensive empires
+is slighter in its more remote territories, he has recourse to a figure of
+speech: "In large bodies, the circulation of power must be less vigorous
+at the extremities. Nature has said it." More often, however, the function
+of the figurative is to drive home a thought or a mood of which a mere
+statement would leave us unmoved--to make us _feel_ it. Thus Burke
+said of the Americans "Their love of liberty, as with you, fixed and
+attached on this specific point of taxing." He added: "Here they felt its
+pulse, and as they found that beat they thought themselves sick or sound."
+Had you been one of his Parliamentary hearers, would not that second
+sentence have made more real and more important the colonial attitude to
+taxation? The poets of course make frequent and noble use of the
+figurative. This is how Coleridge tells us that the descent of a tropical
+night is sudden:
+
+ "The sun's rim dips; the stars rush out;
+ At one stride comes the dark."
+
+The words _rush out_ and _at one stride comes_ convert the stars
+and the darkness into vast beings or at least vast personal forces; the
+comparisons are so natural as to seem inevitable; we are transported to
+the very scene and feel the overwhelming abruptness of the nightfall. But
+if a figure of speech seems artificial, if it is strained or far-fetched
+or merely decorative, it subtracts from the effectiveness of the passage.
+Thus when Tennyson says:
+
+ "When the breeze of a joyful dawn blew free
+ In the silken sail of infancy."
+
+we must stop and ponder before we perceive that what he means is "When I
+was a happy child." The figure is like an exotic plant rather than a
+natural outgrowth of the soil; it appears to us something thought up and
+stuck on; it is a parasite rather than a helper.
+
+Of course, as with abstraction and concreteness, you should develop
+facility in gliding from literalness to figurativeness and back again. But
+you are always to remember that your gymnastics are not to militate
+against verbal concord. You must never set words scowling and growling at
+each other through injudicious combinations like this: "She was five feet,
+four and three-quarter inches high, had a small, round scar between her
+nose and her left cheek-bone, and moved with the lissom and radiant grace
+of a queen."
+
+
+EXERCISE - Literal
+
+1. Give the specifications for a house you intend to build.
+
+2. Make a list of comparisons (as to a nest, a haven, a goal) to show what
+such a house might mean in the life of a man. Expand as many of these
+comparisons as you can, but do not carry the process to absurd lengths.
+(In the figure of the nest you may mention the parent birds, their
+activities, the nestlings; in the figure of the haven you may mention the
+quiet, sheltered waters in contrast to the turbulent billows outside; in
+the figure of the goal you may mention the struggle necessary to reach
+it.)
+
+3. Describe the looks of the house. Use as many figures of speech as you
+can. If you can find no appropriate figures, at least make your words
+specific.
+
+4. Give a surveyor's or a tax assessor's or a conveyancer's description of
+a piece of land. Then describe the land through figures of speech which
+will vivify its outward appearance or its emotional significance to the
+owner.
+
+5. Observe that the Parable of the Sower (Appendix 3) is an extended
+figure of speech. Is the main figure effective? Are its detailed
+applications effective?
+
+6. The Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4) is also an extended figure of
+speech. Does it, as Shakespeare intends, bring vividly to your
+consciousness the course, motives, stages, evolution of a human being's
+life? There are several subsidiary figures. Do these add force,
+definiteness to the picture Shakespeare is drawing at that moment?
+
+7. Observe from Appendix 3, Appendix 4, and the sentences listed in
+Activity 9 for EXERCISE - Abstract above, that a thing meant to be
+concrete is likely to be stated figuratively.
+
+8. Examine The Castaway (Appendix 5) for its proportionate use of literal
+and figurative elements. See Activity 2 of EXERCISE - Wordiness III above
+for a statement of Defoe's purpose. Could he have effected this purpose so
+well had he employed more figures of speech?
+
+9. Examine Appendix 2 for its use of figures. Are the figures appropriate
+to the subject matter? Are there enough of them?
+
+10. Galvanize the thought of any sentence or paragraph in editorial
+(Appendix 1) by the use of a figure of speech.
+
+11. Summarize or illustrate your opinion on any of the topics listed in
+Activity 1 for EXERCISE - Discourse, through the employment of figure of
+speech.
+
+12. Are these figures effective?
+
+Man is born unto trouble, as the sparks fly upward.
+The flower of our young manhood is scaling the ladder of success.
+
+ Fair as a star, when only one
+ Is shining in the sky.
+ Silence, like a poultice, comes
+ To heal the blows of sound.
+ In my head
+ Many thoughts of trouble come,
+ Like to flies upon a plum!
+
+Let me tell you first about those barnacles that clog the wheels of
+society by poisoning the springs of rectitude with their upas-like eye.
+
+ The day is done, and the darkness
+ Falls from the wings of night,
+ As a feather is wafted downward
+ From an eagle in his flight.
+
+Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death,
+I will fear no evil.
+
+ Life, like a dome of many-colored glass,
+ Stains the white radiance of eternity.
+
+Mountains stood out like pimples or lay like broken welts
+across the habitable ground.
+
+ Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
+ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
+ And then is heard no more; it is a tale
+ Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
+ Signifying nothing.
+
+I saw him in Russia, where the infantry of the snow and the cavalry of the
+wild blast scattered his legions like winter's withered leaves.
+
+13. Recast the following sentences to eliminate the clashing of literal
+and figurative elements:
+
+Life is like a rich treasure entrusted to us, and to sustain it we must
+have three square meals a day.
+
+She glanced at the mirror, but did not really see herself. She was trying
+to puzzle out the right course, and could only see as through a glass
+darkly.
+
+Arming himself with the sword of zeal and the buckler of integrity, he
+wrote the letter.
+
+He swept the floor every morning, and was a ray of sunshine in the office.
+He also emptied the waste baskets and cleaned the cuspidors.
+
+
+<3. Connotation>
+
+The connotation of a word is the subtle implication, the emotional
+association it carries--often quite apart from its dictionary definition.
+Thus the words _house_ and _home_ in large measure overlap in
+meaning, but emotionally they are not equivalents at all. You can say
+_house_ without experiencing any sensation whatever, but if you utter
+the word _home_ it will call back, however slightly, tender and
+cherished recollections. _Bald heads_ and _gray hair_ are both
+indicative of age; but you would pronounce the former in disparaging
+allusion to elderly persons, and the latter with sentiments of veneration.
+You would say, of a clodpole that he plays the _fiddle_, but of Fritz
+Kreisler that he plays the _violin_. And just as you unconsciously
+adapt words to feelings in these obvious instances, you must learn, on
+peril of striking false notes verbally, to do so when distinctions are
+less gross.
+
+Moreover circumstance as well as sentiment may control the connotation of
+a word. A word or phrase may have a double or triple connotation, and
+depend upon vocal inflection, upon gesture, upon the words with which it
+is linked, upon the experience of speaker or hearer, upon time, place, and
+external fact, or upon other forces outside it for the sense in which it
+is to be taken. You may be called "old dog" in an insulting manner, or
+(especially if a slap on the shoulder accompanies the phrase) in an
+affectionate manner. You may properly say, "Calhoun had logic on his
+side"; add, however, the words "but his face was to the past," and you
+spoil the sentence,--for _face_ gives a reflex connotation to
+_side_, slight perhaps and momentary, but disconcerting. Think over
+the funny stories you have heard. Many of them turn, you will find, on the
+outcropping of new significance in a phrase because of its environment.
+Thus the anecdote of the servant who had been instructed to summon the
+visiting English nobleman by tapping on his bedroom door and inquiring,
+"My lord, have you yet risen?" and who could only stammer, "My God! ain't
+you up yet?" Or the anecdote of the minister who in a sermon on the
+Parable of the Prodigal Son told how a young man living dissolutely in a
+city had been compelled to send to the pawnbroker first his overcoat, next
+his suit, next his silk shirt, and finally his very underclothing--"and
+then," added the minister, "he came to himself." Only by unresting
+vigilance can you evade verbal discords, if not of this magnitude, at
+least of much frequency and stylistic harm.
+
+EXERCISE - Connotation
+
+1. Note the contrast in emotional suggestion that comes to you from
+hearing the words:
+
+"Sodium chloride" and "salt"
+"A test-tube of H2O" and "a cup of cold water"
+"A pair of brogans" and "a little empty shoe"
+"Bump" and "collide"
+"A brilliant fellow" and "a flashy fellow"
+"Bungled it" and "did not succeed"
+"Tumble" and "fall"
+"Dawn" and "6 A.M."
+"Licked" and "worsted"
+"Fat" and "plump"
+"Wept" and "blubbered"
+"Cheek" and "self-assurance"
+"Stinks" and "disagreeable odors"
+"Steal" and "embezzle"
+"Thievishness" and "kleptomania"
+"Educated" and "highbrow"
+"Job" and "position"
+"Told a lie" and "fell into verbal inexactitude"
+"A drunkard" (a stranger) and "a drunkard" (your father).
+
+2. Make a list of your own similar to that in Exercise 1.
+
+3. Read the sentences listed in EXERCISE - Slovenliness III and IV. What
+do these sentences suggest to you as to the social and mental
+qualifications of the person who employs them?
+
+4. Read the second paragraph of Appendix 2. What does it suggest to you as
+to Burke's social and mental qualifications?
+
+5. Suppose you were told that a passage of twenty-eight lines contains the
+following expressions: "mewling and puking," "whining schoolboy,"
+"satchel," "sighing like furnace," "round belly," "spectacles on nose,"
+"shrunk shank," "sans [without] teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans
+everything." Would you believe the passage is poetry?--that its total
+effect is one of poetic elevation? Read the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix
+4). _Is_ it poetry? How does Shakespeare reconcile the general poetic
+tone with such expressions as those quoted?
+
+6. What is wrong with the connotation of the following?
+
+The servant told us that the young ladies were all in.
+All my poor success is due to you.
+He insisted on carrying a revolver, and so the college authorities fired
+him.
+The carpenter too had his castles in Spain.
+He rested his old bones by the wayside, and his gaunt dog stood sniffing
+at them.
+On the other hand, he had a white elephant to dispose of.
+When he came to the forks of the road, he showed he was not on the square.
+Body, for funeral purposes, must be sold at once. City Automobile Agency.
+
+7. Can you express the following ideas in other words without sacrifice of
+emotional suggestion? Try.
+
+ The music, yearning like a god in pain.
+ Alone, alone, all, all alone,
+ Alone on a wide, wide sea!
+
+ But O for the touch of a vanished hand,
+ And the sound of a voice that is still!
+ Old, unhappy, far-off things,
+ And battles long ago.
+
+ It was night in the lonesome October.
+ How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
+ In the icy air of night!
+ While the stars, that oversprinkle
+ All the heavens, seem to twinkle
+ With a crystalline delight.
+
+ The moan of doves in immemorial elms,
+ And murmuring of innumerable bees.
+
+ Ay, but to die, and go we know not where;
+ To lie in cold obstruction and to rot.
+
+ Merrily, merrily, shall I live now,
+ Under the blossom that hangs on the bough.
+
+ 'Tis as easy now for the heart to be true
+ As for grass to be green or skies to be blue,--
+ 'Tis the natural way of living.
+
+ We are such stuff
+ As dreams are made of, and our little life
+ Is rounded with a sleep.
+
+8. With the most connotative words at your command describe the following:
+
+Your first sweetheart
+A solemn experience
+A ludicrous experience
+A terrifying experience
+A mysterious experience
+The circus parade you saw in your boyhood
+A servant girl
+A dude
+An odd character you have known
+The old homestead
+Your boarding house
+A scene suggesting the intense heat of a midsummer day
+Night on the river
+The rush for the subway car
+The traffic policeman
+Your boss
+Anything listed in the first part of Activity 9 of EXERCISE - Discourse.
+
+
+
+III
+
+ WORDS IN COMBINATION: HOW MASTERED
+
+
+The more dangerous pitfalls for those who use words in combination--as all
+of us do--have been pointed out. The best ways of avoiding these pitfalls
+have also been indicated. But our work together has thus far been chiefly
+negative. To be sure, many tasks assigned for your performance have been
+constructive as well as precautionary; but _the end_ held ever before
+you has been the avoidance of feeble or ridiculous diction. In the present
+chapter we must take up those aspects of the mastery of words in
+combination which are primarily positive.
+
+
+<Preliminaries: General Purposes and Methods>
+
+Before coming to specific aspects and assignments, however, we shall do
+well to consider certain large general purposes and methods.
+
+
+<I. A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?>
+
+First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? A facile, readily
+used one? An accurate one? Or one as nearly as may be comprehensive? The
+three kinds do not necessarily coexist. The possession of one may even
+hinder and retard the acquisition of another. Thus if we seek a ready
+vocabulary, an accurate vocabulary may cause us to halt and hesitate for
+words which shall correspond with the shadings of our thought and emotion,
+and a wide vocabulary may embarrass us with the plenitude of our verbal
+riches.
+
+But _may_ is not _must_. Though the three kinds of vocabulary
+may interfere with each other, there is no reason, except superficially,
+why they should. Our purpose should be, therefore, to acquire not a single
+kind but all three. We should be like the boy who, when asked whether he
+would have a small slice of apple pie or a small slice of pumpkin pie,
+replied resolutely, "Thank you, I will take a large piece of both."
+
+That the assignments in this chapter may help you develop a vocabulary
+which shall be promptly responsive to your needs, you should perform some
+of them rapidly. Your thoughts and feelings regarding a topic may be
+anything but clear, but you must not pause to clarify them. The words best
+suited to the matter may not be instantly available, but you must not
+tarry for accessions of language. Stumble, flounder if you must, yea,
+rearrange your ideas even as you present them, but press resolutely ahead,
+comforting yourself with the assurance that in the heat and stress of
+circumstances a man rarely does his work precisely as he wishes. When you
+have finished the discussion, repeat it immediately--and with no more
+loitering than before. You will find that your ideas have shifted and
+enlarged, and that more appropriate words have become available. Further
+repetitions will assist you the more. But the goal you should set
+yourself, as you proceed from topic to topic, is the attainment of the
+power to be at your best in the first discussion. You may never reach this
+goal, but at least you may approach it.
+
+That the assignments in this chapter may assist you in making your
+vocabulary accurate, you should perform some of them in another way. When
+you have selected a topic, you should first of all think it through. In
+doing this, arrange your ideas as consistently and logically as you can,
+and test them with your reason. Then set them forth in language which
+shall be lucid and exact. Tolerate no slipshod diction, no vaguely
+rendered general meanings. Send every sentence, every word like a skilful
+drop-kick--straight above the crossbar. When you have done your best with
+the topic, lay it by for a space. Time is a great revealer of hidden
+defects, and you must not regard your labors as ended until your
+achievement is the maturest possible for you. If the quantity of what you
+accomplish is meager, suffer no distress on that account. The desideratum
+now is not quantity, but quality.
+
+The assignments in this chapter will do less toward making your vocabulary
+wide than toward making it facile and precise. To be sure, they will now
+and then set you to hunting for words that are new. Better still, they
+will give you a mastery over some of your outlying words--words known to
+your eyes or ears but not to your tongue. But these advantages will be
+somewhat incidental. Means for the systematic extension of your verbal
+domain into regions as yet unexplored by you, are reserved for the later
+chapters of this book.
+
+
+<2. A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?>
+
+In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or
+a vocabulary for writing? It may be that our chief impediment or our chief
+ambition lies in one field rather than in the other. Nevertheless we
+should strive for a double mastery; we ought to speak well _and_
+write well. Indeed the two powers so react upon each other that we ought
+to cultivate both for the sake of either. True, some men, though inexpert
+as writers, have made themselves proficient as speakers; or though
+shambling and ineffective as speakers, have made themselves proficient as
+writers. But this is not natural or normal. Moreover these men might have
+gleaned more abundantly from their chosen field had they not shut it off
+from the acres adjacent. Fences waste space and curtail harvests.
+
+The assignments in this chapter are of such a nature that you may perform
+them either orally or in writing. You should speak and write alternately,
+sometimes on the same topic, sometimes on topics taken in rotation.
+
+In your oral discussions you should perhaps absent yourself at first from
+human auditors. A bedstead or a dresser will not make you self-conscious
+or in any way distract your attention, and it will permit you to sit down
+afterward and think out the degree of your failure or success. Ultimately,
+of course, you must speak to human beings--in informal conversations at
+the outset, in more ambitious ways later as occasion permits.
+
+In your writing you may find it advantageous to make preliminary outlines
+of what you wish to say. But above all, you must be willing to blot, to
+revise, to take infinite pains. You should remember the old admonition
+that easy reading is devilish hard writing.
+
+
+<The Mastery of Words in Combination>
+
+These purposes and methods are general. We now come to the specific fields
+in which we may with profit cultivate words in combination. Of these
+fields there are four.
+
+
+<I. Mastery through Translation>
+
+If you read a foreign language, whether laboriously or with ease, you
+should make this power assist you to amass a good English vocabulary.
+Take compositions or parts of compositions written in the foreign tongue,
+and turn them into idiomatic English. How much you should translate
+at a given time depends upon your leisure and your adeptness. Employ all
+the methods--the spontaneous, the carefully perfected, the oral, the
+written--heretofore explained in this chapter. In your final work on a
+passage you should aim at a faultless rendition, and should spend time and
+ransack the lexicons rather than come short of this ideal.
+
+The habit of translation is an excellent habit to keep up. For the study
+of an alien tongue not only improves your English, but has compensations
+in itself.
+
+EXERCISE - Translation
+
+1. Translate from any accessible book in the foreign language you can
+read.
+
+2. Subscribe for a period of at least two or three months for a newspaper
+or magazine in that language, if it is a modern one. Translate as before,
+but give most of your time to rapid oral translation for a real or
+imaginary American hearer.
+
+3. When you have completed your final written translation of a passage
+from the foreign language, make yourself master of all the English words
+you have not previously (1) known or (2) used, but have encountered in
+your work of translation.
+
+
+
+<2. Mastery through Paraphrasing>
+
+It may be that you are not familiar with a foreign language. At any rate
+you have some knowledge of English. Put this knowledge to use in
+paraphrasing; for thus you will enrich your vocabulary and make it surer
+and more flexible. The process of paraphrasing is simple, though the
+actual work is not easy. You take passages written in English--the more of
+them the better, and the more diversified the better--and both reproduce
+their substance and incarnate their mood in words you yourself shall
+choose.
+
+You may have a passage before you and paraphrase it unit by unit. More
+often, however, you should follow the plan adopted by Franklin when he
+emulated Addison by rewriting the _Spectator Papers_. That is, you
+should steep yourself in the thought and emotion of a piece of writing,
+and then lay the piece aside until its wording has faded from your memory,
+when you should reëmbody the substance in language that seems to you
+natural and fitting. Much of the benefit will come from your comparing
+your version, as Franklin did his, with the original. When you perceive
+that you have fallen short, you should consider the respects wherein your
+inferiority lies--and should make another attempt, and yet another, and
+another. When you perceive that in any way you have surpassed the
+original, you should feel a just pride in your achievement--and should
+resolve that next time your cause for pride shall be greater still. Even
+after you have desisted from formal paraphrasing, you should cling to the
+habit, formed at this time, of observing any notable felicities in
+whatever you read and of comparing them with the expression you yourself
+would likely have employed.
+
+EXERCISE - Paraphrasing
+
+1. Paraphrase the editorial in Appendix 1. You should improve upon the
+original. Keep trying until you do.
+
+2. Paraphrase the second paragraph in Burke's speech (Appendix 2). Burke
+lacked the cheap tricks of the ordinary orator, but his discussions were
+based upon a comprehensive knowledge of facts, a sympathetic understanding
+of human nature, a vast depth and range of thought, and a well-meditated
+political philosophy. In short, he is a model for _elaborated_
+discussions. Set forth the leading thought of this paragraph; you can give
+it in fewer words than he employs. But try setting it forth with his full
+accompaniments of reflection and information; you will be bewildered at
+his crowding so much into such small compass.
+
+3. Try to rival the pregnant conciseness of the Parable of the Sower
+(Appendix 3).
+
+4. Paraphrase in prose the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4). Catch if
+possible the mood, the "atmosphere," of each of the pictures painted by
+Shakespeare. Condense your paraphrase as much as you can.
+
+5. In each of the preceding exercises compare your vocabulary with that of
+the original as to size, precision, and the grace and ease with which
+words are put together. Does the original employ terms unfamiliar to you?
+If so, look up their meaning and make them yours; then observe, when you
+next paraphrase the passage, whether your mastery of these terms has
+improved your expression.
+
+
+<3. Mastery through Discourse at First Hand>
+
+Models have their use, but you can also work without models. It is
+imperative that you should. You must learn to discuss, explain, analyze,
+argue, narrate, and describe for yourself. Here again you should diversify
+your materials to the utmost, not only that you may become well-rounded
+and versatile in your ability to set forth ideas and feelings in words,
+but also that your knowledge and your sensibility may receive stimulation.
+
+It is feasible to begin by discussing or explaining. Most of the
+intercourse conducted through language consists in either discussion or
+explanation. Analysis, ordinarily, is almost ignored. Argument is indulged
+in, and so is description (though less freely), but they are of the
+bluntest and broadest. Narration--the recounting of incidents of everyday
+existence--is, however, widely employed.
+
+In your work of discussion or explanation you may seize upon any current
+topic--industrial, social, political, or what not--that comes into your
+mind. Or you may make a list of such topics, writing each on a separate
+piece of paper; may jumble the slips in a hat; and may thus have always at
+your elbow a collection of satisfactory themes from which you may take one
+at random. Or you may invest in language of your own selection the
+substance of an address or sermon you have heard, or give the burden of
+some important conversation in which you have participated, or explain the
+tenor of an article you have read. You should of course try to interest
+your hearers, and above all, you should impart to what you say complete
+clarity.
+
+In analyzing you should select as your topic a process fairly obscure, the
+implications of a certain statement or argument, the results to be
+expected from some action or policy that has been advocated, or the exact
+matter at issue between two disputants. Any topic for discussion,
+explanation, or argument may be treated analytically. Your analysis in its
+final form should be so carefully considered that its soundness cannot be
+impeached.
+
+In arguing you may take any subject under the sun, from baseball to
+Bolshevism, for all of them are debated with vehemence. Any topic for
+discussion or explanation becomes, when approached from some particular
+angle, material for argument. Thus the initial topic in the exercise that
+follows is "The aeroplane's future as a carrier of mail." You may convert
+it into a question for debate by making it read: "The aeroplane is
+destined to supplant the railroad as a carrier of mail," or "The aeroplane
+is destined to be used increasingly as a carrier of transcontinental
+mail." In arguing you may propose for yourself either of two objectives:
+(1) to silence your opponent, (2) to refute, persuade, and win him over
+fairly. The achievement of the first end calls for bluster and perhaps a
+grim, barbaric strength; you must do as Johnson did according to
+Goldsmith's famous dictum--if your pistol misses fire, you must knock your
+adversary down with the butt end of it. This procedure, though inartistic
+to be sure, is in some contingencies the only kind that will serve. But
+you should cultivate procedure of a type more urbane. Let your very
+reasonableness be the most potent weapon you wield. To this end you should
+form the habit of looking for good points on both sides of a question. As
+a still further precaution against contentiousness you should uphold the
+two sides successively.
+
+In narrating you should, as a rule, stick to simple occurrences, though
+you may occasionally vary your work by summarizing the plot of a novel or
+giving the gist and drift of big historical events. You should confine
+yourself, in large part, to incidents in which you have been personally
+involved, or which you yourself have witnessed, as mishaps, unexpected
+encounters, bickerings, even rescues or riots. You should omit
+non-essentials and make the happening itself live for your hearer; if you
+can so interest him in it that he will not notice your manner of telling
+it, your success is but the greater.
+
+Finally, in describing you should deal for the most part with beings,
+objects, and appearances familiar to you. Description is usually hard to
+make vivid. This is because the objects and scenes are likely to be
+immobile and (at least when told about) to lack distinctiveness. Try,
+therefore, to lay hold of the peculiar quality of the thing described, and
+use words suggestive of color and motion. Moreover be brief. Long
+descriptions are sure to be wearisome.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Discourse
+
+1. Select topics from the following list for discussion or explanation:
+
+The aeroplane's future as a carrier of mail
+The commercial future of the aeroplane
+A recent scientific (or mechanical or electrical) invention
+A better type of newspaper--its contents and makeup
+A better type of newspaper--how it can be secured
+The connection between the advertising and news departments
+ of a newspaper--the actual condition
+The connection between the advertising and news departments
+ of a newspaper--the ideal
+Special features in a newspaper that are popular
+A single standard for the sexes--is it possible?
+A single standard for the sexes--how it can be attained (or approximated)
+Should the divorce laws be made more stringent?
+Should a divorced person be prohibited from remarrying?
+What further marriage restrictions should be placed upon the
+ physically or mentally unfit?
+What further measures should be taken by the cities (states, nation) for
+ the protection of motherhood?
+Is the division of men into strongly contrasted groups as to wealth
+ one of nature's necessities, or is it the result of a social and
+ economic system?
+Some shortcomings of the labor unions
+Are the shortcomings of the labor unions accidental or inherent?
+Some ways of bettering the condition of the working classes
+How municipal (state, national) bureaus for finding employment
+ for the laborer may become more serviceable
+Wrongs committed by big business (or some branch of it)
+Should a man's income above a stipulated amount be confiscated
+ by the government?
+Income taxes--what exemptions should be granted?
+The right basis for business--competition or coöperation?
+Are the courts equally just to labor and capital?
+How can legal procedure be changed to enable individuals to secure just
+ treatment from corporations without resorting to prolonged and expensive
+ lawsuits?
+Where our interests clash with those of Great Britain
+How our relations with Great Britain may be further improved
+How our relations with Japan may be further improved
+How may closer commercial relations with other countries be promoted?
+What to do about the railroads and railroad rates
+A natural resource that should be conserved or restored
+Do high tariffs breed international ill-will?
+Should we have a high tariff at this juncture?
+To what extent should osteopathy (chiropractic) be permitted
+ (or protected) by law?
+What is wrong with municipal government in my city
+How woman suffrage affects local government
+How to make rural life more attractive
+The importance of the rotation of crops
+The race problem as it affects my community
+The class problem as it affects my community
+The school-house as a social center
+How to Americanize the alien elements in our population
+To what extent, if at all, should foreign-born citizens of our
+ country be encouraged to preserve their native traditions and culture?
+Censorship of the moving picture
+Educational possibilities of the moving picture
+How to bring about improvement in the quality of the moving picture
+The effect of the moving picture upon legitimate drama
+A church that men will attend
+How young men may be attracted to the churches
+How far shall doctrine be insisted upon by the churches?
+To what extent shall the church concern itself with social
+ and economic problems?
+To what extent, if at all, shall Sunday diversions be restricted?
+The advantages of using the free public library
+Can the cities give children in the slums better opportunities for
+ physical (mental, moral) development?
+Should all cities be required to establish zoölogical gardens,
+ as well as schools, for the children?
+How my city might improve its system of public parks
+The most interesting thing about the work I am in
+Opportunities in the work I am in
+The qualities called for in the work I am in
+The ideals of my associates
+Something I have learned about life
+Something I have learned about human nature
+A book that has influenced me, and why
+A person who has influenced me, and how
+My favorite sport or recreation
+Why baseball is so popular
+What I could do for the people around me
+What I should like for the people around me to do for me.
+
+2. Discuss or explain the ideas listed in Exercise 3 for 'Abstract vs.
+Concrete' in "Words in Combination: Some Pitfalls" above.
+
+3. Analyze the debatable questions included in the two preceding exercises
+or suggested by them. That is, find the issues in each question, and show
+what each disputant must prove and what he must refute.
+
+4. Analyze the results to be expected from the adoption of some policy or
+course of action by:
+
+A newspaper
+A business firm
+The city
+The farmers
+The producers in some business or industry
+The consumers
+The retail merchants of your city
+Some group of reformers
+Some social group
+Those interested in a social activity, as dancing
+Your neighbors
+Yourself.
+
+5. Analyze or explain:
+
+The testing of seed grain
+How to raise potatoes (any other vegetable)
+How to utilize and apportion the space in your garden
+How to keep an automobile in good shape
+How to run an automobile (motor boat)
+How to make a rabbit trap
+How to lay out a camp
+How to catch trout (bass, codfish, tuna fish, lobsters)
+How to conduct a public meeting
+How a bill is introduced and passed in a legislative body
+How food is digested
+How to extract oxygen from water
+How a fish breathes
+How gold is mined
+How wireless messages are sent
+How your favorite game is played
+How to survey a tract of land
+How stocks are bought and sold on margins
+How public opinion is formed
+How a man ought to form his opinions
+The responsibility of individuals to society
+The responsibility of society to the individual.
+
+6. Argue one side or the other, or the two successively, of
+queries contained or implied in Exercises 1 and 2.
+
+7. Argue one side or the other, or the two successively, of queries listed
+in Exercise 1 in EXERCISE - Abstract.
+
+8. Give a narrative of:
+
+The earning of your first dollar
+How somebody met his match
+An amusing incident
+An anxious moment
+A surprise
+The touchdown
+That fatal seventh inning
+How you got the position
+Why you missed the train
+When you were lost
+Your first trip on the railroad (a motor boat, a merry-go-round,
+ snowshoes, a burro)
+A mishap
+How Jenkins skated
+Your life until the present (a summary)
+Something you have heard your father tell
+What happened to your uncle
+Your partner's (chum's) escapade
+Meeting an old friend
+Meeting a bore
+A conversation you have overheard
+When Myrtle eavesdropped
+When the girls didn't know Algy was in the parlor
+A public happening that interests you
+An incident you have read in the papers
+An incident from your favorite novel
+Backward Ben at the party
+Something that happened to you today.
+
+9. Describe ...
+
+For the mood or general "atmosphere":
+
+Anything you deem suitable in Activity 8 in EXERCISE - Connotation.
+An old, deserted house
+Your birthplace as you saw it in manhood
+The view from an eminence
+A city as seen from a roof garden by night
+Your mother's Bible
+A barnyard scene
+The lonely old negro at the supper table
+A new immigrant gazing out upon the ocean he has crossed
+The downtown section at closing hour
+A scene of quietude
+A scene of bustle and confusion
+A richly colored scene
+A scene of dejection
+A scene of wild enthusiasm
+A scene of dulness or stagnation.
+
+With attention to homely detail:
+
+The old living-room
+My aunt's dresses
+Barker's riding-horse
+The business street of the village
+A cabin in the mountains
+The office of a man approaching bankruptcy
+The Potters' backyard
+The second-hand store
+The ugliest man.
+
+For general accuracy and vividness:
+
+The organ-grinder
+The signs of an approaching storm
+The arrival of the train
+Mail-time at the village post office
+The crowd at the auction
+The old fishing-boat
+A country fair (or a circus)
+The inside of a theater (or a church)
+The funeral procession
+The political rally
+The choir.
+
+
+<4. Mastery through Adapting Discourse to Audience>
+
+For convenience, we have heretofore assumed that ideas and emotions,
+together with such expression of them as shall be in itself adequate and
+faithful, comprise the sole elements that have to be reckoned with in the
+use of words in combination. But as you go out into life you will find
+that these things, however complete they may seem, are not in practice
+sufficient. Another factor--the human--must have its place in our
+equation. You do not speak or write in a vacuum. Your object, your
+ultimate object at least, in building up your vocabulary is to address men
+and women; and among men and women the varieties of training, of stations,
+of outlooks, of sentiments, of prejudices, of caprices are infinite. To
+gain an unbiased hearing you must take persistent cognizance of flesh and
+blood.
+
+In adapting discourse to audience you must have a supple and attentive
+mind and an impressionable and swiftly responsive temperament as well as a
+wide, accurate, and flexible vocabulary. Unless you are a fool, a zealot,
+or an incorrigible adventurer, you will not broach a subject at all to
+which your hearers feel absolute indifference or hostility. Normally you
+should pick a subject capable of interesting them. In presenting it you
+should pay heed to both your matter and your manner. You should emphasize
+for your listeners those aspects of the subject which they will most
+respond to or most need to hear, whether or not the phases be such as you
+would emphasize with other auditors. You should also speak in the fashion
+you deem most effective with them, whether or not it be one to which your
+own natural instincts prompt you.
+
+Let us say you are discussing conditions in Europe. You must speak in one
+way to the man who has traveled and in an entirely different way to the
+man who has never gone abroad--in one way to the well-read man, in an
+entirely different way to the ignoramus. Let us say you are discussing
+urban life, urban problems. You must speak in one way to the man who lives
+in the city, in another to the man who lives in the country. Let us say
+you are discussing the labor problem. You must speak in one way to
+employers, in another to employees, possibly in a third to men thrown out
+of jobs, possibly in a fourth to the general public. Let us say you are
+discussing education, or literature, or social tendencies, or mechanical
+principles or processes, or some great enterprise or movement. You must
+speak in one way to cultivated hearers and in another to men in the
+street, and if you are a specialist addressing specialists, you will cut
+the garment of your discourse to their particular measure.
+
+The same principle holds regardless of whether you expound, analyze,
+argue, recount, or describe. You must always keep a finger on the mental
+or emotional pulse of those whom you address. But your problem varies
+slightly with the form of discourse you adopt. In explanation, analysis,
+and argument the chief barriers you encounter are likely to be those of
+the mind; you must make due allowance for the intellectual limitations of
+your auditors, though many who have capacity enough may for some cause or
+other be unreceptive to ideas. In description you must reckon with the
+imaginative faculty, with the possibility that your hearers cannot
+visualize what you tell them--and you must make your words brief. In
+narration you must vivify emotional torpor; but lest in your efforts to
+inveigle boredom you yourself should induce it, you must have a wary eye
+for signals of distress.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Adapting
+
+1. Explain to (a) a rich man, (b) a poor man the blessings of poverty.
+
+2. Discuss before (a) farmers, (b) merchants the idea that farmers
+(merchants) make a great deal of money.
+
+3. Explain to (a) the initiate, (b) the uninitiate some piece of
+mechanism, or some phase of a human activity or interest, which you know
+at first hand and regarding which technical (or at least not generally
+understood) terms are employed. (The exact subject depends, of course,
+upon your own observation or experience; you are sure to be familiar
+with something that most people know hazily, if at all. Bank clerk,
+chess player, bridge player, stenographer, journalist, truck driver,
+backwoods-man, mechanic--all have special knowledge of one kind or another
+and can use the particular terms it calls for.)
+
+4. Explain to (a) a supporter of the winning team, (b) a supporter of the
+losing team why the baseball game came out as it did.
+
+5. Discuss before (a) a Democratic, (b) a Republican audience your reasons
+for voting the Democratic (Republican) ticket in the coming election.
+
+6. Explain to (a) your own family, (b) the man who can lend you the money,
+why you wish to mortgage your house (any piece of property).
+
+7. Explain to the owner of an ill-conducted business why he should sell
+it, and to a shrewd business man why he should buy it.
+
+8. Discuss before (a) old men, (b) young men, (c) women the desirability
+of men's giving up their seats in street cars to women. (Also modify the
+question by requiring only young men to give up their seats, and then only
+to old people of either sex, to sick people, or to people with children in
+their arms.)
+
+9. Explain the necessity of restricting immigration to (a) prospective
+immigrants, (b) immigrants just granted admission to the country, (c)
+persons just refused admission, (d) exploiters of cheap labor, (e)
+ordinary citizens.
+
+10. Discuss the taking out of a life insurance policy with (a) a man not
+interested, (b) a man interested but uncertain what a policy is like, (c)
+a man interested and informed but doubtful whether he can spare the money,
+(d) the man's wife (his prospective beneficiary), whose desires will have
+weight with him.
+
+11. Discuss the necessity of a reduction in wages with (a) unscrupulous
+employers, (b) kind-hearted employers, (c) the employees.
+
+12. Advocate higher public school taxes before (a) men with children, (b)
+men without children.
+
+13. Advocate a further regulation of the speed of automobiles before (a)
+automobile-owners, (b) non-owners.
+
+14. Urge advocacy of some reform upon (a) a clergyman, (b) a candidate for
+office.
+
+15. Combat before (a) advertisers, (b) a public audience, (c) a lawmaking
+body, the defacement of landscapes by advertising billboards.
+
+16. Describe life in the slums before (a) a rural audience, (b) charitable
+persons, (c) rich people in the cities who know little of conditions among
+the poor.
+
+17. Describe the typical evening of a spendthrift in a city to (a) a poor
+man, (b) a miser, (c) the spendthrift's mother, (d) his employer, (e) a
+detective who suspects him of theft.
+
+18. Describe the city of Washington (any other city) to (a) a countryman,
+(b) a traveler who has not visited this particular city. (If it is
+Washington you describe, describe it also for children in whom you wish to
+inculcate patriotism.)
+
+19. Give (a) a youngster, (b) an experienced angler an account of your
+fishing trip.
+
+20. Recount for (a) a baseball fan, (b) a girl who has never seen a game,
+the occurrences of the second half of the ninth inning.
+
+21. Describe a fight for (a) your friends, (b) a jury.
+
+22. Narrate for (a) children, (b) an audience of adults some historical
+event.
+
+23. Give (a) your partner, (b) a reporter an account of a business
+transaction you have just completed.
+
+24. Narrate an escapade for (a) your father, (b) your cronies in response
+to a toast at a banquet with them.
+
+
+
+IV
+
+ INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS VERBAL CELIBATES
+
+
+Thus far we have studied words as grouped together into phrases,
+sentences, paragraphs, whole compositions. We must now enter upon a new
+phase of our efforts to extend our vocabulary. We must study words as
+individual entities.
+
+You may think the order of our study should be reversed. No great harm
+would result if it were. The learning of individual words and the
+combining of them into sentences are parallel rather than successive
+processes. In our babyhood we do not accumulate a large stock of terms
+before we frame phrases and clauses. And our attainment of the power of
+continuous iteration does not check our inroads among individual words. We
+do the two things simultaneously, each contributing to our success with
+the other. There are plenty of analogies for this procedure. A good
+baseball player, for instance, tirelessly studies both the minutiae of his
+technique (as how to hold a bat, how to stand at the plate) and the big
+combinations and possibilities of the game. A good musician keeps
+unremitting command over every possible touch of each key and at the same
+time seeks sweeping mastery over vast and complex harmonies. So we, if we
+would have the obedience of our vocabularies, dare not lag into desultory
+attention to either words when disjoined or words as potentially combined
+into the larger units of thought and feeling.
+
+We might therefore consider either the individuals first or the groups
+first. But the majority of speakers and writers pay more heed to rough
+general substance than to separate instruments and items. Hence we have
+thought best to begin where most work is going on already--with words in
+combination.
+
+As you turn from the groups to the individuals, you must understand that
+your labors will be onerous and detailed. You must not assume that by
+nature all words are much alike, any more than you assume that all men are
+much alike. Of course the similarities are many and striking, and the
+fundamental fact is that a word is a word as a man is a man. But you will
+be no adept in handling either the one or the other until your knowledge
+goes much farther than this. Let us glance first at the human variations.
+Each man has his own business, and conducts it in his own way--a way never
+absolutely matched with that of any other mortal being. All this you may
+see. But besides the man's visible employment, he may be connected in
+devious fashions with a score of enterprises the public knows nothing
+about. Furthermore he leads a private life (again not precisely
+corresponding to that of any other), has his hobbies and aversions, is
+stamped with a character, a temperament of his own. In short, though in
+thousands of respects he is like his fellows, he has after all no human
+counterpart; he is a distinct, individual self. To know him, to use him,
+to count upon his service in whatsoever contingency it might bestead you,
+you must deem him something more than a member of the great human family.
+You must cultivate him personally, cultivate him without weariness or
+stint, and undergo inconvenience in so doing.
+
+Even so with a word. Commonplace enough it may seem. But it has its
+peculiar characteristics, its activities undisclosed except to the
+curious, its subtle inclinations, its repugnances, its latent
+potentialities. There is no precise duplicate for it in all the wide
+domain of language. To know it intimately and thoroughly, to be on
+entirely free terms with it, to depend upon it just so far as dependence
+is safe, to have a sure understanding of what it can do and what it
+cannot, you must arduously cultivate it. Words, like people, yield
+themselves to the worthy. They hunger for friendship--and lack the last
+barrier of reserve which hedges all human communion. Thus, linguistically
+speaking, you must search out the individuals. You must step aside from
+your way for the sake of a new acquaintance; in conversations, in sermons,
+in addresses, in letters, in journalistic columns, in standard literature
+you must grasp the stranger by the hand and look him straight in the eye.
+Nor must you treat cavalierly the words you know already. You must study
+them afresh; you must learn them over and learn them better; you must come
+to understand them, not only for what they are, but for what they will do.
+
+
+<What Words to Learn First>
+
+What, then, is your first task? Somebody has laid down the injunction--
+and, as always when anything is enjoined, others have given it currency--
+that each day you should learn two new words. So be it,--but which two?
+The first two in the dictionary, or hitherto left untouched in your
+systematic conquest of the dictionary? The first two you hear spoken? The
+first two that stare at you from casual, everyday print? The first two you
+can ferret from some technical jargon, some special department of human
+interest or endeavor? In any of these ways you may obey the behest of
+these mentors. But are not such ways arbitrary, haphazard? And suppose,
+after doing your daily stint, you should encounter a word it behooves you
+to know. What then? Are you to sulk, to withhold yourself from further
+exertion on the plea of a vocabulary-builder's eight-hour day?
+
+To adopt any of the methods designated would be like resolving to invest
+in city lots and then buying properties as you encountered them, with no
+regard for expenditure, for value in general, or for special
+serviceability to you. Surely such procedure would be unbusinesslike. If
+you pay out good money, you meditate well whether that which you receive
+for it shall compensate you. Likewise if you devote time and effort to
+gaining ownership of words, you should exercise foresight in determining
+whether they will yield you commensurate returns.
+
+What, then, is the principle upon which, at the outset, you should
+proceed? What better than to insure the possession of the words regarding
+which you know this already, that you need them and should make them
+yours?
+
+
+<The Analysis of Your Own Vocabulary>
+
+The natural way, and the best, to begin is with an analysis of your own
+vocabulary. You are of course aware that of the enormous number of words
+contained in the dictionary relatively few are at your beck and bidding.
+But probably you have made no attempt to ascertain the nature and extent
+of your actual linguistic resources. You should make an inventory of the
+stock on hand before sending in your order for additional goods.
+
+You will speedily discover that your vocabulary embraces several distinct
+classes of words. Of these the first consists of those words which you
+have at your tongue's end--which you can summon without effort and use in
+your daily speech. They are old verbal friends. Numbered with them, to be
+sure, there may be a few with senses and connotations you are ignorant of--
+friends of yours, let us say, with a reservation. Even these you may woo
+with a little care into uncurbed fraternal abandon. With the exception of
+these few, you know the words of the first class so well that without
+thinking about it at all you may rely upon their giving you, the moment
+you need them, their untempered, uttermost service. You need be at no
+further pains about them. They are yours already.
+
+A second class of words is made up of those you speak on occasions either
+special or formal--occasions when you are trying, perhaps not to show off,
+but at least to put your best linguistic foot foremost. Some of them have
+a meaning you are not quite sure of; some of them seem too ostentatious
+for workaday purposes; some of them you might have been using but somehow
+have not. Words of this class are not your bosom friends. They are your
+speaking acquaintance, or perhaps a little better than that. You must
+convert them into friends, into prompt and staunch supporters in time of
+need. That is to say, you must put them into class one. In bringing about
+this change of footing, you yourself must make the advances. You must say,
+Go to, I will bear them in mind as I would a person I wished to cultivate.
+When occasion rises, you must introduce them into your talk. You will feel
+a bit shy about it, for introductions are difficult to accomplish
+gracefully; you will steal a furtive glance at your hearer perchance, and
+another at the word itself, as you would when first labeling a man "my
+friend Mr. Blank." But the embarrassment is momentary, and there is no
+other way. Assume a friendship if you have it not, and presently the
+friendship will be real. You must be steadfast in intention; for the words
+that have held aloof from you are many, and to unloose all at once on a
+single victim would well-nigh brand you criminal. But you will make sure
+headway, and will be conscious besides that no other class of words in the
+language will so well repay the mastering. For these are words you
+_do_ use, and need to use more, and more freely--words your own
+experience stamps as valuable, if not indeed vital, to you.
+
+The third class of words is made up of those you do not speak at all, but
+sometimes write. They are acquaintance one degree farther removed than
+those of the second class. Your task is to bring them into class two and
+thence into class one--that is, to introduce them into your more formal
+speech, and from this gradually into your everyday speech.
+
+The fourth class of words is made up of those you recognize when you hear
+or read them, but yourself never employ. They are acquaintance of a very
+distant kind. You nod to them, let us say, and they to you; but there the
+intercourse ends. Obviously, they are not to be brought without
+considerable effort into a position of tried and trusted friendship. And
+shall we be absolutely honest?--some of them may not justify such
+assiduous care as their complete subjugation would call for. But even
+these you should make your feudal retainers. You should constrain them to
+membership in class three, and at your discretion in class two.
+
+Apart from the words in class four, you will not to this point have made
+actual additions to your vocabulary. But you will have made your
+vocabulary infinitely more serviceable. You will be like a man with a host
+of friends where before, when his necessities were sorest, he found (along
+with some friends) many distant and timid acquaintance.
+
+Outside the bounds of your present vocabulary altogether are the words you
+encounter but do not recognize, except (it may be) dimly and uncertainly.
+Some counselors would have you look up all such words in a dictionary. But
+the task would be irksome. Moreover those who prescribe it are loath to
+perform it themselves. Your own candid judgment in the matter is the
+safest guide. If the word is incidental rather than vital to the meaning
+of the passage that contains it, and if it gives promise of but rarely
+crossing your vision again, you should deign it no more than a civil
+glance. Plenty of ways will be left you to expend time wisely in the
+service of your vocabulary.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Analysis
+
+1. Make a list of the words in class two of your own vocabulary, and
+similar lists for classes three and four. (To make a list for class one
+would be but a waste of time.) Procure if you can for this purpose a
+loose-leaf notebook, and in the several lists reserve a full page for each
+letter of the alphabet as used initially. Do not scamp the lists, though
+their proper preparation consume many days, many weeks. Try to make them
+really exhaustive. Their value will be in proportion to their accuracy and
+fulness.
+
+2. Con the words in each list carefully and repeatedly. Your task is to
+transfer these words into a more intimate list--those in class four into
+class three, those in three into two, those in two into one. You are then
+to promote again the words in the lower classes, except that (if your
+judgment so dictates) you may leave the new class three wholly or
+partially intact. To carry out this exercise properly you must keep these
+words in mind, make them part and parcel of your daily life. (For a
+special device for bringing them under subjection, see the next exercise.)
+
+3. To write a word down helps you to remember it. That is why the normal
+way to transfer a word from class four into class two is to put it
+temporarily into the intermediary class, three; you first _see_ or
+_hear_ the word, next _write_ it, afterwards _speak_ it.
+The mere writing down of your lists has probably done much to bring the
+words written into the circuit of your memory, where you can more readily
+lay hold of them. Also it has fortified your confidence in using them; for
+to write a word out, letter by letter, makes you surer that you have its
+right form. With many of your words you will likely have no more trouble;
+they will be at hand, anxious for employment, and you may use them
+according to your need. But some of your words will still stubbornly
+withhold themselves from memory. Weed these out from your lists, make a
+special list of them, copy it frequently, construct short sentences into
+which the troublesome words fit. By dint of writing the words so often you
+will soon make them more tractable.
+
+4. Make a fifth list of words--those you hear or see printed, do not
+understand the meaning of, but yet feel you should know. Obtain and
+confirm a grasp of them by the successive processes used with words in the
+preceding lists.
+
+
+<The Definition of Words>
+
+Another means of buttressing your command of your present vocabulary is to
+define words you use or are familiar with.
+
+Do not bewilder yourself with words (like _and, the_) which call for
+ingenuity in handling somewhat technical terms, or with words (like
+_thing, affair, condition_) which loosely cover a multitude of
+meanings. (You may, however, concentrate your efforts upon some one
+meaning of words in the latter group.) Select words with a fairly definite
+signification, and express this as precisely as you can. You may
+afterwards consult a dictionary for means of checking up on what you have
+done. But in consulting it think only of idea, not of form. You are not
+training yourself in dictionary definitions, but in the sharpness and
+clarity of your understanding of meanings.
+
+About the only rule to be laid down regarding the definition of verbs,
+adjectives, and adverbs is that you must not define a word in terms of
+itself. Thus if you define _grudgingly_ as "in a grudging manner,"
+you do not dissipate your hearer's uncertainty as to what the word means.
+If you define it as "unwillingly" or "in a manner that shows reluctance to
+yield possession," you give your hearer a clear-cut idea in no wise
+dependent upon his ability to understand the word that puzzled him in the
+first place.
+
+Normally, in defining a noun you should assign the thing named to a
+general class, and to its special limits within that class; in other
+words, you should designate its genus and species. You must take care to
+differentiate the species from all others comprised within the genus.
+You will, in most instances, first indicate the genus and then the
+species, but at your convenience you may indicate the species first. Thus
+if you affirm, "A cigar is smoking-tobacco in the form of a roll of
+tobacco-leaves," you name the genus first and later the characteristics of
+the species. You have given a satisfactory definition. If on the other
+hand you affirm, "A cigar is a roll of tobacco-leaves meant for smoking,"
+you first designate the species and then merely imply the genus. Again you
+have given a satisfactory definition; for you have permitted no doubt that
+the genus is smoking-tobacco, and have prescribed such limits for the
+species as exclude tobacco intended for a pipe or a cigarette.
+
+In defining nouns by the genus-and-species method, restrict the genus to
+the narrowest possible bounds. You will thus save the need for exclusions
+later. Had you in your first definition of a cigar begun by saying that it
+is tobacco, rather than smoking-tobacco, you would have violated this
+principle; and you would have had to amplify the rest of your definition
+in order to exclude chewing-tobacco, snuff, and the like.
+
+EXERCISE - Definition
+
+1. Define words of your own choosing in accordance with the principles
+laid down in the preceding section of the text.
+
+2. Define the following adjectives, adverbs, and verbs:
+
+Miserable Rebuke Wise
+Angrily Rapidly Boundless
+Swim Paint Whiten
+Haughtily Surly Causelessly
+
+3. So define the following nouns as to prevent any possible confusion with
+the nouns following them in parentheses:
+
+Wages (salary) Ride (drive)
+Planet (star) Truck (automobile)
+Watch (clock) Reins (lines)
+Jail (penitentiary) Iron (steel)
+Vegetable (fruit) Timber (lumber)
+Flower (weed) Rope (string)
+Hail (sleet, snow) Stock (bond)
+Newspaper (magazine) Street car (railway coach)
+Cloud (fog) Revolver (rifle, pistol, etc.)
+Mountain (hill) Creek (river)
+Letter (postal card)
+
+4. While remembering that the following words are of broad signification
+and mean different things to different people, define them according to
+their meaning to you:
+
+Gentleman Courage
+Honesty Beauty
+Honor Good manners
+Generosity A good while
+Charity A little distance
+Modesty Long ago
+
+
+<How to Look Up a Word in the Dictionary>
+
+So much for the words which are already yours, or which you can make yours
+through your own unaided efforts. For convenience we have grouped with
+them some words of a nature more baffling--words of which you know perhaps
+but a single aspect rather than the totality, or upon which you can obtain
+but a feeble and precarious grip. These slightly known words belong more
+to the class now to be considered than to that just disposed of. For we
+have now to deal with words over which you can establish no genuine
+rulership unless you have outside help.
+
+You must own a dictionary, have it by you, consult it carefully and often.
+Do not select one for purchasing upon the basis of either mere bigness or
+cheapness. If you do, you may make yourself the owner of an out-of-date
+reprint from stereotyped plates. What to choose depends partly upon
+personal preference, partly upon whether your need is for
+comprehensiveness or compression.
+
+If you are a scholar, _Murray's_ many-volumed _New English
+Dictionary_ may be the publication for you; but if you are an ordinary
+person, you will probably content yourself with something less expensive
+and exhaustive. You will find the _Century Dictionary and
+Cyclopedia_, in twelve volumes, or _Webster's New International
+Dictionary_ an admirable compilation. The _New Standard
+Dictionary_ will also prove useful. All in all, if you can afford it,
+you should provide yourself with one or the other of these three large and
+authoritative, but not too inclusive, works. Of the smaller lexicons
+_Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, Webster's Secondary School
+Dictionary_, the _Practical Standard Dictionary_, and the _Desk
+Standard Dictionary_ answer most purposes well.
+
+A dictionary is not for show. You must learn to use it. What ordinarily
+passes for use is in fact abuse. Wherein? Let us say that you turn to your
+lexicon for the meaning of a word. Of the various definitions given, you
+disregard all save the one which enables the word to make sense in its
+present context, or which fits your preconception of what the word should
+stand for. Having engaged in this solemn mummery, you mentally record the
+fact that you have been squandering your time, and enter into a compact
+with yourself that no more will you so do. At best you have tided over a
+transitory need, or have verified a surmise. You have not truly
+_learned_ the word, brought it into a vassal's relationship with you,
+so fixed it in memory that henceforth, night or day, you can take it up
+like a familiar tool.
+
+This procedure is blundering, farcical, futile, incorrect. To suppose you
+have learned a word by so cursory a glance at its resources is like
+supposing you have learned a man through having had him render you some
+temporary and trivial service, as lending you a match or telling you the
+time of day. To acquaint yourself thoroughly with a word--or a man--
+involves effort, application. You must go about the work seriously,
+intelligently.
+
+One secret of consulting a dictionary properly lies in finding the
+primary, the original meaning of the word. You must go to the source. If
+the word is of recent formation, and is native rather than naturalized
+English, you have only to look through the definitions given. Such a word
+will not cause you much trouble. But if the word is derived from primitive
+English or from a foreign language, you must seek its origin, not in one
+of the numbered subheads of the definition, but in an etymological record
+you will perceive within brackets or parentheses. Here you will find the
+Anglo-Saxon (Old English), Latin, Greek, French, German, Italian,
+Scandinavian, or other word from which sprang the word you are studying,
+and along with this authentic original you may find cognate words in other
+languages. These you may examine if you care to observe their resemblance
+to your word, but the examination is not necessary. It could teach you
+only the earlier or other _forms_ of your word, whereas what you are
+after is the original _meaning_. This too is set down within the
+brackets; if your search is in earnest, you cannot possible miss it. And
+having discovered this original meaning, you must get it in mind; it is
+one of the really significant things about the word. Your next step is to
+find the present import of the word. Look, therefore, through the modern
+definitions. Of these there may be too many, with too delicate shadings in
+thought between them, for you to keep all clearly in mind. In fact you
+need not try. Consider them of course, but out of them seek mainly the
+drift, the central meaning. After a little practice you will be able to
+disengage it from the others.
+
+You now know the original sense of the word and its central signification
+today. The two may be identical; they may be widely different; but through
+reflection or study of the entire definition you will establish some sort
+of connection between them. When you have done this, you have mastered the
+word. From the two meanings you can surmise the others, wherever and
+whenever encountered; for the others are but outgrowths and applications
+of them.
+
+One warning will not be amiss. You must not suppose that the terms used in
+defining a word are its absolute synonyms, or may be substituted for it
+indiscriminately. You must develop a feeling for _the limits_ of the
+word, so that you may perceive where its likeness to the other terms
+leaves off and its unlikeness begins. Thus if one of the terms employed in
+defining _command_ is _control_, you must not assume that the
+two words are interchangeable; you must not say, for instance, that the
+captain controlled his men to present arms.
+
+Such, abstractly stated, is the way to look up a word in the dictionary.
+Let us now take a concrete illustration. Starting with the word
+_tension_, let us ascertain what we can about it in the _Century
+Dictionary and Cyclopedia_. Our first quest is the original meaning.
+For this we consult the bracketed matter. There we meet the French,
+Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian kinsmen of the word, and learn that they
+are traceable to a common ancestor, the Latin _tensio(n)_, which
+comes from the Latin verb _tendere_. The meaning of _tensio(n)_
+is given as "stretching," that of _tendere_ as "stretch," "extend."
+Thus we know of the original word that in form it closely resembles the
+modern word, and that in meaning it involves the idea of stretching.
+
+What is the central meaning of the word today? To acquaint ourselves with
+this we must run through the definitions listed. Here (in condensed form)
+they are. (1) The act of stretching. (2) In _mechanics_, stress or
+the force by which something is pulled. (3) In _physics_, a
+constrained condition of the particles of bodies. (4) In _statical
+electricity_, surface-density. (5) Mental strain, stress, or
+application. (6) A strained state of any kind, as political or social. (7)
+An attachment to a sewing-machine for regulating the strain of the thread.
+Now of these definitions (2), (3), (4), and (7) are too highly specialized
+to conduct us, of themselves, into the highway of the word's meaning. They
+bear out, however, the evidence of (1), (5), and (6), which have as their
+core the idea of stretching, or of the strain which stretching produces.
+
+We must now lay the original meaning alongside the central meaning today,
+in order to draw our conclusions. We perceive that the two meanings
+correspond. Yet by prying into them we make out one marked difference
+between them. The original meaning is literal, the modern largely
+figurative. To be sure, the figure has been so long used that it is now
+scarcely felt as a figure; its force and definiteness have departed.
+Consequently we may speak of being on a tension without having in mind at
+all a comparison of our nervous system with a stretched garment, or with
+an outreaching arm, or with a tightly strung musical instrument, or with a
+taut rope.
+
+What, then, is the net result of our investigation? Simply this, that
+_tension_ means stretching, and that the stretching may be conceived
+either literally or figuratively. With these two facts in mind, we need
+not (unless we are experts in mechanics, physics, statical electricity, or
+the sewing-machine) go to the trouble of committing the special senses of
+_tension_; for should occasion bid, we can--from our position at the
+heart of the word--easily grasp their rough purport. And from other
+persons than specialists no more would be required.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Dictionary
+
+For each of the following words find (a) the original meaning, (b) the
+central meaning today. (Other words are given in the exercises at the end
+of this chapter.)
+
+Bias Supersede Sly
+Aversion Capital Meerschaum
+Extravagant Travel Alley
+Concur Travail Fee
+Attention Apprehend Superb
+Magnanimity Lewd Adroit
+Altruism Instigation Quite
+Benevolence Complexion Urchin
+Charity Bishop Thoroughfare
+Unction Starve Naughty
+Speed Cunning Moral
+Success Decent Antic
+Crafty Handsome Savage
+Usury Solemn Uncouth
+Costume Parlor Window
+Presumption Bombastic Colleague
+Petty Vixen Alderman
+Queen Doctor Engage
+
+
+<Prying Into a Word's Past>
+
+To thread with minute fidelity the mazes of a word's former history is the
+task of the linguistic scholar; our province is the practical and the
+present-day. But words, like men, are largely what they are because of
+what they have been; and to turn a gossip's eye upon their past is to
+procure for ourselves, often, not only enlightenment but also
+entertainment. This fact, though brought out in some part already,
+deserves separate and fuller discussion.
+
+In the first place, curiosity as to words' past experience enables us to
+read with keener understanding the literature of preceding ages. Of course
+we should not, even so, go farther back than about three centuries. To
+read anything earlier than Shakespeare would require us to delve too
+deeply into linguistic bygones. And to read Shakespeare himself requires
+effort--but rewards it. Let us see how an insight into words will help us
+to interpret the Seven Ages of Man (Appendix 4).
+
+In line 2 of this passage appears the word _merely_. In Shakespeare's
+time it frequently meant "altogether" or "that and nothing else." As here
+used, it may be taken to mean this, or to have its modern meaning, or to
+stand in meaning midway between the two and to be suggestive of both;
+there is no way of determining precisely. In line 12 the word _pard_
+means leopard. In line 18 _saws_ means "sayings" (compare the phrase
+"an old saw"); _modern_ means "moderate," "commonplace";
+_instances_ means what we mean by it today, "examples,"
+"illustrations." (Line 18 as a whole gives us a vivid sense of the
+justice's readiness to speak sapiently, after the manner of justices, and
+to trot out his trite illustrations on the slightest provocation.) The
+word _pantaloon_ in line 20 is interesting. The patron saint of
+Venice was St. Pantaleon (the term is from Greek, means "all-lion," and
+possibly refers to the lion of St. Mark's Cathedral). _Pantaloon_
+came therefore to signify (1) a Venetian, (2) a garment worn by Venetians
+and consisting of breeches and stockings in one. The second sense is
+preserved, substantially, in our term _pantaloons_. The first sense
+led to the use of the word (in the mouths of the Venetians' enemies) for
+"buffoon" and then (in early Italian comedy) for "a lean and foolish old
+man." It is this stock figure of the stage that Shakespeare evokes. In
+line 22 _hose_ means the covering for a man's body from his waist to
+his nether-stock. (Compare the present meaning: a covering for the feet
+and the _lower_ part of the legs.) In line 27 _mere_ means
+"absolute." In line 28 _sans_ means "without."
+
+Of the words we have examined, only _sans_ is obsolete, though
+_pard_, _saws_, and _pantaloon_ are perhaps not entirely
+familiar. That is, only one word in the passage, so far as its outward
+form goes, is completely alien to our knowledge. But how different the
+matter stands when we consider meanings! The words are words of today, but
+the meanings are the meanings of Shakespeare. We should be baffled and
+misled as to the dramatist's thought if we had made no inquiries into the
+vehicle therefor.
+
+In the second place, to look beyond the present into the more remote
+signification of words will put us on our guard against the reappearance
+of submerged or half-forgotten meanings. We have seen that the word
+_tension_ may be used without conscious connection with the idea of
+stretching. But if we incautiously place the word in the wrong
+environment, the idea will be resurrected to our undoing. We associate
+_ardor_ with strong and eager desire. For ordinary purposes this
+conception of the word suffices. But _ardor_ is one of the children
+of fire; its primary sense is "burning" (compare _arson_). Therefore
+to pronounce the three vocables "overflowing with ardor" is to mix figures
+of speech absurdly. We should fall into a similar mistake if we said
+"brilliant fluency," and into a mistake of another kind (that of tautology
+or repetition of an idea) if we said "heart-felt cordiality," for
+_cordiality_ means "feelings of the heart." _Appreciate_ means
+"set a (due) value on." We may perhaps say "really appreciate," but
+scrupulous writers and speakers do not say "appreciate very much." A
+_humor_ (compare humid) was once a "moisture"; then one of the four
+moistures or liquids that entered into the human constitution and by the
+proportions of their admixture determined human temperament; next a man's
+outstanding temperamental quality (the thing itself rather than the cause
+of it); then oddity which people may laugh at; then the spirit of laughter
+and good nature in general. Normally we do not connect the idea of
+moisture with the word. We may even speak of "a dry humor." But we should
+not say "now and then a dry humor crops out," for then too many buried
+meanings lie in the same grave for the very dead to rest peacefully
+together.
+
+Even apart from reading old literature and from having, when you use
+words, no ghosts of their pristine selves rise up to damn you, you may
+profit from a knowledge of how the meaning of a term has evolved. For
+example, you will meet many tokens and reminders of the customs and
+beliefs of our ancestors. Thus _coxcomb_ carries you back to the days
+when every court was amused by a "fool" whose head was decked with a
+cock's comb; _crestfallen_ takes you back to cockfighting; and
+_lunatic_ ("moonstruck"), _disaster_ ("evil star"), and "thank
+your lucky stars" plant you in the era of superstition when human fate was
+governed by heavenly bodies.
+
+Further, you will perceive the poetry of words. Thus to _wheedle is_
+to wag the tail and to _patter_ is to hurry through one's prayers
+(paternoster). What a picture of the frailty of men even in their holiness
+flashes on us from that word _patter! Breakfast is_ the breaking of
+the fast of the night. _Routine_ (the most humdrum of words) is
+travel along a way already broken. _Goodby_ is an abridged form of
+"God be with you." _Dilapidated_ is fallen stone from stone.
+_Daisy_ is "the day's eye," _nasturtium_ (from its spicy smell)
+"the nose-twister," _dandelion_ "the tooth of the lion." _A
+lord_ is a bread-guard.
+
+You will perceive, moreover, that many a dignified word once involved the
+same idea as some unassuming or even semi-disreputable word or expression
+involves now. Thus there is little or no difference in figure between
+understanding a thing and getting on to it; between averting something
+(turning it aside) and sidetracking it; between excluding (shutting out)
+and closing the door to; between degrading (putting down a step) and
+taking down a notch; between accumulating (heaping up) and making one's
+pile; between taking umbrage (the shadow) and being thrown in the shade;
+between ejaculating and throwing out a remark; between being on a tension
+and being highstrung; between being vapid and having lost steam; between
+insinuating (winding in) and worming in; between investigating and
+tracking; between instigating (goading on or into) and prodding up;
+between being incensed (compare _incendiary_) and burning with
+indignation; between recanting (unsinging) and singing another tune;
+between ruminating (chewing) and smoking in one's pipe. Nor is there much
+difference in figure between sarcasm (a tearing of the flesh) and taking
+the hide off; between sinister (left-handed) and backhanded; between
+preposterous (rear end foremost) and cart before the horse; between salary
+(salt-money, an allowance for soldiers) and pin-money; between pedigree
+(crane's foot, from the appearance of genealogical diagrams) and crowsfeet
+(about the eyes); between either precocious (early cooked), apricot (early
+cooked), crude (raw), or recrudescence (raw again) and half-baked. To
+ponder is literally to weigh; to apprehend an idea is to take hold of it;
+to deviate is to go out of one's way; to congregate is to flock together;
+to assail or insult a man is to jump on him; to be precipitate is to go
+head foremost; to be recalcitrant is to kick.
+
+Again, you will perceive that many words once had more literal or more
+definitely concrete meanings than they have now. To corrode is to gnaw
+along with others, to differ is to carry apart, to refuse is to pour back.
+Polite is polished, absurd is very deaf, egregious is taken from the
+common herd, capricious is leaping about like a goat, cross (disagreeable)
+is shaped like a cross, wrong is wrung (or twisted). Crisscross is
+Christ's cross, attention is stretching toward, expression is pressed out,
+dexterity is right-handedness, circumstances are things standing around,
+an innuendo is nodding, a parlor is a room to talk in, a nostril is that
+which pierces the nose (thrill means pierce), vinegar is sharp wine, a
+stirrup is a rope to mount by, a pastor is a shepherd, a marshal is a
+caretaker of horses, a constable is a stable attendant, a companion is a
+sharer of one's bread.
+
+On the other hand, you will find that many words were once more general in
+import than they have since become. _Fond_ originally meant foolish,
+then foolishly devoted, then (becoming more general again) devoted.
+_Nostrum_ meant our own, then a medicine not known by other
+physicians, then a quack remedy. _Shamefast_ meant confirmed in
+modesty (shame); then through a confusion of _fast_ with
+_faced_, a betrayal through the countenance of self-consciousness or
+guilt. _Counterfeit_ meant a copy or a picture, then an unlawful
+duplication, especially of a coin. _Lust_ meant pleasure of any sort,
+then inordinate sexual pleasure or desire. _Virtue_ (to trace only a
+few of its varied activities) meant manliness, then the quality or
+attribute peculiar to true manhood (with the Romans this was valor), then
+any admirable quality, then female chastity. _Pen_ meant a feather,
+then a quill to write with, then an instrument for writing used in the
+same way as a quill. A _groom_ meant a man, then a stableman (in
+_bridegroom_, however, it preserves the old signification).
+_Heathen_ (heath-dweller), _pagan_ (peasant), and _demon_
+(a divinity) had in themselves no iniquitous savor until early Christians
+formed their opinion of the people inaccessible to them and the spirits
+incompatible with the unity of the Godhead. Words betokening future
+happenings or involving judgment tend to take a special cast from the
+fears and anxieties men feel when their fortune is affected or their
+destiny controlled by external forces. Thus _omen_ (a prophetic
+utterance or sign) and _portent_ (a stretching forward, a foreseeing,
+a foretelling) might originally be either benign or baleful; but nowadays,
+especially in the adjectival forms _ominous_ and _portentous_,
+they wear a menacing hue. Similarly _criticism_, _censure_, and
+_doom_, all of them signifying at first mere judgment, have come--the
+first in popular, the other two in universal, usage--to stand for adverse
+judgment. The old sense of _doom_ is perpetuated, however, in
+_Doomsday_, which means the day on which we are all to be, not
+necessarily sent to hell, but judged.
+
+You will furthermore perceive that the exaggerated affirmations people are
+always indulging in have led to the weakening of many a word. _Fret_
+meant eat; formerly to say that a man was fretting was to use a vigorous
+comparison--to have the man devoured with care. _Mortify_ meant to
+kill, then killed with embarrassment, then embarrassed. _Qualm_ meant
+death, but our qualms of conscience have degenerated into mere twinges.
+Oaths are shorn of their might by overuse; _confound_, once a
+tremendous malinvocation, may now fall from the lips of respectable young
+ladies, and _fie_, in its time not a whit less dire, would be
+scarcely out of place in even a cloister. Words designating immediacy come
+to have no more strength than soup-meat seven times boiled.
+_Presently_ meant in the present, _soon_ and _by and by_
+meant forthwith. How they have lost their fundamental meaning will be
+intelligible to you if you have in ordering something been told that it
+would be delivered "right away," or in calling for a girl have been told
+that she would be down "in a minute."
+
+You will detect in words of another class a deterioration, not in force,
+but in character; they have fallen into contemptuous or sinister usage.
+Many words for skill or wisdom have been thus debased. _Cunning_
+meant knowing, _artful_ meant well acquainted with one's art,
+_crafty_ meant proficient in one's craft or calling, _wizard_
+meant wise man. The present import of these words shows how men have
+assumed that mental superiority must be yoked with moral dereliction or
+diabolical aid. Words indicating the generality--indicating ordinary rank
+or popular affiliations--have in many instances suffered the same decline.
+_Trivial_ meant three ways; it was what might be heard at the
+crossroads or on any route you chanced to be traveling, and its value was
+accordingly slight. _Lewd_ meant belonging to the laity; it came to
+mean ignorant, and then morally reprehensible. _Common_ may be used
+to signify ill-bred; _vulgar_ may be and frequently is used to
+signify indecent. _Sabotage_, from a French term meaning wooden shoe,
+has come to be applied to the deliberate and systematic scamping of one's
+work in order to injure one's employer. _Idiot_ (common soldier)
+crystallizes the exasperated ill opinion of officers for privates.
+(_Infantry_--an organization of military infants--has on the contrary
+sloughed its reproach and now enshrines the dignity of lowliness.)
+Somewhat akin to words of this type is _knave_, which first meant
+boy, then servant, then rogue. Terms for agricultural classes seldom
+remain flattering. Besides such epithets as _hayseed_ and
+_clodhopper_, contemptuous in their very origin, _villain_ (farm
+servant), _churl_ (farm laborer), and _boor_ (peasant) have all
+gathered unto themselves opprobrium; _villain_ now involves a
+scoundrelly spirit, _churl_ a contumelious manner, _boor_ a
+bumptious ill-breeding; not one of these words is any longer confined in
+its application to a particular social rank. Terms for womankind are soon
+tainted. _Wench_ meant at first nothing worse than girl or daughter,
+_quean_ than woman, _hussy_ than housewife; even _woman_ is
+generally felt to be half-slighting. Terms affirming unacquaintance with
+sin, or abstention from it, tend to be quickly reft of what praise they
+are fraught with; none of us likes to be saluted as _innocent_,
+_guileless_, or _unsophisticated_, and to be dubbed _silly_ no
+longer makes us feel blessed. Besides these and similar classes of words,
+there are innumerable individual terms that have sadly lost caste. An
+_imp_ was erstwhile a scion; it then became a boy, and then a
+mischievous spirit. A _noise_ might once be music; it has ceased to
+enjoy such possibilities. To live near a piano that is constantly banged
+is to know how _noise_ as a synonym for music was outlawed.
+
+A backward glance over the history of words repays you in showing you the
+words for what they are, and in having them live out their lives before
+you. Do you know what an _umpire_ is? He is a non (or num) peer, a
+not equal man, an odd man--one therefore who can decide disputes. Do you
+know what a _nickname_ is? It is an eke (also) name, a title bestowed
+upon one in addition to his proper designation. Do you know what a
+_fellow_, etymologically speaking, is? He is a fee-layer, a partner,
+a man who lays his fee (property) alongside yours. Do you know that
+_matinée_, though awarded to the afternoon, meant primarily a morning
+entertainment and has traveled so far from its original sense that we call
+an actual before-noon performance a morning matinée? Do you know the past
+of such words as _bedlam_, _rival_, _parson_,
+_sandwich_, _pocket handkerchief?_ _Bedlam_, a corruption
+of _Bethlehem_, was a hospital for the insane in London; it came to
+be a general term for great confusion or discord. _Rivals_ were
+formerly dwellers--that is, neighboring dwellers--on the bank of a stream;
+disputes over water-rights gave the word its present meaning. A
+_person_ or _parson_, for the two were the same, was a mask
+(literally, that through which the sound came); then an actor representing
+a character in a play; then a representative of any sort; then the
+representative of the church in a parish. A _sandwich_ was a
+stratification of bread and meat by the Earl of Sandwich, who was so loath
+to leave the gaming table that he saved time by having food brought him in
+this form. A _kerchief_ was originally a cover for the head, and
+indeed sundry amiable, old-fashioned grandmothers still use it for this
+purpose. Afterward people carried it in their hands and called it a
+_handkerchief_; and when they transferred it to the pocket, they
+called it a _pocket handkerchief_ or pocket hand head-cover. A
+scrutiny of such words should convince you that the reading of the
+dictionary, instead of being the dull occupation it is almost proverbially
+reputed to be, may become an occupation truly fascinating. For clustered
+about the words recorded in the dictionary are inexhaustible riches of
+knowledge and of interest for those who have eyes to see.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Past
+
+1. For each of the following words look up (a) the present meaning if you
+do not know it, (b) the original meaning, (c) any other past meanings you
+can find.
+
+Exposition Corn Cattle
+Influence Sanguine Turmoil
+Sinecure Waist Shrew
+Potential Spaniel Crazy
+Character Candidate Indomitable
+Infringe Rascal Amorphous
+Expend Thermometer Charm
+Rather Tall Stepchild
+Wedlock Ghostly Haggard
+Bridal Pioneer Pluck
+Noon Neighbor Jimson weed
+Courteous Wanton Rosemary
+Cynical Street Plausible
+Grocer Husband Allow
+Worship Gipsy Insane
+Encourage Clerk Disease
+Astonish Clergyman Boulevard
+Realize Hectoring Canary
+Bombast Primrose Diamond
+Benedict Walnut Abominate
+Piazza Holiday Barbarous
+Disgust Heavy Kind
+Virtu Nightmare Devil
+Gospel Comfort Whist
+Mermaid Pearl Onion
+Enthusiasm Domino Book
+Fanatic Grotesque Cheat
+Auction Economy Illegible
+Quell Cheap Illegitimate
+Sheriff Excelsior Emasculate
+Danger Dunce Champion
+Shibboleth Calico Adieu
+Essay Pontiff Macadamize
+Wages Copy Stentorian
+Quarantine Puny Saturnine
+Buxom Caper Derrick
+Indifferent Boycott Mercurial
+Gaudy Countenance Poniard
+Majority Camera Chattel.
+
+2. The following words are often used loosely today, some because their
+original meaning is lost sight of, some because they are confused with
+other words. Find for each word (a) what the meaning has been and (b) what
+the correct meaning is now.
+
+Nice Awful Atrocious
+Grand Horrible Pitiful
+Beastly Transpire Claim
+Weird Aggravate Uncanny
+Demean Gorgeous Elegant
+Fine Noisome Mutual (in "a mutual friend")
+Lovely Cute Stunning
+Liable Immense.
+
+3. The following sentences from standard English literature illustrate the
+use of words still extant and even familiar, in senses now largely or
+wholly forgotten. The quotations from the Bible and Shakespeare (all the
+Biblical quotations are from the King James Version) date back a little
+more than three hundred years, those from Milton a little less than three
+hundred years, and those from Gray and Coleridge, respectively, about a
+hundred and seventy-five and a hundred and twenty-five years. Go carefully
+enough into the past meanings of the italicized words to make sure you
+grasp the author's thought.
+
+And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of
+these is _charity_.(1 _Corinthians_ 13:13)
+
+I _prevented_ the dawning of the morning. (_Psalms_ 119:147)
+
+Our eyes _wait_ upon the Lord our God. (_Psalms_ 123:2)
+
+The times of this ignorance God _winked_ at. (_Acts_ 17:30)
+
+And Jesus said, Somebody hath touched me; for I perceive that
+_virtue_ is gone out of me. (_Luke_ 8:46)
+
+To judge the _quick_ and the dead. (1 _Peter_ 4:5)
+
+Be not wise in your own _conceits_. (_Romans_ 12:16)
+
+In maiden meditation, _fancy_-free. (Shakespeare: _A Midsummer
+Night's Dream_)
+
+Is it so _nominated_ in the bond? (Shakespeare: _The Merchant
+of Venice_)
+
+Would I had met my _dearest_ foe in heaven. (Shakespeare:
+_Hamlet_)
+
+The _extravagant_ and _erring_ spirit. (Said of a spirit
+wandering from the bounds of purgatory. Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+The _modesty_ of nature. (Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+It is a nipping and an _eager_ air. (Shakespeare: _Hamlet_)
+
+_Security_
+Is mortals' chiefest enemy. (Shakespeare: _Macbeth_)
+
+Most _admired_ disorder. (Shakespeare: _Macbeth_)
+
+Upon this _hint_ I spake. (From the account of the wooing of
+Desdemona. Shakespeare: _Othello_)
+
+This Lodovico is a _proper_ man. A very handsome man.
+(Shakespeare: _Othello_)
+
+Mice and rats and such small _deer_. (Shakespeare: _King Lear_)
+
+This is no sound
+That the earth _owes_. (Shakespeare: _The Tempest_)
+
+Every shepherd _tells_ his _tale_. (Milton: _L'Allegro_)
+Bring the _rathe_ primrose that forsaken dies. (_Rathe_ survives
+only in the comparative form _rather_. Milton: _Lycidas_)
+
+Can honor's voice _provoke_ the silent dust? (Gray: _Elegy_)
+
+The _silly_ buckets on the deck. (Coleridge: _The Ancient
+Mariner_)
+
+4. In technical usage or particular phrases a former sense of a word may
+be embedded like a fossil. The italicized words in the following list
+retain special senses of this kind. What do these words as thus used mean?
+Can you add to the list?
+To _wit_
+Might and _main_
+Time and _tide_
+Christmas_tide_
+_Sad_ bread
+A bank _teller_
+To _tell_ one's _beads_
+Aid and _abet_
+_Meat_ and drink
+Shop_lifter_
+Fishing-_tackle_
+Getting off _scot_-free
+An _earnest_ of future favors
+A _brave_ old hearthstone
+_Confusion_ to the enemy!
+Giving aid and _comfort_ to the enemy
+Without _let_ or hindrance
+A _let_ in tennis
+_Quick_lime
+Cut to _the quick_
+_Neat_-foot oil
+To _sound in_ tort (Legal phrase)
+To bid one God_speed_
+I had as _lief_ as not
+The child _favors_ its parents
+On _pain_ of death
+Widow's _weeds_
+I am _bound_ for the Promised Land
+To _carry_ a girl to a party (Used only in the South)
+To give a person so much _to boot_
+
+5. Each of the subjoined phrases contradicts itself or repeats its idea
+clumsily. The key to the difficulty lies in the italicized words. What is
+their true meaning?
+
+A weekly _journal_
+_Ultimate_ end
+Final _ultimatum_
+_Final_ completion
+Previous _preconceptions_
+_Nauseating_ seasickness
+_Join_ together
+_Descend_ down
+_Prefer_ better
+_Argent_ silver
+Completely _annihilate_
+_Unanimously_ by all
+Most _unique_ of all
+The other _alternative_
+_Endorse_ on the back
+_Incredible_ to believe
+A _criterion_ to go by
+An _appetite_ to eat
+_A panacea_ for all ills
+_Popular_ with the people
+_Biography_ of his life
+_Autobiography_ of his own life
+_Vitally_ alive
+A new, _novel_, and ingenious explanation
+_Mutual_ dislike for each other
+_Omniscient_ knowledge of all subjects
+A _material_ growth in mental power
+_Peculiar_ faults of his own
+Fly into an _ebullient_ passion
+To _saturate_ oneself with gold and silver
+Elected by _acclamation on_ a secret ballot.
+
+
+
+V.
+
+ INDIVIDUAL WORDS: AS MEMBERS OF VERBAL FAMILIES
+
+
+Our investigation into the nature, qualities, and fortunes of single words
+must now merge into a study of their family connections. We do not go far
+into this new phase of our researches before we perceive that the career
+of a word may be very complicated. Most people, if you asked them, would
+tell you that an individual word is a causeless entity--a thing that was
+never begotten and lacks power to propagate. They would deny the
+possibility that its course through the world could be other than
+colorless, humdrum. Now words thus immaculately conceived and fatefully
+impotent, words that shamble thus listlessly through life, there are. But
+many words are born in an entirely normal way; have a grubby boyhood, a
+vigorous youth, and a sober maturity; marry, beget sons and daughters,
+become old, enfeebled, even senile; and suffer neglect, if not death. In
+their advanced age they are exempted by the discerning from enterprises
+that call for a lusty agility, but are drafted into service by those to
+whom all levies are alike. Indeed in their very prime of manhood their
+vicissitudes are such as to make them seem human. Some rise in the world
+some sink; some start along the road of grandeur or obliquity, and then
+backslide or reform. Some are social climbers, and mingle in company where
+verbal dress coats are worn; some are social degenerates, and consort with
+the ragamuffins and guttersnipes of language. Some marry at their own
+social level, some above them, some beneath; some go down in childless
+bachelorhood or leave an unkempt and illegitimate progeny. And if you
+trace their own lineage, you will find for some that it is but decent and
+middle-class, for some that it is mongrelized and miscegenetic, for some
+that it is proud, ancient, yea perhaps patriarchal.
+
+It is contrary to nature for a word, as for a man, to live the life of a
+hermit. Through external compulsion or internal characteristics a word has
+contacts with its fellows. And its most intimate, most spontaneous
+associations are normally with its own kindred.
+
+In our work hitherto we have had nothing to say of verbal consanguinity.
+But we have not wholly ignored its existence, for the very good reason
+that we could not. For example, in the latter portions of Chapter IV we
+proceeded on the hypothesis that at least some words have ancestors. Also
+in the analysis of the dictionary definition of _tension_ we learned
+that the word has, not only a Latin forebear, but French, Spanish,
+Portuguese, and Italian kinsmen as well. One thing omitted from that
+analysis would have revealed something further--namely, that the word has
+its English kinfolks too. For the bracketed part of the dictionary
+definition mentions two other English words, _tend_ and _tense_,
+which from their origin involve the same idea as that of _tension_--
+the idea of stretching.
+
+Now words may be akin in either of two ways. They may be related in blood.
+Or they may be related by marriage. Let us consider these two kinds of
+connection more fully.
+
+
+<Words Related in Blood>
+
+As an illustration of blood kinships enjoyed by a native English word take
+the adjective _good_. We can easily call to mind other members of its
+family: goodly, goodish, goody-goody, good-hearted, good-natured, good-
+humored, good-tempered, goods, goodness, goodliness, gospel (good story),
+goodby, goodwill, goodman, goodwife, good-for-nothing, good den (good
+evening), the Good Book. The connection between these words is obvious.
+
+Next consider a group of words that have been naturalized: scribe,
+prescribe, ascribe, proscribe, transcribe, circumscribe, subscriber,
+indescribable, scribble, script, scripture, postscript, conscript,
+rescript, manuscript, nondescript, inscription, superscription,
+description. It is clear that these words are each other's kith and kin in
+blood, and that the strain or stock common to all is _scribe_ or (as
+sometimes modified) _script_. What does this strain signify? The idea
+of writing. The _scribes_ are a writing clan. Some of them, to be
+sure, have strayed somewhat from the ancestral calling, for words are as
+wilful--or as independent--as men. _Ascribe_, for example, does not
+act like a member of the household of writers, whatever it may look like.
+We should have to scrutinize it carefully or consult the record for it in
+that verbal Who's Who, the dictionary, before we could understand how it
+came by its scribal affiliations honestly. But once we begin to reflect or
+to probe, we find we have not mistaken its identity. _Ascribe_ is the
+offspring of _ad_ (to) and _scribo_ (write), both Latin terms.
+It originally meant writing to a person's name or after it (that is,
+imputing to the person by means of written words) some quality or
+happening of which he was regarded as the embodiment, source, or cause.
+Nowadays we may saddle the matter on him through oral rather than written
+speech. That is, _ascribe_ has largely lost the writing traits. But
+all the same it is manifestly of the writing blood.
+
+The _scribes_ are of undivided racial stock, Latin. Consider now the
+_manu_, or _man_, words which sprang from the Latin
+_manus_, meaning "hand." Here are some of them: manual, manoeuver,
+mandate, manacle, manicure, manciple, emancipate, manage, manner,
+manipulate, manufacture, manumission, manuscript, amanuensis. These too
+are children of the same father; they are brothers and sisters to each
+other. But what shall we say of legerdemain (light, or sleight, of hand),
+maintain, coup de main, and the like? They bear a resemblance to the
+_man's_ and _manu's_, yet one that casual observers would not
+notice. Is there kinship between the two sets of words? There is. But not
+the full fraternal or sororal relation. The _mains_ are children of
+_manus_ by a French marriage he contracted. With this French blood in
+their veins, they are only half-brothers, half-sisters of the
+_manu's_ and the _man's_.
+
+Your examination of the family trees of words will be practical, rather
+than highly scholastic, in nature. You need not track every word in the
+dictionary to the den of its remote parentage. Nor need you bother your
+head with the name of the distant ancestor. But in the case of the large
+number of words that have a numerous kindred you should learn to detect
+the inherited strain. You will then know that the word is the brother or
+cousin of certain other words of your acquaintance, and this knowledge
+will apprise you of qualities in it with which you should reckon. To this
+extent only must you make yourself a student of verbal genealogy.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Blood
+
+(Simple exercises in tracing blood relationships among words are given at
+the end of the chapter. Therefore the exercises assigned here are of a
+special character.)
+
+1. Each of the following groups is made up of related words, but the
+relationship is somewhat disguised. Consult the dictionary for each word,
+and learn all you can as to (a) its source, (b) the influence (as passing
+through an intermediate language) that gave it its present form, (c) the
+course of its development into its present meaning.
+
+Captain Cathedral Governor
+Capital Chaise Gubernatorial
+Decapitate Chair
+Chef Shay Guardian
+Chieftain Ward
+ Camp
+Cavalry Campaign Guarantee
+Chivalry Champion Warrant
+
+Camera Inept Incipient
+Chamber Apt Receive
+
+Serrated Inimical Poor
+Sierra Enemy Pauper
+
+Influence Espionage Work
+Influenza Spy Wrought
+ Playwright
+Isolate
+Insular
+
+2. The variety of sources for modern English is indicated by the following
+list. Do not seek for blood kinsmen of these particular words, but think
+of all the additional words you can that have come into English from
+Indian, Spanish, French, any other language spoken today.
+
+Alphabet (Greek) Piano (Italian)
+Folio (Latin) Car (Norman)
+Boudoir (French) Rush (German)
+Binnacle (Portuguese) Sky (Icelandic)
+Anger (Old Norse) Yacht (Dutch)
+Isinglass (Low German) Hussar (Hungarian)
+Slogan (Celtic) Samovar (Russian)
+Polka (Polish) Chess (Persian)
+Shekel (Hebrew) Tea (Chinese)
+Algebra (Arabic) Kimono (Japanese)
+Puttee (Hindoo) Tattoo (Tahitian)
+Boomerang (Australian) Voodoo (African)
+Potato (Haytian) Skunk (American Indian)
+Guano (Peruvian) Buncombe (American)
+Renegade (Spanish)
+
+
+<Words Related by Marriage>
+
+That words marry and are given in marriage, is too generally overlooked.
+Any student of a foreign language, German for instance, can recall the
+thrill of discovery and the lift of reawakened hope that came to him when
+first he suspected, aye perceived, the existence of verbal matrimony. For
+weeks he had struggled with words that apparently were made up of
+fortuitous collocations of letters. Then in some beatific moment these
+huddles of letters took meaning; in instance after instance they
+represented, not a word, but words--a linguistic household. Let them be
+what they might--a harem, the domestic establishment of a Mormon, the
+dwelling-place of verbal polygamists,--he could at last see order in their
+relationships. To their morals he was indifferent, absorbed as he was in
+his joy of understanding.
+
+In English likewise are thousands of these verbal marriages. We may not be
+aware of them; from our very familiarity with words we may overlook the
+fact that in instances uncounted their oneness has been welded by a
+linguistic minister or justice of the peace. But to read a single page or
+harken for thirty seconds to oral discourse with our minds intent on such
+states of wedlock is to convince ourselves that they abound. Consider this
+list of everyday words: somebody, already, disease, vineyard, unskilled,
+outlet, nevertheless, holiday, insane, resell, schoolboy, helpmate,
+uphold, withstand, rainfall, deadlock, typewrite, football, motorman,
+thoroughfare, snowflake, buttercup, landlord, overturn. Every term except
+one yokes a verbal husband with his wife, and the one exception
+(_nevertheless_) joins a uxorious man with two wives.
+
+These marriages are of a simple kind. But the nuptial interlinkings
+between families of words may be many and complicated. Thus there is a
+family of _graph_ (or write) words: graphic, lithograph, cerograph,
+cinematograph, stylograph, telegraph, multigraph, seismograph, dictograph,
+monograph, holograph, logograph, digraph, autograph, paragraph,
+stenographer, photographer, biographer, lexicographer, bibliography,
+typography, pyrography, orthography, chirography, calligraphy,
+cosmography, geography. There is also a family of _phone_ (or sound)
+words: telephone, dictaphone, megaphone, audiphone, phonology, symphony,
+antiphony, euphonious, cacophonous, phonetic spelling. It chances that
+both families are of Greek extraction. Related to the _graphs_--their
+cousins in fact--are the _grams_: telegram, radiogram, cryptogram,
+anagram, monogram, diagram, logogram, program, epigram, kilogram,
+ungrammatical. Now a representative of the _graphs_ married into the
+_phone_ family, and we have graphophone. A representative of the
+_phones_ married into the _graph_ family, and we have
+phonograph. A representative of the _grams_ married into the
+_phone_ family, and we have gramophone. A representative of the
+_phones_ married into the _gram_ family, and we have phonogram.
+Of such unions children may be born. For example, from the marriage of Mr.
+Phone with Miss Graph were born phonography, phonographer, phonographist
+(a rather frail child), phonographic, phonographical, and
+phonographically.
+
+Intermarriage between the _phones_ and the _graphs_ or
+_grams_ is a wedding of equals. Some families of words, however, are
+of inferior social standing to other families, and may seek but not hope
+to be sought in marriage. Compare the _ex's_ with the _ports_.
+An _ex_, as a preposition, belongs to a prolific family but not one
+of established and unimpeachable dignity. Hence the _ex's_, though
+they marry right and left, lead the other words to the altar and are never
+led thither themselves. Witness exclude, excommunicate, excrescence,
+excursion, exhale, exit, expel, expunge, expense, extirpate, extract; in
+no instance does _ex_ fellow its connubial mate--it invariably
+precedes. The _ports_, on the other hand, are the peers of anybody.
+Some of them choose to remain single: port, porch, portal, portly, porter,
+portage. Here and there one marries into another family: portfolio,
+portmanteau, portable, port arms. More often, however, they are wooed than
+themselves do the pleading: comport, purport, report, disport, transport,
+passport, deportment, importance, opportunity, importunate, inopportune,
+insupportable. From our knowledge of the two families, therefore, we
+should surmise that if any marriage is to take place between them; an
+_ex_ must be the suitor. The surmise would be sound. There is such a
+term as _export_, but not as _portex_.
+
+Now it is oftentimes possible to do business with a man without knowing
+whether he is a man or a bridal couple. And so with a word. But the
+knowledge of his domestic state and circumstances will not come amiss, and
+it may prove invaluable. You may find that you can handle him to best
+advantage through a sagacious use of the influence of his wife.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Marriage
+
+1. For each word in the lists of EXERCISE - Dictionary and Activity 1 for
+EXERCISE - Past, determine (a) whether it is single or married; (b) if it
+is married, whether the wedding is one between equals.
+
+2. Make a list of the married words in the first three paragraphs of the
+selection from Burke (Appendix 2). For each of these words determine the
+exact nature and extent of the dowry brought by each of the contracting
+parties to the wedding.
+
+
+<Prying Into a Word's Relationships>
+
+Hitherto in our study of verbal relationships we have usually started with
+the family. Having strayed (as by good luck) into an assembly of kinsmen,
+we have observed the common strain and the general characteristics, and
+have then "placed" the individual with reference to these. But we do not
+normally meet words, any more than we meet men, in the domestic circle. We
+meet them and greet them hastily as they hurry through the tasks of the
+day, with no other associates about them than such as chance or momentary
+need may dictate. If we are to see anything of their family life, it must
+be through effort we ourselves put forth. We must be inquisitive about
+their conjugal and blood relationships.
+
+How, then, starting with the individual word, can you come into a
+knowledge of it, not in its public capacity, but in what is even more
+important, its personal connections? You must form the habit of asking two
+questions about it: (1) Is it married? (2) Of what family or families was
+it born? If you can get an understanding answer to these two questions, an
+answer that will tell you what its relations stand for as well as what
+their name is, your inquiries will be anything but bootless.
+
+Let us illustrate your procedure concretely. Suppose you read or hear the
+word _conchology_. It is a somewhat unusual word, but see what you
+can do with it yourself before calling on the dictionary to help you.
+Observe the word closely, and you will obtain the answer to your first
+question. _Conchology_ is no bachelor, no verbal old maid; it is a
+married pair.
+
+Your second and more difficult task awaits you; you must ascertain the
+meaning of the family connections. With Mr. Conch you are on speaking
+terms; you know him as one of the shells. But the utmost you can recall
+about his wife is that she is one of a whole flock of _ologies_. What
+significance does this relationship possess? You are uncertain. But do not
+thumb the dictionary yet. Pass in mental review all the _ologies_ you
+can assemble. Wait also for the others that through the unconscious
+operations of memory will tardily straggle in. Be on the lookout for
+_ologies_ as you read, as you listen. In time you will muster a
+sizable company of them. And you will draw a conclusion as to the meaning
+of the blood that flows through their veins. _Ology_ implies speech
+or study. _Conchology_, then, must be the study of conches.
+
+Your investigations thus far have done more than teach you the meaning of
+the word you began with. They have brought you some of the by-products of
+the study of verbal kinships. For you no longer pass the _ologies_ by
+with face averted or bow timidly ventured. You have become so well
+acquainted with them that even a new one, wherever encountered, would
+flash upon you the face of a friend. But now your desires are whetted. You
+wish to find out how much you _can_ learn. You at last consult the
+dictionary.
+
+Here a huge obstacle confronts you. The _ologies_, like the
+_ports_ (above), are a haughty clan; they are the wooed, rather
+than the wooing, members of most marital households that contain them. Now
+the marriage licenses recorded in the dictionary are entered under the
+name of the suitor, not of the person sought. Hence you labor under a
+severe handicap as you take the census of the _ologies_. Let us
+imagine the handicap the most severe possible. Let us suppose that no
+_ology_ had ever been the suitor. Even so, you would not be entirely
+baffled. For you could look up in the dictionary the _ologies_ you
+your self had been able to recall. To what profit? First, you could verify
+or correct your surmise as to what the _ological_ blood betokens.
+Secondly, you could perhaps obtain cross-references to yet other
+_ologies_ than those you remembered.
+
+But you are not reduced to these extremities. The _ologies_, arrogant
+as they are, sometimes are the applicants for matrimony, and the marriage
+registry of the dictionary so indicates. To be sure, they do not, when
+thus appearing at the beginning of words, take the form _ology_. They
+take the form _log_. But you must be resourceful enough to keep after
+your quarry in spite of the omission of a vowel or two. Also from some
+lexicons you may obtain still further help. You may find _ology, logy,
+logo_, or _log_ listed as a combining form, its meaning given, and
+examples of its use in compounds cited.
+
+By your zeal and persistence you have now brought together a goodly array
+of the _ologies_--all or most, let us say, of the following:
+conchology, biology, morphology, phrenology, physiology, osteology,
+histology, zoology, entomology, bacteriology, ornithology, pathology,
+psychology, cosmology, eschatology, demonology, mythology, theology,
+astrology, archeology, geology, meteorology, mineralogy, chronology,
+genealogy, ethnology, anthropology, criminology, technology, doxology,
+anthology, trilogy, philology, etymology, terminology, neologism,
+phraseology, tautology, analogy, eulogy, apology, apologue, eclogue,
+monologue, dialogue, prologue, epilogue, decalogue, catalogue, travelogue,
+logogram, logograph, logo-type, logarithms, logic, illogical. (Moreover
+you may have perceived in some of these words the kinship which exists in
+all for the _loquy_ group--see (1) Soliloquy below.) Of course you
+will discard some items from this list as being too learned for your
+purposes. But you will observe of the others that once you know the
+meaning of _ology_, you are likely to know the whole word. Thus from
+your study of _conchology_ you have mastered, not an individual term,
+but a tribe.
+
+In _conchology_ only one element, _ology_, was really dubious at
+the outset. Let us take a word of which both elements give you pause.
+Suppose your thought is arrested by the word _eugenics_. You perhaps
+know the word as a whole, but not its components. For by looking at it and
+thinking about it you decide that its state is married, that it comprises
+the household of Mr. Eu and his wife, formerly Miss Gen. But you cannot
+say offhand just what kind of person either Mr. Eu or the erstwhile Miss
+Gen is likely to prove.
+
+Have you met any of the _Eu's_ elsewhere? You think vaguely that you
+have, but cannot lay claim to any real acquaintance. To the dictionary you
+accordingly betake yourself. There you find that Mr. Eu is of a family
+quite respectable but not prone to marriage. _Euphony, eupepsia,
+euphemism, euthanasia_ are of his retiring kindred. The meaning of the
+_eu_ blood, so the dictionary informs you, is well. The _gen_
+blood, as you see exemplified in gentle, general, genital, engender,
+carries with it the idea of begetting, of producing, of birth, or (by
+extension) of kinship. _Eugenics_, then, is an alliance of well and
+begotten (or born).
+
+Your immediate purpose is fulfilled; but you resolve, let us say, to make
+the acquaintance of more of the _gens_, whose number you have
+perceived to be legion. You are duly introduced to the following: genus,
+generic, genre, gender, genitive, genius, general, Gentile, gentle,
+gentry, gentleman, genteel, generous, genuine, genial, congeniality,
+congener, genital, congenital, engender, generation, progeny, progenitor,
+genesis, genetics, eugenics, pathogenesis, biogenesis, ethnogeny,
+palingenesis, unregenerate, degenerate, monogeny, indigenous, exogenous,
+homogeneous, heterogeneous, genealogy, ingenuous, ingenious, ingenue,
+engine, engineer, hygiene, hydrogen, oxygen, endogen, primogeniture,
+philoprogeniture, miscegenation. Some of these are professional rather
+than social; you decide not to leave your card at their doors. Others have
+assumed a significance somewhat un_gen_-like, though the relationship
+may be traced if you are not averse to trouble, Thus _engine_ in its
+superficial aspects seems alien to the idea of born. But it is the child
+of _ingenious_ (innate, inborn); _ingenious_ is the inborn power
+to accomplish, and _engine_ is the result of the application of that
+power. Whether you care to bother with such subtleties or not, enough
+_gens_ are left to make the family one well worth your cultivation.
+
+Thus by studying two words, _conchology_ and _eugenics_, you
+have for the first time placed yourself on an intimate footing with three
+verbal families--the _ologies_, the _eu's,_ and the _gens_.
+Observe that though you studied the _ologies_ apart from the
+_eu's_ and the _gens_, your knowledge--once you have acquired
+it--cannot be kept pigeonholed, for the _ologies_ have intermarried
+with both the other families. Hence you on meeting _eulogy_ can
+exclaim: "How do you do, Mr. Eu? I am honored in making your acquaintance,
+Mrs. Eu--I was about to call you by your maiden name; for I am a friend of
+your sister, the Miss Ology who married Mr. Conch. And you too, Mr. Eu--I
+cannot regard you as a stranger. I have looked in so often on the family
+of your brother--the Euphony family, I mean. What a beautiful literary
+household it is! Yet it has been neglected by the world-yea, even by the
+people who write. Well, the loss is theirs who do the neglecting." And
+_genealogy_ you can greet with an equal parade of family lore: "Don't
+trouble to tell me who you are. I am hob and nob with your folks on both
+sides of the family, and my word for it, the relationship is written all
+over you. Mr. Gen, I envy you the pride you must feel in the prominence
+given nowadays to the _eugenics_ household. And it must delight you,
+Miss Ology-that-was, that connoisseurs are so keenly interested in
+_conchology_. How are Grandfather Gen and Grandmother Ology? They
+were keeping up remarkably the last time I saw them." Do you think words
+will not respond to cordiality like this? They will work their flattered
+heads off for you!
+
+
+EXERCISE - Relationships
+
+1. For each of the following words (a) determine what families are
+intermarried, (b) ascertain the exact contribution to the household by
+each family represented, and (c) make as complete a list as possible of
+cognate words.
+
+Reject Oppose Convent Defer Omit Produce Expel
+
+2. Test the extent of the intermarriages among these words by successively
+attaching each of the prefixes to each of the main (or key) syllables.
+(Thus re-ject, re-fer, re-pel, etc.)
+
+
+<Two Admonitions>
+
+In tracing verbal kinships you must be prepared for slight variations in
+the form of the same key-syllable. Consider these words: wise, wiseacre,
+wisdom, wizard, witch, wit, unwitting, to wit, outwit, twit, witticism,
+witness, evidence, providence, invidious, advice, vision, visit, vista,
+visage, visualize, envisage, invisible, vis-à-vis, visor, revise,
+supervise, improvise, proviso, provision, view, review, survey, vie, envy,
+clairvoyance. Perhaps the last six should be disregarded as too
+exceptional in form to be clearly recognized. And certainly some words, as
+_prudence_ from _providentia_, are so metamorphosed that they
+should be excluded from practical lists of this kind. But even in the
+words left to us there are fairly marked divergences in appearance. Why?
+Because the key-syllable has descended to us, not through one language,
+but through several. As good verbal detectives we should be able to
+penetrate the consequent disguises; for _wis, wiz, wit, vid, vic_,
+and _vis_ all embody the idea of seeing or knowing.
+
+On the other hand, you must take care not to be misled by a superficial
+resemblance into thinking two unrelated key-syllables identical. Let us
+consider two sets of words. The first, which is related to the _tain_
+group (see <Tain> below), has a key-syllable that means holding:
+tenant, tenement, tenure, tenet, tenor, tenable, tenacious, contents,
+contentment, lieutenant, maintenance, sustenance, countenance,
+appurtenance, detention, retentive, pertinacity, pertinent, continent,
+abstinence, continuous, retinue. The second has a key-syllable that means
+stretching: tend, tender, tendon, tendril, tendency, extend, subtend,
+distend, pretend, contend, attendant, tense, tension, pretence, intense,
+intensive, ostensible, tent, tenterhook, portent, attention, intention,
+tenuous, attenuate, extenuate, antenna, tone, tonic, standard. The form of
+the key-syllable for the first set of words is usually _ten, tent_,
+or _tin_; that for the second _tend, tens, tent_, or _ten_.
+You may therefore easily confuse the two groups until you have learned to
+look past appearances into meanings. Thenceforth the holdings and the
+stretchings will be distinct in your mind--will constitute two great
+families, not one. Of course individual words may still puzzle you. You
+will not perceive that _tender_, for example, belongs with the
+stretchings until you go back to its primary idea of something stretched
+thin, or that _tone_ has membership in that family until you connect
+it with the sound which a stretched chord emits.
+
+
+FIRST GENERAL EXERCISE FOR THE CHAPTER
+
+Each of the key-syllables given below is followed by (1) a list of fairly
+familiar words that embody it, (2) a list of less familiar words that
+embody it, (3) several sentences containing blank spaces, into each of
+which you are ultimately to fit the appropriate word from the first list.
+(The existence of the two lists will show you that learned words may have
+commonplace kinfolks.)
+
+First, however, you are to study each word in both lists for (1) its exact
+meaning, (2) the influence of the key-syllable upon that meaning, (3) any
+variation of the key-syllable from its ordinary form. (A few words have
+been introduced to show how varied the forms may be and yet remain
+recognizable.)
+
+Also, as an aid to your memory, you are to copy each list, underscoring
+the key-syllable each time you encounter it.
+
+(The lists are practical, not meticulously academic. In many instances
+they contain words derived, not from a single original, but from cognates.
+No list is exhaustive.)
+
+
+<Ag, act, ig> (carry on, do, drive): (1) agent, agitate, agile, act,
+actor, actuate, exact, enact, reaction, counteract, transact, mitigate,
+navigate, prodigal, assay, essay; (2) agenda, pedagogue, synagogue,
+actuary, redact, castigate, litigation, exigency, ambiguous, variegated,
+cogent, cogitate.
+
+_Sentences_ (inflect forms if necessary; for example, use the past
+tense, participle, or infinitive of a verb instead of its present tense):
+It was ____ into law. The legislators had been ____ by honest motives, but
+the popular ____ was immediate. The ____ of the mining company refused to
+let us proceed with the ____. Nothing could ____ the offense. The father
+was ____, the son ____. The student handed in his ____ at the ____ time
+designated. Though ____ enough on land, he could not ____ a ship.
+The ____ by missing his cue so ____ the manager that his good work
+thereafter could not ____ the ill impression.
+
+
+<Burn, brun, brand> (burn): (1 and 2 combined) burn, burnish,
+brunette, brunt, bruin, brand, brandish, brandy, brown.
+
+_Sentences_: He plucked a ____ from the ____. The ____ hair of
+the ____ was so glossy it seemed ____. He ____ his sword and bore
+the ____ of the conflict. After drinking so much ____ he saw snakes in his
+imagination, he staggered off into the woods and met Old ____ in reality.
+
+
+<Cad, cas, cid> (fall): (1) cadence, decadent, case, casual,
+casualty, occasion, accident, incident, mischance, cheat; (2) casuistry,
+coincide, occidental, deciduous.
+
+_Sentences_: The period was a ____ one. He gave but ____ attention
+to the ____ of the music. On this ____ an ____ befell him. To the general
+it was a mere ____ that his ____ were heavy. As a result of this ____ he
+was accused of trying to ____ them.
+
+
+<Cede, ceed, cess> (go): (1) cede, recede, secede, concede,
+intercede, procedure, precedent, succeed, exceed, success, recess,
+concession, procession, intercession, abscess, ancestor, cease, decease;
+(2) antecedent, precedence, cessation, accessory, predecessor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the existence of a ____ that justified
+such ____. The delegate ____ his authority when he consented to ____ the
+territory. He would not ____ from his position or ____ for mercy.
+At ____ the pupils ____ in forming a ____. His ____ was suffering from
+an ____ at the time the Southern states ____. His agony ____ only with
+his ____.
+
+
+<Ceive, ceit, cept, cip, cap(t)> (take): (1) receive, deceive,
+perceive, deceit, conceit, receipt, reception, perception, inception,
+conception, interception, accept, except, precept, municipal, participate,
+anticipate, capable, capture, captivate, case (chest, covering), casement,
+incase, cash, cashier, chase, catch, prince, forceps, occupy;
+(2) receptacle, recipient, incipient, precipitate, accipiter, capacious,
+incapacitate.
+
+_Sentences_: Though she ____ the officers, she did not prevent
+the ____ of the fugitive. He ____ that the man was very ____. The mayor
+skilfully ____ the alderman and proposed that ____ bonds be issued. The
+sight of the money ____ him and he quickly gave me a ____. He uttered
+musty ____, which were not always given a friendly ____. From the ____ of
+the movement he plotted to ____ the leadership in it. The ____ took part
+in the ____, but failed to ____ any of the game.
+
+
+<Cide, cis(e)> (cut, kill): (1) decide, suicide, homicide, concise,
+precise, decisive, incision, scissors, chisel, cement; (2) patricide,
+fratricide, infanticide, regicide, germicide, excision, circumcision,
+incisors, cesura.
+
+_Sentences_: He could not ____ whether to make the ____ with
+a ____ or a pair of ____. There was ____ evidence that he was the ____.
+In a few ____ sentences he explained why his friend could never have been
+a ____. The prim old lady had very ____ manners of speech.
+
+
+<Cur, course> (run): (1) current, currency, incur, concur,
+occurrence, cursory, excursion, course, discourse, intercourse, recourse;
+(2) curriculum, precursor, discursive, recurrent, concourse, courier,
+succor, corridor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ in the request that payment be made in ____.
+The ____ was so strong that the ____ by steamer had to be abandoned. In
+the ____ of his remarks he had ____ to various shifts and evasions. By his
+____ with one faction, though it was but ____, he ____ the enmity of the
+other. It was a disgraceful ____.
+
+
+<Dic, dict> (speak, say): (1) dedicate, vindicate, indication,
+predicament, predict, addict, verdict, indict, dictionary, dictation,
+jurisdiction, vindictive, contradiction, benediction, ditto, condition;
+(2) abdicate, adjudicate, juridical, diction, dictum, dictator,
+dictaphone, dictograph, edict, interdict, valedictory, malediction, ditty,
+indite, ipse dixit, on dit.
+
+_Sentences_: The man ____ to drugs was ____ for ____ treatment of his
+wife, and the ____ were that the ____ would be against him. He said, on
+the contrary, that his character would be ____. The attorney for the
+defense ____ that the judge would rule that the matter did not lie within
+his ____. This would leave the prosecution in a ____. But the prosecution
+issued a strong ____ of this theory, and said ____ were favorable for
+proving the man guilty.
+
+
+<Duce, duct> (lead): (1) induce, reduce, traduce, seduce, introduce,
+reproduce, education, deduct, product, production, reduction, conduct,
+conductor, abduct, subdue; (2) educe, adduce, superinduce, conducive,
+ducat, duct, ductile, induction, aqueduct, viaduct, conduit, duke, duchy.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ the company to ____ the fare. They ____ ten
+cents from the wages of each man, an average ____ of four per cent.
+They ____ us when they say we have wilfully lessened ____. The highwaymen
+____ the ____. If you have an ____, you can ____ an idea in other words.
+
+
+<Error> (wander): (1) error, erroneous, erratic, errand;
+(2) errata, knight errant, arrant knave, aberration.
+
+_Sentences_: That ____ fellow came on a special ____ to tell us we
+had made an ____. And his statement was ____ at that!
+
+
+<Fact, fic(e), fy, fect, feat, feit> (make, do): (1) fact, factory,
+faction, manufacture, satisfaction, suffice, sacrifice, office, difficult,
+pacific, terrific, significant, fortification, magnificent, artificial,
+beneficial, verify, simplify, stupefy, certify, dignify, glorify, falsify,
+beautify, justify, infect, perfect, effect, affection, defective, feat,
+defeat, feature, feasible, forfeit, surfeit, counterfeit, affair, fashion;
+(2) factor, factotum, malefaction, benefaction, putrefaction, facile,
+facsimile, faculty, certificate, edifice, efficacy, prolific, deficient,
+proficient, artifice, artificer, beneficiary, versification, unification,
+exemplification, deify, petrify, rectify, amplify, fructify, liquefy,
+disaffect, refection, comfit, pontiff, ipso facto, de facto, ex post
+facto, au fait, fait accompli.
+
+_Sentences_: The opposing ____ by incredible ____ had found
+it ____ to take over the ____ of the goods. By this ____ it ____ what
+goodwill the owner of the ____ had for it, but it won the ____ of the
+public. The owner, though seemingly ____ at first, soon ____ a scheme to
+make the success of the enterprise more ____. By an ____ lowering of the
+price of his own goods and by ____ that those of his rivals were ____,
+he hoped to ____ the public mind with unjust suspicions. But all this did
+not ____. In truth the ____ of it was the hastening of his own ____ and a
+____ heightening of the public ____ toward his rivals. His directors,
+seeing that his policy had failed to ____ itself, met in his ____ and
+urged him to take a more ____ attitude.
+
+
+<Fer> (bear, carry): (1) transfer, prefer, proffer, suffer, confer,
+offer, referee, deference, inference, indifferent, ferry, fertile; (2)
+referendum, Lucifer, circumference, vociferate, auriferous, coniferous,
+pestiferous.
+
+_Sentences_: With real ____ to their wishes he ____ to ____ the
+goods by ____. The ____ of the sporting writers was that the ____
+was ____ to his duties. After ____ apart, the farmers ____ the use of
+their most ____ acres for this experiment. To be mortal is to ____.
+
+
+<Fide> (trust, believe, have faith): (1) fidelity, confide,
+confident, diffident, infidel, perfidious, bona fide, defiance, affiance;
+(2) fiduciary, affidavit, fiancé, auto da fé, Santa Fé.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ that the man was an ____. He had ____ in
+a ____ rascal. He had been ____ for years and had proved his ____. Though
+we are somewhat ____ in making it, you may be sure it is a ____ offer. His
+attitude toward his father is one of gross ____.
+
+
+<Grade, gress> (walk, go): (1) grade, gradual, graduate, degrade,
+digress, Congress, aggressive, progressive, degree; (2) gradation,
+Centigrade, ingress, egress, transgression, retrogression, ingredient.
+
+_Sentences_: His failure to ____ from college made him feel ____
+especially as his cronies all received their ____. The engine lost
+speed ____ as it climbed the long ____. I ____ to remark that some members
+of ____ are more ____ than ____.
+
+
+<Hab, hib> (have, hold): (1) habit, habitation, inhabitant, exhibit,
+prohibition, ability, debit, debt; (2) habituate, habiliment, habeas
+corpus, cohabit, dishabille, inhibit.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the island ____ an ____ to live without
+permanent ____. It was his ____ to glance first at the ____ side of his
+ledger, as he was much worried about his ____. Most women favor ____.
+
+
+<Hale, heal, hol, whole> (sound): (1) hale, hallow, Hallowe'en, heal,
+health, unhealthy, healthful, holy, holiday, hollyhock, whole, wholesome;
+(2) halibut, halidom.
+
+_Sentences_: Though he lived in a ____ climate, he was ____. The food
+was ____, the man ____ and hearty. He did not think of a ____ as ____. We
+had ____ in our garden almost until ____. He wept at hearing the ____ name
+of his mother. For a ____ month the wound refused to ____.
+
+
+<It> (go): (1) exit, transit, transition, initial, initiative,
+ambition, circuit, perishable; (2) itinerant, transitory, obituary,
+sedition, circumambient.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was broken. It was his ____ shipment of ____
+goods, and they suffered a good deal in ____. His ____ was to be regarded
+as a man of great ____. His ____ was less effective than his entrance.
+
+
+<Ject> (throw): (1) eject, reject, subject, project, objection,
+injection, dejected, conjecture, jet, jetty; (2) abject, traject,
+adjective, projectile, interjection, ejaculate, jetsam, jettison.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ mien he watched the waves lash the ____.
+His scheme was ____ to much ridicule and then ____, and he himself
+was ____ from the room. From a pipe that ____ from the corner of the
+building came a ____ of dirty water. He could only ____ what their ____
+was. The ____ brought immediate relief.
+
+
+<Jud, jur, just> (law, right): (1) judge, judicious, judicial,
+prejudice, jurist, jurisdiction, just, justice, justify; (2) judicature,
+adjudicate, juridical, jurisprudence, justiciary, de jure.
+
+_Sentences_: The eminent ____ said the matter did not lie within
+his ____. Though ____ in most matters, he admitted to ____ in this.
+The ____ said he would comment in an unofficial rather than a ____ way.
+She could not ____ her suspicions. He was not only ____ himself, but
+devoted to ____.
+
+
+<Junct> (join): (1) junction, juncture, injunction, disjunctive,
+conjugal, adjust; (2) adjunct, conjunction, subjunctive, conjugate.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ force had entered their ____ relationships.
+At this ____ he gave the ____ that disturbances should cease. The tramp
+halted at the ____ to eat his lunch and ____ his knapsack.
+
+
+<Jure> (swear): (1 and 2 combined) juror, jury, abjure, adjure,
+conjurer, perjury.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ their loyalty. He ____ them to remember their
+duty as ____. The ____ held the ____ guilty of ____.
+
+
+<Leg, lig, lect> (read, choose, pick up): (1) elegant, illegible,
+college, negligent, diligent, eligible, elect, select, intellect,
+recollect, neglect, lecturer, collection, coil, cull; (2) legend, legion,
+legacy, legate, delegate, sacrilegious, dialect, lectern, colleague,
+lexicon.
+
+_Sentences_: In ____ he listened to the ____ and took an occasional
+note in an ____ hand. She ____ an ____ costume. They ____ the only man
+who was ____. He did not ____ to take up the ____. He was ____ rather
+than ____. Her mind was too ____ to ____ all the circumstances.
+
+
+<Lig> (bind): (1 and 2 combined) ligament, ligature, obligation,
+ally, alliance, allegiance, league, lien, liable, liaison, alloy.
+
+_Sentences_: It was a pleasure that knew no ____. To belong to
+the ____ carries ____. In studying anatomy you learn all about ____ and
+____. The two nations were in ____. We may be sure of their ____. We will
+take a ____ upon your property. As a ____ officer he was ____ for the
+equipment which our ____ reported lost.
+
+
+<Luc, lum, lus> (light): (1) lucid, translucent, luminous,
+illuminate, luminary, luster, illustrate, illustrious; (2) lucent,
+Lucifer, lucubration, elucidate, pellucid, relume, limn.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ author spoke very ____. He gave us a ____
+explanation of a very abstruse subject. The material was ____ even to the
+rays of the feeblest of the heavenly ____. He ____ his theory by the
+following anecdote. This deed added ____ to his fame.
+
+
+<Mand> (order): (1 and 2 combined) mandate, mandamus, mandatory,
+demand, remand, countermand, commandment.
+
+_Sentences_: The superior court issued a writ of ____. The case
+was ____ to the lower court. His instructions were not discretionary,
+but ____. At your ____ the ____ has been issued. The ____ promptly
+____ the orders of the offending officer.
+
+
+<Mit, mis, mise> (send): (1) permit, submit, commit, remit, transmit,
+mission, missile, missionary, remiss, omission, commission, admission,
+dismissal, promise, surmise, compromise, mass, message; (2) emit,
+intermittent, missive, commissary, emissary, manumission, inadmissible,
+premise, demise.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ could only ____ why so many of his people had
+not attended ____. The ____ contained a ____ that no one would be held
+____. The request was ____ that he would please ____. He ____ to his ____
+without a protest. A ____ was appointed to investigate whether the
+territory should be granted ____ as a state. His ____ was such as to ____
+him to tarry if he chose.
+
+
+<Move, mote, mob> (move): (1) move, movement, removal, remote,
+promote, promotion, motion, motive, emotion, commotion, motor, locomotive,
+mob, mobilize, automobile, moment; (2) immovable, motivate, locomotor
+ataxia, mobility, immobile, momentum.
+
+_Sentences_: The next ____ was his, and his ____ was profound.
+The ____ of the ____ from across the alley enabled the ____ to surge in a
+threatening ____ toward the rear of the building. At this ____ the ____
+was great. The officer whose ____ had seemed so ____ was now enabled
+to ____ strong forces for the campaign. The ____ began a slow ____
+forward. His exact ____ was not known.
+
+
+<Pass, path> (suffer): (1) passion, passive, impassive, impassioned,
+compassion, pathos, pathetic, impatient, apathy, sympathy, antipathy; (2)
+passible, impassible, dispassionate, pathology, telepathy, hydropathy,
+homeopathy, allopathy, osteopathy, neuropathic, pathogenesis.
+
+_Sentences_: With an ____ countenance he spoke of the ____ of our
+Lord. The ____ of the story moved her to ____. He allowed his ____ no
+further expression than through that one ____ shrug. With a ____ smile he
+settled back into dull ____. His plea was ____.
+
+
+<Ped, pod> (foot): (1) pedal, pedestrian, pedestal, expedite,
+expediency, expedition, quadruped, impediment, biped, tripod, chiropodist,
+octopus, pew; (2) centiped, pedicle, pedometer, velocipede,
+sesquipedalian, antipodes, podium, polypod, polyp, Piedmont.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ suggested that we could ____ matters by each
+mounting a ____. The loss of the ____ was a serious ____ to the rider of
+the bicycle. The ____ had me place my foot on an artist's ____. The
+purpose of this nautical ____ was to capture a live ____. The ____ of
+having so large a ____ for the statue had not occurred to us. A ____
+scarcely recognizable as human occupied my ____.
+
+
+<Pell, pulse> (drive): (1) dispel, compel, propeller, repellent,
+repulse, repulsive, impulse, compulsory, expulsion, appeal; (2) appellate,
+interpellate.
+
+_Sentences_: After the ____ of the attack the mists along the
+lowlands were ____. His manner was ____, even ____. The revolutions of the
+____ soon ____ the boatmen to shove farther off. After his ____ he ____
+for a rehearing of his case. The act was ____, but he felt an ____ toward
+it anyhow.
+
+
+<Pend, pense, pond> (hang, weigh): (1) pending, impending,
+independent, pendulum, perpendicular, expenditure, pension, suspense,
+expense, pensive, compensate, ponder, ponderous, preponderant, pansy,
+poise, pound; (2) pendant, stipend, appendix, compendium, propensity,
+recompense, indispensable, dispensation, dispensary, avoirdupois.
+
+_Sentences_: The veterans felt great ____ while action regarding
+their ____ was ____. We shall ____ you. An arm of it stood in a
+position ____ to the ____ mass. He knew that fate was ____, and he watched
+the ____ swing back and forth slowly. He gave a ____ argument in favor of
+the ____ of the money. There is ____, that's for thoughts. Let us ____ the
+question whether the ____ is needful. She was a woman of rare social ____.
+Penny-wise, ____ foolish.
+
+
+<Pet> (seek): (1 and 2 combined) petition, petulant, impetus,
+impetuous, perpetuate, repeat, compete, competent, appetite, centripetal.
+
+_Sentences_: A great ____ force keeps the planets circling about
+the sun. The complaints of a ____ woman led him to ____ for the prize. The
+sexual ____ leads men to ____ the race. The ____ was pronounced upon ____
+authority to be ill drawn up. With ____ wrath he ____ the assertion. The
+____ became noticeably weaker.
+
+
+<Ply, plic, plicate> (fold): (1) ply, reply, imply, plight,
+suppliant, explicit, implicit, implicate, supplicate, duplicate,
+duplicity, complicate, complicity, accomplice, application, plait,
+display, plot, employee, exploit, simple, supple; (2) pliant, pliable,
+replica, explication, inexplicable, multiplication, deploy, triple,
+quadruple, plexus, duplex.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ the thief's ____ with questions. He ____ that
+others were ____ with him. The king ____ to the ____ that such ____ must
+never be ____ in the realm thereafter. It would be a ____ matter to ____
+the order. The manager had ____ confidence in his ____. She admired his
+courage in this ____, perceived his ____ in the crime, and deplored his
+participation in the ____. They ____ him for an ____ promise that mercy
+would be shown. She was in a ____, for she had not had time to arrange her
+hair in its usual broad ____. He was ____ of body. The ____ was refused.
+
+
+<Pose, pone> (place): (1) expose, compose, purpose, posture,
+position, composure, impostor, postpone, post office, positive, deposit,
+disposition, imposition, deponent, opponent, exponent, component;
+(2) depose, impost, composite, apposite, repository, preposition,
+interposition, juxtaposition, decomposition.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ said he would ____ the manner in which the
+cashier had made away with the ____. The true ____ of the ____ was now
+known, yet he retained his ____. For you to make yourself an ____ of these
+wild theories is an ____ on your friends. The closing hour at the ____ is
+____ thirty minutes on account of the rush of Christmas mail. He
+was ____ that his ____ had ____ the letter. One of the ____ elements in
+his ____ was gloom.
+
+
+<Prise, prehend> (seize): (1) prize, apprise, surprise, comprise,
+enterprise, imprison, comprehend, apprehension; (a) reprisal, misprision,
+reprehend, prehensile, apprentice, impregnable, reprieve.
+
+_Sentences_: He had no ____ as to what the ____ would ____.
+His ____ was so great that he could scarcely ____ the fact that the ____
+was his. The judge ____ them of the likelihood that they would be ____.
+
+
+<Prob> (prove): (1 and 2 combined) probe, probation, probate,
+probity, approbation, reprobate, improbable.
+
+_Sentences_: The young ____ was placed on ____. The will was brought
+into the ____ court. It is ____ that such ____ as his will win the ____ of
+evil-doers.
+
+
+<Rupt> (break): (1 and 2 combined) rupture, abrupt, interrupt,
+disrupt, eruption, incorruptible, irruption, bankrupt, rout, route,
+routine.
+
+_Sentences_: The volcano was in ____. Though ____, he remained
+ ____. The ____ of the barbarians ____ these reforms. The organization was
+____ after having already been put to ____. The ____ he had chosen led to
+a ____ in their relationships. It was ____ work.
+
+
+<Sed, sid(e), sess> (seat): (1) sedulous, sedentary, supersede,
+subside, preside, reside, residue, possess, assessment, session, siege;
+(2) sediment, insidious, assiduous, subsidy, obsession, see (noun),
+assize.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was so small that he scarcely noticed he ____
+it. The officer was ____ in making the ____ upon every tax-payer fair.
+During the ____ Congress remained in ____. He ____ in the city and has a
+____ occupation. When the officer who ____ is firm, such commotions will
+quickly ____. He ____ the disgraced commander.
+
+
+<Sequ, secu, sue> (follow): (1) sequel, sequence, consequence,
+subsequent, consecutive, execute, prosecute, persecute, sue, ensue,
+suitor, suitable, pursuit, rescue, second; (2) obsequies, obsequious,
+sequester, inconsequential, non sequitur, executor, suite.
+
+_Sentences_: On the ____ day they continued the ____. In the ____
+chapter of the ____ the heroine is ____. The ____ of events is hard to
+follow. The ____ was that her brother began to ____ her ____. The district
+attorney ____ six ____ offenders, but thought it useless to bring any ____
+offender to trial. It was a ____ occasion.
+
+
+<Shear, share, shore> (cut, separate): (1 and 2 combined) shear,
+sheer, shred, share, shard, scar, score, (sea)shore, shorn, shroud, shire,
+sheriff.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ had on his face a ____ made by a ____ thrown at
+him. In that ____ an old custom for every one to ____ in the ____ the
+sheep. There was, instead of the usual ____, a cliff that rose from the
+sea. All ____ as the freshman was, he had hardly a ____ of his former
+dignity. The ____ was very one-sided. A ____ of mist was about him.
+
+
+<Sign> (sign): (1) sign, signal, signify, signature, consign, design,
+assign, designate, resignation, insignificant; (2) ensign, signatory,
+insignia.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ his approval of the ____. The disturbance
+caused by his ____ was ____. He ____ no reason for ____ those particular
+men. As he could not write his own ____, I ____ the document for him. It
+was a ____ defeat.
+
+
+<Solve, solu> (loosen): (r) solve, resolve, dissolve, solution,
+dissolute, resolute, absolute; (2) solvent, absolution, indissoluble,
+assoil.
+
+_Sentences_: On account of his ____ course he had given his parents
+many a problem to ____. He ____ the powder in a cupful of water and ____
+to give it to the patient. This ____ of the difficulty did not win the
+____ approval of his employer. The obstacles were many, but he was ____.
+
+
+<Spec(t), spic(e)</b/> (look): (1) spectator, spectacle, suspect,
+aspect, prospect, expect, respectable, disrespect, inspection, speculate,
+special, especial, species, specify, specimen, spice, suspicion,
+conspicuous, despise, despite, spite; (2) specter, spectrum, spectroscope,
+prospector, prospectus, introspection, retrospect, circumspectly,
+conspectus, perspective, specie, specification, specious, despicable,
+auspices, perspicacity, frontispiece, respite.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ was conducted in such a manner as to show the
+utmost ____. In ____ she noticed an odor of ____. From his ____ you would
+have taken him to be a ____ of wild animal. The ____ was better than we
+had ____ it to be. Though you have no ____ fondness for children, you will
+enjoy the ____ of them playing together. The ____ did not ____ what
+underhand tactics some of the players were resorting to. In ____ of all
+this, we made a ____ showing. The ____ is one you cannot ____. ____ this
+____ of matters, she did not ____ the cause of her ____, but let him ____
+what it might be.
+
+
+<Spire, spirit> (breathe, breath): (1 and 2 combined) spirit,
+spiritual, perspire, transpire, respire, aspire, conspiracy, inspiration,
+expiration, esprit de corps.
+
+_Sentences_: At the ____ of a few days it ____ that a ____ had
+actually been formed. The ____ of the division was such that every man
+____ to meet the enemy forthwith. He was a man of much ____ and marked
+powers of ____. As he lay there, he merely ____ and ____; he had no
+thought whatsoever of things ____.
+
+
+<Sta, sti(t), sist> (stand): (1) stand, stage, statue, stall,
+stationary, state, reinstate, station, forestall, instant, instance,
+distance, constant, withstand, understand, circumstance, estate,
+establish, substance, obstacle, obstinate, destiny, destination,
+destitute, substitute, superstition, desist, persist, resist, insist,
+assist, exist, consistent, stead, rest, restore, restaurant, contrast; (2)
+stature, statute, stadium, stability, instable, static, statistics,
+ecstasy, stamen, stamina, standard, stanza, stanchion, capstan, extant,
+constabulary, apostate, transubstantiation, status quo, armistice,
+solstice, interstice, institute, restitution, constituent, subsistence,
+pre-existence, presto.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the motion was that the student who had been
+expelled should be ____. He ____ in his ____ resolution to go on the ____.
+She could not ____ the pleas of ____ people. He ____ her to alight at the
+____. In an ____ you shall ____ what the ____ was that drove me to
+tempt ____ thus. We had gone but a little ____ when I perceived by the
+hungry working of his jaws that his ____ was the ____ in the next block.
+No ____ could cause him to ____. She was ____ in a ____ at the bazaar.
+
+
+<Stead> (place): (1 and 2 combined) stead, steadfast, instead,
+homestead, farmstead, roadstead, bestead.
+
+_Sentences_: ____ of resting in a harbor, the ships were tossed about
+in an open ____. Little did it ____ him to cling to the old ____. A ____
+nestled by the highway. To be known as ____ now stood him in good ____.
+
+
+<Strict, string, strain> (bind): (1) district, restrict, strictly,
+stringent, strain, restrain, constrain; (2) stricture, constriction, boa
+constrictor, astringent, strait, stress.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ them by means of ____ regulations. He ____ them
+to this course by his mere example. He attended ____ to his duties. You
+should not ____ your pleasures in this way. The ____ of long effort was
+telling on him.
+
+
+<Tact, tang, tain, ting, teg> (touch): (1) tact, contact, intact,
+intangible, attain, taint, stain, tinge, contingent, integrity, entire,
+tint; (2) tactile, tactual, tangent, distain, attaint, attainder, integer,
+disintegrate, contagion, contaminate, contiguous.
+
+_Sentences_: His appointment is ____ upon his removing this ____ from
+his name. His ____ is such that no ____ with evil could leave any ____
+upon him. The contents were ____. With ____ he hopes to ____ the ____
+approval of his auditors. It was a dark ____. The reason is ____.
+
+
+<Tail> (cut): (1 and 2 combined) detail, curtail, entail, retail,
+tailor, tally.
+
+_Sentences_: He held the property in ____. He kept the reckoning
+straight by means of ____ cut in a shingle. He resolved to ____ expenses
+by visiting the ____ less often. We need not go into ____. The profit lies
+in the difference between wholesale and ____ prices.
+
+
+<Tain> (hold--for related _ten_ group see above under Two
+Admonitions): (1 and 2 combined) detain, abstain, contain, obtain,
+maintain, entertain, pertain, appertain, sustain, retain.
+
+_Sentences_: Village life and things ____ thereto I shall willingly
+____ from. I ____ that precepts of this kind in no sense ____ to public
+morals. If the gentleman can ____ the consent of his second, the chair
+will ____ the motion as he restates it. Though your forces may ____ heavy
+losses, they must ____ their position and ____ the enemy.
+
+
+<Term, termin> (end, bound): (1 and 2 combined) term, terminus,
+terminal, terminate, determine, indeterminate, interminable, exterminate.
+
+_Sentences_: At the ____ of the railroad stands a beautiful ____
+station. The manner in which we may ____ the agreement remains ____.
+He ____ that rather than yield he would make the negotiations ____. During
+the second ____ they ____ all the rodents about the school.
+
+
+<Tort> (twist): (1) torture, tortoise, retort, contort, distortion,
+extortionate, torch, (apple) tart, truss, nasturtium; (2) tort, tortuous,
+torsion, Dry Tortugas.
+
+_Sentences_: By the light of the ____ he saw a ____ fowl by the
+fireside and a ____ in the cupboard. The ____ of his countenance was due
+to the ____ he was undergoing. ____ his face into a very knowing look, he
+____ that a man with a ____ in his buttonhole and ____ shell glasses on
+his nose had leered at the girls as he passed.
+
+
+<Tract, tra(i)> (draw): (1) tract, tractor, intractable, abstracted,
+retract, protract, detract, distract, attractive, contractor, trace,
+trail, train, trait, portray, retreat; (2) traction, tractate, distraught,
+extraction, subtraction.
+
+_Sentences_: In an ____ manner he drove the ____ across a large ____
+of ground. He ____ his gaze at the ____ girl. The ____ was now willing to
+____ his statement that in the house as it stood there was no ____ of
+departure from the specifications. Down the weary ____ of the pioneer
+dashes the palatial modern ____. To be ____ was one of his ____. The
+artist ____ her as in a ____ state. The ____ of his forces ____ but little
+from his fame.
+
+
+<Vene, vent> (come): (1) convene, convenient, avenue, revenue,
+prevent, event, inventor, adventure, convention, circumvent; (2) venire,
+venue, parvenu, advent, adventitious, convent, preventive, eventuate,
+intervention.
+
+_Sentences_: The legislature ____ in order to pass a measure
+regarding the public ____. At the ____ the wily old politician was able to
+____ his enemies. The ____ saw no means of ____ this infringement of his
+patent right. In that ____ we are likely to have an ____. Through the
+long, shaded ____ they strolled together.
+
+
+<Vert, vers(e)> (turn): (1) avert, divert, convert, invert, pervert,
+advertize, inadvertent, verse, aversion, adverse, adversity, adversary,
+version, anniversary, versatile, divers, diversity, conversation,
+perverse, universe, university, traverse, subversive, divorce;
+(2) vertebra, vertigo, controvert, revert, averse, versus, versification,
+animadversion, vice versa, controversy, tergiversation, obverse,
+transverse, reversion, vortex.
+
+_Sentences_: Though he carried a large ____ of goods, he was ____ to
+____ them. He had ____ forgotten that it was his wedding ____. The ____
+was on ____ subjects. They ____ a broad area where nothing had been done
+to ____ the danger that threatened them. With ____ stubbornness he held to
+his ____ of the story. He held that the reading of ____ is ____ of
+masculine qualities. His professors at the ____ soon ____ him to new
+social and economic theories. Her husband was such a ____ creature that
+she resolved to secure a ____. Americans are the most ____ people in the
+____. The anecdote ____ his ____ himself. Her answer not only was ____,
+it revealed her ____. He had undergone grave ____ in his time.
+
+
+<Vince, vict> (conquer): (1 and 2 combined) evince, convince,
+province, invincible, evict, convict, conviction, victorious.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ that the campaign against the rebels in
+the ____ could not be ____. He ____ a lively interest in my theory that
+the fugitive could not be ____. He felt an ____ repugnance to ____ the
+man, and this in spite of his ____ that the man was guilty.
+
+
+<Voc, voke> (call, voice): (1) vocal, vocation, advocate,
+irrevocable, vociferous, provoke, revoke, evoke, convoke;
+(2) vocable, vocabulary, avocation, equivocal, invoke, avouch, vouchsafe.
+
+_Sentences_: He was a ____ ____ of the measure, but no sooner was
+the order issued than he wished it ____. In ____ the assembly he ____ the
+enthusiasm of his followers. That he should give ____ utterance to this
+thought ____ me; but the words, once spoken, were ____.
+
+
+<Volve, volute> (roll, turn): (1) involve, devolve, revolver,
+evolution, revolutionary, revolt, voluble, volume, vault; (2) circumvolve,
+convolution, convolvulus.
+
+_Sentences_: It ____ upon me to put down the ____. In this ____ the
+heroine is ____ and the hero handy with a ____. He was ____ in a ____
+uprising. He had laid the papers away in a ____. The ____ of civilization
+is a tedious story.
+
+
+SECOND GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+Copy both sections (the first consists of fairly familiar terms, the
+second of less familiar terms) of each of the following word-groups.
+Find the key-syllable, underscore it in each word, observe any
+modifications in its form. Decide for yourself what its meaning is; then
+verify or correct your conclusion by reference to the dictionary. Study
+the influence of the key-syllable upon the meaning of each separate word;
+find the word's original signification, its present signification. Add to
+each word-group as many cognate words as you can (1) think of for
+yourself, (2) find in the dictionary by looking under the key-syllable.
+Fill the blanks in the sentences after each word-group with terms chosen
+from the first section of words in that group.
+
+
+(1) Animosity, unanimous, magnanimity;
+(2) animate, animadvert, equanimity.
+
+_Sentences_: It was the ____ opinion that to so noble a foe ____
+should be shown. The spiteful man continued to display his ____.
+
+
+(1) Annual, annuity, anniversary, perennial, centennial, solemn;
+(2) superannuate, biennial, millennium.
+
+_Sentences_: The amateur gardener made the ____ discovery that the
+plant was a ____. The ____ celebration of the great man's birth took a
+____ and imposing form in our city. By a happy coincidence the increase in
+his ____ came on his wedding ____.
+
+
+(1) Audit, auditor, auditorium, audience, inaudible, obey;
+(2) aurist, auricular, auscultation.
+
+_Sentences_: His voice may not have been ____, but it certainly did
+not fill the ____. Not one ____ in all that vast ____ but was willing to
+____ his slightest suggestion. He was not willing that they should ____
+his accounts.
+
+
+(1) Automatic, automobile, autocrat, autobiography;
+(2) autograph, autonomy.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ dictated to his secretary the third chapter
+of his ____. The habit of changing gear properly in an ____ becomes
+almost ____.
+
+
+(1) Cant, descant, incantation, chant, enchant, chanticleer, accent,
+incentive;
+(2) canto, canticle, cantata, recant, chantry, chanson, precentor.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ upon this topic in a queer, foreign ____.
+Such utterances are mere sanctimonious ____; I had rather listen to the
+____ of a voodoo conjurer. The little girl from the city was ____ with the
+crowing of ____. The ____ of the choir somehow gave him the ____ to try
+again.
+
+
+(1) Cent, per cent, century, centennial;
+(2) centenary, centime, centurion, centimeter, centigrade.
+
+_Sentences_: For nearly a ____ this family has been living on a small
+____ of its income. I wouldn't give a ____ for ____ honors; I want my
+reward now.
+
+
+(1) Chronic, chronological, chronicle;
+(2) chronometer, synchronize, anachronism.
+
+_Sentences_: It is a ____ record of changing activities and ____
+ills. This page is a ____ of athletic news.
+
+
+(1) Corps, corpse, corporal, corpulent, corporation, incorporate;
+(2) corpus, habeas corpus, corporeal, corpuscle, Corpus Christi.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ gentleman said he did not believe in ____
+punishment. The hospital ____ carried the ____ into the office of a great
+____. He resolved to ____ this idea into the reforms he was introducing.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Creed, credulous, credential, credit, accredit,
+discredit, incredible.
+
+_Sentences_: He was not so ____ as to suppose that his ____ would be
+accepted and his statements ____ without some investigation. It is to his
+____ that he refused to be bound by his former religious ____. That such
+____ has been heaped upon him is ____.
+
+
+(1) Crescent, increase, decrease, concrete, recruit, accrue, crew;
+(2) crescendo, excrescence, accretion, increment.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ now had ____ evidence that military life was
+not altogether pleasant. In the olden days on the sea deaths from scurvy
+might bring about a dangerous ____ in the size of the ____. His courage
+____ with the profits that ____ to him. The ____ moon rode in the sky.
+
+
+(1) Cure, secure, procure, sinecure, curious, inaccurate;
+(2) curate, curator.
+
+_Sentences_: Occupying the position for a while will ____ you of the
+notion that it is a ____. He was ____ to know so a bookkeeper had managed
+to ____ so high a salary. He ____ the equipment required.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Indignity, indignation, undignified, condign, deign,
+dainty.
+
+_Sentences_: We must not be too ____ about visiting ____ punishment
+upon those responsible for this ____. He did not ____ to express his ____.
+It was an ____ act.
+
+
+(1) Durable, endure, during, duration, obdurate;
+(2) durance, duress, indurate, perdurable.
+
+_Sentences_: ____ the whole interview she remained ____. It is a
+____ cloth; it will ____ all sorts of weather. The session was one of
+prolonged ____.
+
+
+(1) Finite, infinite, define, definite, confine, final, in fine,
+unfinished;
+(2) definitive, infinitesimal.
+
+_Sentences_: One cannot ____ the ____. He ____ himself to purely ____
+topics. ____ it was a ____ offer and the ____ one he expected to make.
+The bridge is still ____.
+
+
+(1) Flexibility, inflexible, deflect, inflection, reflection, reflex;
+(2) circumflex, genuflection.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ influence of this act was great. I did not like
+the ____ of his voice. After some ____ he decided to remain ____. He was
+not to be ____ from his purpose. I could but admire the ____ of her tones.
+
+
+(1) Fluent, affluent, influence, influenza, superfluous, fluid, influx,
+flush (rush of water), fluctuate;
+(2) confluent, mellifluous, flux, reflux, effluvium, flume.
+
+_Sentences_: When you ____ the basin, an ____ of water fills it
+again. He is an ____ man and a ____ writer. When I had ____, the doctor
+gave me a disgusting ____ to drink. The wind must have an ____ in making
+the waves ____ as they do. Any more would be ____.
+
+
+(1) Fort, forte, effort, comfort, fortitude, fortify, fortress;
+(2) aqua fortis, pianoforte.
+
+_Sentences_: The defenders of the ____ held out with great ____.
+Though a ____ or two stood at important passes, the border was not really
+____. His ____ was not public speaking. It was the only by an ____ that he
+could ____ them.
+
+
+(1) Fraction, infraction, fracture, fragility, fragment, suffrage, frail,
+infringe;
+(2) diffract, refractory, frangible.
+
+_Sentences_: It was in the course of his ____ of the rules that he
+suffered the ____ of his collar-bone. He told the committee of ladies that
+he was as fond of ____ as of ____. It is hardly a proof of ____ that he is
+so willing to ____ upon the rights of others. The ____ scaffolding bent
+and swung as he trod it.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Fugitive, fugue, refuge, subterfuge, centrifugal.
+
+_Sentences_: Closing his eyes as if to listen better to the ____ was
+a little ____ of his. The upward movement of the missile was arrested by
+the ____ attraction of the earth. The ____ took ____ in an abandoned barn.
+
+
+(1) Refund, confound, foundry, confuse, suffuse, profuse, refuse, diffuse;
+(2) fusion, effusion, transfuse.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ cheeks and ____ utterance he made a ____
+apology. The amount we lost through the defective work at your ____ should
+be ____ to us. Such a blow might ____ but not ____ him. He ____ the
+appointment.
+
+
+(1) Belligerent, gesture, suggest, congested, digestion, register, jest;
+(2) gerund, congeries.
+
+_Sentences_: As he stopped before the cash ____ he gave a ____ which
+showed that his ____ was none too good. His look was ____, but he lightly
+made a ____. Amid the ____ traffic she stopped to ____ that pink would be
+more becoming than lavender.
+
+
+(1) Relate, translate, legislate, elation, dilated, dilatory;
+(2) collate, correlate, prelate, oblation, superlative, ablative.
+
+_Sentences_: With ____ eyes he ____ the passage for me. The ____ was
+very ____ in agreeing upon the measure to be passed. He ____ the story
+with pride and ____.
+
+
+(1) Locate, locality, locomotive, dislocate;
+(2) locale, allocate, collocation.
+
+_Sentences_: In trying to ____ the mine as near the fissure as
+possible he fell and ____ his hip. It was only ____ in that entire ____.
+
+
+(1) Soliloquy, loquacious, loquacity, colloquial, eloquent, obloquy,
+circumlocution, elocution;
+(2) magniloquent, grandiloquent, ventriloquism, interlocutor, locutory,
+allocution. (For related _log_ and _ology_ words see above under
+Prying Into a Word's Relationships.)
+
+_Sentences_: ____ always, he indulged at this time in a great deal
+of ____. Though it was mere ____, yet there was something ____ about it.
+Amid all this ____ he managed to rid himself of a good deal of ____
+regarding Standish. Hamlet's ____ on suicide is a famous passage.
+
+(1) Allude, elude, delude, ludicrous, illusory, collusion;
+(2) prelude, postlude, interlude.
+
+_Sentences_: Such evidence is ____, and belief in it is ____.
+He ____ to a possible ____ between them. The more credulous ones he ____,
+and the skeptical he manages to ____.
+
+
+(1) Metrical, thermometer, barometer, pedometer, diametrically, geometry;
+(2) millimeter, chronometer, hydrometer, trigonometry, pentameter.
+
+_Sentences_: He was careful to consult both the ____ and the ____.
+He always wore a ____ on these trips. The two were ____ opposed to each
+other. The poet has great ____ skill. ____ is an exact science.
+
+(1) Monotone, monotonous, monoplane, monopoly, monocle, monarchy,
+monogram, monomania;
+(2) monosyllable, monochrome, monogamy, monorail, monograph, monolith,
+monody, monologue, monad, monastery, monk.
+
+_Sentences_: His eye held a ____, his gold ring bore a ____ seal,
+and his voice was a stilted ____. One thing I hate about a ____ is the
+____ reference to everything as his majesty's. He had a ____ of the trade
+in his town. He is suffering, not from madness, but from ____.
+
+(1) Mortal, immortality, mortify, postmortem, mortgage, morgue;
+(2) mortmain, moribund, À la mort.
+
+_Sentences_: After a hasty ____ examination, the body was taken to
+the ____. She was ____ at this reminder of the ____ on her father's
+property. The ____ shall put on ____.
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Mutual, mutation, permutation, commute, transmute,
+immutable, moult.
+
+_Sentences_: As he ____ that morning he reflected upon the ____ and
+combinations of fortune. We suffer the ____ of this worldly life, but
+ourselves are not ____. God's love is ____, and our love for each other
+should be ____. Birds when they ____ are weakened in body and depressed in
+spirit.
+
+(1) Native, prenatal, innate, nature, unnatural, naturalize, nation,
+pregnant, puny;
+(2) denatured, nativity, cognate, agnate, nascent, renascence, née.
+
+_Sentences_: It was some ____ influence, he thought, that gave him
+his ____ physique. It was a ____ reply, but its heartlessness was ____.
+He was not ____ to the country, but ____. ____ in his ____ was the love
+of his own ____.
+
+
+(1) Note, notion, notable, notice, notorious, cognizant, incognito,
+recognize, noble, ignoble, ennoble, ignore, ignorance, ignoramus,
+reconnoiter, quaint, acquaintance;
+(2) notary, notation, connotation, cognition, prognosticate,
+reconnaissance, connoisseur.
+
+_Sentences_: In complete ____ of the enemy's position, he decided
+that he would ____ it. ____ himself, he was ____ of what was going on
+about him. You must ____ the conduct of such an ____. His ____ with this
+____ gentleman ____ him. He ____ but would not ____ this ____ fellow.
+The ____ is a ____ one. He could but ____ how ____ his brother had become.
+
+
+(1) Panacea, panoply, panorama, pantomime, pan-American, pandemonium;
+(2) pantheist, pantheon.
+
+_Sentences_: Arrayed in all the ____ of savages, they acted the scene
+out in ____. From this point the ____ of the country-side unrolled itself
+before him. It is no ____ for human ills; any supposition that it is will
+lead to ____. It is a ____ movement.
+
+
+(1) Peter, petrify, petrol, stormy petrel, petroleum, saltpeter, pier;
+(2) petrology, parsley, samphire.
+
+_Sentences_: As he walked along the ____, he observed the flight of
+the ____. The English name for gasoline is ____. ____ is used in the
+manufacture of gunpowder. He was almost ____ at hearing of this enormous
+stock of ____. The crowing of the cock caused ____ to weep bitterly.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Petty, petite, petit jury, petit larceny, petticoat,
+pettifogger.
+
+_Sentences_: Charged with ____, he was tried by the ____. The
+contemptible ____ hid behind the ____ of his wife. She was a winsome
+maiden, dainty and ____. It is a ____ fault.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Philosophy, philanthropy, Philadelphia, bibliophile,
+Anglophile.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ was generous, but his ____ was not profound.
+That queer old ____ hangs to the library like a caterpillar. It was the
+love of humankind that caused Penn to name the city ____. Most Americans
+are not ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Cosmopolitan, metropolitan, politics, policy, police.
+
+_Sentences_: Those who engage in ____ lack, as a rule, a ____
+outlook. It is merely ____ intolerance of towns and villages. The ____ of
+the mayor was to increase the ____ force.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Potential, potency, potentate, impotent, omnipotent,
+plenipotentiary.
+
+_Sentences_: So far from being ____, we possess a ____ difficult to
+estimate. The ____ sent an ambassador ____. A ____ solution of the problem
+is this. ____ God.
+
+
+(1) Impute, compute, dispute, ill repute, reputation, disreputable;
+(2) putative, indisputable.
+
+_Sentences_: She could not ____ the cost. There was some ____ as to
+the cause of his ____. Let them ____ to me what motives they will. Though
+somewhat ____, he was extremely solicitous about his ____.
+
+
+(1) Abrogate, arrogate, interrogate, arrogant, derogatory, prerogative;
+(2) surrogate, rogation, prorogue.
+
+_Sentences_: In an ____ manner he ____ these ____ to himself. To ____
+authority is to give opportunity for remarks ____ to one's reputation. He
+skilfully ____ the witness.
+
+
+(1) Salmon, sally, assail, assault, insult, consult, result, exultation,
+desultory;
+(2) salient, salacious, resilient.
+
+_Sentences_: After the ____ the firing was ____. The defenders ____
+out and ____ us, but the ____ of this effort only added to our ____. We
+sat there watching the ____ leap over the waterfall and ____ about our
+arrangements for taking them. To accept the remark as an ____ is to
+acknowledge the speaker as an equal.
+
+
+(1) Science, conscience, unconscious, prescience, omniscience, nice;
+(2) sciolist, adscititious, plebiscite.
+
+_Sentences_: By his ____ understanding of the issues he was able to
+gain a reputation for ____. We thought he possessed ____, but he seemed
+____ of his erudition. Except under the sharp necessities of ____, he was
+ruled by a ____ thoroughly tender.
+
+
+(1) Sect, section, non-sectarian, dissect, insect, intersection, sickle,
+vivisection, segment;
+(2) bisect, trisect, insection, sector, secant.
+
+_Sentences_: He stood at the ____ of the roads, leaning on the shank
+of a sharp ____. The foreman of the ____ gang is a member of our ____. The
+boy was ____ an ____ with a butcher knife he had previously used to cut
+for himself a large ____ of the Sunday cake. It is a ____ movement. He
+defended the ____ of animals.
+
+
+(1) Sense, consent, assent, resent, sentimental, dissension, sensation,
+sensibility, sentence, scent, nonsense;
+(2) sentient, consensus, presentiment.
+
+_Sentences_: A woman of her ____ would shrink from a ____ of this
+sort. He ____ in a single, crisp ____. To be ____ is to be guilty of ____.
+He had the good ____ to ____ to this course. He ____ such ____ and the
+causes that produced them. A hound hunts by ____.
+
+
+(1) Despond, respond, correspond, corespondent, sponsor;
+(2) sponsion, spouse, espouse.
+
+_Sentences_: She ____ that her husband had been ____ with the ____.
+The ____ of the movement could as yet see no reason to ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Structure, instructor, construct, obstruct, instrument,
+destructive, misconstrue.
+
+_Sentences_: The student ____ the intentions of his ____. He resolved
+to ____ every effort to complete the ____. The ____ was one that might
+easily be turned to ____ work. They ____ a grandstand overlooking the
+racetrack.
+
+
+(1) Terrace, territory, subterranean, inter, terrier;
+(2) terrene, tureen, terrestrial, terra cotta, Mediterranean, terra firma,
+parterre.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ was tearing a great hole in the ____ in order
+to ____ a bone. He found rich ____ deposits. The discoverers laid claim to
+the entire ____.
+
+
+(1) Thesis, parenthesis, antithesis, anathema, theme, epithet, treasure;
+(2) hypothesis, synthesis, metathesis.
+
+_Sentences_: To set two ideas in ____ to each other makes both more
+vivid. By way of ____ he informed me that the subject was ____ to his
+father. On this ____ he can summon a host of picturesque ____. The ____ is
+one you will find it hard to establish. He was seeking Captain Kidd's
+buried ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Tumor, tumidity, tumult, tumulus, contumacy.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of his joints was due to rheumatism. His ____
+led to a ____ of opposition. So excited was he at the discovery of the
+____ that he did not permit the ____ on his hand to restrain him from
+beginning the excavation.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Turbid, disturb, perturbation, turbulence, trouble,
+imperturbable.
+
+_Sentences_: His ____ manner gave no hint of the ____ within him. The
+____ sweep of the stream caused her not the slightest ____. Do not ____
+yourself with the thought that you are putting me to any ____.
+
+
+(1 and 2 combined) Pervade, invade, evasion, vade mecum.
+
+_Sentences_: He promised that there would be no ____ of payments.
+Byron's _Childe Harold_ was my ____ during my travels in Switzerland
+and Italy. The fragrance of heliotrope ____ the room. You must not ____ my
+privacy like this.
+
+
+(1) Avail, prevail, prevalent, equivalent, valiant, validity, invalid,
+invalidate; (2) valetudinarian, valediction, valence.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the agreement has been thoroughly
+established. Our cause is just, and must ____. It is ____ to admitting
+that the terms are now ____. It was a ____ act and ____ the concessions
+previously wrested from us. The ____ impression is that mere ingenuity
+will not ____.
+
+
+(1) Virtue, virile, virgin, virtually; (2) virago, virtuoso, triumvir.
+
+_Sentences_: It was ____ a new arrangement. It is ____ soil. To
+be ____ and daring is every boy's dream. ____ is its own reward.
+
+
+(1) Revive, survival, convivial, vivid, vivify, vivacious, vivisection;
+(2) vive (le roi), qui vive, bon vivant, tableau vivant.
+
+_Sentences_: He has a ____ manner, a ____ spirit. The ____ of the
+opposition to the ____ of animals is very marked. You cannot ____ a dead
+cause or scarcely ____ memories of it. The ____ coloring of her cheeks was
+a sure sign of health, or of skill.
+
+
+THIRD GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+Find the key-syllable (in a few instances the key-syllables) of each of
+the following words. How does it affect the meaning of the word? Does it
+appear, perhaps in disguised form, in any of the words immediately
+preceding or following? Can you bring to mind other words that embody it?
+
+Innovation Commonwealth Welfare Wayfarer
+Adjournment Rival Derivation Arrive
+Denunciation Denomination Ignominy Synonym
+Patronymic Parliament Dormitory Demented
+Presumptuous Indent Dandelion Trident
+Indenture Contemporary Disseminate Annoy
+Odium Desolate Impugn Efflorescent
+Arbor vitae Consider Constellation Disaster
+Suburb Address Dirigible Dirge
+Indirectly Desperate Inoperative Benevolent
+Voluntary Offend Enumerate Dilapidate
+Request Exquisite Exonerate Approximate
+Insinuate Resurgence Insurrection Rapture
+Exasperate Complacent Dimension Commensurate
+Preclude Cloister Turnpike Travesty
+Atone Incarnate Charnal Etiquette
+Rejuvenate Eradicate Quiet Requiem
+Acquiesce Ambidextrous Inoculate Divulge
+Proper Appropriate Omnivorous Voracious
+Devour Escritoire Mordant Remorse
+Miser Hilarious Exhilarate Rudiment
+Erudite Mark Marquis Libel
+Libretto Vague Vagabond Extravagant
+Souse Saucer Oyster Ostracize
+
+
+FOURTH GENERAL EXERCISE
+
+With a few exceptions like the Hale-heal group above under Verbal
+Families, most verbal families of straight English or of Germanic-
+Scandinavian-English descent are easily recognizable as families. Witness
+the _Good_ family and the _Stead_ family. The families in which
+kinship may be overlooked are likely to be of Latin or Greek ancestry,
+though perhaps with a subsequent infusion of blood from some other foreign
+language, as French. Hitherto our approach to verbal families has been
+through the descendants, or through that quality in their blood which
+holds them together. But we shall also profit from knowing something of
+the founders of these families--from having some acquaintance with them as
+individuals. Below (in separate lists) the more prominent of Latin and of
+Greek progenitors are named, their meaning is given, and two or three of
+their living representatives (not always direct descendants) are
+designated. Starred [*] words are those whose progeny has not been in good
+part assembled in the preceding pages; for these words you should assemble
+all the living representatives you can. (Inflectional forms are given only
+where they are needed for tracing English derivatives.)
+
+
+<Latin Ancestors of English Words>
+
+_Latin word Meaning English representatives_
+
+ Ago, actum do, rouse agile, transact
+*Alius other alias, inalienable
+*Alter other alteration, adultery
+*Altus high altitude, exalt
+*Ambulo walk perambulator, preamble
+*Amicus friend amicable, enemy
+*Amo, amatum love inamorata, amateur, inimical
+*Anima life animal, inanimate
+ Animus mind animosity, unanimous
+ Annus year annuity, biennial
+*Aqua water aquarium, aqueduct
+ Audio, auditum hear audience, audit
+*Bellum war rebel, belligerent
+*Bene well benefit, benevolence
+*Bonus good bonanza, bona fide
+*Brevis short abbreviate, unabridged
+ Cado, casum fall cadence, casual
+ Caedo, cecidi, caesum cut, kill suicide, incision
+ Cano, cantum sing recant, chanticleer
+ Capio, captum take, hold capacious, incipient
+*Caput, capitis head cape (Cape Cod), decapitate,
+ chapter, biceps
+ Cedo, cessum go concede, accessory
+ Centum hundred per cent, centigrade
+*Civis citizen civic, uncivilized
+*Clamo shout acclaim, declamation
+*Claudo, clausum close, shut conclude, recluse, cloister, sluice
+ Cognosco (see _Nosco_)
+*Coquo, coxi, coctum cook decoction, precocious
+*Cor, cordis heart core, discord, courage
+ Corpus body corpse, incorporate
+ Credo, credituin believe creed, discreditable
+ Cresco, cretum grow crescendo, concrete, accrue
+*Crux, crucis cross crucifix, excruciating
+ Cura care curate, sinecure
+ Curro, cursum run occur, concourse
+*Derigo, directum direct dirge, dirigible, address
+*Dexter right, right hand ambidextrous, dexterity
+ Dico speak, say abdicate, verdict
+*Dies day diary, quotidian
+ Dignus worthy, fitting dignity, condign
+ Do, datum give condone, data
+*Doceo, doctum teach document, doctor
+*Dominus lord dominion, danger
+*Domus house domicile, majordomo
+*Dormio sleep dormant, dormouse
+ Duco lead traduce, deduction
+*Duo two dubious, duet
+ Durus hard durable, obdurate
+ Eo, itum go exit, initial
+ Error, erratum wander erroneous, aberration
+ Facio, feci, factum make, do manufacture, affect, sufficient,
+ verify
+ Fero, latum carry transfer, relate
+ Fido trust, believe confide, perfidious
+ Finis end confine, infinity
+ Flecto, flexum bend reflection, inflexible
+ Fluo, fluxum flow influence, reflux
+ Fortis strong fortress, comfort
+ Frango, fractum break infringe, refraction
+*Frater brother fraternity, fratricide
+ Fugio, fugitum flee centrifugal, fugitive
+ Fundo, fusum pour refund, profuse, fusion
+ Gero, gestum carry belligerent, gesture, digestion
+ Gradior, gressus walk degrade, progress
+*Gratia favor, pleasure, ingratiate, congratulate,
+ good-will disgrace
+*Grex, gregis flock segregate, egregious
+ Habeo, habitum have, hold habituate, prohibit
+ Itum (see Eo)
+ Jacio, jeci, jactum throw, hurl reject, interjection
+ Jungo, junctum join conjugal, enjoin, juncture
+ Juro swear abjure, perjury
+ Jus, juris law, right justice, jurisprudence
+ Judex (from jusdico) judge judgment, prejudice
+*Juvenis young rejuvenate, juvenilia
+ Latum (see Fero)
+*Laudo, laudatum praise allow, laudatory
+ Lego, lectum read, choose elegant, lecture, dialect
+*Lex, legis law privilege, illegitimate,
+ legislature
+*Liber book libel, library
+*Liber free liberty, deliberate
+ Ligo bind obligation, allegiance, alliance
+*Linquo, lictum leave delinquent, relict, derelict
+*Litera letter illiterate, obliterate
+ Locus place collocation, dislocate
+ Loquor, locutus speak soliloquy, elocution
+ Ludo, lusum play prelude, illusory
+/Lux, lucis light\ lucid, luminary
+\Lumen, luminis /
+*Magnus great magnate, magnificent
+*Malus bad, evil malaria, malnutrition
+ Mando order mandatory, commandment
+ Manus hand manual, manufacture
+*Mare sea maritime, submarine
+*Mater mother maternal, alma mater
+*Medius middle mediocre, intermediate
+*Mens mind mental, demented
+*Miror wonder mirror, admirable
+ Mitto, missum send commit, emissary
+*Mordeo, morsum bite mordant, morsel, remorse
+ Mors, mortis death mortal, mortify
+ Moveo, motum move remove, locomotive
+*Multus many multiform, multiplex
+ Muto, mutatum change transmute, immutable, moult
+ Nascor, natus be born renascence, cognate
+*Nihil nothing nihilism, annihilate
+*Nomen, nominis name denomination, renown
+*Norma rule abnormal, enormous
+/Nosco, notum cognosco \
+\ cognitum know / notation, incognito
+*Novus new novelty, renovate
+*Nuntio announce denounce, renunciation
+*Opus, operis work magnum opus, inoperative
+*Pater father patrician, patrimony
+ Patior, passus suffer impatient, passion
+ Pello, pulsum drive propeller, repulse
+ Pendeo, pensum hang pendulum, appendix
+ Pendo, pensum weigh compendium, expense
+ Pes, pedis foot expedite, biped
+ Peto seek impetus, compete
+*Plaudo, plausum clap, applaud explode, plausible
+*Plecto, plexum braid perplex, complexion
+*Pleo, pletum fill complement, expletive
+*Plus, pluris more surplus, plural
+ Plico, plicatum fold reply, implicate
+ Pono, positum place opponent, deposit
+ Porto carry report, porter
+ Potens, potentis powerful impotent, potential
+ Prendo, prehensum seize comprehend, apprise
+*Primus, primatis first primary, primate
+ Probo, probatum prove improbable, reprobate
+*Pugno fight impugn, repugnant
+ Puto think impute, disreputable
+*Quaero, quaesitum seek require, inquest, exquisite
+*Rapio, raptum seize enraptured, surreptitious
+*Rego, rectum rule, lead region, erect
+*Rideo, risum laugh deride, risible
+ Rogo, rogatum ask prorogue, abrogate
+ Rumpo, ruptum break disrupt, eruption
+ Salio, saltum leap salient, insult
+*Sanguis blood sang froid, ensanguined
+ Scio, scitum know prescience, plebiscite
+ Scribo, scriptum write prescribe, manuscript, escritoire
+ Seco, sectum cut secant, dissect
+ Sedeo, sessum sit supersede, obsession
+ Sentio, sensum feel presentiment, consensus
+ Sequor, secutus follow sequence, persecute, ensue
+ Signum sign insignia, designate
+*Solus alone solitude, desolate
+ Solvo, solutum loosen solvent, dissolute
+*Somnus sleep somnambulist, insomnia
+*Sono sound consonant, resonance
+*Sors, sortis lot sort, assortment
+ Specio, spectum look despicable, suspect
+ Spiro, spiratum breathe perspire, conspiracy
+*Spondeo, sponsum promise respond, espouse
+ Sto, steti, statum stand constant, establish
+ Sisto, stiti, statum cause to stand consistent, superstition
+ Stringo, strictum bind stringent, restrict
+ Struo, structum build construe, destruction
+ Tango, tactum touch intangible, tact
+ Tempus, temporis time temporize, contemporary
+ Tendo, tensum stretch distend, intense
+ Teneo, tentuin hold tenure, detention
+*Tendo try tentative, attempt
+ Terminus end, boundary terminal, exterminate
+ Terra earth territory, inter
+ Torqueo, tortum twist distort, tortuous
+ Traho, tractum draw extract, subtraction
+ Tumeo, tumidum swell tumor, contumacy
+ Turba tumult, crowd turbulent, disturb
+*Unus one unify, triune, onion
+*Urbs city urbane, suburban
+ Vado, vasum go pervade, invasion
+ Valeo, validum be strong prevail, invalid
+ Venio, ventum come intervene, adventure
+ Verto, versum turn divert, adverse
+*Verus true verdict, veracity
+*Via way obviate, impervious, trivial
+ Video, visum see provide, revise
+ Vinco, victum conquer province, convict
+ Vir man triumvir, virtue
+ Vivo, victum live vivacious, vivisect
+ Voco, vocatum call revoke, avocation
+*Volo wish malevolent, voluntary
+ Volvo, volutum turn revolver, evolution
+ Vox voice equivocal, vociferate
+
+
+ <Latin Prefixes>
+
+_Prefix Meaning English embodiments_
+
+*A, ab from, away avert, abnegation, abstract
+*Ad to adduce, adjacent, affect, accede
+*Ante before antediluvian, anteroom
+*Bi two biped, bicycle
+*Circum around circumambient, circumference
+*Cum, com, with, together combine, consort, coadjutor
+ con, co
+*Contra against contradict, contrast
+*De from, negative deplete, decry, demerit, declaim
+ down, intensive
+*Di, dis asunder, away from, divert, disbelief
+ negative
+*E, ex from, out of evict, excavate
+*Extra beyond extraordinary, extravagant
+*In in, into, not innate, instil, insignificant
+*Inter among, between intercollegiate, interchange
+*Intro, into, within introduce, intramural
+ intra
+*Non negative nonage, nondescript
+*Ob against, before
+ (facing), toward obloquy, obstacle, offer
+*Per through, extremely persecute, perfervid, pursue,
+ pilgrim, pellucid
+*Post after postpone, postscript
+*Pre before prepay, preoccupy
+*Pro before proceed, proffer
+*Re back, again return, resound
+*Retro back, backward retroactive, retrospective
+*Se apart, aside seclude, secession
+*Semi half semiannual, semicivilized
+*Sub under, less than, subscribe, suffer, subnormal,
+ inferior subcommittee
+*Super above, extremely superfluous, supercritical, soprano
+*Trans across, through transfer, transparent
+*Ultra beyond, extremely ultramundane, ultraconservative
+
+
+ <Greek Ancestors of English Words>
+ (Scientific terms in English are largely derived from the Greek)
+
+_Greek word Meaning English representatives_
+
+*Aner, andros, man, stamen androgynous, philander,
+ anthropos philanthropy
+*Archos chief, primitive archaic, architect
+*Astron star asterisk, disaster
+ Autos self autograph, automatic, authentic
+*Barvs heavy baritone, barites
+*Biblos book Bible, bibliomania
+*Bios life biology, autobiography, amphibious
+*Cheir hand chiropody, chirurgical, surgeon
+*Chilioi a thousand kilogram, kilowatt
+*Chroma color chromo, achromatic
+ Chronos time chronic, anachronism
+*Cosmos world, order cosmopolitan, microcosm
+*Crypto hide cryptogam, cryptology
+*Cyclos wheel, circle encyclopedia, cyclone
+*Deca ten decasyllable, decalogue
+*Demos people democracy, epidemic
+*Derma skin epidermis, taxidermist
+*Dis, di twice, doubly dichromatic, digraph
+*Didonai, dosis give dose, apodosis, anecdote
+*Dynamis power dynamite, dynasty
+*Eidos form, thing seen idol, kaleidoscope, anthropoid
+*Ethnos race, nation ethnic, ethnology
+ Eu well euphemism, eulogy
+*Gamos marriage cryptogam, bigamy
+*Ge earth geography, geometry
+ Genos family, race gentle, engender
+ Gramma writing monogram, grammar
+ Grapho write telegraph, lithograph
+*Haima blood hematite, hemorrhage, anemia
+*Heteros other heterodox, heterogeneous
+*Homos same homonym, homeopathy
+*Hydor water hydraulics, hydrophobia, hydrant
+*Isos equal isosceles, isotherm
+*Lithos stone monolith, chrysolite
+ Logos word, study theology, dialogue
+ Metron measure barometer, diameter
+*Micros small microscope, microbe
+ Monos one, alone monoplane, monotone
+*Morphe form metamorphosis, amorphous
+*Neos new, young neolithic, neophyte
+*Neuron nerve neuralgia, neurotic
+ Nomos law, science, astronomy, gastronomy, economy
+ management
+*Onoma name anonymous, patronymic
+*Opsis view, sight synopsis, thanatopsis, optician
+*Orthos right orthopedic, orthodox
+*Osteon bone osteopathy, periosteum
+*Pais, paidos child paideutics, pedagogue,
+ encyclopedia
+ Pas, pan all diapason, panacea, pantheism
+ Pathos suffering allopathy, pathology
+ Petros rock petroleum, saltpeter
+*Phaino show, be visible diaphanous, phenomenon,
+ epiphany, fantastic
+ Philos loving bibliophile, Philadelphia
+*Phobos fear hydrophobia, Anglophobe
+ Phone sound telephone, symphony
+*Phos light phosphorous, photograph
+*Physis nature physiognomy, physiology
+*Plasma form cataplasm, protoplasm
+*Pneuma air, breath pneumatic, pneumonia
+ Polis city policy, metropolitan
+*Polys many polyandry, polychrome,
+ polysyllable
+ Pous, pados foot octopus, chiropodist
+*Protos first protoplasm, prototype
+*Pseudes false pseudonym, pseudo-classic
+*Psyche breath, soul, psychology, psychopathy
+ mind
+*Pyr fire pyrography, pyrotechnics
+*Scopos watcher scope, microscope
+*Sophia wisdom philosophy, sophomore
+*Techne art technicality, architect
+*Tele far, far off telepathy, telescope
+{*Temno cut }
+{*Tomos that which is } epitome, anatomy, tome
+{ cut off }
+*Theos god theosophy, pantheism
+*Therme heat isotherm, thermodynamics
+{Tithenai place } epithet, hypothesis,
+{Thesis a placing, } anathema
+{ arrangement }
+*Treis three trichord, trigonometry
+*Zoon animal zoology, protozoa, zodiac
+
+
+ <Greek Prefixes>
+
+_Prefix Meaning English embodiments_
+
+*A, an no, not aseptic, anarchy
+*Amphi about, around, ambidextrous, amphitheater
+ (Latin ambi) both
+*Ana up, again anatomy, Anabaptist
+*Anti against, opposite antidote, antiphonal, antagonist
+*Cata down catalepsy, cataclysm
+*Dia through, across diameter, dialogue
+*Epi upon epidemic, epithet, epode, ephemeral
+*Hyper over, extremely hypercritical, hyperbola
+*Hypo under, in smaller hypodermic, hypophosphate
+ measure
+*Meta after, over metaphysics, metaphor
+*Para beside paraphrase, paraphernalia
+*Peri around, about periscope, peristyle
+*Pro before proboscis, prophet
+*Syn together, with synthesis, synopsis, sympathy
+
+
+
+VI
+
+ WORDS IN PAIRS
+
+
+Our first task in this volume was the study of words in combination. Our
+second was the study of individual words in two of their aspects--first,
+as they are seen in isolation, next as they are seen in verbal families.
+Now our third task confronts us. It is the study of words as they are
+associated, not in actual blood kinship, but in meaning.
+
+Such an association in meaning may involve only two words (pairs) or
+larger groups. In this chapter we shall confine ourselves to the study of
+pairs.
+
+Of the relationship between pairs there are three types. In the first the
+words are hostile to each other. In the second they may easily be confused
+with each other. In the third they are parallel with each other. We shall
+examine the three types successively.
+
+But we must make an explanation first. Although we shall, in this and the
+following chapters, have frequent occasion to give the meanings of
+individual words, we shall give them without regard to dictionary methods.
+We shall not attempt formal, water-tight, or exhaustive definitions; our
+purpose is to convey, in the simplest and most human manner possible,
+brief general explanations of what the words stand for.
+
+
+<Opposites>
+
+Pairs of the first type are made up of words by nature opposite to each
+other, or else thought of as opposite because they are so often
+contrasted. Here is a familiar, everyday list:
+
+east, west straight, crooked myself, others
+large, small pretty, ugly major, minor
+laugh, cry walk, ride light, darkness
+top, bottom hard, soft friend, enemy
+sweet, sour clean, dirty temporal, spiritual
+meat, drink merry, sad means, extremes
+land, water private, public Jew, Gentile
+man, woman noisy, quiet independent, dependent
+old, new general, particular sublime, ridiculous
+age, youth wholesale, retail give, receive
+sick, well savage, civilized pride, humility
+brain, brawn wealth, poverty constructive, destructive
+soul, body positive, negative
+
+None of these words needs explaining. If you think of one of them, you
+will think of its opposite; at least its opposite will be lurking in the
+back of your mind. As proof of this fact you have only to glance at the
+following list, from which the second member of each pair is omitted:
+
+hot -- black -- boy -- in --
+off -- over -- love -- wrong --
+strong -- wet -- first -- day --
+long -- fast -- good -- hope --
+least -- asleep -- buy -- left --
+alive -- winter -- war -- succeed --
+creditor -- fat -- internal -- wise --
+drunk --
+
+Many words of a more difficult kind are thus pitted against each other,
+and we learn them, not singly, but in pairs. At least we should. As good
+verbal hunters we should be alert to the chance of killing two birds with
+one stone.
+
+_Allopath_ and _homeopath_, for example, are difficult
+opposites. We know of the existence of the two classes of medical
+practitioners; we know that they use different methods; but beyond this
+our knowledge is likely to be hazy. Let us set out, then, to _learn_
+the two words. The best way is to learn them together. _Allopathy_
+means other suffering, _homeopathy_ like suffering. An allopath uses
+remedies which create within the patient a condition that squarely
+conflicts with the further progress of the disease. A homeopath prescribes
+medicines (in small doses) which produce within the patient the same
+condition that the disease would produce; he "beats the disease to it," so
+to speak--takes the job himself and leaves the disease nothing to do. The
+allopath travels around a race-track in the opposite direction from the
+disease, and thwarts it through a head-on collision. The homeopath travels
+around the race-track in the same direction as the disease, and thwarts it
+by pulling at the reins. If we consider the two words together and get
+these ideas in mind, we shall have no further trouble with allopaths and
+homeopaths--except, perhaps, when they have rendered their services and
+presented their bills.
+
+_Objective_ and _subjective_ are also a troublesome pair. A
+thing is objective if it is an actual object or being, if it exists in
+itself rather than in our surmises. A thing is subjective if it is the
+creature of a state of mind, if it has its existence in the thought or
+imagination of some person or other. Thus if I meet a bear in the wilds,
+that bear is objective; whatever may be the state of my thoughts, _he is
+there_--and it would be to my advantage to reckon with this fact. But
+if a child who is sent off to bed alone says there is a bear in the room,
+the bear is subjective; it is not a living monster that will devour
+anybody, but a creature called into the mind of the child through dread.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Opposites
+
+Study the following words in pairs. Consult the dictionary for actual
+meanings. Then test your knowledge by embodying each word of each pair in
+a sentence, or in an illustration like those of the race-track and the
+bear in the preceding paragraphs.
+
+superior, inferior concord, discord
+export, import domestic, foreign
+fact, fiction prose, poetry
+verbal, oral literal, figurative
+predecessor, successor genuine, artificial
+positive, negative practical, theoretical
+optimism, pessimism finite, infinite
+longitude, latitude evolution, revolution
+oriental, occidental pathos, bathos
+sacred, profane military, civil
+clergy, laity capital, labor
+ingress, egress element, compound
+horizontal, perpendicular competition, coöperation
+predestination, freewill universal, particular
+extrinsic, intrinsic inflation, deflation
+dorsal, ventral acid, alkali
+synonym, antonym prologue, epilogue
+nadir, zenith amateur, connoisseur
+anterior, posterior stoic, epicure
+ordinal, cardinal centripetal, centrifugal
+stalagmite, stalactite orthodox, heterodox
+homogeneous, heterogeneous monogamy, polygamy
+induction, deduction egoism, altruism
+Unitarian, Trinitarian concentric, eccentric
+herbivorous, carnivorous deciduous, perennial
+esoteric, exoteric endogen, exogen
+vertebrate, invertebrate catalectic, acatalectic
+
+
+<Words Often Confused>
+
+Pairs of the second type are made up of words which are often confused by
+careless writers and speakers, and which should be accurately
+discriminated.
+
+Sometimes the words are actually akin to each other. _Continuous-
+continual_ and _enormity-enormousness_ are examples. Sometimes
+they merely look or sound much alike. _Mean-demean_ and _affect-
+effect_ are examples. Sometimes the things they designate are more or
+less related, so that the ideas behind the words rather than the words
+themselves are responsible for the confusion. _Contagious-infectious_
+and _knowledge-wisdom_ are examples. Let us distinguish between the
+two members of each of the pairs named.
+
+A thing is _continuous_ if it suffers no interruption whatever,
+_continual_ if it is broken at regular intervals but as regularly
+renewed. Thus "a continuous stretch of forest"; "the continual drip of
+water from the eaves."
+
+_Enormity_ pertains to the moral and sometimes the social,
+_enormousness_ to the physical. Thus "the enormity of the crime,"
+"the enormity of this social offense"; "the enormousness of prehistoric
+animals."
+
+_Demean_ is often used reproachfully because of its supposed relation
+to _mean_. But it has nothing to do with _mean_. The word with
+which to connect it is _demeanor_ (conduct). Thus "We observed how he
+demeaned himself" implies no adverse criticism of either the man or his
+deportment. Both may be debased to be sure, but they may be exemplary.
+
+To _affect_ means to feign or to have an influence upon, to
+_effect_ to bring to pass. Thus "He affects a fondness for classical
+music," "The little orphan's story affected those who heard it"; "We
+effected a compromise." _Affect_ is never properly used as a noun.
+_Effect_ as a noun means result, consequence, or practical operation.
+Thus "The shot took instant effect"; "He put this idea into effect."
+
+A disease is _contagious_ when the only way to catch it is through
+direct contact with a person already having it, or through contact with
+articles such a person has used. A disease is _infectious_ when it is
+presumably caused, not by contact with a person, but through widespread
+general conditions, as of climate or sanitation.
+
+Our _knowledge_ is our acquaintance with a fact, or the sum total of
+our information. Our _wisdom_ is our intellectual and spiritual
+discernment, to which our knowledge is one of the contributors.
+_Knowledge_ comprises the materials; _wisdom_ the ability to use
+them to practical advantage and to worthy or noble purpose.
+_Knowledge_ is mental possession; _wisdom_ is mental and moral
+power.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Confused
+
+1. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members of each
+of the following pairs. In each blank of the illustrative sentences insert
+the word appropriate in meaning.
+
+<Ability, capacity.> ____ to receive knowledge. ____ to impart
+knowledge.
+
+<Abstain, refrain.> He ____ from laughter. He steadfastly ____ from
+evil courses.
+
+<Abstinence, temperance.> Though he always displayed ____, he did not
+carry it to the point of ____.
+
+<Accept, except.> I shall ____ most of the suggestions, but must ____
+the one made by Mr. Wheeler.
+
+<Accept, receive>. When the package was ____ at the local post
+office, Bayard refused to ____ it.
+
+<Ache, pain>. The dull ____ of his head. A sharp ____ below
+shoulder-blade. I have known the ____ of cold hands. "My heart ____, and
+a drowsy numbness ____ My sense, as though of hemlock I had drunk."
+
+<Address, tact>. With firmness and ____ he set about reconciling the
+factions. Her ____ enabled her to perceive that something was amiss.
+
+<Adhere, cohere>. The magnetized iron filings ____. The cold iron
+____ to the boy's tongue.
+
+<Adherence, adhesion>. The ____ of the heated particles to each other
+was instantaneous. Amid these trials their ____ to the cause was unshaken.
+
+<Admission, admittance>. His ____ to the room was forced. He obtained
+____ into a fraternal order.
+
+<Admit, confess>. When he ____ that he had a weapon, he practically
+____ that he had slain the man.
+
+<Adverse, averse>. He was ____ to going. Their answer was ____.
+
+<Advice, counsel>. In this emergency he sought ____. He asked my ____
+as to the best place to hang the picture.
+
+<Aggravate, irritate>. To let these mishaps ____ you is to ____ your
+suffering.
+
+<Allusion, illusion>. It is an ____ to suppose that I made any ____
+to you.
+
+<Allusion, reference>. It was more than a possible ____; it was an
+unmistakable ____.
+
+<Amateur, novice>. Though we call him a(n) ____, he is in skill by no
+means the ____ you might think him.
+
+<Ambiguous, equivocal>. You are unintentionally ____. These words are
+deliberately ____.
+
+<Anticipate, expect>. Since we ____ the enemy to advance, would it
+not be wise to ____ him?
+
+<Appearance, aspect>. He was handsome in ____. The ____ of the sky
+was ominous.
+
+<Apprehend, comprehend>. "Lovers and madmen have such seething
+brains, Such shaping fantasies, that ____ More than cool reason ever
+____."
+
+<Ardor, fervor>. The ____ of the worshipers. The ____ of the
+soldiers.
+
+<Artist, artisan>. The ____ who was decorating the walls called to an
+____ who was mixing mortar.
+
+<Ascent, ascension>. We easily made the ____ of the slope, and from
+the summit witnessed the balloon ____.
+
+<Ascent, assent.> He gave his ____ when I proposed that we wait for
+the others to complete the ____ to this point.
+
+<Ascribe, impute.> I ____ it to you as a fault rather than ____ it to
+you as an honor.
+
+<Assembly, assemblage.> It was an informal ____. The ____ considered
+the matters it had been called to discuss.
+
+<Assent, consent.> When told that the measure would advance his
+interests, he ____; but he would not ____ to it.
+
+<Avenge, revenge.> The injury was slight, but he ____ it with
+unsparing malice. "____, O Lord, thy slaughtered saints."
+
+<Avocation, vocation.> The lawyer, besides his regular ____, had the
+collecting of birds' eggs as his ____.
+
+<Aware, conscious.> Though not ____ of the seriousness of his malady,
+he was ____ of the pain it caused him.
+
+<Balance, remainder.> Darrell added the ____ of the coins, but not
+even they brought about the ____ he sought between assets and obligations.
+
+<Bashful, modest.> Though ____ socially, he was not what you would
+term a ____ man.
+
+<Behavior, conduct.> His ____ in this time of trial was exemplary.
+She praised the ____ of the children at the party.
+
+<Belief, faith.> He possibly had ____, but not an active ____.
+
+<Benignant, benign.> Her social manner was ____. The ____ influence
+of sunlight.
+
+<Beside, besides.> ____ his personal friends, many people he had not
+even met stood ____ his sickbed.
+
+<Blanch, whiten.> At this threat the face of the heroine ____. With a
+pail of cheap paint he ____ the dingy wall.
+
+<Blessing, benediction.> After telling his parishioners to be mindful
+of their ____, the clergyman pronounced the ____.
+
+<Blockade, siege.> Daily attacks on exposed redoubts marked the
+progress of the ____. The fleet lay there in silent ____ of the port.
+
+<Bravery, bravado.> The incident proved that his ____ was not founded
+in real ____.
+
+<Bring, fetch.> When you come, ____ the official documents with you.
+____ me the scales you will find in the granary yonder.
+
+<Broad, wide.> A man with ____ shoulders stood in the ____, open
+doorway.
+
+<Bury, inter.> After they had solemnly ____ their comrade, they ____
+the treasure. They also ____ their comrade's dog.
+
+
+2. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members of each
+of the following pairs. Determine whether the words are correctly used in
+the illustrative sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Can, may.> Can I stay at home this afternoon, papa? Because of the
+floods, the train beyond doubt may not get through.
+
+<Character, reputation.> His character among them was very good. A
+man's reputation can never be taken from him.
+
+<Childish, childlike.> Your conduct is peevish; it is childishly so.
+Her innocence was childlike.
+
+<Cite, quote.> He was always citing snatches of Tennyson. We might
+quote Hamlet's soliloquy on suicide as an example of Shakespeare's ability
+to go to the heart of deep questions.
+
+<Claim, assert.> He claimed that Jefferson was our third President.
+He asserted that bears sleep through the winter.
+
+<Clothing, costume.> At the masquerade ball we each wore special
+clothing. The mariner who had swum from the wreck to the desert shore had
+not a shred of costume.
+
+<Comfort, ease.> Comfort after labor. The ease of owning a home.
+
+<Commercial, mercantile.> Petty commercial transactions. A mercantile
+treaty.
+
+<Common, mutual.> This pavilion was the common play-house for the
+children of the neighborhood. Ward and Aker held this property as their
+mutual possession.
+
+<Complement, compliment.> This addition is the complement of our
+quota. He paid his dancing partner a compliment.
+
+<Complement, supplement.> His downrightness is the complement of his
+uprightness. As a supplement to his wages he received an occasional bonus.
+
+<Complete, finish.> He put in the completing touches. He had finished
+the task.
+
+<Composure, equanimity.> His composure was not to be shaken. After
+this inner tumult came equanimity.
+
+<Comprehensible, comprehensive.> Numbers of such magnitude are
+scarcely comprehensible. That men by the million should die for a cause is
+a thing not really comprehensive.
+
+<Compulsion, obligation.> Who does not feel within him a compulsion
+to help the weak? It was through obligation, through having slave-drivers
+stand over them, that these wretched folk built the pyramids.
+
+<Congratulate, felicitate.> I congratulated my friend on his
+appointment to the commission. I also felicitated the stranger on his
+appointment.
+
+<Consecutive, successive.> Three consecutive convictions proved the
+ability of the prosecuting attorney. The quiet passing of successive
+summer days.
+
+<Contemptible, contemptuous.> Its size was insignificant, even
+contemptible. He won the prize by a contemptuous trick.
+
+<Continuation, continuance.> The investigator was surprised to find
+the tradition of such long continuation. We waited impatiently for the
+continuance of the story in the next issue.
+
+<Corporal, corporeal.> I am more and more amazed at the perfection of
+man's corporal frame. His corporeal vigor was unusual.
+
+<Correct, rectify.> A man may correct many of his false judgments on
+current affairs by studying history. The mistake is ours; it shall be
+rectified.
+
+<Cozy, snug.> The cozy fit of a garment. A snug place by the fire.
+
+<Crawl, creep.> We crawled forward at dawn to surprise their
+outposts. In his humility he fairly crept on the earth.
+
+<Credible, creditable.> I do not doubt it; it is entirely credible.
+The success of the antidote seemed scarcely creditable.
+
+<Credit, accredit.> Though he is the official and credited
+ambassador, his assertions are not accredited.
+
+<Cure, heal.> I cured the dog's wounds. The physician declared he
+could heal leprosy.
+
+<Custom, habit.> "A custom more honor'd in the breach than the
+observance." Is it your custom to watch the clock while you eat? The habit
+in that region was to rise at cockcrow.
+
+<Decided, decisive.> A decided battle. A decisive fault in manners.
+
+<Definite, definitive.> We still await a definite edition of this
+author's works. His answer was so definitive that we no longer doubted
+what he meant.
+
+<Demesne, domain.> Clive added India to the British demesne.
+The king went riding through his personal domain.
+
+<Deprecate, depreciate.> The German mark has deprecated in value. He
+depreciated the praise they were lavishing upon him.
+
+<Descent, dissent.> They tied themselves together with a rope in
+order to make their dissent safer. The dissent to a lower plane of
+conversation was what he most desired.
+
+<Discovery, invention.> The discovery of the wireless telegraph is
+Marconi's chief claim to remembrance. The invention of a water passage
+between Tierra del Fuego and the mainland was the work of Magellan.
+
+<Discriminate, distinguish.> He could not discriminate individuals at
+that distance. Any man can distinguish right from wrong.
+
+<Disinterested, uninterested.> His course was entirely generous and
+disinterested. Most visitors to art galleries have an uninterested manner.
+
+<Disposal, disposition.> This disposal of the matter is
+authoritative, final. His disposition of his forces was well-considered.
+
+<Dissatisfied, discontented.> Though the colonists were dissatisfied
+for the moment, they could hardly be called discontented.
+
+<Distinct, distinctive.> The distinct quality of his character was
+aggressiveness. There were four separate and distinctive calls.
+
+<Dramatic, theatrical.> An affected, dramatic manner. A truly
+theatrical situation.
+
+<Dry, arid.> A dry plain. An arid place to sleep in.
+
+<Dumb, mute.> The man stood dumb with surprise. Always be kind to
+mute animals.
+
+<Durable, lasting.> Our joy is durable. Oak is a lasting wood.
+
+3. Consult the dictionary for the distinction between the members
+of each of the following pairs. Frame sentences to illustrate
+the correct use of the words. (Some of the words in this list,
+as well as some in other parts of the chapter, are considered in
+larger groups in the chapters following.)
+
+earth, world efficiency, efficacy
+egoism, egotism eldest, oldest
+elemental, elementary elude, evade
+emigrate, immigrate enough, sufficient
+envy, jealousy equable, equitable
+equal, equivalent essential, necessary
+esteem, respect euphemism, euphuism
+evidence, proof exact, precise
+exchange, interchange excuse, pardon
+exempt, immune expect, suppose
+expedite, facilitate
+
+facsimile, copy familiar, intimate
+fancy, imagination farther, further
+feeling, sentiment feminine, effeminate
+fervent, fervid fewer, less
+fluid, liquid first (or last) two, two first (or last)
+food, feed foreign, alien
+force, strength forgive, pardon
+
+gayety, cheerfulness genius, talent
+gentle, tame genuine, authentic
+glance, glimpse grateful, thankful
+grieve, mourn
+
+hanged, hung happen, transpire
+happiness, pleasure healthy, healthful
+hear, listen heathen, pagan
+honorable, honorary horrible, horrid
+human, humane
+
+illegible, unreadable image, effigy
+imaginary, imaginative impending, approaching
+imperious, imperial imply, infer
+in, into inability, disability
+ingenious, ingenuous intelligent, intellectual
+insinuation, innuendo instinct, intuition
+involve, implicate irony, sarcasm
+irretrievable, irreparable
+
+judicious, judicial just, equitable
+justify, warrant
+
+lack, want languor, lassitude
+later, latter lawful, legal
+lax, slack leave, let
+lend, loan liable, likely
+libel, slander lie, lay
+like, love linger, loiter
+look, see loose, lose
+luxurious, luxuriant
+
+majority, plurality marine, maritime
+martial, military moderate, temperate
+mood, humor moral, ethical
+moral, religious mutual, reciprocal
+myth, legend
+
+natal, native nautical, naval
+near, close necessaries, necessities
+needy, needful noted, notorious
+novice, tyro
+
+observance, observation observe, perceive
+obsolete, archaic omnipresent, ubiquitous
+on, upon oppose, resist
+opposite, contrary oppress, depress
+
+palliate, extenuate passionate, impassioned
+pathos, pity patron, customer
+peculiar, unusual perspicuity, perspicacity
+permeate, pervade permit, allow
+perseverance, persistence pertain, appertain
+pictorial, picturesque pitiable, pitiful
+pity, sympathy pleasant, pleasing
+politician, statesman practicable, practical
+precipitous, precipitate precision, preciseness
+prejudice, bias prelude, overture
+pride, vanity principal, principle
+process, procedure procure, secure
+professor, teacher progress, progression
+propitious, auspicious proposal, proposition
+tradition, legend truth, veracity
+
+quiet, quiescent
+
+raise, rear raise, rise
+ransom, redeem rare, scarce
+reason, understanding reasonable, rational
+recollect, remember regal, royal
+reliable, trustworthy requirement, requisite
+restive, restless reverse, inverse
+ride, drive rime (or rhyme), rhythm
+
+sacred, holy salutation, salute
+scanty, sparse scholar, student
+science, art scrupulous, conscientious
+serf, slave shift, expedient
+sick, ill silent, taciturn
+sit, set skilled, skilful
+slender, slim smart, clever
+sociable, social solicitude, anxiety
+stay, stop stimulus, stimulation
+strut, swagger suppress, repress
+
+termination, terminus theory, hypothesis
+tolerate, permit torment, torture
+tradition, legend truth, veracity
+
+unbelief, disbelief unique, unusual
+
+varied, various variety, diversity
+venal, venial vengeance, revenge
+verse, stanza vindictive, revengeful
+visit, visitation visitant, visitor
+
+wander, stray warn, caution
+will, volition wit, humor
+witness, see womanish, womanlike
+worth, value
+
+
+ <Parallels>
+
+Pairs of the third type are made up of words parallel in meaning. This
+class somewhat overlaps the second; many terms that are frequently
+confused are parallels, and parallelism is of course a cause of confusion.
+
+Parallels are words that show likeness in meaning. Likeness, not sameness.
+Yet at one time actual sameness may have existed, and in many instances
+did. Nowadays this sameness has been lost, and the words have become
+differentiated. As a rule they still are closely related in thought;
+sometimes, however, the divergence between them is wide.
+
+Why did words having the same meaning find lodgment in the language in the
+first place? The law of linguistic economy forbids any such happening, and
+only through sheer good fortune did English come to possess duplications.
+The original Anglo-Saxon did not contain them. But the Roman Catholic
+clergy brought to England the language of religion and of scholarship,
+Latin. Later the Normans, whose speech as a branch of French was an
+offshoot of Latin, came to the island as conquerors. For a time,
+therefore, three languages existed side by side in the country--Anglo-
+Saxon among the common folk, Latin among the clergy, and Norman-French at
+the court and among the nobility. The coalescing of the three (or of the
+two if we count Latin in its direct and indirect contributions as one) was
+inevitable. But other (mostly cognate) languages also had a part in the
+speech that was ultimately evolved. The Anglo-Saxon element was
+augmented by words from Dutch, Scandinavian, and the Germanic tongues in
+general; and Latin was reinforced by Greek. Thus to imply, as is
+sometimes done, that modern English is simply a blend of Anglo-Saxon and
+Latin elements is misleading. _Native_ and _classic_ are the better
+terms to use, provided both are used broadly. _Native_ must include not
+only Anglo-Saxon but the other Germanic elements as well, and _classic_
+must include French and Greek as well as Latin.
+
+The welding of these languages made available two--in some instances more
+than two--words for a single object or idea. What became of these
+duplicates? Sometimes one of the words was dropped as needless.
+Oftentimes, however, both were retained--with such modifications in
+meaning that thereafter they designated, not the same object or idea, but
+different forms or aspects of it. Thus they became parallels, and the new
+language waxed rich with discriminations which neither of the component
+tongues had possessed.
+
+Scott in _Ivanhoe_ gives the basis upon which the unification of the
+languages proceeded. The jester Wamba in conversation with the swineherd
+Gurth explains how the Anglo-Saxon term took on the homelier, rougher,
+more workaday uses and left the more refined and fastidious uses for the
+Norman-French. A domestic animal, says Wamba, was cared for by the
+conquered people, and in consequence bore while living a "good Saxon"
+name--swine, ox, or calf; but it was served at the tables of the
+conquerors, and therefore when ready for consumption bore a "good
+Norman-French" name--pork, beef, or veal. "When the brute [a sow] lives,
+and is in charge of a Saxon slave, she goes by her Saxon name; but becomes
+Norman and is called pork, when she is carried into the castle hall to
+feast among the nobles.... He [a calf] is Saxon when he requires tendance,
+and takes a Norman name [Monsieur de Veau] when he becomes matter of
+enjoyment."
+
+Let us see how Scott's contention fares if we extend his list of terms
+relative to animal life. As throughout the rest of this chapter, with the
+single and necessary exception of List B, the first word in each pair is
+native, the second classic:
+
+
+<LIST A>
+
+sheep, mutton deer, venison horse, equine
+cow, bovine bull, taurine sheep, ovine
+wolf, lupine hog, porcine bear, ursine
+fox, vulpine cat, feline dog, canine
+fish, piscatorial mouse, vermin rat, rodent
+mankind, humanity man, masculine woman, feminine
+childish, infantile boyish, puerile
+
+A glance at this list will show that, at least as regards animal life, the
+native word is likely to be the more familiar and unpretentious. But we
+must not leap to the conclusion that, taking the language as a whole, the
+simple, easy word is sure to be native, the abstruse word classic. In the
+following list one word in each pair is simpler, oftentimes much simpler,
+than the other; yet both are of classic origin. (In some instances the two
+are doublets; that is, they spring from the same stem.)
+
+
+<LIST B>
+
+boil, effervesce plenty, abundance force, coerce
+clear, transparent sound, reverberate echo, reverberate
+toil, labor false, perfidious prove, verify
+join, unite join, annex try, endeavor
+carry, convey save, preserve save, rescue
+safe, secure poor, pauper poor, penurious
+poor, impecunious native, indigenous strange, extraneous
+excuse, palliate excusable, venial cannon, ordnance
+corpse, cadaverous parish, parochial fool, stultify
+fool, idiot rule, govern governor, gubernatorial
+wages, salary nice, exquisite haughty, arrogant
+letter, epistle pursue, prosecute use, utility
+use, utilize rival, competitor male, masculine
+female, feminine beauty, esthetics beauty, pulchritude
+beautify, embellish poison, venom vote, franchise
+vote, suffrage taste, gust tasteful, gustatory
+tasteless, insipid flower, floral count, compute
+cowardly, pusillanimous tent, pavilion money, finance
+monetary, pecuniary trace, vestige face, countenance
+turn, revolve bottle, vial grease, lubricant
+oily, unctuous revive, resuscitate faultless, impeccable
+scourge, flagellate power, puissance barber, tonsorial
+bishop, episcopal carry, portable fruitful, prolific
+punish, punitive scar, cicatrix hostile, inimical
+choice, option cry, vociferate ease, facility
+peaceful, pacific beast, animal chasten, castigate
+round, rotunda imprison, incarcerate bowels, viscera
+boil, ebullient city, municipal color, chromatics
+nervous, neurotic pleasing, delectable accidental, fortuitous
+change, mutation lazy, indolent fragrance, aroma
+pay, compensate face, physiognomy joy, rapture
+charitable, eleemosynary blame, blaspheme priest, presbyter
+coy, quiet prudent, provident pupil, disciple
+story, narrative pause, interval despise, abhor
+doctor, physician fate, destiny country, rustic
+aged, senile increase, increment gentle, genteel
+clear, apparent eagle, aquiline motion, momentum
+nourishment, nutrition pure, unadulterated closeness, proximity
+number, notation ancestors, progenitors confirm, corroborate
+convert, proselyte benediction, benison treasury, thesaurus
+egotism, megalomania
+
+Sometimes the native word is less familiar than the classic:
+
+
+<LIST C>
+
+seethe, boil loam, soil fare, travel
+abide, remain bestow, present bestow, deposit
+din, noise quern, mill learner, scholar
+shamefaced, modest hue, color tarnish, stain
+ween, expect leech, physician shield, protect
+steadfast, firm withstand, resist straightway, immediately
+dwelling, residence heft, gravity delve, excavate
+forthright, direct tidings, report bower, chamber
+rune, letter borough, city baleful, destructive
+gainsay, contradict cleave, divide hearten, encourage
+hoard, treasure
+
+
+Again, the native word is sometimes less emphatic than the classic:
+
+<LIST D>
+
+fly, soar old, venerable flood, cataclysm
+steep, precipitous wonder, astonishment speed, velocity
+sparkle, scintillate stir, commotion stir, agitate
+strike, collide learned, erudite small, diminutive
+scare, terrify burn, combustion fire, conflagration
+fall, collapse uproot, eradicate skin, excoriate
+hate, abominate work, labor bright, brilliant
+hungry, famished eat, devour twisted, contorted
+thin, emaciated sad, lugubrious mirth, hilarity
+
+Despite these exceptions, the native word is in general better known
+and more crudely powerful than the classic. Thus of the pair
+_sweat-perspiration_, _sweat_ is the plain-spoken, everyday member,
+_perspiration_ the polite, even learned member. The man of limited
+vocabulary says _sweat_; even the sophisticated person, unless there
+is occasion to soften effects, finds _sweat_ the more natural term.
+No one would say that a horse perspires. No one would say that human
+beings must eat their bread in the perspiration of their faces. But
+_sweat_ is a word of connotation too vigorous (though honest withal)
+for us to use the term in the drawing room. A questionable woman in _The
+Vicar of Wakefield_ betrays her lack of breeding by the remark that she
+is in a muck of sweat.
+
+The native word, besides being in itself simpler and starker than the
+classic, makes stronger appeal to our feelings and affections. In nearly
+every instance the objects and relationships that have woven themselves
+into the very texture of our lives are designated by native terms. Even if
+they are not so designated solely, they are so designated in their more
+cherished aspects. We warm more to the native _fatherly_ than to the
+classic _paternal_. We have a deeper sentiment for the native
+_home_ than for the classic _residence_.
+
+That the native is the more downright term may be seen from the following
+words. (These pairs are of course merely illustrative. With them might be
+grouped a few special pairs, like _devilish-diabolical_ and
+_church_-_ecclesiastical_, of which the first members are
+classic in origin but of such early naturalization into English that they
+may be regarded as native.)
+
+
+<LIST E>
+
+belly, stomach belly, abdomen navel, umbilicus
+suck, nurse naked, nude murder, homicide
+dead, deceased dead, defunct dying, moribund
+lust, salacity lewd, libidinous read, peruse
+lie, prevaricate hearty, cordial following, subsequent
+crowd, multitude chew, masticate food, pabulum
+eat, regale meal, repast meal, refection
+thrift, economy sleepy, soporific slumberous, somnolent
+live, reside rot, putrefy swelling, protuberant
+soak, saturate soak, absorb stinking, malodorous
+spit, saliva spit, expectorate thievishness, kleptomania
+belch, eructate sticky, adhesive house, domicile
+eye, optic walker, pedestrian talkative, loquacious
+talkative, garrulous wisdom, sapience bodily, corporeal
+name, appellation finger, digit show, ostentation
+nearness, propinquity wash, lave handwriting, chirography
+waves, undulations shady, umbrageous fat, corpulent
+muddy, turbid widow, relict horseback, equestrian
+weight, avoirdupois blush, erubescence
+
+The word of classic origin in many instances survives only or mainly in
+the form of an adjective; as a noun (or other part of speech) it has
+completely or largely disappeared. This fact may be observed in lists
+already given, particularly List A. It may also be observed in the
+following words:
+
+
+<LIST F>
+
+moon, lunar star, stellar star, sidereal
+sun, solar earth, terrestrial world, mundane
+heaven, celestial hell, infernal earthquake, seismic
+ear, aural head, capital hand, manual
+foot, pedal breast, pectoral heart, cardial
+hip, sciatic tail, caudal throat, guttural
+lung, pulmonary bone, osseous hair, hirsute
+tearful, lachrymose early, primitive sweet, dulcet,
+sweet, saccharine young, juvenile bloody, sanguinary
+deadly, mortal red, florid bank, riparian
+hard, arduous wound, vulnerable written, graphic
+spotless, immaculate sell, mercenary son, filial
+salt, saline meal, farinaceous wood, ligneous
+wood, sylvan cloud, nebulous glass, vitreous
+milk, lacteal water, aquatic stone, lapidary
+gold, aureous silver, argent iron, ferric
+honey, mellifluous loving, amatory loving, erotic
+loving, amiable wedded, hymeneal plow, arable
+priestly, sacerdotal arrow, sagittal wholesome, salubrious
+warlike, bellicose timely, temporary fiery, igneous
+ring, annular soap, saponaceous nestling, nidulant
+snore, stertorous window, fenestral twilight, crepuscular
+soot, fuliginous hunter, venatorial
+
+The fact that English is a double-barreled language, and that of parallel
+terms one is likely to be native and the other classic, is interesting in
+itself. Our lists of parallels, however, though (with the exception of
+List B) they are arranged to bring out this duality of origin, have other
+and more vital uses as material for exercises. For after all it matters
+little whether we know where a word comes from, provided we know
+thoroughly the meaning and implications of the word itself. The lists
+already given and those to follow show the more important words actually
+yoked as parallels. Your task must be to ascertain the differences in
+import between the words thus joined.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Parallels
+
+<LIST G>
+
+Study the discriminations between the members of the following pairs. At
+each blank in the illustrative sentences insert the appropriate word.
+
+<Brotherly, fraternal.> _Brotherly_ is used of actual blood
+kinship, or indicates close feeling, deep affection, or religious love.
+_Fraternal_ is used less personally and intimately; it normally
+betokens that the relations are at least in part formal (as relations
+within societies). "The sight of the button on the stranger's lapel caused
+Wilkes to give him the cabalistic sign and ask his ____ assistance."
+"Though the children of different parents, we bear for each other a true
+____ devotion." "Because we both are newspaper men I feel a ____ interest
+in him."
+
+<Daily, diurnal.> _Daily_, the popular word, is often used
+loosely. We may say that we eat three meals daily without implying that we
+have never gone dinnerless. _Diurnal_, the scientific term, is used
+exactly, whether applying to the period of daylight or to the whole
+twenty-four hours. A diurnal flower closes at night; a diurnal motion is
+precisely coincident with the astronomical day. In poetry, however,
+_diurnal_ is often used for _daily_. "Give us this day our ____
+bread." "The ____ rotation of the earth on its axis is the cause of our
+day and night." "Fred and I went for our ____ ramble through the hills."
+
+<Cold, frigid.> Which is the more popular word? Let us see. Would the
+man in the street be more likely to use one than the other? Which one?
+Does this answer our question? Another question: Which word is the more
+inclusive in meaning? Again, let us see. A blacksmith is beating iron;
+does the iron grow cold or frigid? Which term, then, approaches the closer
+in meaning to the idea of mere coolness? On the other hand, may that same
+term represent a temperature far beyond mere coolness? Would you speak of
+a morning as bitterly cold or bitterly frigid? Now think of the term you
+have not been using. _Can_ it convey as wide meanings, or is it
+limited in range? Does the word _frigid_ carry for you a geographical
+suggestion (to the frigid zone)? Do you yourself use the term? If so, do
+you use it chiefly (perhaps entirely) in connection with human temperament
+or demeanor? Is _cold_ used thus figuratively also? Which is the more
+often thus used? "I suffer from ____ hands and feet." "The slopes of Mont
+Blanc are ____ with eternal snow." "He did not warm to the idea at all.
+His inclinations are absolutely ____."
+
+<Manly, virile>. _Manly_ implies possession of traits or
+qualities a man should possess; it may be used of immature persons.
+_Virile_ implies maturity and robust masculinity; it is also used of
+the power to procreate. "A ____ lad." "A ____ reply." "____ energy."
+"____ and aggressive." "____ forbearance."
+
+<Inner, internal>. _Inner_ is somewhat within, or more within
+than something else is; it is also used in figurative and spiritual
+senses. _Internal_ is entirely within. "The ____ organs of the human
+body." "The ____ layer of the rind." "The injury was ____."
+"The ____ nature of man." "The ____ meaning of the occurrence."
+
+<Height, altitude>. "He was five feet, eleven inches in height."
+Can you substitute _altitude_? Is _altitude_ used of persons?
+"At an altitude of eleven feet from the ground." Would _height_ be
+more natural? Does _altitude_ betoken great height? If so, does
+Hamlet speak jestingly when he greets the player, "Your ladyship is nearer
+heaven than when I saw you last, by the altitude of a chopine?" What of
+the sentence: "The altitude of Galveston was not sufficient to protect it
+from the tidal wave"? Does the magnitude or importance of the object
+(Galveston) compensate for its lack of elevation and thus justify
+_altitude_? Could _height_ be substituted? If so, would the
+words _above sea-level_ have to follow it? Does this fact give you a
+further clue as to the distinction between the two words? You are
+comparing the elevation of two peaks, both plainly visible; you measure
+them merely by your eye. Do you say "This exceeds the other in height" or
+"This exceeds the other in altitude"? Suppose the peaks are so distant
+from each other that the two are not visible simultaneously, and suppose
+you are speaking from a knowledge of the scientific measurements. Do you
+say "This exceeds the other in height" or "This exceeds the other in
+altitude"?
+
+<Talk, conversation>. _Talk_ may be one-sided and empty.
+_Conversation_ requires that at least two shall participate, and it
+is not spoken of as empty, though it may be trivial. "Our ____ was
+somewhat desultory." "Thought is less general than ____."
+"His ____ was so lively that I had no chance to interrupt"
+"That is meaningless ____."
+
+<Homesickness, nostalgia>. All of us have heard physicians call
+commonplace ailments by extraordinary names. When homesickness reaches the
+stage where a physician is or might be called in, it becomes nostalgia.
+The latter term suggests morbid or chronic suffering. A healthy boy away
+from home for the first time is homesick. An exile who has wasted himself
+with pining for his native land is nostalgic. "His ____ was more than
+____; it had so preyed upon his thoughts that it had grown into ____."
+
+Rise, ascend. _Rise_ is the more general term, but it expresses less
+than _ascend_ in degree or stateliness. "He had foretold to them that
+he would ____ into heaven." "Do not ____ from your seat." "The diver
+slowly ____ to the surface." "The travelers ____ the mountain."
+
+<Sell, vend>. _Sell_ is the more dignified word socially, but
+may express greater moral degradation. _Vend_ is used of the petty
+(as that which can be carried about in a wagon), and may suggest the
+pettily dishonest. "That man would ____ his country." "We shall ____ a
+million dollars' worth of goods." "The hucksters ____ their wares."
+
+
+<LIST H>
+
+Study the discriminations between the members of the following pairs.
+Determine whether the words are correctly used in the illustrative
+sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Friendly, amicable>. _Friendly_ denotes goodwill positive in
+quality though perhaps limited in degree; we may be friendly to friends,
+enemies, or strangers. _Amicable_ is negative, denoting absence of
+open discord: it is used of those persons between whom some connection
+already exists. "The newcomer has an amicable manner." "Both sides were
+cautious, but at last they reached a friendly settlement." "I have only
+amicable feelings for an enemy who is thus merciful." "The two met, if not
+in a friendly, at least in an amicable way."
+
+<Willing, voluntary>. Both words imply an act of the will; but
+_willing_ adds positive good-nature, desire, or enthusiasm, whereas
+_voluntary_ conveys little or nothing of the emotional attitude.
+_Voluntary_ is often thought of in contrast with _mechanical_.
+"They made willing submission." "They rendered whole-hearted and voluntary
+service." "Though torn by desire to return to his mother, he willingly
+continued his journey away from her." "The sneeze was unwilling."
+
+<Greedy, voracious.> _Greedy_ denotes excessiveness (usually
+habitual) of appetite or, in its figurative uses, of desire; it nearly
+always carries the idea of selfishness. _Voracious_ denotes intense
+hunger or the hasty and prolonged consumption of great quantities of food;
+it may indicate, not habitual selfishness, but the stress of
+circumstances. "Nobody else I know is so greedy as he." "The young poet
+was voracious of praise." "Trench, though a capital fellow, was so hungry
+that he ate voraciously."
+
+<Offspring, progeny.> _Offspring_ is likely to be used when our
+thought is chiefly on the children, _progeny_ when our thought is
+chiefly on the parents. _Offspring_ may be used of one or many;
+_progeny_ is used in collective reference to many. "He was third
+among the progeny who won distinction." "They are the progeny of very rich
+parents." "Clayton left his offspring well provided for."
+
+<Ghost, spirit.> _Ghost_ is the narrower term. It never
+expresses, as _spirit_ does, the idea of soul or of animating mood or
+purpose. With reference to incorporeal beings, it denotes (except in the
+phrase "the Holy Ghost") the reappearance of the dead in disembodied form.
+_Spirit_ may denote a variety of incorporeal beings--among them
+angels, fairies (devoid of moral nature), and personalities returned from
+the grave and manifested--seldom visibly--through spiritualistic tappings
+and the like. "The superstitious natives thought the spirit of their chief
+walked in the graveyard." "The ghost of the ancestors survives in the
+descendants." "I can call spirits from the vasty deep."
+
+<Foe, enemy.> Nowadays the chief difference between the two terms is
+that _foe_ is the more used in poetry, _enemy_ in prose.
+But _foe_ tends to express the more personal and implacable
+hostility. We do not think of foes as bearing any friendship for each
+other; enemies may, or they may be enemies in public affairs but downright
+friends in their private relations. A man is hardly spoken of as being his
+own foe, but he may be his own enemy. "For the moment we found ourselves
+foes." "Suspicion is an enemy to content." "I paid a tribute to my friend,
+who was the dominant personality among the enemy."
+
+<Truth, veracity.> _Truth_ has to do with the accuracy of the
+statement, of the facts; _veracity_ with the intention of the person
+to say nothing false. "I cannot vouch for the veracity of the story, but I
+can for the truth of the teller." "Though he is not a man of veracity, I
+believe he is now speaking the truth." "Veracity, crushed to earth, will
+rise again."
+
+<Break, fracture>. _Break_ is the broader term. It need not
+refer clearly to the operation or result of external force, nor need it
+embody the idea that this force is brought against a hard substance. In
+these respects it differs from _fracture_, as also in the fact that
+it may designate a mere interruption. Furthermore it has figurative uses,
+whereas _fracture_ is narrowly literal. "There was a fracture in the
+chain of mountains." "The break in his voice was distinct." "The fracture
+of the bones of his wrist incapacitated him." "The fracture of the rope."
+
+<Hug, embrace>. To _hug_ is to clasp violently or
+enthusiastically, and perhaps ludicrously. To _embrace_ is to clasp
+in a more dignified, perhaps even in a formal, way; the term also means to
+include, to comprise. "This topic embraces the other." "Did you see that
+ardent bumpkin embracing his sweetheart?" "Her sister gave her a graceful
+but none too cordial hug." "The wounded bear hugged the hunter
+ferociously."
+
+<Shorten, abridge>. The two terms overlap; but there is a fairly
+strong tendency to use _shorten_ for reduction in length, and
+_abridge_ for reduction in quantity or mass. Both words are used
+figuratively as well as literally. "The tyrant shortened the privileges of
+his subjects." "We shortened the rope." "The teacher abridged the
+recitation." "The report of the committee appears in abridged form in
+Volume 2 of our records."
+
+
+<LIST I>
+
+With the help of the dictionary discriminate between the members of the
+following pairs. Determine whether the words are correctly used in the
+illustrative sentences. (Some are; some are not.)
+
+<Fiery, inflammable>. "He delivered a fiery address." "The
+underbrush was dry and fiery." "Your disposition is too inflammable."
+
+<Lean, attenuated>. "The fat man had grown attenuated."
+"Yon Cassius has a lean and hungry look." "The hot metal was then drawn
+into an attenuated wire." "Only a lean line of our soldiers faced the
+dense masses of the enemy."
+
+<Home-like, domestic>. "The scene was quiet and domestic." "It is
+home-like, inexpressibly dear." "To Waltham, heartsick from his
+wanderings, the room in all its arrangements was thoroughly domestic."
+
+<Vigilant, watchful>. "We must be vigilant if we would maintain our
+liberty." "He was wakeful, even watchful, though not from set purpose."
+"He was vigilant for evidences of friendship."
+
+<Building, edifice>. "It is a big, barn-like building." "Spare yonder
+sacred edifice." "This is the most imposing building I ever saw."
+
+<Hole, aperture>. "I poked a stick into the aperture which the
+crawfish had made." "Through the aperture of the partly open door I gazed
+out on the street." "The hole of the hornet's nest was black with the
+emerging and angry insects."
+
+<Farming, agriculture>. "Two hundred students graduated this year
+from the college of farming." "For long years he had devoted himself to
+the homely, grinding tasks of agriculture." "I have looked rather
+carefully into the theories of farming."
+
+<Rest, repose>. "He obtained some repose even while standing." "We
+wished for a moment's rest from our exertions." "Worn out, he was
+compelled to seek repose." "Lincoln's face in repose was very melancholy."
+
+<Help, aid>. "The man was so injured he could do nothing for himself;
+I had to aid him." "Help, help!" "Aid us, O God, in our sore distress."
+"The little fellow could not quite get the bundle to his shoulder; a
+passerby helped him."
+
+<Hide, conceal>. "By refraining from comment he hid his connection
+with the affair." "Wild creatures hide themselves by means of their
+protective coloring." "The frost on the panes conceals the landscape from
+you." "Do not hide your misdeeds from your mother."
+
+
+<LIST J>
+
+In the following list only the native member of each pair is given.
+Determine what the classic member is, and frame sentences to illustrate
+the correct use of the two words. (Make a conscientious effort to find the
+classic member by means of its parallelism with the native. If, and after,
+you definitely fail in any instance to find it, obtain a clue to it
+through study of the words in List G. Every pair in that list is clearly
+suggestive of one or more pairs in this list.)
+
+nightly,-- motherly,--
+breadth,-- buy,--
+hot,-- fall,--
+thought,-- sleeplessness,--
+fatherly,-- yearly,--
+outer,-- depth,--
+womanly,-- speech,--
+
+
+<LIST K>
+
+Discriminate between the members of each of the following pairs, and frame
+sentences to illustrate the correct use of the two words.
+
+freedom, liberty well, cistern
+freedom, independence give, donate
+free, acquit happen, occur
+door, portal lessen, abate
+begin, commence lessen, diminish
+behead, decapitate forefathers, ancestors
+belief, credence friend, acquaintance
+belief, credulity lead, conduct
+swear, vow end, finish
+curse, imprecate end, complete
+curse, anathema end, terminate
+die, expire warn, admonish
+die, perish warn, caution
+die, succumb rich, affluent
+lively, vivacious wealthy, opulent
+walk, ambulate help, assistance
+leave, depart help, succor
+leave, abandon answer, reply
+go with, accompany find out, ascertain
+go before, precede take, appropriate
+hasten, accelerate shrewd, astute
+quicken, accelerate breathe, respire
+speed, celerity busy, industrious
+hatred, animadversion growing, crescent
+fearful, timorous grow, increase
+
+
+<LIST L>
+
+Cover with a piece of paper the classic (right-hand) members of the
+following pairs, and if possible ascertain what they are by studying the
+native members. Frame sentences to illustrate the correct use of both
+words in each pair.
+
+neighborhood, vicinity hang, impend
+hang, suspend rash, impetuous
+flood, inundation drunk, intoxicated
+harmful, injurious tool, instrument
+mind, intellect mad, insane
+birth, nativity sail, navigate
+sailor, mariner ship, vessel
+lying, mendacious upright, erect
+early, premature upright, vertical
+first, primary shake, vibrate
+raise, elevate swing, oscillate
+lift, elevate leaves, foliage
+greet, salute beg, importune
+choose, select beggar, mendicant
+choose, elect smell, odor
+same, identical sink, submerge
+name, nominate dip, immerse
+follow, pursue room, apartment
+follow, succeed see, perceive
+teach, instruct see, inspect
+teach, inculcate sight, visibility
+teacher, pedagogue sight, vision
+tiresome, tedious sight, spectacle
+empty, vacant glasses, spectacles
+farewell, valediction
+
+
+<LIST M>
+
+Cover with a piece of paper the native (left-hand) members of the
+following pairs, and if possible ascertain what they are by studying the
+classic members. Frame sentences to illustrate the correct use of both
+words in each pair.
+
+skin, cuticle thunder, fulminate
+skin, integument sleep-walking, somnambulism
+hide, epidermis bird, ornithology
+fleshly, carnal bird, aviary
+hearer, auditor bee, apiary
+snake, serpent bending, flexible
+heap, aggregation wrinkle, corrugation
+laugh, cachinnation slow, dilatory
+laughable, risible lime, calcimine
+fear, trepidation coal, lignite
+live, exist man, anthropology
+bridal, nuptial winter, hibernate
+wed, marry gap, hiatus
+husband/wife, spouse right, ethical
+shore, littoral showy, ostentatious
+forswear, perjure spelling, orthography
+steal, peculate time, chronology
+steal, embezzle handbook, manual
+lockjaw, tetanus hole, cavity
+mistake, error dig, excavate
+mistake, erratum boil, tumor
+wink, nictation tickle, titillate
+blessing, benediction dry, desiccated
+wet, humid warm, tepid
+flirt, coquet forgetfulness, oblivion
+fiddle, violin sky, firmament
+sky, empyrean flatter, compliment
+flee, abscond flight, fugitive
+forbid, prohibit hinder, impede
+hold, contain
+
+
+<LIST N>
+
+For each of the following pairs frame a sentence which shall contain one
+of the members. Can the other member be substituted without affecting the
+meaning of the sentence? Read the discrimination of _Height-altitude_
+in EXERCISE - Parallels. Ask yourself similar questions to bring out the
+distinction between the two words you are considering.
+
+threat, menace call, summon
+talk, commune cleanse, purify
+short, terse short, concise
+better, ameliorate lie, recline
+new, novel straight, parallel
+lawful, legitimate law, litigation
+law, jurisprudence flash, coruscate
+late, tardy watch, chronometer
+foretell, prognosticate king, emperor
+winding, sinuous hint, insinuate
+burn, incinerate fire, incendiarism
+bind, constrict crab, crustacean
+fowls, poultry lean, incline
+flat, level flat, vapid
+sharpness, acerbity sharpness, acrimony
+shepherd, pastor word, vocable
+choke, suffocate stifle, suffocate
+clothes, raiment witness, spectator
+beat, pulsate mournful, melancholy
+beginning, incipient drink, imbibe
+light, illuminate hall, corridor
+stair, escalator anger, indignation
+fight, combat sleight-of-hand, prestidigitation
+build, construct tree, arbor
+ask, interrogate wench, virgin
+frisk, caper fill, replenish
+water, irrigate silly, foolish
+coming, advent feeling, sentiment
+old, antiquated forerunner, precursor
+sew, embroider unload, exonerate
+grave, sepulcher readable, legible
+tell, narrate kiss, osculate
+nose, proboscis striking, percussion
+green, verdant stroke, concussion
+grass, verdure bowman, archer
+drive, propel greed, avarice
+book, volume stingy, parsimonious
+warrior, belligerent bath, ablution
+owner, proprietor wrong, incorrect
+bow, obeisance top, summit
+kneel, genuflection food, nutrition
+work, occupation seize, apprehend
+shut, close field, agrarian
+
+Turn back to Lists A, B, C, D, E, and F. Discriminate between the members
+of each pair contained in these lists. Frame sentences to illustrate the
+correct use of the words.
+
+
+
+VII
+
+ SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (1)
+
+
+In considering pairs we have, without using the word, been studying
+synonyms. For most pairs are synonyms (or in some instances antonyms) that
+hunt in couples. We must now deal with synonyms, and incidentally
+antonyms, as they associate themselves in larger groups.
+
+A vocabulary is impoverished. Why? Nine times in ten, because of a
+disregard of synonyms. Listen to the talk of the average person. Whatever
+is pleasing is _fine_ or _nice_ or _all to the good_;
+whatever is displeasing is _bum_ or _awful_ or _a fright_.
+Life is reflected, not as noble and complex, but as mean and meager. Out
+of such stereotyped utterance only the general idea emerges. The precise
+meaning is lazily or incompetently left to the hearer to imagine. The
+precise meaning? There is none. A person who does not take the trouble to
+speak clearly has not taken the trouble to think clearly.
+
+But the master of synonyms expresses, instead of general, hazy,
+commonplace conceptions, the subtlest shadings of thought and feeling. He
+has so trained himself that he selects, it may be unconsciously, from a
+throng of possible words. One word may be strong, another weak. One may be
+broad, another narrow. One may present an alternative in meanings, another
+permit no liberty of choice. One may be suggestive, another literal or
+colorless. One may penetrate to the core of the idea, another strike only
+in the environs. With these possibilities the master of synonyms reckons.
+He must have the right word. He chooses it, not at haphazard, but in
+conformity with a definite purpose.
+
+For synonyms are not words that have the same meaning. They are words that
+have similar meanings. They may be compared to circles that overlap but do
+not coincide. Each embraces a common area, but each embraces also an area
+peculiar to itself. Though many words cluster about a given idea, rarely
+if ever are even two of these words entirely equivalent to each other. In
+scope, in suggestion, in emotional nuance, in special usage, or what not,
+is sure to lurk some denial of perfect correspondence. And of synonyms, so
+of antonyms. Antonyms are words opposite in meaning; but the opposition,
+for the same reasons as the likeness, is seldom or never absolute.
+
+In your study of synonyms you will find most of the dictionaries
+previously named of great help. You may also profitably consult the
+following books of synonyms (heavy, scholastic works not suited for
+ordinary use are omitted):
+
+
+<Books of Plain Synonyms and Antonyms>
+
+Edith B. Ordway: _Synonyms and Antonyms_. A compact, practical
+volume, with antonyms (in italics for contrast) immediately following
+synonyms.
+
+Louis A. Flemming: _Putnam's Word Book_. A book of the ordinarily
+used synonyms of words, with antonyms after some of them, and with lists
+of associated words wherever these are likely to be useful.
+
+Samuel Fallows: _100,000 Synonyms and Antonyms_. A handy little
+volume, with useful lists of various kinds in appendices.
+
+Richard Soule: _Dictionary of English Synonyms_ [revised and enlarged
+by George H. Howison]. A much larger and more expensive book than the
+others, and less practical for ordinary use, but fuller in treatment of
+material, with words of more than one meaning carefully divided into their
+various senses.
+
+
+<Synonyms with Word Discriminations>
+
+George Crabb: _English Synonyms_. A standard volume for over 100
+years. Has close distinctions, but is somewhat scholarly for ordinary use.
+Revised edition of 1917, omitting illustrative quotations from literature,
+not so good as editions before that date.
+
+James C. Fernald: _English Synonyms, Antonyms, and Prepositions_.
+A pleasing book to read, with much information about the use of words and
+their shades of meaning (with exercises), also with proper prepositions to
+follow words. Material taken from the _Standard Dictionary_.
+
+Peter Mark Roget: _Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases_. Issued in
+many editions and revisions. Words grouped under general ideas. An
+excellent book for serious and laborious study, but not for quick use.
+
+
+<How to Acquire Synonyms>
+
+The best principle for the extension of one's mastery of synonyms is the
+principle already used over and over in this book--that of proceeding from
+the known to the unknown. It is the fundamental principle, indeed, of any
+kind of successful learning. We should build on what we have, fit each new
+piece of material into the structure already erected. But normally it is
+our ill fortune to learn through chance rather than through system. We
+perceive elucidation here, draw an inference there. These isolated
+fragments of knowledge may mislead rather than inform us.
+
+The principle of proceeding from the known to the unknown may be applied
+to synonyms in various ways. Two of these--the two of most importance--we
+must consider here.
+
+First, you should reckon with your personal, demonstrated needs. Just as
+you have already analyzed your working vocabulary for its general limits
+and shortcomings, so should you analyze it with particular reference to
+your poverty in synonyms. Watch your actual speech; make a list of the
+words--nouns, verbs, and adjectives particularly--that you employ again
+and again. Make each of these words the starting-point for a linguistic
+exploring expedition. First, write the word down. Then under it write all
+the synonyms that come forthwith to your mind. These constitute your
+present available stock; in speaking or writing you could, if you kept
+yourself mentally alert, summon them on the moment. But the list, as you
+know, is not exhaustive. Draw a line under it and subjoin such synonyms as
+come to you after reflection. These constitute a second stock, not
+instantaneously available, yet to be tagged as among your resources. Next
+add a list of the synonyms you find through research, through a ransacking
+of dictionaries and books of synonyms. This third stock, but dimly
+familiar if familiar at all, is in no practical sense yours. And indeed
+some of the words are too abstruse, learned, or technical for you to
+burden your memory with them. But many--most--are worth acquiring. By
+writing down the words of these three classes you have done something to
+stamp them upon your memory as associates. You must now make it your
+business to bring them into use. Never call upon them for volunteers, but
+like a wise commander summon the individual that can rightly perform a
+particular service. Thus will your speech, perhaps vague and indolent now,
+become exact, discriminating, competent, vital.
+
+In the second place, you should obtain specific and detailed command of
+general ideas. Not of out-of-the-way ideas. But of the great basic ideas
+that are the common possession of all mankind. For through these basic
+ideas is the most natural and profitable approach to the study of
+synonyms. Each of them is represented by a generic word. So elementary are
+idea and word alike that a person cannot have the one in mind without
+having the other ready and a-quiver on his tongue. Every person is master
+of both. But it is unsafe to predicate the person's acquaintance with the
+shades and phases of the idea, or with the corresponding discriminations
+in language. He may not know them at all, he may know them partially, he
+may know them through and through. Let us suppose him ignorant of them but
+determined to learn. His progress, both in the thought and in the
+language, will be from the general to the specific. His acquaintance with
+the idea in the large he will gradually extend to an acquaintance with it
+in detail, and his command of the broad term for it he will little by
+little supplement with definite terms for its phases. An illustration will
+make this clear.
+
+We are aware that the world is made up of various classes and conditions
+of men. How did we learn this? Let us go back to the time when our minds
+were a blank, when we were babes and sucklings, when we had not perceived
+that men exist, much less that mankind is infinitely complex. A baby comes
+slowly to understand that all objects in the universe are divisible into
+two classes, human and non-human, and that a member of the former may be
+separated from the others and regarded as an individual. It has reached
+the initial stage of its knowledge on the subject; it has the basic idea,
+that of the individual human being. As soon as it can speak, it acquires a
+designating term--not of course the sophisticated _human being_, but
+the simpler _man_. It uses this word in the generic sense, to
+indicate _any_ member of the human race; for as yet it knows nothing
+and cares nothing about differences in species. With increasing
+enlightenment, however, it discerns five species, and distinguishes among
+them by swelling this branch of its vocabulary to five words: man (in the
+sense of adult male), woman, boy, girl, baby. (To be sure, it may chance
+to have acquired a specific term, as _boy_ or _baby_, before the
+generic term _man_; but if so, it has attached this term to some
+particular individual, as the grocer's boy or itself, rather than to the
+individuals of a species. Its understanding of the species as a species
+comes after its understanding of the genus.) As time passes, it divides
+mankind into yet further species by sundry other methods: according to
+occupation, for example, as doctors, chauffeurs, gardeners; to race or
+color, as white men; negroes, Malays, Chinese; to disposition, as heroes,
+gift-givers, teasers, talkers; and so on. It perceives moreover that
+species are made up of sub-species. Thus instead of lumping all boys
+together it begins to distinguish them as big boys, little boys,
+middle-sized boys, boys in long trousers, boys in short trousers, barefoot
+boys, schoolboys, poor boys, rich boys, sick boys, well boys, friends,
+enemies, bullies, and what not. It even divides the sub-species. Thus it
+classifies schoolboys as bright boys, dullards, workers, shirkers,
+teachers' favorites, scapegoats, athletes, note-throwers, truant-players,
+and the like. And of these classes it may make yet further sub-divisions,
+or at least it may separate them into the individuals that compose them.
+In fine, with its growing powers and experience, it abandons its old
+conception that all persons are practically alike, and follows human
+nature through the countless ramifications of man's status, temperament,
+activities, or fate. And it augments its vocabulary to keep pace, roughly
+at least, with its expanding ideas. In thought and terminology alike its
+growth is from genus to species.
+
+So it is with all our ideas and with all our words to cap them. We radiate
+from an ascertained center into new areas of knowledge; we proceed from
+the broad, fundamental, generic to the precise, discriminatory, specific.
+Upon this natural law are based the exercises in this chapter and the two
+to follow. The starting-point is always a word representative of an
+elementary idea--a word and an idea which everybody knows; the advance is
+into the unknown or the unused, at any rate into the particular. Now
+fundamental ideas are not very numerous, and these exercises include the
+commoner ones. Such a method of studying synonyms must therefore yield
+large and tangible results.
+
+One matter, however, should be explained. Most books of synonyms start
+with a word and list all the terms in any way related to it. The idea of
+the compilers is that the more they give the student the more they help
+him. But oftentimes by giving more than is strictly pertinent they
+actually hinder and confuse him. They may do this in various ways, of
+which two must be mentioned. First, they follow an idea too far afield.
+Thus in listing the synonyms of _love_ they include such terms as
+_kindness_ and _lenity_, words only through stretched usage
+connected with _love_. Secondly, they trace, not one meaning of a
+word, but two or more unrelated meanings when the word chances to possess
+them. Thus in listing the synonyms of _cry_ they include both the
+idea of weeping and the idea of calling or screaming. What are the results
+of these methods? The student finds a clutter where he expects
+rationalized order; he finds he must exclude many words which lie in the
+borders and fringes of the meaning. Moreover he finds mere chance
+associations mingled with marked kinships. In both cases he finds dulled
+distinctions.
+
+This book offers synonyms that are apropos and definite rather than
+comprehensive. Starting with a basic idea, it finds the generic term; it
+then disregards dim and distant relationships, confines itself rigorously
+to one of perhaps two or three legitimate senses, and refuses to consider
+the peculiar twists and devious ways of subsidiary words when they wander
+from the idea it is tracing. It thus deliberately blinds itself to much
+that is interesting. But this partial blindness enables it to concentrate
+attention upon the matter actually under study, to give sharper
+distinctions and surer guidance.
+
+
+EXERCISE A
+
+After three introductory groups (dealing with thoroughly concrete ideas
+and words) the synonyms in this exercise are arranged alphabetically
+according to the first word in each group.
+
+This first word is generic. It is immediately followed by a list of its
+synonyms. These are then informally discriminated or else (in a few
+instances) questions are asked about them. Perhaps a few less closely
+related synonyms are then listed for you to discriminate in a similar way.
+Finally, illustrative sentences are given. Each blank in these you are to
+fill with the word that conveys the meaning exactly. (To prevent monotony
+and inattention, the number of illustrative sentences varies. You may have
+to use a particular word more than once, and another word not at all.)
+
+
+<Walk, plod, trudge, tread, stride, stalk, strut, tramp, march, pace,
+toddle, waddle, shuffle, mince, stroll, saunter, ramble, meander,
+promenade, prowl, hobble, limp, perambulate.>
+
+Any one may be said to _walk_ who moves along on foot with moderate
+speed. He _plods_ if he walks slowly and heavily, and perhaps
+monotonously or spiritlessly as well. He _trudges_ if he walks
+toilsomely and wearily, as though his feet were heavy. He _treads_ if
+his walk is suggestive of a certain lightness and caution--if, for
+instance, he seems half-uncertain whether to proceed and sets one foot
+down carefully before the other. He _strides_ if he takes long steps,
+especially in a firm, pompous, or lofty manner. He _stalks_ if there
+is a certain stiffness or haughtiness in his walking. He _struts_ if
+he walks with a proud or affectedly dignified gait, especially if he also
+raises his feet high. He _tramps_ if he goes for a long walk, as for
+pleasure or enjoyment out-of-doors. He _marches_ if he walks in a
+measured, ordered way, especially in company with others. He _paces_
+if he engages in a measured, continuous walk, as from nervousness,
+impatience, or anger. He _toddles_ if his steps are short, uneven,
+and unsteady, like those of a child. He _waddles_ if his movement is
+ungainly, with a duck-like swaying from side to side. He _shuffles_
+if he drags his feet with a scraping noise. He _minces_ if he takes
+short steps in a prim, precise, or affectedly nice manner. He
+_strolls_ or _saunters_ if he goes along in an easy, aimless, or
+idle fashion. He _rambles_ if he wanders about, with no definite aim
+or toward no definite goal. He _meanders_ if he proceeds slowly and
+perhaps listlessly in an ever-changing course, as if he were following the
+windings of the crooked Phrygian river, Meander. He _promenades_ if
+he walks in a public place, as for pleasure or display. He _prowls_
+if he moves about softly and stealthily, as in search of prey or booty. He
+_hobbles_ if he jerks along unevenly, as from a stiff or crippled
+condition of body. He _limps_ if he walks lamely. He
+_perambulates_ when he walks through, perhaps for observation or
+inspection. _(Perambulates_ is of course a learned word.)
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <sneak, shamble, amble,
+wander, stamp, slouch, gad, gallivant, glide, hike>.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ down the lane in the moonlight. Rip Van
+Winkle loved to ____ about the mountains. "The plowman homeward ____ his
+weary way." The old man ____ down the street with his cane. The excavators
+____ about the ruins in search of relics. He ____ about the room, almost
+bursting with importance. The nervous man ____ up and down the station
+platform. They ____ along the beach at the sea resort. The baby learned to
+____ when it was eleven months old. The two of them ____ about the field
+all day hunting rabbits. A ghost, so they tell me, ____ about the
+haunted house at midnight. He carefully ____ the plank that spans the
+abyss. The baby ____ toward us with outstretched arms. The Chinaman ____
+out of the back room of the laundry in his carpet slippers. They caught
+glimpses of gaunt wolves ____ about their campfire. He was terrified when
+the giant ____ into the room. The fat lady ____ down the aisle of the
+street car. The sick man will ____ a few steps each day until he is
+stronger. A turkey cock ____ about the barnyard. A boy with a rag tied
+around his toe ____ painfully down the street. They reported to the police
+that a man had been ____ about the place. She held her skirts daintily and
+____ along as if she were walking on eggs. The lovers ____ along the banks
+of the stream. He ____ through the hall like a conqueror. The children
+wore themselves out by ____ through the snow to school. We ____ through
+the meadows, often stooping to pick flowers as we went. The soldiers ____
+into camp at nightfall.
+
+
+<Laugh, giggle, snicker, titter, chuckle, guffaw, cachinnate.>
+
+What differences in human nature, conditions, and disposition are revealed
+by laughter! If a person gives audible expression to mirth, gayety, or
+good-humor, the simplest word to apply to what he does is _laugh_.
+But suppose a girl, with slight or insufficient provocation, engages in
+silly or foolish though perhaps involuntary laughter. We should say she
+_giggles_. Suppose a youngster is amused at an inappropriate moment
+and but partly suppresses his laughter; or suppose he wilfully permits the
+breaking forth of just enough laughter to indicate disrespect. He
+_snickers_. Suppose a person gives a little, light laugh; or more
+especially, suppose a crowd gives such an one as the result of slight,
+simultaneous amusement. Our word now is _titters_. Suppose we laugh
+low or gently or to ourselves. We _chuckle_. Suppose some one laughs
+loudly, boisterously, even coarsely, in a manner befitting a lumber camp
+rather than a drawing room. That person _guffaws_. Suppose a man
+engages in explosive and immoderate laughter. He _cachinnates_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <chortle, roar>.
+
+_Second assignment_: Name all the words you can that designate
+inaudible laughter (for example, <smile, smirk, grin>).
+
+_Sentences_: The rough fellow ____ in the lecturer's face. "If you
+prick us, do we not bleed? if you tickle us, do we not ____?" He kept ____
+at the thought of the surprise he would give them. "The swain mistrustless
+of his smutted face, While secret laughter ____ round the place." The
+ill-bred fellow was ____ with strident, violent, irritating sounds. "The
+little dog ____ to see such sport." The audience ____ when the speaker's
+glasses began to slip from his nose. The girl kept ____ in a way that
+embarrassed us both. The small boy ____ when the preacher's notes
+fluttered out of the Bible to the floor. The rude fellows ____ at this
+evidence of my discomfiture. He ____ very kindly and told me not to feel
+any regrets. The little maids tried to be polite, but ____ irrepressibly.
+
+
+<Look, glance, gaze, stare, peer, scan, scrutinize, gloat, glare,
+glower, lower, peek, peep, gape, con, pore, ogle.>
+
+A person simply directs his eyes to see. He _looks_. But eyes may
+speak, we are told, and since this person undergoes many changes of mood
+and purpose, we shall let his eyes tell us all they will about his
+different manners of looking. At first he but looks momentarily (as from
+lack of time) or casually (as from lack of interest). He _glances_.
+Soon he makes a business of looking, and fastens his eyes for a long time
+on something he admires or wonders at. He _gazes_. Presently he looks
+with a blank, perhaps a rude, expression and with eyes opened widely; he
+may be for the moment overcome with incomprehension, surprise, or fright,
+or perhaps he wishes to be insolent. He _stares_. Now he is looking
+narrowly or closely at something that he sees with difficulty. He
+_peers_. The next moment he looks over something with care or with an
+encompassing sweep of vision. He _scans_ it. His interest thoroughly
+enlisted, he looks at it carefully point by point to see that it is right
+in each detail. He _scrutinizes_ it. He then alters his mood, and
+looks with scornful or malignant satisfaction upon something he has
+conquered or has power over. He _gloats_. Anger, perhaps fierceness,
+takes possession of him, and he looks with piercing eyes. He
+_glares_. Threat mingles with anger, and in all likelihood he looks
+scowlingly or frowningly. He _glowers_. An added expression of
+sullenness or gloom comes into his look. He _lowers_. He throws off
+his dark spirit and looks slyly and playfully, let us say through a small
+opening. He _peeks_. Playfulness gives place to curiosity; he looks
+quickly and furtively, perhaps through some tiny aperture, and probably at
+something he has no business to see. He _peeps_. The while he looks
+his mouth falls open, as from stupidity or wonder. He _gapes_. He
+looks at something a long time to study it. He _cons_ or
+_pores_. His study is not of the thing itself; it is meditation or
+reverie. He _pores_. A member of the opposite sex is present; he
+looks at her with the effort of a flirt to attract attention to himself,
+or less scrupulous, he directs toward her amorous or inviting glances. He
+_ogles_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <leer, view, survey,
+inspect, regard, watch, contemplate>.
+
+_Sentences_: The inspecting officer ____ the men's equipment. The
+student ____ his lessons carefully. At this unexpected proposal Dobbett
+merely ____. Jimmie ____ at the fellow who had kicked the pup. The
+inquisitive maid ____ into all the the closets. He ____ over his fallen
+adversary. The bookkeeper ____ over his ledger. In the darkened hallway he
+____ at the notices on the bulletin board. "The poet's eye, in a fine
+frenzy rolling, Doth ____ from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven."
+From the way her father ____ the foolish, young man should have known it
+was time to go. He ____ long and lovingly upon the scenes he was leaving.
+The newcomer ____ insolently at his host and ____ the young ladies.
+
+
+<Abandon, desert, forsake.>
+
+_Abandon_ denotes absolute giving up, as from force of circumstances
+or shirking of responsibility. _Desert_ refers to leaving or quitting
+in violation of obligation, duty, or oath. _Forsake_, which may
+involve no culpability, usually implies a breaking off of intimate
+association or attachment.
+
+_Sentences_: The sailor ____ his ship. Necessity compelled him to
+____ his friends in a time of sore trouble. They hated to ____ their old
+haunts. A brave man never ____ hope. An unscrupulous man will ____ his
+principles when it is to his advantage. "When my father and my mother ____
+me, then the Lord will take me up." We ____ our attempt to save the ship.
+
+
+<Abase, debase, degrade, humble, humiliate, disgrace.>
+
+To _abase_ is to bring down so that the victim feels himself lowered
+in estate or external condition. To _debase_ is to produce a marked
+decline in actual worth or in moral quality. To _degrade_ is to lower
+in rank or status. To _humble_ is to lower in dignity or self-esteem,
+or as used reflexively, to restrain one's own pride; the word often
+implies that the person has been over-proud or arrogant. To
+_humiliate_ is to deprive of self-esteem or to bring into ignominy.
+To _disgrace_ is to bring actual shame upon.
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ the guilty officer from captain to lieutenant.
+A man should ____ himself before God. He had so ____ himself that I no
+longer expected good of him. His detection at cheating had ____ him before
+the students. By successive overlords they had been ____ into a condition
+of serfdom. The aristocratic old lady was ____ by her loss of social
+position. The conversion of so much bullion into money had ____ the
+coinage.
+
+
+<Answer, reply, response, rejoinder, retort, repartee.>
+
+An interesting thing about the _answer_ group is that the generic
+term has a somewhat strong rival in _reply_, itself fairly inclusive.
+We must therefore discriminate rather fully between _answer_ and
+_reply_. The former is a return in words to a question, a
+communication, or an argument. The latter suggests a more or less formal
+answer, as one carefully prepared or intelligently thought out. We might
+give an _answer_ offhand, but are less likely to give a _reply_
+so. We may give any kind of _answer_ to a question, but if we give a
+_reply_, the implication is that we have answered it definitely,
+perhaps satisfactorily. On the other hand, in controversial matters we
+may, though we by no means always do, imply a more conclusive meeting of
+objections through _answer_ than through _reply_. A
+_response_ is an expected answer, one in harmony with the question or
+assertion, or in some way carrying the thought farther. A _rejoinder_
+is a quick reply to something controversial or calling forth opposition.
+A _retort_ is a short, sharp reply, such as turns back censure or
+derision, or as springs from anger. A _repartee_ is an immediate and
+witty reply, perhaps to a remark of similar character which it is intended
+to surpass in cleverness.
+
+_Sentences_: The detailed ____ to our letter should reach us within a
+week. The plays of Oscar Wilde abound in brilliant ____. The speaker's
+____ to the heckler was incisive and scathing. My ____ to that third
+question in the examination in history was incorrect. The congregation
+read the ____ in unison. You have enumerated objections to my course; here
+is their ____. "This is no ____, thou unfeeling man, to excuse the current
+of thy cruelty." There was silence throughout the chamber as the old
+statesman rose to make his ____. To the tenderfoot's remark the guide
+mumbled an indifferent ____. Our appeal for the sufferers elicited but a
+poor ____.
+
+
+<Ask, inquire, question, interrogate, interpellate, query, quiz,
+catechize, request, beg, solicit, entreat, beseech, crave, implore,
+supplicate, importune, petition.>
+
+From the general tree of asking grow many branches, different in size, in
+the direction they take, in the shades of meaning they cast. What can we
+learn from a rapid scrutiny of each? That to _inquire_ is to ask for
+specific information. That to _question_ is to keep asking in order
+to obtain detailed or reluctantly given information. That to
+_interrogate_ is to question formally, systematically, or thoroughly.
+That to _interpellate_ is to question as of unchallenged right, as in
+a deliberative body. That to _query_ is to bring a thing into
+question because of doubt as to its correctness or truth. That to
+_quiz_ is to question closely and persistently, as from
+meddlesomeness, opposition, or curiosity. That to _catechize_ is to
+question in a minute, perhaps impertinent, manner in order to ascertain
+one's secrets or the amount of his knowledge or information. That to
+_request_ is to ask formally and politely. That to _beg_ is to
+ask for deferentially or humbly, especially on the ground of pity. That to
+_solicit_ is to ask with urgency. That to _entreat_ is to ask
+with strong desire and moving appeal. That to _beseech_ is to ask
+earnestly as a boon or favor. That to _crave_ is to ask humbly and
+abjectly, as though unworthy of receiving. That to _implore_ is to
+ask with fervor and intense earnestness. That to _supplicate_ is to
+ask with urgent or even desperate appeal. (Both _implore_ and
+_supplicate_ imply humility, as of a prayer to a superior being.)
+That to _importune_ is to ask for persistently, even wearyingly. That
+to _petition_ is to ask a superior, usually in writing, for some
+favor, grant, or right.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <plead, pray>.
+
+_Sentences_: The leader of the minority ____ the upholders of the
+measure sharply as to a secret understanding. I ____ you to keep your
+promise. I shall ____ that solution for the present. The colonists ____
+Great Britain for a redress of grievances. She ____ the governor to grant
+her husband a pardon. A child is naturally inquisitive and ____ many
+questions. I ____ you to show mercy. On bended knees he ____ God's
+forgiveness. "I'm stopp'd by all the fools I meet And ____ in every
+street." The policeman ____ the suspect closely. The prosecuting attorney
+____ the witness. We are ____ funds to aid the famine-stricken people of
+India. He ____ me about your health. You should ____ at the office about
+the lost package. She ____ your presence at the party. Every one resents
+being ____. I ____ you to care for the child after I am gone. A fool
+can ____ questions a wise man can't answer. She annoyed them by constantly
+____ them for favors. The reporter ____ into the causes of the riot. "____
+and it shall be given you." I ____ your pardon, though I well know I do
+not deserve it. The man ____ me to give him some money for food.
+
+
+<Burn, scorch, singe, sear, parch, char, incinerate, cremate,
+cauterize.>
+
+If you consume or injure something by bringing it in contact with fire or
+heat, you _burn_ it. If you do not consume it but burn it
+superficially so as to change the texture or color of its surface, you
+_scorch_ it. If you burn off ends or projections of it, you
+_singe_ it. If you burn its surface to dryness or hardness, you
+_sear_ it. If you dry or shrivel it with heat, you _parch_ it.
+If through heat you reduce it to a state of charcoal, or cinders, you
+_char_ it. If you burn it to ashes, you _incinerate_ it. (This
+word is learned and but little used in ordinary discourse.) If you burn a
+dead body to ashes, you _cremate_ it. If you burn or sear anything
+with a hot iron or a corrosive substance, you _cauterize_ it.
+
+_Sentences_: The hired girl ____ the cloth in ironing it. By getting
+too close to the fire he ____ the nap of his flannels. The doctor at once
+____ the wound. The cook had picked the chicken and now ____ its down over
+the coals. I used to ____ grains of field corn on the cookstove, while my
+mother prepared dinner. Shelley's body was ____ on a funeral pyre. The
+lecturer spoke of the time when the whole earth might be ____. The earth
+was ____ and all growing things were ____ by the intense summer heat.
+
+
+<Busy, industrious, diligent, assiduous, sedulous.>
+
+From much of the talk that we hear nowadays it might be supposed that the
+earnest devotion of one's self to a task is a thing that has disappeared
+from the earth. But a good many people are exhibiting this very devotion.
+Let us see in what different degrees. The man who actively applies himself
+to something, whether temporarily or habitually, is _busy_. The man
+who makes continued application to work a principle or habit of life, is
+_industrious_. The man who applies himself aggressively to the
+accomplishment of some specific undertaking or pursuit, is
+_diligent_. The man who quietly and determinedly sticks to a task
+until it is accomplished, no matter what its difficulties or length, is
+_assiduous_. The man who makes steady and painstaking application to
+whatever he is about, is _sedulous_.
+
+_Sentences_: Early in life he acquired ____ habits. By patient and
+____ study you may overcome those defects of your early education. "How
+doth the ____ little bee improve each shining hour." The manager gave such
+____ attention to details that he made few mistakes. He is ____ at
+present. Oh, yes, he is always ____. "Nowher so ____ a man has he ther
+has, And yet he seemed ____ than he was."
+
+
+<Concise, terse, succinct, compendious, compact, sententious, pithy,
+laconic, curt.>
+
+Words descriptive of brief utterance are, in nearly every instance, in
+their origin figurative. The brevity is brought out by comparison with
+something that is noticeably short or small. Let us examine the words of
+our list for their figurative qualities. A _concise_ statement is one
+that is _cut down_ until a great deal is said in a few words. A
+_terse_ statement is _rubbed off_, rid of unessentials.
+A _succinct_ statement has its important thoughts _bound_ into
+small compass, as by a girdle. A _compendious_ statement _weighs
+together_ the various thoughts and aspects of a subject; it shows by
+means of a few effective words just what these amount to, gives a summary
+of them. A _compact_ statement has its units of thought _fastened
+together_ into firmness of structure; its brevity is well-knit. A
+_sententious_ statement gives _feelings_ or _opinions_ in a
+strikingly pointed or axiomatic way, so that they can be easily grasped
+and remembered; if _sententious_ is unfavorably used, the statement
+may be filled with paraded platitudes. A _pithy_ statement gives the
+very _pith_, the heart of a matter; it is sometimes slightly quaint,
+always effective and arresting. A _laconic_ statement is made in the
+manner of _the Spartans_, who hated talk and used as few words as
+possible. A _curt_ statement is _made short_; its abruptness is
+oftentimes more or less rude.
+
+_Sentences_: "A tale should be judicious, clear, ____, the language
+plain, and incidents well link'd." "Charles Lamb made the most ____
+criticism of Spenser when he called him the poet's poet." With a ____,
+disdainful answer she turned away. The sermon was filled with ____
+sayings. By omitting all irrelevant details, he made his statement of the
+case ____. It requires great skill to give a ____ statement of what such a
+treatise contains. A proverb is a ____ statement of a truth.
+
+
+<Death, decease, demise.>
+
+Men are as mindful of rank and pretension in their terms for the cessation
+of life as in their choice of tombstones for the departed. _Death_ is
+the great, democratic, unspoilable word. It is not too good for a clown or
+too poor for an emperor. _Decease_ is a more formal word. Its
+employment is often legal--the death proves to be of sufficient importance
+for the law (and the lawyers) to take notice. _Demise_, however, is
+outwardly the most resplendent term of all. It implies that the victim cut
+a wide swath even in death. It is used of an illustrious person, as a
+king, who transmits his title to an heir. Ordinary people cannot afford a
+_demise_. If the term is applied to their shuffling off of this
+mortal coil, the use is euphemistic and likely to be stilted.
+
+_Sentences_: "The crown at the moment of ____ must descend to the
+next heir." "____ is a fearful thing." "In their ____ they were not
+divided." At the ____ of his father he inherited the estate. "Each shall
+take His chamber in the silent halls of ____." "Many a time I have been
+half in love with easeful ____."
+
+
+<Early, primitive, primeval, primordial, primal, pristine.>
+
+_Early_ is the simple word for that which was in, or toward, the
+beginning. That is _primitive_ which has the old-fashioned or simple
+qualities characteristic of the beginning. That is _primeval_ which
+is of the first or earliest ages. That is _primordial_ which is first
+in origin, formation, or development. That is _primal_ which is first
+or original. (The word is poetic.) That is _pristine_ which has not
+been corrupted from its original state.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <aboriginal,
+prehistoric.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was a hardy mountain folk that preserved the ____
+virtues. The ____ history of mankind is shrouded in uncertainty. "This is
+the forest ____." "It hath the ____ eldest curse upon 't, A brother's
+murder." "A ____ leaf is that which is immediately developed from the
+cotyledon." As the explorers penetrated farther into the country, they
+beheld all the ____ beauties of nature. Some countries still use the ____
+method of plowing with a stick.
+
+
+<Face, countenance, features, visage, physiognomy.>
+
+We hear some one say that he reads faces. How? Through long study of them
+and what they indicate. The human race as a whole has been reading faces
+through the centuries. It has felt such need to label certain recurring
+aspects of them that it has invented the designating terms. Of these terms
+the simple, inclusive one is of course _face_ itself. If, however, we
+are thinking of the face as its look or expression reveals thoughts,
+emotions, or state of mind, our term is _countenance_. If we are
+thinking of it as distinguished or individualized by the contour, lines,
+etc., we speak of the _features_. If we are thinking of its external
+appearance or aspect, we call it the _visage_. If, finally, we are
+thinking of it as indicative of mind, disposition, or fundamental
+character, we say _physiognomy._
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <lineaments>.
+
+_Sentences_: His grotesque ____ reminded one of a gargoyle. It is
+said that the ____ of persons living constantly together tend to become
+alike. "Behind a frowning providence He hides a smiling ____." The teacher
+told the students to wash their ____ every morning. "A ____ more in sorrow
+than in anger." The firm but kind ____ of the old statesman shone happily
+at this ovation. "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then ____ to
+____." She turned an eager ____ up to me as she spoke. One's ____ is
+moulded by one's thoughts. Cosmetics injure the ____. His clear-cut ____
+impressed his employer.
+
+
+<Financial, monetary, pecuniary, fiscal.>
+
+_Financial_ is usually applied to money matters of considerable size
+or moment. _Monetary_ applies to money, coin, or currency as such.
+_Pecuniary_ refers to practical matters in which money is involved,
+though not usually in large amounts. _Fiscal_ refers especially to
+the time when money, receipts, and accounts are balanced or reckoned.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ reward has been offered. We gave the unfortunate
+man ____ assistance. The ____ system of the country was sound. It was
+Hamilton who more than any one else shaped the ____ policies of the new
+government. Experts audit the company's accounts at the end of the ____
+year. The ____ interests of the country were behind the bill.
+
+
+<Flee, abscond, decamp.>
+
+To _flee_ is to run away from what one would avoid, as danger,
+arrest, or the like. To _abscond_ is to steal off secretly and hide
+one's self, as from some disgraceful reason or to avoid arrest. To
+_decamp_ is to leave suddenly in great haste to get away; the word is
+often used humorously.
+
+_Sentences_: They went to have their money refunded, but the swindler
+had ____. The bank teller ____ after having squandered most of the
+deposits. Yes, we were in proximity to a polecat, and without further
+parley we ____. "Resist the devil, and he will ____ from you." William
+Wallace, when pursued by the English, ____ into the Highlands.
+
+
+<Foretell, predict, prophesy, forecast, presage, forebode, portend,
+augur, prognosticate.>
+
+_Foretell_ is the general word for stating or perceiving beforehand
+that which will happen. _Predict_ implies foretelling based on
+well-founded or precise knowledge. _Prophesy_ often implies
+supernatural inspiration to foretell correctly. The word is especially so
+used in connection with the Scriptures; but in the Scriptures themselves
+it frequently expresses insight and admonition without the element of
+foretelling. _Forecast_ involves a marked degree of conjecture.
+_Presage_ usually means to give as a presentiment or warning.
+_Forebode_ expresses an uncertain foreknowledge of vague impending
+evil. _Portend_ indicates the likelihood that something will befall
+which is threatening or evil in its consequences. _Augur_ means
+foretelling from omens. _Prognosticate_ means foretelling through the
+study of signs or symptoms.
+
+_Sentences_: "For we know in part, and we ____ in part." (Insert
+in the blank, successively, the terms just distinguished. In each instance
+how is the meaning affected? Do any of the terms fail to make sense at
+all? Which term do you think the right one? Bearing in mind the
+distinctions we have made, frame sentences of your own to embody the
+terms.)
+
+
+<Get, acquire, obtain, procure, attain, gain, win, earn.>
+
+_Get_, the general term, may be used of whatever one comes by
+whatsoever means to possess, experience, or realize. To _acquire_ is
+to get into more or less permanent possession, either by some gradual
+process or by one's determined efforts. To _obtain_ is to get
+something desired by means of deliberate effort or request. To
+_procure_ is to get by definitely planned effort something which, in
+most instances, is of a temporary nature or the possession of which is
+temporary. To _attain_ is to get through striving that which one has
+set as a goal or end of his desire or ambition. To _gain_ is to get
+that which is advantageous. To _win_ is to get as the result of
+successful competition or the overcoming of opposition. To _earn_ is
+to get as a deserved reward for one's efforts or exertions.
+
+_Sentences_: With such wages as those, he can barely ____ a living.
+He ____ a pardon by appealing to the governor. The speaker ____ his point
+by forcing his opponent to admit that the figures were misleading. By
+buying in June I can ____ a good overcoat at half price. Did you ____ only
+seven thousand dollars for your house? Walpole believed in ____ one's
+ends in the surest and easiest way possible. It is illegal to ____ money
+through false pretences. A junior ____ the prize in the oratorical
+contest. Kirk ____ his advancement by taking a personal interest in the
+firm's welfare. The painter ____ a foreign accent while he was studying in
+Paris. He ____ their gratitude by loyally serving them. It was through
+sacrifices that he ____ an education.
+
+
+<Give, bestow, grant, confer, present>.
+
+We _give_ that which we transfer from our own to another's possession
+or ownership, usually without compensation. We _bestow_ that which we
+give gratuitously, or of which the recipient stands in especial need. We
+_grant_ that which has been requested by one dependent upon us or
+inferior to us, and which we give with some formality. From a position of
+superiority we _confer_ as a favor or honor that which we might
+withhold or deny. We _present_ that which is of importance or value
+and which we give ceremoniously.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <furnish, supply,
+impart>.
+
+_Sentences_: William the Conqueror ____ English estates upon his
+followers. The rich man ____ his wonderful art collection to the museum.
+My application for a leave of absence has been ____. The ticket agent ____
+us complete information. Every year he ____ alms upon the poor in that
+neighborhood. The school board may ____ an increase in the salaries of
+teachers. Many merchants ____ premiums with the articles they sell. The
+college ____ an honorary degree upon the distinguished visitor. The
+Pilgrims ____ thanks to God for their preservation. "Not what we ____, but
+what we share."
+
+
+<Haste, celerity, speed, hurry, expedition, despatch>.
+
+What did John Wesley mean by saying, "Though I am always in _haste_,
+I am never in a _hurry_"? Does Lord Chesterfield's saying "Whoever is
+in a _hurry_ shows that the thing he is about is too big for him"
+help explain the distinction? Explain the distinction (taking _speed_
+in the modern sense) in the saying "The more _haste_, ever the worse
+_speed_." "The tidings were borne with the usual _celerity_ of
+evil news." Give the well-known saying in four simple words that express
+the same idea. Which of the two statements is the more forceful? Which is
+the more literary? Why did Prescott use the former in his _Ferdinand and
+Isabella_? "_Despatch_," says Lord Chesterfield, "is the soul of
+business." What does _despatch_ suggest about getting work done that
+_haste_ or _speed_ does not? In which way would you prefer for
+your employee to go about his task--with _haste_, with _speed_,
+or with _despatch_? "With wingéd _expedition_, Swift as the
+lightning glance, he executes His errand on the wicked." Why is it that
+this use of _expedition_ in Milton's lines is apt? Would
+_despatch_ have served as well? If not, why not?
+
+
+<Hate, detest, abhor, loathe, abominate, despise>.
+
+To _hate_ involves deep or passionate dislike, sometimes bred of
+ill-will. To _detest_ involves an intense, vehement, or deep-seated
+antipathy. To _abhor_ involves utter repugnance or aversion, with an
+impulse to recoil. To _loathe_ involves disgust because of physical
+or moral offensiveness. To _abominate_ involves strong moral
+aversion, as of that which is odious or wicked. To _despise_ is to
+dislike and look down upon as inferior.
+
+_Sentences_: When he had explained his fell purpose, I could only
+____ him. Who would not ____ a slimy creature like Uriah Heep? It is
+natural for us to ____ our enemies. She ____ greasy food. There suddenly
+in my pathway was the venomous reptile, darting out its tongue; oh, I ____
+snakes! A wholesome nature must ____ such principles as these. A child
+____ to kiss and make up. The pampered young millionaire ____ those who
+are simply honest and kind. These daily practices of her associates she
+____.
+
+
+<Healthful, wholesome, salutary, salubrious, sanitary, hygienic>.
+(With this group contrast the _Disease_ group below.)
+
+The words of this group are assuredly blessed. Every one of them has to do
+with the giving, promotion, or preservation of health. But health is of
+various kinds, and therefore the words apply differently. _Healthful_
+is the most inclusive of them; it means that the thing it refers to is
+full of health for us. _Wholesome_ also is a very broad term; what is
+wholesome is good for us physically, mentally, or morally. _Salutary_
+is confined to that which affects for good our moral (including civic and
+social) welfare, especially if it counteracts evil influences or
+propensities. _Salubrious_ is confined to the physical; it is used
+almost solely of healthful air or climate. _Sanitary_ and
+_hygienic_ apply to physical well-being as promoted by the
+eradication of the causes for sickness, disease, or the like;
+_sanitary_, however, is used of measures and conditions affecting
+people in general, whereas _hygienic_ connects itself with personal
+habits.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: The word _healthy_ is
+often confused with _healthful_. You have already discriminated
+between these two terms, but you should renew your knowledge of the
+distinction between them.
+
+_Sentences_: Colorado is noted for its ____ air. He offered the young
+people some ____ advice. A person should brush his teeth every day for
+____ reasons. In spite of its horrors, the French Revolution has had a
+____ effect upon civilization. Damp, low places do not have a ____
+climate. Cities in the middle ages were not ____. His is a very ____ way
+of life. My doctor recommends buttermilk as ____.
+
+
+<Heavy, weighty, burdensome, onerous>.
+
+He knew that it was a ____ responsibility. (Insert the four words in the
+blank space in turn, and analyze the differences in meaning thus
+produced.)
+
+
+<Liberal, generous, bountiful, munificent>.
+
+He made a ____ donation to the endowment fund. (Insert the four words in
+the blank space in turn, and analyze the differences in meaning.)
+
+
+<Masculine, male, manly, manlike, manful, mannish, virile>.
+
+"A man's a man for a' that," sang the poet. So he is, but not all the
+adjectives allusive to his state are equally complimentary.
+_Masculine_ betokens the qualities and characteristics belonging to
+men. _Male_ designates sex and is used of animals as well as human
+beings. _Manly_ (used of boys as well as men) implies the possession
+of qualities worthy of a man, as strength, courage, sincerity, honesty,
+independence, or even tenderness. _Manlike_ refers to qualities,
+attributes, or foibles characteristically masculine. _Manful_
+suggests the valor, prowess, or resolution properly belonging to men.
+_Mannish_ (a derogatory word) indicates superficial or affected
+qualities of manhood, especially when inappropriately possessed by a
+woman. _Virile_ applies to the sturdy and intrepid qualities of
+mature manhood.
+
+_Sentences_: The Chinese especially prize ____ children. He was a
+____ little fellow. She walked with a ____ stride. With ____ courage he
+faced the crisis. It was a ____ defense of an unpopular cause. ____
+strength is the complement of female grace. The old sailor still retained
+the rugged and ____ strength of a man much younger. With ____ bluntness
+he told her what he thought. Such gentleness is not weak; it is ____. He
+made a ____ struggle against odds. "His ____ brow Consents to death, but
+conquers agony." Now isn't that assumption of omniscience ____?
+
+
+<Name, appellation, designation, denomination, title, alias>.
+
+A _name_ is the word or words by which a person or thing is called or
+known. If the name be descriptive or characterizing, even though in a
+fanciful way, it is an _appellation_. If it particularizes an
+individual through reference to distinctive quality or nature, perhaps
+without employing any word the individual is usually known by, it is a
+_designation_. If it specifies a class, especially a religious sect
+or a kind of coin, it is a _denomination_. If it is an official or
+honorary description of rank, office, place within a profession, or the
+like, it is a _title_. If it is assumed, as to conceal identity, it
+is an _alias_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <cognomen, patronymic, nom
+de plume, pseudonym>.
+
+_Sentences_: Yes, it is a five-dollar gold piece, though one doesn't
+often see a coin of that ____ nowadays. The Little Corporal is the ____
+applied to Napoleon by his soldiers. The eldest son of the king of England
+bears the ____ of the Prince of Wales. The government issues stamps in
+various ____. "That loafer" was his contemptuous ____ of the man who could
+not find work. "Duke" is the highest ____ of nobility in England. The
+crook was known to the police under many ____. At the battle of Bull Run
+Jackson received the ____ "Stonewall." "What's in a[n] ____? that which we
+call a rose By any other ____ would smell as sweet." The head of the
+American government bears the ____ of President. The Mist of Spring was
+the little Indian maiden's ____. His ____ was Thornberg.
+
+
+<Old, ancient, olden, antique, antiquated, archaic, obsolete, venerable,
+immemorial, elderly, aged, hoary, decrepit, senile, superannuated>.
+
+We reserve the right to judge for ourselves when told that something--
+especially a joke--is "the very latest." So may we likewise discriminate
+among degrees of age. _Old_ is applied to a person or thing that has
+existed for a long time or that existed in the distant past. The word may
+suggest a familiarity or sentiment not found in _ancient_, which is
+used of that which lived or happened in the remote past, or has come down
+from it. _Olden_ applies almost wholly to time long past.
+_Antique_ is the term for that which has come down from ancient times
+or is made in imitation of the style of ancient times, whereas
+_antiquated_ is the term for that which has gone out of style or
+fashion. _Archaic_ and _obsolete_ refer to words, customs, or
+the like, the former to such as savor of an earlier period though they are
+not yet completely out of use, the latter to such as have passed out of
+use altogether. _Immemorial_ implies that a thing is so old that it
+is beyond the time of memory or record. _Elderly_ is applied to
+persons who are between middle age and old age. _Aged_ is used of one
+who has lived for an unusually long time. _Hoary_ refers to age as
+revealed by white hair. _Venerable_ suggests the reverence to be paid
+to the dignity, goodness, or wisdom of old age. _Decrepit_ conveys a
+sense of the physical infirmities and weakness which attend old age;
+_senile_ of the lessening powers of both body and mind that result
+from old age. _Superannuated_ is applied to a person who on account
+of old age has been declared incapable of continuing his activities.
+
+_Sentences_: He liked to read romances of the ____ days. Dana records
+that he once saw a man so ____ that he had to raise his eyelids with his
+fingers. Many writers use ____ words to give quaintness to their work. He
+liked to sit around in his ____ clothes. "The moping owl does to the moon
+complain Of such as, wandering near her secret bower, Molest her ____
+solitary reign." Some of these ____ sequoia trees were old before the
+white man discovered this continent. They are building the church in the
+____ Roman style of architecture. "Be not ... the last to lay the ____
+aside." Many of Chaucer's words, being ____, cannot possibly be understood
+without a glossary. Most churches now have funds for ____ ministers. A man
+is as ____ as he feels; a woman is as ____ as she looks. The ____ old man
+could scarcely hobble across the room. What better proof that he is ____
+do you ask than that he babbles constantly about what happened when he was
+young? "I am a very foolish fond ____ man, Fourscore and upward." They
+revered the ____ locks of the old hero. At sixty a man is considered a[n]
+____ person. That the earth is flat is a[n] ____ idea. The young warriors
+listened respectfully to the ____ chief's advice. They unearthed a[n] ____
+vase. "____ wood best to burn, ____ wine to drink, ____ friends to trust,
+and ____ authors to read." His favorite study was ____ history. "Grow ____
+along with me." "The most ____ heavens, through thee, are fresh and
+strong."
+
+
+<Pay, compensate, recompense, remunerate, requite, reimburse,
+indemnify>.
+
+Most men are willing to receive what is due them. They might even be
+persuaded to receive a bit more. Why should they not be as scrupulous to
+receive what they are entitled to in the medium of language as of money?
+Sometimes they are. Offering to _pay_ some people instead of to
+_compensate_ them is like offering a tip to the wrong person. Why?
+Because there is a social implication in _compensate_ which is not
+contained in _pay_. To _pay_ is simply to give what is due, as
+in wages (or even salary), price, or the like. To _compensate_ is to
+make suitable return for service rendered. Does _compensate_ not
+sound the more soothing? But save in exceptional circumstances the
+downrightness of _pay_ has no hint of vulgarity. To _recompense_
+is to make a return, especially if it is not monetary, for work, pains,
+trouble, losses, or suffering; or some quality or blessing (as affection
+or happiness) may be said to recompense one. To _remunerate_ is to
+disburse a large amount to a person, or to give it to him as a reward, or
+otherwise to make him a return in a matter of importance. To
+_requite_ is to put a just value upon one's work, deeds, or merit and
+to make payment strictly in accordance with his deserts. To
+_reimburse_ is to make good what some one has spent for you. To
+_indemnify_ is to secure some one against loss or to make restitution
+for damages he has sustained.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <disburse, reward>.
+
+_Sentences_: Let us ____ him for his efforts in our behalf.
+Let us ____ their kindness with kindness, their cruelty with cruelty.
+To ____ them adequately for such patriotic sacrifices is of course
+impossible. The government demanded that it be ____ for the injury to its
+citizens. I shall ____ you for all sums expended. He ____ the bill by a
+check. The success of her children ____ a mother for her sacrifices for
+them. Wages are ____ to laborers; salaries are ____ to judges.
+
+
+<Proud, arrogant, presumptuous, haughty, supercilious, insolent,
+insulting>.
+
+Most persons feel in their hearts that their claims and merits are
+superior to those of other people. But they do not like for you, in
+describing them, to imply that their self-appraisal is too high.
+"Comparisons are odious," and therefore in comparing their fancied with
+their real selves you must choose your terms carefully. Of the words that
+suggest an exaggerated estimate of one's merits or privileges the
+broadest, as well as the least offensive, is _proud_. In fact this
+word need not carry the idea of exaggeration. A proud man may but hold
+himself in justifiable esteem, or wish to measure up to the demands of his
+station or to the expectations of others. On the other hand, he may
+overvalue his attainments, possessions, connections, etc. To say that the
+man is _arrogant_ means that he combines with pride a contempt for
+others, that he claims for himself greater attention, consideration, or
+respect than he is entitled to. To say that he is _presumptuous_
+makes him an inferior (or at least not a superior) who claims privileges
+or takes liberties improperly. To say that he is _haughty_ means that
+he assumes a disdainful superiority to others, especially through fancied
+or actual advantage over them in birth or social position. To say that he
+is _supercilious_ means that he maintains toward others an attitude
+of lofty indifference or sneering contempt. To say that he is
+_insolent_ means that he is purposely and perhaps coarsely
+disrespectful toward others, especially toward his superiors. To say that
+he is _insulting_ means that he gives or offers personal affront,
+probably in scornful or disdainful speech.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <scornful, imperious,
+contumelious, impudent, impertinent>.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ in replying to the questions. She paid no
+attention to his words, but kept looking at him with a[n] ____ smile. He
+was ____ in acting as if he were their equal. The hot-tempered fellow
+answered this ____ remark with a blow. She resented his presuming to speak
+to her, and turned away in a[n] ____ manner. The servant was ____ to her
+mistress. Are you not very ____ of your family connections? The old man
+was so ____ that he expected people to raise their hats to him and not to
+sit down till he gave permission.
+
+
+<Punish, chastise, chasten>.
+
+To _punish_ a person is to inflict pain or penalty upon him as a
+retribution for wrong-doing. There may be, usually is, no intention to
+improve the offender. To _chastise_ him is to inflict deserved
+corporal punishment upon him for corrective purposes. To _chasten_
+him is to afflict him with trouble for his reformation or spiritual
+betterment. The word is normally employed in connection with such
+affliction from God.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <castigate, scourge>.
+
+_Sentences_: "Hearing oftentimes The still, sad music of humanity,
+Nor harsh nor grating, though of ample power To ____ and subdue." Ichabod
+Crane freely used his ferule in ____ his pupils. "Whom the Lord loveth he
+____." A naughty child should be ____.
+
+
+<Rich, wealthy, affluent, opulent>.
+
+"It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a
+rich man to enter into the kingdom of God." Substitute _wealthy_ for
+_rich_. Is the meaning exactly the same? Is Goldsmith's description
+of the village preacher--"passing rich with forty pounds a year"--as
+effective if _wealthy_ is substituted? What is the difference between
+_riches_ and _wealth_? Which implies the greater degree of
+possession, which the more permanence and stability? Which word suggests
+the more personal relationship with money? Which word the more definitely
+denotes money or its immediate equivalent? Why do we say "get-rich-quick
+schemes" rather than "get-wealthy-quick schemes"? What besides the
+possession of wealth does _affluent_ suggest? Could we say that a
+rich miser lives in affluence? If not, why not? A poor clerk who has ten
+dollars to spend as he pleases may feel affluent. A rich banker may be a
+man of affluence in his town. What power does this suggest that he has
+besides the possession of a great deal of money? Explain all that Swift
+implies by the word _opulence_ in the quotation "There in full
+opulence a banker dwelt, Who all the joys and pangs of riches felt." If
+you substitute _affluence_, what different impression do you get?
+
+
+<Rural, rustic, pastoral, bucolic>.
+
+"The _rural_ inhabitants of a country." Are the people being spoken
+of favorably, unfavorably, or neutrally? How would the meaning be affected
+if they were called _rustic_ inhabitants? Would you ordinarily speak
+of the _rural_ or the _rustic_ population to distinguish it from
+the urban? Would you speak of _rural_ or _rustic_ activities?
+_rural_ or _rustic_ manners? When the two adjectives may be
+employed, is one of them unflattering? Is a _rustic_ bridge something
+to be ashamed of? a _rustic_ chair? a _rustic_ gate? What, then,
+is the degree of reproach that attaches to each of the two adjectives? the
+degree of commendation? Wherein do _pastoral_ scenes differ from
+_rural_? _pastoral_ amusements from _rustic_? Can you trace
+a connection between the _pastor_ of a church and a _pastoral_
+life? Do you often hear the word _bucolic_? In what mood is it
+oftenest uttered? Which of the four adjectives best fits into Goldsmith's
+dignified lament: "And ____ mirth and manners are no more"?
+
+
+<Silent, reserved, uncommunicative, reticent, taciturn>.
+(This group may be contrasted with the _Talkative_ group, below.)
+
+We pass through a crowded room and notice that some of its occupants are
+not adding their voices to the chatter. We resolve to study these
+unspeaking persons. Some of them merely have nothing to say, or are timid
+or preoccupied; or it may be they deliberately have set themselves not to
+talk. These are _silent_. Some plainly desire not to talk, it may be
+in general or it may be upon some particular topic; they may (but need
+not) regard themselves as superior to their associates, or for some other
+reason let aloofness or coldness creep into their manner. These are
+_reserved_. Others withhold information that persons about them are,
+or would be, interested in. These are _uncommunicative_. Others
+maintain their own counsel; they neglect opportunities to reveal their
+thoughts, plans, and the like. These are _reticent_. Others are
+disinclined--and habitually, we perceive--to talking. These are
+_taciturn_.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ prisoner evaded all questions. He was as ____
+as nature itself; he never gave his views upon any subject. He was ____
+about the firm's affairs, especially toward persons who seemed
+inquisitive. We knew there had been a love affair in his life, but he was
+____ on the subject. She sat ____ throughout the discussion. If to be ____
+is golden, Lucas should have been a billionaire.
+
+
+<Sing, chant, carol, warble, troll, yodel, croon, hum, chirp,
+chirrup>.
+
+You hear a "concord of sweet sounds," not instrumental but vocal, and wish
+to tell me so. You say that some person _sings_. Then you recall that
+I am something of an expert in music, and you cast about for the word that
+shall state specifically the kind of singing that is being done. Does the
+person sing solemnly in a more or less uniform tone? You tell me that he
+_chants_. Does he sing gladly, spontaneously, high-spiritedly, as if
+his heart were pouring over with joy? You say that he _carols_. Does
+he sing with vibratory notes and little runs, as in bird-music? You say
+that he _warbles_. Does he sing loudly and freely? You say that he
+_trolls_. Does he sing with peculiar modulations from the regular
+into a falsetto voice? You say that he _yodels_. Does he sing a
+simple, perhaps tender, song in a low tone (as a lullaby to an infant)?
+You say that he _croons_. Does he sing with his lips closed? You say
+that he _hums_. Does he utter the short, perhaps sharp, notes of
+certain birds and insects? You say that he _chirps_ or
+_chirrups_.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <trill, pipe, quaver,
+peep, cheep, twitter>.
+
+_Sentences_: A cricket ____ in the grass outside the door. He
+abstractedly gazed out of the window and ____ a few strains of an old
+song. Listen, they are ____ the Te Deum. "And ____ still dost soar, and
+soaring ever ____." A strange, uncanny blending of false and true notes it
+is when the Swiss mountaineers are ____. Negroes, as a race, love to
+____. As she soothes the child to sleep she ____ a "rock-a-bye-baby."
+
+
+<Suave, bland, unctuous, fulsome, smug>.
+
+_Suave_ implies agreeable persuasiveness or smooth urbanity.
+_Bland_ suggests a soothing or coaxing kindness of manner, one that
+is sometimes lacking in sincerity. _Unctuous_ implies excessive
+smoothness, as though one's manner were oiled. The word carries a decided
+suggestion of hypocrisy. _Fulsome_ suggests such gross flattery as to
+be annoying or cloying. _Smug_ suggests an effeminate
+self-satisfaction, usually not justified by merit or achievement.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <complaisant, elegant,
+trim, dapper, spruce, genteel, urbane, well-bred, gracious, affable,
+benign>.
+
+_Sentences_: He thought his answer exceedingly brilliant and settled
+back into his chair with ____ complacency. "____ the smile that like a
+wrinkling wind On glassy water drove his cheek in lines." They were
+irritated by his ____ praise. Although he disliked them, he greeted them
+with ____ cordiality. "A bankrupt, a prodigal, ... that used to come so
+____ upon the mart; let him look to his bond." ____ as a diplomat.
+
+
+<Talkative, loquacious, garrulous, fluent, voluble, glib>.
+(This group may be contrasted with the _Silent_ group, above.)
+
+A little while ago you were in a crowded room and made a study of the
+persons disposed to silence. But your study was carried on under
+difficulties, for many of those about you showed a tendency to copious or
+excessive speech. One woman entered readily into conversation with you and
+convinced you that her natural disposition was to converse a great deal.
+She was _talkative_. From her you escaped to a man who soon proved
+that he talked too much and could run on with an incessant flow of words,
+perhaps employing many of them where a few would have sufficed. He was
+_loquacious_. The two of you were joined by an old gentleman who
+forthwith began to talk wordily, tediously, continuously, with needless
+repetitions and in tiresome detail; you suspected that he had suffered a
+mental decline from age, and that he might be excessively fond, in season
+and out of season, of talking about himself and his opinions. He was
+_garrulous_. You broke away from these two and fell into the hands of
+a much more agreeable interlocutor. He talked with a ready, easy command
+of words, so that his discourse _flowed_ smoothly. He was
+_fluent_. He introduced you to a lady whose speech possessed
+smoothness and ease in too great degree; it fairly _rolled_ along, as
+a hoop does downhill. The lady was _voluble_. Into your triangular
+group broke a newcomer whose speech had in it a flippant, or at least a
+superficially clever, fluency. He was _glib_. Leaving these three to
+fight (or talk) it out as best they might, you grabbed your hat and
+hurried outside for a fresh whiff of air.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <chattering, long-winded,
+prolix, wordy, verbose>.
+
+_Sentences_: The insurance agent was so ____ a talker that I was
+soothed into sleepiness by his voice. The ____ old man could talk forever
+about the happenings of his boyhood. Through ____ descriptions of life in
+the city the dapper summer boarder entranced the simple country girl. I
+met a ____ fellow on the train, and we had a long conversation. She was so
+____ that I spent half the afternoon with her and learned nothing.
+
+
+<Weak, debilitated, feeble, infirm, decrepit, impotent>.
+
+_Weak_ is the general word for that which is deficient in strength.
+_Debilitated_ is used of physical weakness, in most instances brought
+on by excesses and abuses. _Feeble_ denotes decided or extreme
+weakness, which may excite pity or contempt. _Infirm_ is applied to a
+person whose weakness or feebleness is due to age. _Decrepit_ is used
+in reference to a person broken down or worn out by infirmities, age, or
+sickness. _Impotent_ implies such loss or lack of strength or
+vitality as to render ineffective or helpless.
+
+
+_Assignment for further discrimination_: <enervated, languid,
+frail>.
+
+_Sentences_: "Here I stand, your slave, A poor, ____, weak, and
+despis'd old man." A[n] ____ old man shuffled along with the aid of a
+cane. Though still in his youth, he was ____ from intemperance and fast
+living. A fellow who does that has a[n] ____ mind. He staggered about
+trying to strike his opponent, but rage and his wound rendered him for the
+time ____. The grasp of the old man was so ____ that the cup trembled in
+his hand. "Like rich hangings in a homely house, So was his will in his
+old ____ body." After his long illness he was as ____ as a child. He made
+but a[n] ____ attempt to defend himself.
+
+
+<Wise, learned, erudite, sagacious, sapient, sage, judicious, prudent,
+provident, discreet>. (Compare the distinction between _knowledge_
+and _wisdom_ under Words Often Confused above.)
+
+_Wise_ implies sound and discriminating judgment, resulting from
+either learning or experience. _Learned_ denotes the past acquisition
+of much information through study. _Erudite_ means characterized by
+extensive or profound knowledge. _Sagacious_ implies far-sighted
+judgment and intuitive discernment, especially in practical matters.
+_Sapient_ is now of infrequent use except as applied ironically or
+playfully to one having or professing wisdom. _Sage_ implies deep
+wisdom that comes from age or experience. _Judicious_ denotes sound
+judgment or careful discretion in weighing a matter with reference to its
+merits or its consequences. _Prudent_ conveys a sense of cautious
+foresight in judging the future and planning for it upon the basis of the
+circumstances at hand. _Provident_ suggests practical foresight and
+careful economy in preparing for future needs. _Discreet_ denotes
+care or painstakingness in doing or saying the right thing at the right
+time, and the avoidance thereby of errors or unpleasant results.
+
+_Sentences_: Against the time when his children would be going to
+college he had been ____. "Most ____ judge!" The ____ old warrior could
+not be deceived by any such ruse. "Be ye therefore as ____ as serpents,
+and harmless as doves." The ____ advice of his elders was wasted on him.
+The course was ____, not rash. He was ____ in avoiding all reference to
+the subject. "Type of the ____, who soar but never roam, True to the
+kindred points of heaven and home." Even by those scholars, those
+specialists, he was deemed ____. How ____ the young man is! "Where
+ignorance is bliss, 'Tis folly to be ____." Is it ____ to spend money thus
+lavishly? He considered the matter well and gave a most ____ answer. To
+spend every cent of one's income is surely not to be ____.
+
+
+<Work, labor, toil, drudgery>.
+
+All of us, at times anyhow, get out of as much work as we can. We even use
+the word _work_ and its synonyms loosely and indolently. Perhaps this
+is a literary aspect of the labor problem. If, however, we can shake off
+our sluggishness and exert ourselves in discriminating our terms, we shall
+use _work_ as a general word for effort, physical or mental, to some
+purposive end; _labor_ for hard, physical work; _toil_ for
+wearying or exhaustive work; and _drudgery_ for tedious, monotonous,
+or distasteful work, especially of a low or menial kind.
+
+_Sentences_: It required the ____ of thousands of men to complete the
+tunnel. To be condemned to the galleys meant a life of unending ____. The
+man who enjoys his ____ will succeed. Twenty years of incessant ____ had
+extinguished in him every spark of ambition. He was weary after the
+____ of the day. All ____ and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Through the
+heart-breaking ____ of thousands the pyramids were built to commemorate a
+few. He was sentenced to hard ____.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+ SYNONYMS IN LARGER GROUPS (2)
+
+
+You have now seen enough of the method of discriminating synonyms to take
+more of the responsibility for such work upon yourself. In this chapter,
+therefore, the plan followed in Exercise A is abandoned and no
+discriminations are supplied you.
+
+
+EXERCISE B
+
+For some of the generic words in Exercise A you will find antonyms in
+Exercise C. Here is a list:
+
+In Exercise A: walk, laugh, busy, hate, masculine, old
+
+In Exercise C: run, cry, idle, love, feminine, young.
+
+Now each of the generic terms in C is followed by a list of its synonyms.
+But for the six generic terms just given let us see how many synonyms you
+can find for yourself. Simply study each word in turn, think of all the
+synonyms for it you can summon, strike out those you consider far-fetched.
+Then compare your list with the list under the antonym in Exercise A; if
+possible, improve your list by means of this comparison. Finally, compare
+your revised list with the list in Exercise C.
+
+In Exercise C are two generic terms that carry the same idea (but not in
+the same part of speech) as generic terms in Exercise A. They are as
+follows:
+
+In Exercise A: sing, death
+
+In Exercise C: song, die.
+
+Take _song_ and _die_. First, find all the satisfactory synonyms
+you can for yourself. Then if possible improve your list by studying the
+list under the corresponding word in Exercise A. Finally, compare your
+revised list with the one in Exercise C.
+
+
+EXERCISE C
+
+After three introductory groups (dealing with thoroughly concrete ideas
+and words) the synonyms in this exercise are arranged alphabetically
+according to the first word in each group.
+
+Discriminate the words in each group, and fill each blank in the
+illustrative sentences with the word that conveys the meaning exactly.
+
+
+<See, perceive, descry, distinguish, espy, discern, note, notice, watch,
+observe, witness, behold, view>.
+
+_Sentences_: The intruder he ____ in the early dawn-light might have
+been man or beast; he could not have ____ one from the other. After a long
+search I ____ on the map the name of the town. The teacher ____ the
+throwing of the paper wad, but thought best not to ____ it. "He that hath
+eyes to ____, let him ____." I ____ the encounter. "I hope to ____ my
+Pilot face to face When I have crossed the bar." "When my eyes turn to
+____ for the last time the sun in heaven." I sat by the flower and ____
+the bee plunder it. The scrawl on the paper was meaningless, but at length
+by close attention he ____ secret writing. "Your young men shall ____
+visions, and your old men shall dream dreams." He had ____ human nature
+manifesting itself under various conditions.
+
+
+<Kill, slay, slaughter, massacre, butcher, murder, assassinate, execute,
+hang, electrocute, guillotine, lynch, despatch, decimate, crucify>.
+
+_Sentences_: With the jawbone of an ass Samson ____ a thousand of his
+enemies. It was his duty as sheriff to ____ the criminal, and the method
+decreed by the state was that he should ____ him. Previously the method of
+carrying out a sentence of death had been to ____ the criminal. On our
+left wing we lost one man in ten: thus our lines were literally ____ On
+our right wing, where we advanced to the attack in the open, our men were
+simply ____. After the garrison had laid down its arms the Indians ____
+men, women, and children. "I would not ____ thy soul." During the French
+Revolution many of the nobility were ____. In the country late fall is the
+time to ____ hogs. Thinking that his accomplice was no longer of use, he
+quietly ____ him. The anarchist who had ____ the governor was taken by a
+mob and ____.
+
+
+<Sleep, slumber, repose, nap, doze, drowze, lethargy, dormancy, coma,
+trance, siesta>.
+
+_Sentences_: Since he had not exerted himself beforehand, his state
+was one of ____ rather than one of ____. The sultry heat of the day put
+him into a ____. "Not poppy, nor mandragora, Nor all the ____ syrops of
+the world, Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet ____ Which thou
+ow[n]edst yesterday." Light and pleasant be thy ____. "And still she slept
+an azure-lidded ____." From the ____ induced by his injury the physicians
+were unable to arouse him. "Oh ____! it is a gentle thing, Beloved from
+pole to pole!" "The poppied warmth of ____ oppress'd Her soothéd limbs,
+and soul fatigued away." In Spanish-speaking South American countries
+every one expects to take his ____. He lay down under the tree for a short
+____ and had just fallen into a preliminary ____ when the picnic party
+arrived. "Macbeth does murder ____, the innocent ____, ____ that knits up
+the ravel'd sleave of care."
+
+
+<Abolish, repeal, rescind, revoke, abrogate, annul, nullify, cancel,
+reverse>.
+
+_Sentences_: A declaration of war would of course ____ the treaty.
+The legislature has the right to ____ old laws as well as to enact new
+ones. Because they left his grounds littered with paper, he ____ their
+privilege of holding picnics there. The king ____ the decree that the
+conspirators should be exiled. Slavery was ____ by the Emancipation
+Proclamation. The emperor ____ many of the ancient rights of the people.
+They ____ the mortgage when he paid the money. The violation of these
+provisions has ____ the contract. It was an ill day for France when the
+Edict of Nantes was ____ by Louis XIV. The Supreme Court ____ the decision
+of the lower tribunal. The Mormons have officially ____ polygamy. The
+codicil ____ some of the earlier provisions in his will.
+
+
+<Acquit, exculpate, exonerate, absolve>.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ himself from all blame. The king ____ them from
+their allegiance. The teacher ____ the student who had been suspected of
+theft. The father confessor ____ the penitent. The jury ____ the man on
+the first ballot.
+
+
+<Afraid, fearful, frightened, alarmed, scared, aghast, terrified, timid,
+timorous.> (This group may be compared with the _Fear group_,
+below.)
+
+_Sentences_: One child was too ____ to speak to the strangers; the
+other too ____ to do anything but squall. "If Caesar hide himself, shall
+they not whisper 'Lo, Caesar is ____'?" Any one might have been ____ by
+this noise in a room said to be haunted; and for my part, I stood ____.
+
+
+<Allay, alleviate, mitigate, assuage, mollify, relieve.>
+
+_Sentences_: The judge ____ the severity of the punishment. They
+collected funds to ____ the sufferings of the poor. He could not ____ the
+wrath of the angry man. Shall we try to ____ their fears by telling them
+the accident may have been less calamitous than they have heard? A mustard
+plaster ____ the pain. The grief of the mother was ____ by the presence of
+her child. This experience had by no means ____ his temper.
+
+
+<Allow, permit, suffer, tolerate.>
+
+_Sentences_: Visitors are not ____ to see the king. The over-running
+of my yard by the neighbors' chickens is a nuisance I shall not ____. "____
+little children to come unto me." The use of bicycles and velocipedes
+on the pavement, though not ____ by the city, is good-naturedly ____ by
+most of the citizens. She ____ her children to play in the street.
+
+
+<Ascribe, attribute, impute.>
+
+_Sentences_: I ____ my failure to poor judgment. He ____ sinister
+motives for their actions. So many ideal characteristics have been ____ to
+Washington that it is difficult to think of him as a man.
+
+
+<Awkward, clumsy, ungainly, gawky, lanky.>
+
+_Sentences_: An elephant is ____ in its movements. Some ____
+countrymen hung around the circus entrance. He was tall and ____; he
+seemed to be a mere prop on which clothes were hung. Isn't that man ____
+in his carriage? The fingers of the ball-players might as well have been
+thumbs, so ____ were they from the cold. Girls throw a ball in a[n] ____
+manner.
+
+
+<Bite, nibble, gnaw, chew, masticate, champ>.
+
+_Sentences_: Fletcher taught people to ____ their food well. The
+mouse ____ the cheese, but the trap did not spring. A horse ____ his bits.
+When I ____ into the apple, I found that it was sour. The rat ____ a hole
+through the board.
+
+
+<Break, crack, fracture, sever, rend, burst, smash, shatter, shiver,
+splinter, sunder, rive, crush, batter, demolish, rupture>. (After
+discriminating these terms for yourself, see the treatment of _break,
+fracture_ under <Break, fracture> above under Parallels.)
+
+_Sentences_: "____ my timbers!" the old salt exclaimed. The anaconda
+is an immense serpent that wraps itself about its victim and ____ it.
+The child blew the soap bubble wider and wider till it ____. "You
+may ____, you may ____ the vase if you will." Looking closely at the eggs,
+she perceived that one of them was ____. With a board the thoughtless
+child ____ the anthill. During a violent fit of coughing he ____ a blood
+vessel. The thick cloud was ____ and the sunshine streamed through.
+
+
+<Careful, cautious, wary, circumspect, canny>.
+
+_Sentences_: A mouse must be ____ lest it be caught in a trap. He had
+learned to be ____ in advancing his radical opinions. The man was a Scot
+and therefore ____. With a ____ movement I opened the door to investigate
+the strange noise. He was ____ in checking up the accounts. Be extremely
+____ in your behavior, for they are watching to criticize you.
+
+
+<Condescend, deign, vouchsafe>.
+
+_Sentences_: The king ____ them safe conduct through the country. He
+would not ____ to touch the money that had been gained dishonestly. His
+____ manner irritated them. The master ____ to hear the complaints of the
+servants.
+
+
+<Confirm, corroborate, substantiate, verify_.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the charge with positive proof. The finding of
+Desdemona's handkerchief ____ Othello's belief that she was guilty. The
+other witnesses ____ his testimony. The doctor ____ the appointment his
+assistant had made for him. He ____ his results by repeating the
+experiment a number of times.
+
+
+<Courage, bravery, resolution, dauntlessness, gallantry, boldness,
+intrepidity, daring, valor, prowess, fortitude, heroism>. (With this
+group contrast the _Fear_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: It seemed they must be driven from their works but they
+held to them with the utmost ____. He had the ____ to fight an aggressive
+battle, but not the ____ to stand for long days upon the defensive; less
+still did he have the ____ to disregard unjust criticism. The silent ____
+of the women who bide at home surpasses the ____ the warriors who engage
+in battle. He had the dashing ____ of a cavalry officer.
+
+
+<Cruel, brutal, ferocious, fierce, savage, barbarous, truculent,
+merciless, unmerciful, pitiless, ruthless, fell>. (With this group
+contrast the _Kind_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: "But with the whiff and wind of his ____ sword
+The unnerved father falls." "Poor naked wretches, wheresoe'er you are,
+That bide the pelting of this ____ storm." The ____ fellow could cause
+suffering to a child without the least tinge of remorse. Such conduct is
+unheard of in civilized communities; it is ____, it is ____. "I must be
+____ only to be kind."
+
+
+<Cry, weep, sob, snivel, whimper, blubber, bawl, squall, howl, wail>.
+
+_Sentences_: "____ no more, woeful shepherds; ____ no more."
+The woman covered her face with her hands and ____, while the children
+____. He ____ a forced regret at the death of his uncle, and asked that
+the will be read, "Rachel ____ for her children." "Rejoice with them that
+do rejoice, and ____ with them that ____." "I could lie down like a tired
+child And ____ away this life of care Which I have borne and yet must
+bear." "An infant ____ in the night." "What's Hecuba to him or he
+to Hecuba That he should ____ for her?" I was disgusted at the sight of
+that overgrown boy standing in the corner ____. "You think I'll ____; No,
+I'll not ____: I have full cause of ____, but this heart Shall break into
+a hundred thousand flaws Or ere I'll ____."
+
+
+<Cut, cleave, hack, haggle, notch, slash, gash, split, chop, hew, lop,
+prune, reap, mow, clip, shear, trim, dock, crop, shave, whittle, slice,
+slit, score, lance, carve, bisect, dissect, amputate, detruncate,
+syncopate.>
+
+_Sentences_: "I'll ____ around your heart with my razor, And shoot
+you with my shotgun too." "O Hamlet! thou hast ____ my heart in twain." By
+the pressure of his hands he could ____ an apple. With his new hatchet
+George began ____ at the cherry tree. He carelessly ____ off a branch or
+two. The horses were ____ the rank grass. An old form of punishment was to
+____ the nose of the offender. The nobleman ordered the groom to ____ the
+tails of the carriage horses. You should ____ your meadows in the summer
+and ____ your grapevines in the late fall or early winter. "Do you," asked
+the barber, "wish your hair ____ or ____?" ____ to the line. It is painful
+to see Dodwell trying to ____ a turkey. In geometry we learned to ____
+angles, in biology to ____ cats. The bad man in the West ____ his gunstock
+each time he shot a tenderfoot. Betty, will you ____ this cucumber?
+"'Mark's way,' said Mark, and ____ him thro' the brain."
+
+
+<Deadly, mortal, fatal, lethal>.
+
+_Sentences_: He has a ____ disease. The spirit of Virgil guided Dante
+through the ____ shades. Cyanide of potassium is a ____ poison. He struck
+a ____ blow.
+
+
+<Defeat, subdue, conquer, overcome, vanquish, subjugate, suppress>.
+
+_Sentences_: Napoleon ____ his enemies in many battles, but he was
+not able to ____ them. The new governor general ____ the uprising. He was
+____ in the election. Caesar ____ many countries and made them swear
+allegiance to Rome. "Who ____ by force Hath ____ but half his foe." The
+militia ____ the rioters.
+
+
+<Deny, contravene, controvert, refute, confute>.
+
+_Sentences_: He produced evidence to ____ the charge. They could not
+____ the facts we presented. It is difficult to ____ those who are
+spreading these rumors, yet all right-minded people think the rumors
+false. "I put thee now to thy book-oath; ____ it if thou canst." Either
+admit or ____ the truth of this allegation. Such a law ____ the first
+principles of justice.
+
+
+<Destroy, demolish, raze, annihilate, exterminate, eradicate, extirpate,
+obliterate.>
+
+_Sentences_: All the ferocious wild animals are gradually being
+____. As weeds from a field, so is it difficult to ____ all the faults
+from man's nature. But how shall we ____ the cause of this disease? Fire
+____ the bank. The wrecking crew ____ the building. She tried to ____ the
+terrible scene from her memory. "____ all that's made To a green thought
+in a green shade." The cyclone ____ the church. The Spanish Inquisition
+tried to ____ heresy. "____ out the written troubles of the brain."
+The army was not only defeated; it was ____. "A bold peasantry, their
+country's pride, When once ____, can never be supplied."
+
+
+<Die, expire, perish, decease, succumb.>
+
+_Sentences_: All men are mortal and must ____. "As wax melteth before
+the fire, so let the wicked ____ at the presence of God." "I still had
+hopes, my long vexations past, Here to return, and ____ at home at last."
+The late ____ Mr. Brown left all his property to his family. "Cowards ____
+many times before their deaths." "The poor beetle, that we tread upon, In
+corporal sufferance finds a pang as great As when a giant giant ____."
+"Government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not ____
+from the earth." "Thus on Maeander's flowery margin lies Th' ____ swan,
+and as he sings he dies." Over a thousand people ____ in the fire at the
+theater. "To ____, to sleep; to sleep: perchance to dream." He ____ to a
+lingering disease. "Aye, but to ____, and go we know not where; To lie in
+cold obstruction and to rot." "Wind my thread of life up higher, Up,
+through angels' hands of fire! I aspire while I ____."
+
+
+<Dip, douse, duck, plunge, immerge, immerse, submerge, sink, dive.>
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ his head under the hydrant. The Baptists ____ at
+baptism. She ____ the cloth into the dye. The sophomores ____ the freshmen
+into the icy water of the lake. Paul Jones could not ____ the enemy's
+ship; he therefore resolved to board it. The wreck lay ____ in forty
+fathoms of water. Uncle Tom ____ overboard to rescue the child. When the
+gun is discharged, the loon does not rise from the water; it ____. Lewis
+became badly strangled when the other boys ____ him.
+
+
+<Disease, sickness, illness, indisposition, ailment, affection,
+complaint, disorder, distemper, infirmity, malady.> (With this group
+contrast the _healthful_ group.)
+
+_Sentences_: He was suffering the ____ of age. Cancer is still in
+many instances an incurable ____ The ____ of the lady ended as soon as the
+maid told her the callers had gone away. It was an old ____ of the
+tonsils, but this time the child's ____ was slight. "To help me through
+this long ____, my life."
+
+
+<Disloyal, false, unfaithful, faithless, traitorous, treasonable,
+treacherous, perfidious.>
+
+_Sentences_: The king discovered many ____ schemes among those who
+pretended to be his loyal supporters. England's enemies have long called
+her "____ Albion." They were afraid the Indian guide would betray them by
+some ____ action. "O you beast! O ____ coward! O dishonest wretch!" He was
+____ to his adopted country. "Bloody, bawdy villain! Remorseless, ____,
+lecherous, kindless villain! O! vengeance!"
+
+
+<Do, perform, execute, accomplish, achieve, effect.>
+
+_Sentences_: An officer ____ the orders with despatch. He ____ a
+mighty name for himself. "If it were ____ when 'tis ____ then 'twere well
+It were ____ quickly." Constant efforts will ____ miracles. The student
+____ the problems quickly. The doctor hopes his new treatment will ____ a
+cure. "God moves in a mysterious way His wonders to ____." He persevered
+till he ____ his purpose. He always ____ more than was expected of him.
+
+
+<Dress, clothes, clothing, garments, apparel, raiment, habiliments,
+vestments, attire, garb, habit, costume, uniform.>
+
+_Sentences_: The spy concealed his identity by wearing the ____ of a
+monk. The soldiers wore blue ____. She was an excellent horsewoman, and
+rode in a fashionable ____. "No man putteth a piece of new cloth unto an
+old ____." Millions of men left farms and factories and shops to don the
+____ of war. The invitation specified that the men should wear evening
+____. The store specialized in women's wearing ____. A person should wear
+warm ____ in winter. The king appeared in his royal ____. He always wore
+expensive ____. The bishop entered in his clerical ____. "The ____ oft
+proclaims the man." The theatrical ____ was full of spangles. One's ____
+should never be conspicuous.
+
+
+<Drink, imbibe, sip, sup, swallow, quaff, tipple, tope, guzzle,
+swig.>
+
+_Sentences_: "She who, as they voyaged, ____ With Tristram that
+spiced magic draught." Plants ____ moisture through their roots. "A little
+learning is a dang'rous thing; ____ deep, or taste not the Pierian
+spring." He ____ down the liquor in a couple of huge draughts. On the fan
+was a picture of Japanese maidens daintily ____ tea. "____ to me only with
+thine eyes." His red nose betrayed the fact that he constantly ____.
+
+
+<Elicit, extract, exact, extort.>
+
+_Sentences_: They ____ payment to the last cent. The police ____ a
+confession from the prisoner by intimidating him. This terrible suffering
+____ our sympathy. His resolve to begin again after his failure ____ their
+admiration. "But lend it rather to thine enemy; Who if he break, thou
+mayst with better face ____ the penalty." They ____ all the information
+they could by questioning the child.
+
+
+<Embarrass, disconcert, discompose, discomfit, confuse, confound,
+agitate, abash, mortify, chagrin, humiliate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The annoying little raids ____ the enemy. Such
+conclusive proof of his lies completely ____ him. His sudden proposal ____
+her. He stood ____ in the presence of the king. The traveler was ____ by
+the many turns in the road. She was ____ by the delay in having dinner
+ready. She was ____ by her husband's ill manners. The possibility that her
+daughter might have been in the accident ____ her. I was ____ at being so
+cleverly outwitted.
+
+
+<Excuse, pardon, forgive, condone.>
+
+_Sentences_: We should ____ even those who do us wrong. "Father, ____
+them; for they know not what they do." I trust you will ____ my being
+late. Ignorance ____ no one before the law. The governor ____ the convict.
+He thought it better to ____ the offense than to try to punish it.
+
+
+<Explain, expound, interpret, elucidate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The minister ____ the doctrine of predestination.
+The tribesman ____ his chief's words for us. He ____ his meaning by giving
+clear examples. Joseph was called upon to ____ Pharaoh's dream. Can you
+____ the reason for your absence? Various scholars have ____ the passage
+differently.
+
+
+<Fat, fleshy, stout, plump, buxom, corpulent, obese, portly, pursy,
+burly, pudgy, chubby.>
+
+_Sentences_: "There live not three good men unhanged in England, and
+one of them is ____ and grows old." A[n] ____ rosy-faced child walking
+beside a girl just pleasantly ____ came past the garden. The ____ lady was
+talking with a[n] ____, ill-conditioned man. "So ____, blithe, and
+debonair." "He's ____ and scant of breath." The ruffian was a[n] ____
+fellow. They were ____ in varying degrees: one was ____, one ____, and one
+downright ____.
+
+
+<Fear, dread, fright, apprehension, affright, alarm, dismay, timidity,
+consternation, panic, terror, horror, misgiving, anxiety, scare, tremor,
+trepidation.> (With this group compare the _Afraid_ group, above,
+and contrast the _Courage_ group, also above.)
+
+_Sentences_: "Like one, that on a lonesome road Doth walk in ____ and
+____." "His scepter shows the force of temporal power, The attribute to
+awe and majesty, Wherein doth sit the ____ and ____ of kings." ____
+changed to ____ when we perceived the corpse. Washington felt some ____ as
+to the loyalty of Charles Lee, but was amazed to find his force retreating
+in ____, indeed almost in a[n] ____.
+
+
+<Feminine, female, womanly, womanlike, womanish, effeminate,
+ladylike.>
+
+_Sentences_: She possessed every ____ charm. He gave a[n] ____ start
+of curiosity. The pistil is considered the ____ organ of a flower. It was
+once not thought ____ for a woman to ride astride a horse. He inherited
+the throne through the ____ line. Patience is one of the greatest of ____
+virtues. The hired girl in her finery minced along with a[n] ____ step.
+Some people consider it ____ to wear a wrist watch. Her ____ heart was
+touched at the sight. It is ____ to jump at the sight of a mouse.
+
+
+<Fight, combat, struggle, scuffle, fray, affray, attack, engagement,
+assault, onslaught, brawl, melee, tournament, battle, conflict, strife,
+clash, collision, contest, skirmish, encounter, brush, bout, set-to.>
+
+_Sentences_: "A darkling plain Swept with confused alarms of ____ and
+flight." The ____ upon Fort Sumter was the direct cause of the Civil War.
+The ____ between our forces and theirs was brief and trivial; it was only
+a cavalry ____. There is an excellent account of a knightly ____ in
+_Ivanhoe_. We repelled their general ____; then ourselves advanced;
+the ____ of our lines with theirs soon resulted in an inextricable ____.
+A chance ____ of small forces at Gettysburg brought on a terrible ____.
+There had long been ____ between the two factions within the party.
+Angered by what had begun as a playful ____, one of the men challenged the
+other to ____.
+
+
+<Fleeting, transient, transitory, ephemeral, evanescent.>
+
+_Sentences_: It is the lot of every one to endure many sorrows in
+this ____ life. They saw for a short while a[n] ____ comet. The ____
+glories of dawn had merged into the sordid realities of daytime. The
+remark made but a[n] ____ impression upon him. The ____ moments sped away.
+"Art is long, and time is ____." Joy is ____. Much of the popular
+literature of the day is ____ in character.
+
+
+<Frank, candid, open, artless, guileless, ingenuous, unsophisticated,
+naive.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was a[n] ____ excuse. It was a pleasure to meet a
+person so simple and ____. He was ____ to say that he did not like the
+arrangement. "Who, mindful of the unhonored dead, Dost in these lines
+their ____ tale relate." "The Moor is of a free and ____ nature." He gave
+them his ____ opinion.
+
+
+<Frustrate, foil, thwart, counteract, circumvent, balk, baffle,
+outwit.>
+
+_Sentences_: The schemers were themselves ____. He was ____ by the
+many contradictory clues. Circumstances ____ all his plans to get rich.
+The parents ____ the attempt of the couple to elope. The guard ____ the
+prisoner's attempt to escape. He was ____ at every turn. They put forth a
+statement to ____ the influence of their opponents' propaganda. By
+slipping away during the night, Washington ____ the enemy. The politician
+by his shrewdness ____ the attempt to discredit him.
+
+
+<Glad, happy, cheerful, mirthful, joyful, joyous, blithe, gay,
+frolicsome, merry, jolly, sportive, jovial, jocular, jocose, jocund.>
+
+_Sentences_: "The milkmaid singeth ____." "And all went ____ as a
+marriage bell." "How beautiful are the feet of them that preach the gospel
+of peace, and bring ____ tidings of good things." A ____ Lothario. "So
+buxom, ____, and debonair." As ____ as a fawn. He kept smiling, for he was
+in ____ mood. "You are sad Because you are not ____; and 'twere as easy
+For you to laugh and leap, and say you are ____, Because you are not sad."
+He longed for the ____ life of a ____ English squire.
+
+
+<Habit, custom, usage, practice, wont.>
+
+_Sentences_: ____ makes perfect. The immigrants kept up many of the
+____ of their native land. "God fulfils himself in many ways, Lest one
+good ____ should corrupt the world." It was his ____ to walk among the
+ruins. An old ____ permits a man to kiss a girl who is standing under
+mistletoe. ____ establishes many peculiar idioms in a language. He
+acquired the ____ of smoking. "It is a ____ more honor'd in the breach
+than the observance." De Quincey was a victim of the opium ____. "Age
+cannot wither her, nor ____ stale Her infinite variety." "'Tis not his
+____ to be the hindmost man."
+
+
+<Harass, annoy, irritate, vex, fret, worry, plague, torment, molest,
+tease, tantalize.>
+
+_Sentences_: The merchant ____ about his financial losses. "Life's
+but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and ____ his hour upon
+the stage, And then is heard no more." The children never lost an
+opportunity to ____ the teacher. The other pupils ____ him because he was
+the teacher's favorite. The newcomer was ____ by their frequent questions.
+Don't ____ the child by holding the grapes beyond its reach. "He was met
+even now As mad as the ____ sea." Ah, but I am ____ by doubts and fears.
+"The moping owl does to the moon complain Of such as, wand'ring near her
+secret bower, ____ her ancient, solitary reign." The child ____ because
+the rain kept it indoors. When the joke was discovered, they almost ____
+the life out of him. I was ____ at their discovering my predicament. "You
+may as well forbid the mountain pines To wag their high tops, and to make
+no noise When they are ____ with the gusts of heaven."
+
+
+<Hinder, restrain, obstruct, impede, hamper, retard, check, curb, clog,
+encumber, forestall, suppress, repress, prevent.>
+
+_Sentences_: Baggage ____ the progress of an army. It is the purpose
+of modern medicine to ____ disease. The accumulations of dust and grease
+____ the machine. "My tears must stop, for every drop ____ needle and
+thread." By acknowledging his fault he hoped to ____ criticism. Though
+before she had been unable to ____ her tears, she could now scarcely ____
+a yawn. A fallen tree ____ his further progress. The horse was ____ with a
+heavy burden, and the unsure footing of the trail further ____ the
+ascent. His jealous colleagues ____ his plans in every way they could.
+
+
+<Hole, cavity, excavation, pit, cache, cave, cavern, hollow, depression,
+perforation, puncture, rent, slit, crack, chink, crevice, cranny, breach,
+cleft, chasm, fissure, gap, opening, interstice, burrow, crater, eyelet,
+pore, bore, aperture, orifice, vent, concavity, dent, indentation. >
+
+_Sentences_: The explorers, having eaten all the provisions they had
+carried with them, hurried back to their ____. The battering-ram at last
+made a[n] ____ in the walls. The ____ in the log had been caused by the
+intense heat. He tore off the check along the line of the ____. The ____
+in the earth gradually deepened and narrowed into a[n] ____. Pyramus and
+Thisbe made love to each other through a[n] ____ in a wall. "Once more
+unto the ____, dear friends, once more." The ____ in the mountain ranges
+of Virginia influenced strategy during the Civil War. Several ____ in the
+toe of one of his shoes apprised me that he had a sore foot. The supposed
+____ in the rock turned out to be a[n] ____ that led into a dark but
+spacious ____. He suffered a[n] ____ of one of his tires near the place
+where the laborers were making the ____. It was a gun of very large ____.
+The ____ in the percolator was made by a flatiron aimed at Mr. Wiggins'
+head.
+
+
+<Idle, inert, lazy, indolent, sluggish, slothful.>
+
+_Sentences_: "He also that is ____ in his work is brother to him
+that is a great waster." "The ____ singer of an empty day." Mighty, ____
+forces lie locked up in nature, waiting for man to release them. He was
+a[n] ____, good-for-nothing fellow whose whole business in life was to
+keep out of work. "For Satan finds some mischief still For ____ hands to
+do." He was too ____ to do his work well. "The ____ yawning drone." His
+steps were so ____ one would almost think he was not moving. "As ____ as a
+painted ship Upon a painted ocean." "I talk of dreams, Which are the
+children of an ____ brain, Begot of nothing but vain fantasy."
+
+
+<Ignorant, illiterate, uninformed, uneducated, untutored, unlettered,
+unenlightened.>
+
+_Sentences_: Without public schools most children would be ____;
+without missionaries many barbarous tribes would remain ____. Andrew
+Jackson was ____ that peace had been declared when he fought the battle of
+New Orleans. Even the wisest men are ____ upon some subjects. "Lo, the
+poor Indian, whose ____ mind Sees God in clouds or hears Him in the wind!"
+The mountain whites, though often totally ____, are nevertheless a shrewd
+folk. "Their name, their years, spelt by th' ____ muse, The place of fame
+and elegy supply." The percentage of ____ persons is constantly decreasing
+in America.
+
+
+<Incline, tip, lean, cant, slant, slope, tilt, list, careen, dip.>
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the bucket of water over. The vessel ____ to the
+stern and began to sink. The ship ____ to larboard. He ____ the top of the
+picture away from the wall. The sprinter ____ forward and touched the tips
+of his fingers against the ground. The gable ____ sharply. The hill ____
+gently. The cowboy had ____ his hat fetchingly.
+
+
+<Journey, voyage, tour, pilgrimage, trip, jaunt, excursion, junket,
+outing, expedition.>
+
+_Sentences_: The people protested the expenditure of money for a
+Congressional ____ to investigate the Philippine Islands. Each Sunday
+there is a[n] ____ at half fare between the two cities. He conducted a
+party on a summer ____ through Europe. Last summer I took a[n] ____ to the
+Yellowstone National Park. It was a long ____ from Philadelphia to Boston
+by stage coach. They hurriedly arranged for a[n] ____ to the woods.
+Magellan was the first man to make a[n] ____ around the globe. The
+scientific body organized a[n] ____ to explore the polar regions.
+Thousands of Mohammedans make an annual ____ to Mecca.
+
+
+<Kind, compassionate, merciful, lenient, benignant, benign, clement,
+benevolent, charitable, gracious, humane, sympathetic.> (With this
+group compare the _Cruel_ group, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: The weather was ____. She was as ____ as a queen. "Thou
+dost wear The Godhead's most ____ grace." Cowper was too ____ to tread
+upon a worm needlessly. A judge in sentencing a convicted man may be as
+____ as circumstances and the law allow. ____ neutrality. "Blessed are the
+____." "She was so ____ and so pitous She wolde wepe if that she sawe a
+mous Caught in a trappe." "____ hearts are more than coronets."
+
+
+<Love, affection, attachment, fondness, infatuation, devotion,
+predilection, liking.>
+
+_Sentences_: Between the two young people had grown a[n] ____ which
+now ripened into ____. "The course of true ____ never did run smooth." The
+mad ____ of Mark Antony for Cleopatra was the cause of his downfall. She
+had only a[n] ____ for him, but he an unqualified ____ for her. "Man's
+____ is of his life a thing apart; 'Tis woman's whole existence." He shows
+a marked ____ for the companionship of women. My ____ for the tart was
+enhanced by my ____ for the girl who baked it. That boy shows a[n] ____
+for horses, and a positive ____ for dogs.
+
+
+<Margin, edge, limit, border, boundary, bound, bourn, brim, rim, brink,
+verge, skirt, confine.>
+
+_Sentences_: He had reached the ____ of endurance. In writing, leave
+a wide ____ on the left side of the page. "Borrowing dulls the ____ of
+husbandry." "The extravagant and erring spirit hies To his ____." Within
+the ____ of reason. He stood on the ____ of ruin. The rock at the ____ of
+the cañon is called the ____ rock. I was on the ____ of doing a very
+indiscreet thing. "The undiscover'd country from whose ____ No traveler
+returns." Fill your glasses to the ____.
+
+
+<Matrimonial, conjugal, connubial, nuptial, marital.>
+
+_Sentences_: "However old a ____ union, it still garners some
+sweetness." A court of ____ relations. "Contented toil, and hospitable
+care, And kind ____ tenderness are there." "To the ____ bower I led her,
+blushing like the morn." She finally decided that he had no ____
+intentions. "And hears the unexpressive ____ song In the blest kingdoms
+meek of joy and love."
+
+
+<Occupation, employment, calling, pursuit, vocation, avocation,
+profession, business, trade, craft.>
+
+_Sentences_: He gave his life to literary ____. My brother found ____
+as a tutor in a rich family. Colleges are trying to direct their students
+into the ____ they are best fitted for. Andrew Johnson was a tailor by
+____. Medicine is a very ancient ____. The shoemaker was very skilled at
+his ____. After losing his hand he could no longer engage in his ____ as
+telegrapher. The grocer carries on only a wholesale ____. He considered
+his ____ to the ministry a sacred duty. "Sir, 'tis my ____ to be plain."
+Do you find collecting coins a pleasant ____?
+
+
+<Pacify, appease, placate, propitiate, conciliate, mollify>.
+
+_Sentences_: We ____ our hunger when we reached the inn. In olden
+times men tried to ____ the offended gods by offering human sacrifices.
+They ____ the angry man by promising to hear his grievances immediately.
+The premier thought he could ____ this particular faction by offering its
+leader a seat in the cabinet. "Chiron ____ his cruel mind With art, and
+taught his warlike hands to wind The silver strings of his melodious
+lyre." A friendly word will usually ____ one's enemies.
+
+
+<Part, piece, portion, section, subdivision, fraction, instalment
+element, component, constituent, ingredient, share, lot, allotment>.
+
+_Sentences_: One ____ in his success was his courage. She was
+studying the ____ of the pie; he the chances of getting another ____. Is
+it ____ and ____ alike? "I live not in myself, but I become ____ of that
+around me." "Act well your ____; there all the honor lies." He owned a[n]
+____ of land near the city limits; a speculator bought a[n] ____ of this
+and divided it into city lots. "I am a[n] ____ of all that I have met."
+The purchaser, having only a[n] ____ of this sum in ready money, offered
+to pay in ____.
+
+
+<Pay, hire, salary, wages, fee, stipend, honorarium>.
+
+_Sentences_: Give the manager his ____, the workmen their ____. "The
+laborer is worthy of his ____." He received his weekly ____ from the
+parsimonious old man. The ____ for enrolment is ten dollars. "This is ____
+and ____, not revenge."
+
+
+<Polite, civil, obliging, courteous, courtly, urbane, affable,
+complaisant, gracious>.
+
+_Sentences_: He was ____ enough, but not definitely ____. "So ____
+that he ne'er ____." Though he had never lived in a city, much less in the
+circle of royalty, his manners were ____, even ____. Your desire to please
+is shown in your ____ greeting. "Damn with faint praise, assent with ____
+leer, And without sneering teach the rest to sneer."
+
+
+<Quarrel, altercation, disagreement, contention, controversy, breach,
+rupture, dispute, dissension, bickering, wrangle, broil, squabble, row,
+rumpus, ruction, spat, tiff, fuss, jar, feud.>
+
+_Sentences_: It was only a little ____ between lovers. The ____
+between the partners was over the right of the senior to make contracts
+for the firm; it grew into an angry ____. It was a long-drawn political
+____. At the meeting of our committee the chairman and one of the members
+had a sharp ____ over a point of order. A[n] ____ in some minor matters
+led to a[n] ____ in their friendship. "Thrice is he armed that hath his
+____ just." Those chattering, choleric fellows are always engaged in ____;
+last night they on meeting had a[n] ____ which brought on a long-drawn
+____, and when their friends joined in, there was a noisy ____. I have
+seen all sorts of ____, from a trivial childish ____ to a grim ____ of
+mountaineers.
+
+
+<Raise, lift, heave, hoist, erect, rear, elevate, exalt, enhance.>
+
+_Sentences_: Let the Lord be ____. "As some tall cliff that ____ its
+awful form." Because of this success his reputation was ____. The horse
+____ when the machine began to ____ the huge block of stone by means of a
+crane. "I will ____ up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence cometh my
+help." The load was too heavy for him to carry; in fact he just managed to
+____ it into the wagon.
+
+
+<Relinquish, waive, renounce, surrender, forego, resign, abdicate.>
+
+_Sentences_: The defense ____ objection to the first of these points.
+The refugee was willing to ____ his right to resist extradition. The
+teacher ____ her position at the end of the year. The king ____ when the
+people rose in revolt. He ____ his command of the army. Do you ____ your
+claim in this mine? The bankrupt ____ his property to the receiver to help
+pay his debts.
+
+
+<Renounce, abjure, forswear, recant, retract, repudiate>.
+
+_Sentences_: He ____ the statement. Thereupon Henry Esmond ____ his
+allegiance to the House of Stuart. It is a serious matter for a government
+to ____ its debts. Did the heretic ____? Do you ____ the devil and all his
+works? "The wounded gladiator ____ all fighting, but soon forgetting his
+former wounds resumes his arms." He had broken his solemn oath; he was
+____.
+
+
+<Reprove, rebuke, reprimand, admonish, chide, upbraid, reproach, scold,
+rate, berate>.
+
+_Sentences_: "He ____ their wanderings but relieved their pain."
+"Many a time and oft In the Rialto you have ____ me About my moneys and my
+usances." They ____ the man who had taken the savings of the poor, and
+____ him against such schemes thereafter. The general ____ his
+subordinate.
+
+
+<Robber, bandit, brigand, ladrone, desperado, buccaneer, freebooter,
+pirate, corsair, raider, burglar, footpad, highwayman, depredator,
+spoiler, despoiler, forager, pillager, plunderer, marauder, myrmidon>.
+(With this group compare the _Steal_ group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: Every boy has his period of wanting to be a ____.
+_Treasure Island_ is one of the best ____ stories ever written.
+The ____ lurks in dark passageways and steals upon his victim. The fierce
+followers of Achilles were called ____. The men sent out by the army as
+____ seemed to the people of the countryside more like ____. The fearless
+____ had soon gathered about him a band of ____. Robin Hood was no ____ of
+poor folk. The outcast became a ____ among the mountaineers of northern
+Italy. Every, boy likes to read of the bold ____ who sailed the Spanish
+Main. Union plans were often upset by daring Confederate ____, such as
+Stuart, Morgan, and Forrest.
+
+
+<Run, scamper, scurry, scuttle, scud, scour, pace, gallop, trot, lope,
+sprint, sweep>.
+
+_Sentences_: Swift horsemen ____ the country in search of the
+fugitive. Wherever they came, the inhabitants ____ for shelter. "The dish
+____ away with the spoon." For his horse to ____ made difficult riding, to
+____ made comfortable riding, to ____ made exhilarating riding. "He may
+____ that readeth it." The old sailing-boat ____ before the wind. "Haste
+me to know't, that I, with wings as swift As meditation or the thoughts of
+love, May ____ to my revenge." The rats ____ across the floor. "He who
+fights and ____ away May live to fight another day."
+
+
+<Say, utter, pronounce, announce, state, declare, affirm, aver,
+asseverate, allege, assert, avouch, avow, maintain, claim, depose,
+predicate, swear, suggest, insinuate, testify>. (With this group
+compare the _Speak_ and _Talk_ groups, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: It was something I merely ____ in passing; I would not
+____ to it. I could not ____ in court, and therefore had to ____ before a
+notary. The scientist ____ that a seismograph will infallibly record
+earthquakes. He solemnly ____ that he would not ____ exemption from the
+draft.
+
+
+<Shine, beam, gleam, glisten, glister, glitter, glare, flare, flash,
+sparkle, twinkle, dazzle, glimmer, glow, radiate, scintillate,
+coruscate>.
+
+_Sentences_: The gorgeous parade ____ the boy. "____, ____, little
+star." He was witty that night; he fairly ____. At this compliment the old
+lady ____. "Now fades the ____ landscape on the sight." A rocket ____ in
+the darkness. She ____ her elderly wooer a look of defiance; then her eyes
+softened and ____ with amusement. "All that ____ is not gold." "How far
+that little candle throws his beams! So ____ a good deed in a naughty
+world." The old man ____ into sudden anger.
+
+
+<Slander, defame, asperse, calumniate, traduce, vilify, malign, libel,
+backbite>.
+
+_Sentences_: A newspaper must be careful not to ____ any one. Too
+many supposedly religious people ____ their fellow believers. I do not
+____ your motives. He ____ the character of everybody who chances to
+possess one.
+
+
+<Smell, odor, savor, scent, fragrance, aroma, perfume, redolence, tang,
+stench>.
+
+_Sentences_: The ____ of the flowers in the vase mingled with the
+____ of boiling cabbage in the kitchen. The ____ of spring is on the
+meadows. So keen was the hound's sense of ____ that he quickly picked up
+the ____ again. Any smoker likes the ____ of a good cigar. The ____ of
+the handkerchief was delicate. Though it was a disagreeable ____, I should
+hardly call it a[n] ____. The ____ of spices told him that his mother was
+baking his favorite cake, and he also detected the ____ of coffee. The
+____ of the ocean was in the air. He sniffed the ____ of frying bacon.
+
+
+<Song, ballad, ditty, lullaby, hymn, anthem, dirge, chant, paean, lay,
+carol, lilt>.
+
+_Sentences_: "They learn in suffering what they teach in ____."
+The mother crooned a[n] ____ to her babe. The Highland girl sang a moving
+old ____. The worshipers sang a[n] ____ of praise. Charles Wesley wrote many
+____. As I approached the cathedral, I could hear the ____ of larks
+outside and the ____ of the choir within. "Our sweetest ____ are those
+that tell of saddest thought." "A[n] ____ for her the doubly dead in that
+she died so young."
+
+
+<Speak, discourse, expatiate, descant, comment, argue, persuade, plead,
+lecture, preach, harangue, rant, roar, spout, thunder, declaim, harp>.
+(With this group compare the _Say_ group, above, and the _Talk_
+group, below.)
+
+_Sentences_: "His virtues Will ____ like angels trumpet-tongu'd
+against The deep damnation of his taking-off." "Here, under leave of
+Brutus and the rest, ... Come I to ____ in Caesar's funeral." "Ay me! what
+act, That ____ so loud and ____ in the index?" "Hadst thou thy wits and
+didst ____ revenge, It could not move thus." "Thou canst not ____ of that
+thou dost not feel." "Nay, if thou'lt mouth, I'll ____ as well as thou."
+While the politician ____ in the senate chamber upon theoretical ills, the
+agitator outside ____ the mob about actual ones. "For murder, though it
+have no tongue, will ____ With most miraculous organ."
+
+
+<Spend, expend, disburse, squander, waste, lavish>.
+
+_Sentences_: Large sums were ____ in rebuilding the devastated
+regions of France. ____ your money, but do not ____ it. One should not
+____ more than one earns. The king ____ great sums upon his favorites. The
+political boss ____ the money among his henchmen. "The younger son ...
+____ his substance with riotous living."
+
+
+<Spot, blotch, speckle, fleck, dapple, smear, smutch, brand, defacement,
+blemish, stain, discoloration, speck, mark, smudge, flaw, defect,
+blot>.
+
+_Sentences_: A ____ in the crystal. The ____ of Cain. A life free
+from ____. "Thou turn'st mine eyes into my very soul; And there I see such
+black and grained ____ As will not leave their tinct." From the standpoint
+of theatrical effectiveness _A ____ in the 'Scutcheon_ is one of the
+best of Browning's plays. An eruption of the skin made a yellow ____ on
+his right hand. Dragging my sleeve across the fresh ink had made a ____
+upon the page. The ____ of foam by the roadside proved that his horse had
+been going fast. The ____ at the end of his fingers told me he was a
+cigarette-smoker. On the left foreleg of the horse was a slight ____.
+
+
+<Stay, tarry, linger, stop, sojourn, remain, abide, live, reside, dwell,
+lodge.>
+
+_Sentences_: The Israelites ____ in Egypt. He ____ to chat with us,
+but could not ____ overnight. I ____ in a wretched tavern. "I can ____, I
+can ____ but a night." "I did love the Moor to ____ with him." "He that
+shall come will come, and will not ____." "I will ____ in the house of the
+Lord forever." "If ye ____ in me, and my words ____ in you, ye shall ask
+what ye will, and it shall be done unto you." "I would rather be a
+doorkeeper in the house of my God, than to ____ in the tents of
+wickedness." The guests ____ in the cheerful drawing-room.
+
+
+<Steal, abstract, pilfer, filch, purloin, peculate, swindle, plagiarize,
+poach>. (With this group, which excludes the idea of violence, compare
+the _Robber_ group, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: I am afraid that our son ____ the purse from the
+gentleman. No one knows how long the cashier has been ____ the funds of
+the bank. To take our money on such unsound security is to ____ us. He
+slyly ____ a handkerchief or two. This paragraph is clearly ____. "Thou
+shalt not ____." Many government employees seem to think that to ____ is
+their privilege and prerogative. The crown jewels have been ____. She ____
+a number of petty articles. A well-known detective story by Poe is called
+_The ____ Letter._ "Who ____ my purse ____ trash.... But he that ____
+from me my good name Robs me of that which not enriches him, And makes me
+poor indeed." "A cut-purse of the empire and the rule, That from a shelf
+the precious diadem ____, And put it in his pocket!"
+
+
+<Strike, hit, smite, thump, beat, cuff, buffet, knock, whack, belabor,
+pommel, pound, cudgel, slap, rap, tap, box.>
+
+_Sentences_: ____ him into the middle of next week. He ____ and ____
+the poor beast unmercifully. "As of some one gently ____, ____ at my
+chamber door." "Unto him that ____ thee on the one cheek offer also the
+other." "Bid them come forth and hear me, Or at their chamber door I'll
+____ the drum Till it cry sleep to death." "One whom I will ____ into
+clamorous whining." "____ for your altars and your fires!" By means of
+heavy stones the squaws ____ the corn into meal.
+
+
+<Sullen, surly, sulky, crabbed, cross, gruff, grum, glum, morose, dour,
+crusty, cynical, misanthropic, saturnine, splenetic.>
+
+_Sentences_: "Between us and our hame [home], Where sits our ____,
+____ dame, Gathering her brows like gathering storm, Nursing her wrath to
+keep it warm." A ____ old bachelor. A ____ Scotchman. He hated all men; he
+was truly ____. He sat ____ and silent all day; by nightfall he was truly
+____.
+
+
+<Talk, chat, chatter, prate, prattle, babble, gabble, jabber, tattle,
+twaddle, blab, gossip, palaver, parley, converse, mumble, mutter, stammer,
+stutter.> (With this group compare the _Say_ and _Speak_
+groups, above.)
+
+_Sentences_: It was a queer assembly, and from it arose a queer
+medley of sounds: the baby was ____, the old crone ____, the gossip ____,
+the embarrassed young man ____, the child ____ the tale-bearer ____, the
+hostess ____ with the most distinguished guest, and the trickster ____
+with his intended victim. "Blest with each talent and each art to please,
+And born to write, ____, and live with ease." "I wonder that you will
+still be ____, Signor Benedick; nobody marks you."
+
+
+<Tear, rend, rip, lacerate, mangle.>
+
+_Sentences_: The explosion of the shell ____ his flesh. The tailor
+____ the garment along the seam. I'll ____ this paper into bits. Those
+savages would ____ you limb from limb. She ____ her dress on a nail. The
+cogs caught his hand and ____ it. How could such reproaches fail to ____
+my feelings?
+
+
+<Throw, pitch, hurl, dash, fling, cast, toss, flip, chuck, sling, heave,
+launch, dart, propel, project.>
+
+_Sentences_: Suddenly he ____ the glittering coins away. Goliath
+learned to his cost that David could ____ a stone. The explosion of the
+gunpowder ____ the bullet from the gun. "____ down your cups of Samian
+wine!" The children amused themselves by ____ the ball back and forth. He
+____ himself dejectedly into a seat. The thief ____ a glance beside him.
+The mischievous boy ____ a stone through the window. They ____ some of the
+cargo overboard to lighten the boat. The eager fisherman ____ the fly for
+the trout. The untidy fellow ____ the towel in a corner.
+
+
+<Whip, chastise, castigate, flagellate, scourge, lash, trounce, thrash,
+flog, maul, drub, switch, spank, bastinado.> (This group limits the
+field of the _Punish_ group in Exercise A, and extends the list of
+synonyms.)
+
+_Sentences_: The drunken driver ____ the excited horses. The zealot
+was accustomed to ____ himself. The ruler bade that the Christians be
+____. The teacher ____ the small children gently, but he unsparingly ____
+the big ones. "My father hath ____ you with whips, but I will ____ you
+with scorpions." The bully was always ____ men smaller than himself till
+one of them turned on him and ____ him thoroughly.
+
+
+<Wicked, sinful, felonious, illegal, immoral, heinous, flagitious,
+iniquitous, criminal, vicious, vile.>
+
+_Sentences_: "I am fled From this ____ world, with ____ worms to
+dwell." A[n] ____ assault. "The ____ prize itself Buys out the law." It
+was, though not a[n] ____ act, a most ____ one. "There the ____ cease from
+troubling; and there the weary be at rest."
+
+
+<Young, youthful, boyish, girlish, juvenile, puerile, immature, callow,
+adolescent.>
+
+_Sentences_: The plan had all the faults of ____ judgment. Many great
+authors have written books of ____ fiction. The bird, which was still
+____, was of course unable to fly. "Such sights as ____ poets dream On
+summer eves by haunted stream." He was in that ____ stage of development
+when one is neither a boy nor a man. "I was so ____, I loved him so, I had
+No mother, God forgot me, and I fell." He made a[n] ____ attempt to
+impress them with his importance. "Bacchus ever fair, and ever ____."
+A red necktie gave him a more ____ appearance. The self-satisfied air of
+a[n] ____ youth is often trying to his elders.
+
+
+EXERCISE D
+
+In this exercise each group of synonyms is followed by quotations from
+authoritative writers in which the words are discriminatingly employed.
+Find the meaning of each italicized word in these quotations, and
+differentiate the word accurately from the others in that group.
+Substitute for it other words from the group, and observe precisely how
+the meaning is affected.
+
+(So many of the quotations are from poetry that these will be printed as
+verse rather than, as in the preceding exercises, in continuous lines like
+prose.)
+
+
+<Affront, insult, indignity.>
+
+ A moral, sensible, and well-bred man
+ Will not _affront_ me,--and no other can.
+ An old _affront_ will stir the heart
+ Through years of rankling pain.
+
+The way to procure _insults_ is to submit to them. A man meets
+with no more respect than he exacts.
+
+It is often better not to see an _insult_ than to avenge it.
+
+Even a hare, the weakest of animals, may _insult_ a dead lion.
+
+To a native of rank, arrest was not merely a restraint, but a foul
+personal _indignity_.
+
+
+<Dishonor, disgrace, ignominy, infamy, obloquy, opprobrium>.
+
+ His honor rooted in _dishonor_ stood,
+ And faith unfaithful kept him falsely true.
+
+It is hard to say which of the two we ought most to lament,--the unhappy
+man who sinks under the sense of his _dishonor_, or him who survives
+it.
+
+ Could he with reason murmur at his case
+ Himself sole author of his own _disgrace_?
+
+Whatever _disgrace_ we may have deserved, it is almost always in our
+power to re-establish our character.
+
+ When in _disgrace_ with fortune and men's eyes
+ I all alone beweep my outcast state.
+
+Their generals have been received with honor after their defeat; yours
+with _ignominy_ after conquest.
+
+Wilful perpetuations of unworthy actions brand with most indelible
+characters of _infamy_ the name and memory to posterity.
+
+And when his long public life, so singularly chequered with good and evil,
+with glory and _obloquy_, had at length closed forever, it was to
+Daylesford that he retired to die.
+
+Great _opprobrium_ has been thrown on her name.
+
+
+<Fame, honor, renown, glory, distinction, reputation, repute, celebrity,
+eminence, notoriety>.
+
+ Let _fame_, that all hunt after in their lives,
+ Live register'd upon our brazen tombs.
+
+Men have a solicitude about _fame_; and the greater share
+they have of it, the more afraid they are of losing it.
+
+ _Fame_ is no plant that grows on mortal soil,
+ . . . . . . . .
+ But lives and spreads aloft by those pure eyes
+ And perfect witness of all-judging Jove;
+ As he pronounces lastly on each deed,
+ Of so much _fame_ in heaven expect thy meed.
+
+ When faith is lost, when _honor_ dies,
+ The man is dead.
+
+ Act well your part; there all the _honor_ lies.
+
+The Athenians erected a large statue of Aesop, and placed him, though a
+slave, on a lasting pedestal, to show that the way to _honor_ lies
+open indifferently to all.
+
+ I could not love thee, dear, so much,
+ Loved I not _honor_ more.
+
+That nation is worthless which does not joyfully stake everything on her
+_honor_.
+
+ By heaven methinks it were an easy leap
+ To pluck bright _honor_ from the pale-fac'd moon.
+
+That merit which gives greatness and _renown_ diffuses its influence
+to a wide compass, but acts weakly on every single breast.
+
+ Speak no more of his _renown_,
+ Lay your earthly fancies down,
+ And in the vast cathedral leave him,
+ God accept him, Christ receive him.
+
+The young warrior did not fly; but met death as he went forward in his
+strength. Happy are they who dies in youth, when their _renown_ is
+heard!
+
+ The paths of _glory_ lead but to the grave.
+
+_Glory_ long has made the sages smile; 'tis something, nothing,
+words, illusion, wind.
+
+ Not once or twice in our rough island-story
+ The path of duty was the way to _glory_.
+
+He was a charming fellow, clever, urbane, free-handed, with all that
+fortunate quality in his appearance which is known as _distinction._
+
+Never get a _reputation_ for a small perfection if you are trying for
+_fame_ in a loftier area.
+
+One may be better than his _reputation_ or his conduct, but never
+better than his principles.
+
+ I see my _reputation_ is at stake
+ My _fame_ is shrewdly gor'd.
+
+CASSIO. _Reputation, reputation, reputation!_ O! I have lost my
+reputation. I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is
+bestial. My reputation, Iago, my reputation!
+IAGO. As I am an honest man, I thought you had received some bodily wound.
+
+You have a good _repute_ for gentleness and wisdom.
+_Celebrity_ sells dearly what we think she gives.
+
+ Kings climb to _eminence_
+ Over men's graves.
+
+_Notoriety_ is short-lived; _fame_ is lasting.
+
+
+<Hatred, hate, animosity, ill-will, enmity, hostility, bitterness,
+malice, malevolence, malignity, rancor, resentment, dudgeon, grudge,
+spite>.
+
+The _hatred_ we bear our enemies injures their happiness less than
+our own.
+
+_Hate_ is like fire; it makes even light rubbish deadly.
+
+He generously forgot all feeling of _animosity_, and determined to go
+in person to his succor.
+
+ That thereby he may gather
+ The ground of your _ill-will_, and so remove it.
+
+No place is so propitious to the formation either of close friendships or
+of deadly _enmities_ as an Indiaman.
+
+There need be no _hostility_ between evolutionist and theologian.
+
+ Shall we be thus afflicted in his wreaks,
+ His fits, his frenzy, and his _bitterness?_
+
+ Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate,
+ Nor set down aught in _malice_.
+
+Every obstacle which partisan _malevolence_ could create he has had
+to encounter.
+
+His flight is occasioned rather by the _malignity_ of his countrymen
+than by the enmity of the Egyptians.
+
+ Where the soul sours, and gradual _rancor_ grows,
+ Imbitter'd more from peevish day to day.
+
+Peace in their mouthes, and all _rancor_ and vengeance in their
+hartes [hearts].
+
+ For them the gracious Duncan have I murder'd;
+ Put _rancors_ in the vessel of my peace
+ Only for them.
+
+Her _resentment_ against the king seems not to have abated.
+
+Mrs. W. was in high _dudgeon_; her heels clattered on the red-tiled
+floor, and she whisked about the house like a parched pea upon a
+drum-head.
+
+ If I can catch him once upon the hip,
+ I will feed fat the ancient _grudge_ I bear him.
+
+Men of this character pursue a _grudge_ unceasingly, and never forget
+or forgive.
+
+ And since you ne'er provoked their _spite_,
+ Depend upon't their judgment's right.
+
+
+<Marriage, matrimony, wedlock>. (With this group compare the
+_matrimonial_ group in Exercise C, above.)
+
+_Marriages_ are made in heaven.
+
+Hasty _marriage_ seldom proveth well.
+
+A man finds himself seven years older the day after his _marriage_.
+
+ Let me not to the _marriage_ of true minds
+ Admit impediments.
+
+_Marriage_ is the best state for man in general; and every man is a
+worse man in proportion as he is unfit for the married state.
+
+_Matrimony_--the high sea for which no compass has yet been invented.
+
+_Wedlock's_ a lane where there is no turning.
+
+ What is _wedlock_ forced, but a hell,
+ An age of discord and continual strife?
+
+
+<Mercy, clemency, lenity, leniency, lenience, forbearance>.
+
+ Teach me to feel another's woe,
+ To hide the fault I see;
+ That _mercy_ I to others show,
+ That _mercy_ show to me.
+
+ The quality of _mercy_ is not strain'd,
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath: it is twice bless'd;
+ It blesseth him that gives and him that takes;
+ * * * * *
+ And earthly power doth then show likest God's
+ When _mercy_ seasons justice.
+
+_Clemency_ is the surest proof of a true monarch.
+
+_Lenity_ will operate with greater force, in some instances, than
+vigor.
+
+All the fellows tried to persuade the Master to greater _leniency_,
+but in vain.
+
+It will be necessary that this acceptance should be followed up by
+measures of the utmost _lenience_.
+
+There is however a limit at which _forbearance_ ceases to be a
+virtue.
+
+
+<Pity, sympathy, compassion, commiseration, condolence>.
+
+ Careless their merits or their faults to scan,
+ His _pity_ gave ere charity began.
+
+For _pity_ melts the mind to love.
+
+For _pitee_ renneth [runneth] soon in gentle herte [heart].
+
+Our _sympathy_ is cold to the relation of distant misery.
+
+Man may dismiss _compassion_ from his heart, but God will never.
+
+It is unworthy a religious man to view an irreligious one either with
+alarm or aversion; or with any other feeling than regret, and hope, and
+brotherly _commiseration_.
+
+Their congratulations and their _condolences_ are equally words of
+course.
+
+
+<Poverty, want, need, destitution, indigence, penury>.
+
+ Is there for honest _poverty_
+ That hings [hangs] his head, and a' that?
+
+Not to be able to bear _poverty_ is a shameful thing, but not to know
+how to chase it away by work is a more shameful thing yet.
+
+ Stitch! stitch! stitch!
+ In _poverty_, hunger, and dirt,
+ And still with a voice of dolorous pitch,
+ Would that its tone could reach the Rich,
+ She sang this "Song of the Shirt!"
+
+_Poverty_ is dishonorable, not in itself, but when it is a proof of
+laziness, intemperance, luxury, and carelessness; whereas in a person that
+is temperate, industrious, just and valiant, and who uses all his virtues
+for the public good, it shows a great and lofty mind.
+
+ _Want_ is a bitter and hateful good,
+ Because its virtues are not understood;
+ Yet many things, impossible to thought,
+ Have been by _need_ to full perfection brought.
+
+Hundreds would never have known _want_ if they had not first known
+waste.
+
+ O! reason not the _need_; our basest beggars
+ Are in the poorest thing superfluous:
+ Allow not nature more than nature needs,
+ Man's life is cheap as beast's.
+
+The Christian inhabitants of Thessaly would be reduced to
+_destitution_.
+
+It is the care of a very great part of mankind to conceal their
+_indigence_ from the rest.
+
+ Chill _penury_ repress'd their noble rage,
+ And froze the genial current of the soul.
+
+Chill _penury_ weighs down the heart itself; and though it sometimes
+be endured with calmness, it is but the calmness of despair.
+
+ Where _penury_ is felt the thought is chain'd,
+ And sweet colloquial pleasures are but few.
+
+
+<Regret, compunction, remorse, contrition, penitence, repentance>.
+
+_Regrets_ over the past should chasten the future.
+
+He acknowledged his disloyalty to the king with expressions of great
+_compunction_.
+
+ Through no disturbance of my soul,
+ Or strong _compunction_ in me wrought,
+ I supplicate for thy control.
+
+God speaks to our hearts through the voice of _remorse_.
+
+To err is human; but _contrition_ felt for the crime distinguishes
+the virtuous from the wicked.
+
+Christian _penitence_ is something more than a thought or an emotion
+or a tear; it is action.
+
+_Repentance_ must be something more than mere _remorse_ for
+sins; it comprehends a change of nature befitting heaven.
+
+
+<Stubborn, obstinate, pertinacious, intractable, refractory,
+contumacious>.
+
+ For fools are _stubborn_ in their way,
+ As coins are harden'd by th' allay;
+ And _obstinacy's_ ne'er so stiff
+ As when 'tis in a wrong belief.
+
+They may also laugh at their _pertinacious_ and incurable obstinacy.
+
+He who is _intractable_, he whom nothing can persuade, may boast
+himself invincible.
+
+ There is a law in each well-order'd nation
+ To curb those raging appetites that are
+ Most disobedient and _refractory_.
+
+He then dissolved Parliament, and sent its most _refractory_ members
+to the Tower.
+
+If he were _contumacious_, he might be excommunicated, or, in other
+words, be deprived of all civil rights and imprisoned for life.
+
+
+EXERCISE E
+
+The following list of synonyms is given for the convenience of those who
+wish additional material with which to work. This is a selected list and
+makes no pretense to completeness. It is suggested that you discriminate
+the words within each of the following groups, and use each word
+accurately in a sentence of your own making.
+
+Abettor, accessory, accomplice, confederate, conspirator.
+Acknowledge, admit, confess, own, avow.
+Active, agile, nimble, brisk, sprightly, spry, bustling.
+Advise, counsel, admonish, caution, warn.
+Affecting, moving, touching, pathetic.
+Agnostic, skeptic, infidel, unbeliever, disbeliever.
+Amuse, entertain, divert.
+Announce, proclaim, promulgate, report, advertise, publish, bruit, blazon,
+trumpet, herald.
+Antipathy, aversion, repugnance, disgust, loathing.
+Artifice, ruse, trick, dodge, manoeuver, wile, stratagem, subterfuge,
+finesse.
+Ascend, mount, climb, scale.
+Associate, colleague, partner, helper, collaborator, coadjutor, companion,
+helpmate, mate, team-mate, comrade, chum, crony, consort, accomplice,
+confederate.
+Attach, affix, annex, append, subjoin.
+Attack, assail, assault, invade, beset, besiege, bombard, cannonade,
+storm.
+
+Begin, commence, inaugurate, initiate, institute, originate, start, found.
+Belief, faith, persuasion, conviction, tenet, creed.
+Belittle, decry, depreciate, disparage.
+Bind, secure, fetter, shackle, gyve.
+Bit, jot, mite, particle, grain, atom, speck, mote, whit, iota, tittle,
+scintilla.
+Bluff, blunt, outspoken, downright, brusk, curt, crusty.
+Boast, brag, vaunt, vapor, gasconade.
+Body, corpse, remains, relics, carcass, cadaver, corpus.
+Bombastic, sophomoric, turgid, tumid, grandiose, grandiloquent,
+magniloquent.
+Boorish, churlish, loutish, clownish, rustic, ill-bred.
+Booty, plunder, loot, spoil.
+Brittle, frangible, friable, fragile, crisp.
+Building, edifice, structure, house.
+
+Call, clamor, roar, scream, shout, shriek, vociferate, yell, halloo,
+whoop.
+Calm, still, motionless, tranquil, serene, placid.
+Care, concern, solicitude, anxiety.
+Celebrate, commemorate, observe.
+Charm, amulet, talisman.
+Charm, enchant, fascinate, captivate, enrapture, bewitch, infatuate,
+enamor.
+Cheat, defraud, swindle, dupe.
+Choke, strangle, suffocate, stifle, throttle.
+Choose, pick, select, cull, elect.
+Coax, wheedle, cajole, tweedle, persuade, inveigle.
+Color, hue, shade, tint, tinge, tincture.
+Combine, unite, consolidate, merge, amalgamate, weld, incorporate,
+confederate.
+Comfort, console, solace.
+Complain, grumble, growl, murmur, repine, whine, croak.
+Confirmed, habitual, inveterate, chronic.
+Connect, join, link, couple, attach, unite.
+Continual, continuous, unceasing, incessant, endless, uninterrupted,
+unremitting, constant, perpetual, perennial.
+Contract, agreement, bargain, compact, covenant, stipulation.
+Copy, duplicate, counterpart, likeness, reproduction, replica, facsimile.
+Corrupt, depraved, perverted, vitiated.
+Costly, expensive, dear.
+Coterie, clique, cabal, circle, set, faction, party.
+Critical, judicial, impartial, carping, caviling, captious, censorious.
+Crooked, awry, askew.
+Cross, fretful, peevish, petulant, pettish, irritable, irascible, angry.
+Crowd, throng, horde, host, mass, multitude, press, jam, concourse.
+Curious, inquisitive, prying, meddlesome.
+
+Dainty, delicate, exquisite, choice, rare.
+Danger, peril, jeopardy, hazard, risk.
+Darken, obscure, bedim, obfuscate.
+Dead, lifeless, inanimate, deceased, defunct, extinct.
+Decay, decompose, putrefy, rot, spoil.
+Deceit, deception, double-dealing, duplicity, chicanery, guile, treachery.
+Deceptive, deceitful, misleading, fallacious, fraudulent.
+Decorate, adorn, ornament, embellish, deck, bedeck, garnish, bedizen,
+beautify.
+Decorous, demure, sedate, sober, staid, prim, proper.
+Deface, disfigure, mar, mutilate.
+Defect, fault, imperfection, disfigurement, blemish, flaw.
+Delay, defer, postpone, procrastinate.
+Demoralize, deprave, debase, corrupt, vitiate.
+Deportment, demeanor, bearing, port, mien.
+Deprive, divest, dispossess, strip, despoil.
+Despise, contemn, scorn, disdain.
+Despondency, despair, desperation.
+Detach, separate, sunder, sever, disconnect, disjoin, disunite.
+Determined, persistent, dogged.
+Devout, religious, pious, godly, saintly.
+Difficulty, hindrance, obstacle, impediment, encumbrance, handicap.
+Difficulty, predicament, perplexity, plight, quandary, dilemma, strait.
+Dirty, filthy, foul, nasty, squalid.
+Discernment, perception, penetration, insight, acumen.
+Disgraceful, dishonorable, shameful, disreputable, ignominious,
+opprobrious, scandalous, infamous.
+Disgusting, sickening, repulsive, revolting, loathsome, repugnant,
+abhorrent, noisome, fulsome.
+Dispel, disperse, dissipate, scatter.
+Dissatisfied, discontented, displeased, malcontent, disgruntled.
+Divide, distribute, apportion, allot, allocate, partition.
+Doctrine, dogma, tenet, precept.
+Dream, reverie, vision, fantasy.
+Drip, dribble, trickle.
+Drunk, drunken, intoxicated, inebriated.
+Dry, arid, parched, desiccated.
+
+Eat, bolt, gulp, gorge, devour.
+Encroach, infringe, intrench, trench, intrude, invade, trespass.
+End, conclude, terminate, finish, discontinue, close.
+Enemy, foe, adversary, opponent, antagonist, rival.
+Enough, adequate, sufficient.
+Entice, inveigle, allure, lure, decoy, seduce.
+Erase, expunge, cancel, efface, obliterate.
+Error, mistake, blunder, slip.
+Estimate, value, appreciate.
+Eternal, everlasting, endless, deathless, imperishable, immortal.
+Examination, inquiry, inquisition, investigation, inspection,
+scrutiny, research, review, audit, inquest, autopsy.
+Example, sample, specimen, instance.
+Exceed, excel, surpass, transcend, outdo.
+Expand, dilate, distend, inflate.
+Expel, banish, exile, proscribe, ostracize.
+Experiment, trial, test.
+Explicit, exact, precise, definite.
+
+Faculty, gift, endowment, aptitude, attribute, talent, predilection, bent.
+Failing, shortcoming, defect, fault, foible, infirmity.
+Famous, renowned, celebrated, noted, distinguished, eminent, illustrious.
+Fashion, mode, style, vogue, rage, fad.
+Fast, rapid, swift, quick, fleet, speedy, hasty, celeritous, expeditious,
+instantaneous.
+Fasten, tie, hitch, moor, tether.
+Fate, destiny, lot, doom.
+Fawn, truckle, cringe, crouch.
+Feign, pretend, dissemble, simulate, counterfeit, affect, assume.
+Fiendish, devilish, diabolical, demoniacal, demonic, satanic.
+Fertile, fecund, fruitful, prolific.
+Fit, suitable, appropriate, proper.
+Flame, blaze, flare, glare, glow.
+Flat, level, even, plane, smooth, horizontal.
+Flatter, blandish, beguile, compliment, praise.
+Flexible, pliable, pliant, supple, limber, lithe, lissom.
+Flit, flutter, flicker, hover.
+Flock, herd, bevy, covey, drove, pack, brood, litter, school.
+Flow, pour, stream, gush, spout.
+Follow, pursue, chase.
+Follower, adherent, disciple, partisan, henchman.
+Fond, loving, doting, devoted, amorous, enamored.
+Force, strength, power, energy, vigor, might, potency, cogency, efficacy.
+Force, compulsion, coercion, constraint, restraint.
+Free, liberate, emancipate, manumit, release, disengage, disentangle,
+disembarrass, disencumber, extricate.
+Freshen, refresh, revive, renovate, renew.
+Friendly, amicable, companionable, hearty, cordial, neighborly, sociable,
+genial, complaisant, affable.
+Frighten, affright, alarm, terrify, terrorize, dismay, appal, daunt,
+scare.
+Frown, scowl, glower, lower.
+Frugal, sparing, saving, economical, chary, thrifty, provident,
+prudent.
+
+Game, play, amusement, pastime, diversion, fun, sport, entertainment.
+Gather, accumulate, amass, collect, levy, muster, hoard.
+Ghost, spirit, specter, phantom, apparition, shade, phantasm.
+Gift, present, donation, grant, gratuity, bequest, boon, bounty, largess,
+fee, bribe.
+Grand, magnificent, gorgeous, splendid, superb, sublime.
+Greet, hail, salute, address, accost.
+Grief, sorrow, distress, affliction, trouble, tribulation, woe.
+Grieve, lament, mourn, bemoan, bewail, deplore, rue.
+Guard, defend, protect, shield, shelter, screen, preserve.
+
+Habitation, abode, dwelling, residence, domicile, home.
+Harmful, injurious, detrimental, pernicious, deleterious, baneful,
+noxious.
+Have, possess, own, hold.
+Headstrong, wayward, wilful, perverse, froward.
+Help (noun), aid, assistance, succor.
+Help (verb), assist, aid, succor, abet, second, support, befriend.
+Hesitate, falter, vacillate, waver.
+Hide, conceal, secrete.
+High, tall, lofty, elevated, towering.
+Hint, intimate, insinuate.
+Hopeful, expectant, sanguine, optimistic, confident.
+Hopeless, despairing, disconsolate, desperate.
+Holy, sacred, hallowed, sanctified, consecrated, godly, pious, saintly,
+blessed.
+
+Impolite, discourteous, inurbane, uncivil, rude, disrespectful, pert,
+saucy, impertinent, impudent, insolent.
+Importance, consequence, moment.
+Impostor, pretender, charlatan, masquerader, mountebank, deceiver,
+humbug, cheat, quack, shyster, empiric.
+Imprison, incarcerate, immure.
+Improper, indecent, indecorous, unseemly, unbecoming, indelicate.
+Impure, tainted, contaminated, polluted, defiled, vitiated.
+Inborn, innate, inbred, congenital.
+Incite, instigate, stimulate, impel, arouse, goad, spur, promote.
+Inclose, surround, encircle, circumscribe, encompass.
+Increase, grow, enlarge, magnify, amplify, swell, augment.
+Indecent, indelicate, immodest, shameless, ribald, lewd, lustful,
+lascivious, libidinous, obscene.
+Insane, demented, deranged, crazy, mad.
+Insanity, dementia, derangement, craziness, madness, lunacy, mania,
+frenzy, hallucination.
+Insipid, tasteless, flat, vapid.
+Intention, intent, purpose, plan, design, aim, object, end.
+Interpose, intervene, intercede, interfere, mediate.
+Irreligious, ungodly, impious, godless, sacrilegious, blasphemous,
+profane.
+Irritate, exasperate, nettle, incense.
+
+Join, connect, unite, couple, combine, link, annex, append.
+
+Kindle, ignite, inflame, rouse.
+
+Lack, want, need, deficiency, dearth, paucity, scarcity, deficit.
+Lame, crippled, halt, deformed, maimed, disabled.
+Large, great, big, huge, immense, colossal, gigantic, extensive, vast,
+massive, unwieldy, bulky.
+Laughable, comical, comic, farcical, ludicrous, ridiculous, funny, droll.
+Lead, guide, conduct, escort, convoy.
+Lengthen, prolong, protract, extend.
+Lessen, decrease, diminish, reduce, abate, curtail, moderate, mitigate,
+palliate.
+Lie (noun), untruth, falsehood, falsity, fiction, fabrication, mendacity,
+canard, fib, story.
+Lie (verb), prevaricate, falsify, equivocate, quibble, shuffle, dodge,
+fence, fib.
+Likeness, resemblance, similitude, similarity, semblance, analogy.
+Limp, flaccid, flabby, flimsy.
+List, roll, catalogue, register, roster, schedule, inventory.
+Loud, resonant, clarion, stentorian, sonorous.
+Low, base, abject, servile, slavish, menial.
+Loyal, faithful, true, constant, staunch, unwavering, steadfast.
+Lurk, skulk, slink, sneak, prowl.
+
+Make, create, frame, fashion, mold, shape, form, forge, fabricate, invent,
+construct, manufacture, concoct.
+Manifest, plain, obvious, clear, apparent, patent, evident, perceptible,
+noticeable, open, overt, palpable, tangible, indubitable, unmistakable.
+Many, various, numerous, divers, manifold, multitudinous, myriad,
+countless, innumerable.
+Meaning, significance, signification, import, purport.
+Meet, encounter, collide, confront, converge.
+Meeting, assembly, assemblage, congregation, convention, conference,
+concourse, gathering, mustering.
+Melt, thaw, fuse, dissolve, liquefy.
+Memory, remembrance, recollection, reminiscence, retrospection.
+Misrepresent, misinterpret, falsify, distort, warp.
+Mix, compound, amalgamate, weld, combine, blend, concoct.
+Model, pattern, prototype, criterion, standard, exemplar, paragon,
+archetype, ideal.
+Motive, incentive, inducement, desire, purpose.
+Move, actuate, impel, prompt, incite.
+
+Near, nigh, close, neighboring, adjacent, contiguous.
+Neat, tidy, orderly, spruce, trim, prim.
+Needful, necessary, requisite, essential, indispensable.
+Negligence, neglect, inattention, inattentiveness, inadvertence,
+remissness, oversight.
+New, novel, fresh, recent, modern, late, innovative, unprecedented.
+Nice, fastidious, dainty, finical, squeamish.
+Noisy, clamorous, boisterous, hilarious, turbulent, riotous, obstreperous,
+uproarious, vociferous, blatant, brawling.
+Noticeable, prominent, conspicuous, salient, signal.
+
+Order (noun), command, mandate, behest, injunction, decree.
+Order (verb), command, enjoin, direct, instruct.
+Oversight, supervision, direction, superintendence, surveillance.
+
+Pale, pallid, wan, colorless, blanched, ghastly, ashen, cadaverous.
+Patience, forbearance, resignation, longsuffering.
+Penetrate, pierce, perforate.
+Place, office, post, position, situation, appointment.
+Plan, design, project, scheme, plot.
+Playful, mischievous, roguish, prankish, sportive, arch.
+Plentiful, plenteous, abundant, bounteous, copious, profuse, exuberant,
+luxuriant.
+Plunder, rifle, loot, sack, pillage, devastate, despoil.
+Pretty, beautiful, comely, handsome, fair.
+Profitable, remunerative, lucrative, gainful.
+Prompt, punctual, ready, expeditious.
+Pull, draw, drag, haul, tug, tow.
+Push, shove, thrust.
+Puzzle, perplex, mystify, bewilder.
+
+Queer, odd, curious, quaint, ridiculous, singular, unique, bizarre,
+fantastic, grotesque.
+
+Rash, incautious, reckless, foolhardy, adventurous, venturous,
+venturesome.
+Rebellion, insurrection, revolt, mutiny, riot, revolution, sedition.
+Recover, regain, retrieve, recoup, rally, recuperate.
+Reflect, deliberate, ponder, muse, meditate, ruminate.
+Relate, recount, recite, narrate, tell.
+Replace, supersede, supplant, succeed.
+Repulsive, unsightly, loathsome, hideous, grewsome.
+Requital, retaliation, reprisal, revenge, vengeance, retribution.
+Responsible, answerable, accountable, amenable, liable.
+Reveal, disclose, divulge, manifest, show, betray.
+Reverence, veneration, awe, adoration, worship.
+Ridicule, deride, mock, taunt, flout, twit, tease.
+Ripe, mature, mellow.
+Rise, arise, mount, ascend.
+Rogue, knave, rascal, miscreant, scamp, sharper, villain.
+Round, circular, rotund, spherical, globular, orbicular.
+Rub, polish, burnish, furbish, scour.
+
+Sad, grave, sober, moody, doleful, downcast, dreary, woeful, somber,
+unhappy, woebegone, mournful, depressed, despondent, gloomy, melancholy,
+heavy-spirited, sorrowful, dismal, dejected, disconsolate, miserable,
+lugubrious.
+Satiate, sate, surfeit, cloy, glut, gorge.
+Scoff, jeer, gibe, fleer, sneer, mock, taunt.
+Secret, covert, surreptitious, furtive, clandestine, underhand, stealthy.
+Seep, ooze, infiltrate, percolate, transude, exude.
+Sell, barter, vend, trade.
+Shape, form, figure, outline, conformation, configuration, contour,
+profile.
+Share, partake, participate, divide.
+Sharp, keen, acute, cutting, trenchant, incisive.
+Shore, coast, littoral, beach, strand, bank.
+Shorten, abridge, abbreviate, curtail, truncate, syncopate.
+Show (noun), display, ostentation, parade, pomp, splurge.
+Show, exhibit, display, expose, manifest, evince.
+Shrink, flinch, wince, blench, quail.
+Shun, avoid, eschew.
+Shy, bashful, diffident, modest, coy, timid, shrinking.
+Sign, omen, auspice, portent, prognostic, augury, foretoken, adumbration,
+presage, indication.
+Simple, innocent, artless, unsophisticated, naive.
+Skilful, skilled, expert, adept, apt, proficient, adroit, dexterous, deft,
+clever, ingenious.
+Skin, hide, pelt, fell.
+Sleepy, drowsy, slumberous, somnolent, sluggish, torpid, dull, lethargic.
+Slovenly, slatternly, dowdy, frowsy, blowzy.
+Sly, crafty, cunning, subtle, wily, artful, politic, designing.
+Smile, smirk, grin.
+Solitary, lonely, lone, lonesome, desolate, deserted, uninhabited.
+Sour, acid, tart, acrid, acidulous, acetose, acerbitous, astringent.
+Speech, discourse, oration, address, sermon, declamation, dissertation,
+exhortation, disquisition, harangue, diatribe, tirade, screed, philippic,
+invective, rhapsody, plea.
+Spruce, natty, dapper, smart, chic.
+Stale, musty, frowzy, mildewed, fetid, rancid, rank.
+Steep, precipitous, abrupt.
+Stingy, close, miserly, niggardly, parsimonious, penurious, sordid,
+Storm, tempest, whirlwind, hurricane, tornado, cyclone, typhoon
+Straight, perpendicular, vertical, plumb, erect, upright.
+Strange, singular, peculiar, odd, queer, quaint, outlandish.
+Strong, stout, robust, sturdy, stalwart, powerful.
+Stupid, dull, obtuse, stolid, doltish, sluggish, brainless, bovine.
+Succeed, prosper, thrive, flourish, triumph.
+Succession, sequence, series.
+Supernatural, preternatural, superhuman, miraculous.
+Suppose, surmise, conjecture, presume, imagine, fancy, guess, think,
+believe.
+Surprise, astonish, amaze, astound.
+Swearing, cursing, profanity, blasphemy, execration, imprecation.
+
+Teach, instruct, educate, train, discipline, drill, inculcate, instil,
+indoctrinate.
+Thoughtful, contemplative, meditative, reflective, pensive, wistful.
+Tire, weary, fatigue, exhaust, jade, fag.
+Tool, implement, instrument, utensil.
+Trifle, dally, dawdle, potter.
+Try, endeavor, essay, attempt.
+Trust, confidence, reliance, assurance, faith.
+Turn, revolve, rotate, spin, whirl, gyrate.
+
+Ugly, homely, uncomely, hideous.
+Unwilling, reluctant, disinclined, loath, averse.
+
+Watchful, vigilant, alert.
+Wave (noun), billow, breaker, swell, ripple, undulation.
+Wave (verb), brandish, flourish, flaunt, wigwag.
+Weariness, languor, lassitude, enervation, exhaustion.
+Wearisome, tiresome, irksome, tedious, humdrum.
+Wet (adjective), humid, moist, damp, dank, sodden, soggy.
+Wet (verb), moisten, dampen, soak, imbrue, saturate, drench
+Whim, caprice, vagary, fancy, freak, whimsey, crotchet.
+Wind, breeze, gust, blast, flaw, gale, squall, flurry.
+Wind, coil, twist, twine, wreathe.
+Winding, tortuous, serpentine, sinuous, meandering.
+Wonderful, marvelous, phenomenal, miraculous.
+Workman, laborer, artisan, artificer, mechanic, craftsman.
+Write, inscribe, scribble, scrawl, scratch.
+
+Yearn, long, hanker, pine, crave.
+
+
+EXERCISE F
+
+Write three synonyms for each of the following words. Discriminate the
+three, and embody each of them in a sentence.
+
+Accomplish Conduct (noun) Humble Scream
+Agree Conspicuous Indifferent Shrewd
+Anger Cringe Misfortune Shudder
+Attempt Difficult Obey Skill
+Big Disconnect Object (noun) Soft
+Brute Erratic Object (verb) Splash
+Business Flash Obligation Success
+Careless Fragrant Occupied Sweet
+Climb Gain Oppose Trick
+Collect Generous Persist Wash
+Commanding Grim Revise Worship
+Compel Groan Room
+
+
+EXERCISE G
+
+Supply eight or ten intervening words between each of the following pairs.
+Arrange the intervening words in an ascending scale.
+
+Dark, bright Wet, dry
+Savage, civilized Beautiful, ugly
+Friend, enemy Hope, despair
+Wise, foolish Love, hate
+Enormous, minute Admirable, abominable
+Curse, bless Pride, humility
+
+
+
+IX
+
+ MANY-SIDED WORDS
+
+
+In Chapter VII you made a study of printed distinctions between synonyms.
+In Chapter VIII you were given lists of synonyms and made the distinctions
+yourself. Near the close of Chapter VIII you were given words and
+discovered for yourself what their synonyms are. This third stage might
+seem to reveal to you the full joys and benefits of your researches in
+this subject. Certainly to find a new word for an old one is an
+exhilarating sort of mental travel. And to find a new word which expresses
+exactly what an old one expressed but approximately is a real acquisition
+in living. But you are not yet a perfectly trained hunter of synonyms.
+Some miscellaneous tasks remain; they will involve hard work and call your
+utmost powers into play.
+
+Of these tasks the most important is connected with the hint already given
+that many words, especially if they be generic words, have two or more
+entirely different meanings. Let us first establish this fact, and
+afterwards see what bearing it has on our study of synonyms.
+
+My friend says, "I hope you will have a good day." Does he mean an
+enjoyable one in general? a profitable or lucrative one, in case I have
+business in hand? a successful one, if I am selling stocks or buying a
+house? Possibly he means a sunshiny day if I intend to play golf, a snowy
+day if I plan to go hunting, a rainy day if my crops are drying up. The
+ideas here are varied, even contradictory, enough; yet _good_ may be
+used of every one of them. _Good_ is in truth so general a term that
+we must know the attendant circumstances if we are to attach to it a
+signification even approximately accurate. This does not at all imply that
+_good_ is a term we may brand as useless. It implies merely that when
+our meaning is specific we must set _good_ aside (unless
+circumstances make its sense unmistakable) in favor of a specific word.
+
+_Things_ is another very general term. In "Let us wash up the things"
+it likely means dishes or clothes. In "Hang your things in the closet" it
+likely means clothes. In "Put the things in the tool-box" it likely means
+tools. In "Put the things in the sewing-basket" it likely means thread,
+needles, and scissors. In "The trenches are swarming with these things" it
+likely means cooties. A more accurate word is usually desirable. Yet we
+may see the value of the generality in the saying "A place for everything,
+and everything in its place."
+
+_Good_ and _things_ are not alone in having multitudinous
+meanings. There are in the language numerous many-sided words. These words
+should be studied carefully. True, they are not always employed in
+ambiguous ways. For example, _right_ in the sense of correct is
+seldom likely to be mistaken for _right_ in the sense of not-left,
+but a reader or hearer may frequently mistake it for _right_ in the
+sense of just or of honorable. In the use of such words, therefore, we
+cannot become too discriminating.
+
+
+EXERCISE H
+
+This exercise concerns itself with common words that have more than one
+meaning. Make your procedure as follows. First, look up the word itself.
+Under it you will find a number of defining words. Then look up each of
+these in turn, until you have the requisite number and kind of synonyms.
+(The word is sure to have more synonyms than are called for.) You will
+have to use your dictionary tirelessly.
+
+<Bare.> Find three synonyms for _bare_ as applied to the body;
+three for it as applied to a room.
+
+<Bear.> Give three other words that might be used instead of
+_bear_ in the sentence "The pillar bears a heavy weight"; three in
+the sentence "He bore a heavy load on his back"; three in the sentence "He
+bore the punishment that was unjustly meted out to him"; three in the
+sentence "He bore a grudge against his neighbor"; two in the sentence "The
+field did not bear a crop last year."
+
+<Bold.> Give ten synonyms for _bold_ as applied to a warrior;
+ten as applied to a young girl. Observe that the synonyms in the first
+list are favorable in import and suggest the idea of bravery, whereas
+those in the second list are unfavorable and suggest the idea of
+brazenness. How do you account for this fact? Can you think of
+circumstances in which a young girl might be so placed that the favorable
+synonyms might be applied to her?
+
+<Bright.> Give as many words as you can, at least twelve, that can be
+used instead of _bright_ as applied to a light, a diamond, a wet
+pavement, or a live coal. Give three words for _bright_ as applied to
+a child of unusual intelligence; two as applied to an occasion that
+promises to turn out well; two as applied to a career that has been
+signally successful.
+
+<Clear.> Give five synonyms for clear as applied to water; ten as
+applied to a fact or a statement; three as applied to the sky or
+atmosphere; three as applied to the voice; two as applied to a passageway
+or a view; three as applied to one's judgment or thinking.
+
+<Close.> Give three words that could be substituted for _close_
+as applied to the atmosphere in a room; four as applied to a person who is
+uninclined to talk about a matter; three as applied to something not far
+off; four as applied to a friend; five as applied to a person who is
+reluctant to spend money; five as applied to a translation; five as
+applied to attention or endeavor.
+
+<Discharge.> Substitute in turn four words for _discharge_ in
+the sentence "The judge discharged the prisoner"; two in the sentence "The
+foreman discharged the workman"; two in the sentence "The hunter
+discharged the gun"; three in the sentence "The sore discharged pus"; two
+in the sentence "My neighbor discharged the debt"; two in the sentence "He
+discharged his duty."
+
+<Dull>. Name three words besides _dull_ that could be applied to
+a blade or a point; five to a person with slow intellect; three to
+indifference toward others; two to a color; three to a day that is not
+cheerful; five to talk or discourse that is not interesting.
+
+<Fair>. Substitute five words for _fair_ in the sentence "He
+gave a fair judgment in the case"; three in the sentence "The son made a
+fair showing in his studies"; four in the sentence "She had a fair face";
+two in the sentence "Her complexion was fair"; three in the sentence "Let
+no shame ever fall upon your fair name."
+
+<False>. Find two words that you can substitute for _false_ as
+applied to a signature, to a report or a piece of news, to jewels or
+money, to a friend.
+
+<Fast>. Name two words I might substitute for _fast_ in the
+sentence "Drive the stake until it is fast in the ground"; three in the
+sentence "He made a fast trip for the doctor"; six in the sentence "By
+leading a fast life he soon squandered his inheritance."
+
+<Firm>. Substitute four words for _firm_ in the sentence "I made
+the board firm by nailing it to the wall"; three in the sentence "The
+water froze into a firm mass"; five in the sentence "He was firm in his
+determination to proceed."
+
+<Flat>. Instead of _flat_ use in turn four other words in the
+sentence "This is a flat piece of ground"; five in the sentence "It was as
+flat a story as ever wearied company"; three in the sentence "The cook
+having forgotten the salt, the soup was flat"; four in the sentence "I am
+surprised by your flat refusal."
+
+<Free>. _Free_ may be applied to a person not subject to a tax
+or a disease, to a person who has been released from confinement or
+restraint, to a person who is not reserved or formal in his relations to
+others, to a person who is willing to give. Out of your own resources
+substitute as many words as you can for _free_ in each of these
+sentences. Now look up _free_ in a dictionary or book of synonyms.
+What proportion of its synonyms were you able to think up unaided?
+
+<Great>. Give three synonyms for _great_ as applied to size, to
+number, to a man widely known for notable achievement, to an error or
+crime, to price.
+
+<Hard>. Give six synonyms for _hard_ as applied to a rock; six
+as applied to a task or burden; six as applied to a problem or situation;
+ten as applied to one's treatment of others.
+
+<Harsh>. Give three words that can be applied instead of _harsh_
+to a sound; three that can be applied instead of _harsh_ to the
+voice; five that can be applied to one's treatment of others; five that
+can be applied to one's disposition or nature.
+
+<Just>. Substitute five words for _just_ in the sentence "You
+are just in your dealings with others"; three in the sentence "A just
+punishment was meted out to him"; three in the sentence "They made a just
+division of the property"; two in the sentence "He had a just claim to the
+title."
+
+<Plain>. Give six words that can be substituted for _plain_, as
+applied to a fact or statement; four as applied to the decorations of a
+room; two as applied to the countenance; four as applied to a surface;
+three as applied to a statement or reply.
+
+<Poor>. Give five words that can be used instead of _poor_ as
+applied to a person who is without money or resources; ten as applied to a
+person lacking in flesh; three as applied to clothing that is worn out;
+five as applied to land that will bear only small crops or no crops at
+all; two as applied to an occasion that does not promise to turn out well.
+
+<Quick>. Give six words that could be used instead of _quick_
+as applied to a train or a horse in travel; six as applied to the
+movements of a person about a room or to his actions in the performance of
+his work; four to a disposition or temper that is easily irritated.
+
+<Serious>. Give five synonyms for _serious_ as applied to one's
+countenance or expression; three as applied to a problem or undertaking;
+two as applied to a disease or to sickness.
+
+<Sharp>. Give two synonyms for _sharp_ as applied to a blade or
+a point; six as applied to a pain or to grief; four as applied to a remark
+or reply; ten as applied to one's mind or intellect; three as applied to
+temper or disposition; three as applied to an embankment; three as applied
+to the seasoning of food; three as applied to a cry or scream.
+
+<Stiff>. Give six synonyms for _stiff_ as applied to an iron
+rod; three as applied to an adversary; six as applied to one's manner or
+bearing; two as applied to one's style of writing or speaking.
+
+<Strong>. Give three synonyms for _strong_ as applied to a
+person in regard to his health; ten as applied to him in regard to his
+muscularity of physique; four as applied to a fortress; three as applied
+to a plea or assertion; three as applied to an argument or reason; three
+as applied to determination; two as applied to liquor; three as applied to
+a light; two as applied to corrective measures; two as applied to an odor.
+
+<Vain>. Give five synonyms for vain as applied to a man who
+overvalues himself or his accomplishments; six as applied to an attempt
+that comes to nothing; three as applied to hopes that have little chance
+of fulfilment.
+
+<Weak>. Substitute five synonyms for _weak_ in the sentence "I
+was very weak after my illness"; four in the sentence "The fortress was
+especially weak on the side toward the plain"; three in the sentence "He
+made a weak attempt to defend his actions"; three in the sentence "Many of
+these arguments are weak"; three in the sentence "Hamlet is usually
+interpreted as being weak of will"; three in the sentence "The liquor was
+so weak it had no taste"; three in the sentence "The lace was weak and
+soon tore."
+
+<Wild>. Give two words instead of _wild_ as applied to animals;
+two as applied to land; three as applied to people who have not been
+civilized; three as applied to a storm, an uncontrolled temper, or a mob;
+three as applied to a scheme that has no basis in reason or practicality.
+
+
+EXERCISE I
+
+In Exercise H you started with ideas and objects, and had to find words of
+a given meaning that could be applied to them. In this exercise you start
+with the words, and must find the ideas and objects.
+
+<Base>. To what is _base_ applied when inferior, cheap,
+worthless could be used as its synonyms? To what is it applied when
+debased, impure, spurious, alloyed, counterfeit could be used? When mean,
+despicable, contemptible, shameful, disgraceful, dishonorable,
+discreditable, scandalous, infamous, villainous, low-minded could be used?
+When ignoble, servile, slavish, groveling, menial could be used? When
+plebeian, obscure, untitled, vulgar, lowly, nameless, humble, unknown
+could be used?
+
+<Mortal>. Can you properly contrast mortal with immortal existence?
+mortal with porcine existence? Is porcine existence also mortal? Is mortal
+existence also porcine? What adjective pertaining to mankind forms a true
+contrast to _porcine_? What is a synonym for _mortal_ in its
+broad sense? in its narrow sense?
+
+<Severe>. To what is _severe_ applied when harsh, stern,
+rigorous, drastic, austere, hard could be substituted for it? When plain,
+unembellished, unadorned, chaste could be substituted? When acute,
+violent, extreme, intense, sharp, distressing, afflictive could be
+substituted? When keen, cutting, biting, stinging, caustic, critical,
+trenchant could be substituted?
+
+
+EXERCISE J
+
+Reread the discussion of _good_ and _things_ in Many-sided
+Words. Then for each of the words listed below collect or compose twenty
+or more sentences in which the word is used. As largely as possible, take
+them from actual experience. In doing this you must listen to the use of
+the word in everyday talk. After you have made your list of sentences as
+varied and extensive as you can, try to substitute synonyms that will
+express the idea more accurately. Note whether a knowledge of the
+attendant circumstances is necessary to an understanding of the original
+word, to an understanding of the word substituted for it.
+
+Bad Fine Matter Affair
+Nice Common Case Boost
+
+
+EXERCISE K
+
+Analyze each of the words given below into its various uses or
+applications. Then for it in each of these applications assemble as many
+synonyms as you can unaided. Finally, have recourse to a dictionary or
+book of synonyms for the further extension of your lists.
+
+(By way of illustration, let us take the word _quiet_. Through
+meditation and analysis we discover that it may be applied (a) to water or
+any liquid not in motion, (b) to a place that is without sound, (c) to a
+place shut off from activity or bustle, (d) to a person who is not
+demonstrative or forward in manner. We then think of all the words we can
+that can be substituted for it in each of these uses. No matter how
+incompletely or unsatisfactorily we feel we are performing this task, we
+must not give it over until we have found every word we can summon. Then
+we turn to a dictionary or book of synonyms. Thus for _quiet_ we
+shall assemble such synonyms as (a) calm, still, motionless, placid,
+tranquil, serene, smooth, unruffled, undisturbed, pacific, stagnant;
+(b) silent, still, noiseless, mute, hushed, voiceless; (c) secluded,
+sequestered, solitary, isolated, unfrequented, unvisited, peaceful,
+untrodden, retired; (d) demure, sedate, staid, reserved, meek, gentle,
+retiring, unobtrusive, modest, unassuming, timid, shrinking, shy.)
+
+Barren Keep Pure Solid
+Certain Liberal Rare Sorry
+Cold Light (adjective) Rich Spread
+Cool Light (noun) Right Straight
+Deep Long Rude Still
+Dry Low Short Sure
+Easy Mean Simple Thick
+Foul Narrow Slow Thin
+Full New Small Tender
+Gentle Obscure Smooth True
+Grand Odd Sober Warm
+Heavy Particular Soft Yield
+Keen
+
+
+<Literal vs. Figurative Applications>
+
+One of the most interesting things to watch in the study of words is their
+development from a literal to a figurative application. The first man who
+broke away from the confines of the literal meaning of a word and applied
+the word to something that only in a figurative sense had qualities
+analogous to the original meaning, was creating poetry. He was making an
+imaginative flight comparable in daring to the Wright brothers' first
+aeronautic flight. But as the word was used over and over in this
+figurative way the imaginative flight became more and more commonplace. At
+last it ceased to be imaginative at all; through frequent repetition it
+had settled into the matter of course. A glance back at the _Concise_
+group above will show you that with time the comparison which was once the
+basis and the life of the figurative use of words is dulled, obscured,
+even lost.
+
+As a further enforcement of this fact, let us analyze the word
+_rough_. In its literal application, it may designate any surface
+that has ridges, projections, or inequalities and is therefore uneven,
+jagged, rugged, scraggy, or scabrous. Now frequently a man's face or head
+is rough because unshaved or uncombed; also the fur of an animal is rough.
+Hence the term could be used for unkempt, disheveled, shaggy, hairy,
+coarse, bristly. "The child ran its hand over its father's rough cheek"
+and "The bear had a rough coat" are sentences that even the most
+unimaginative mind can understand. We speak of rough timber because its
+surface has not been planed or made smooth. We speak of a rough diamond
+because it is unpolished, uncut. Note that all these uses are literal,
+that in each instance some unevenness of surface is referred to.
+
+But man, urged on by the desire to say what he means with more novelty,
+strikingness, or force, applied the word to ideas that have no surfaces to
+be uneven. He imagined what these ideas would be like if they had
+surfaces. Of course in putting these conceptions into language he was
+creating figures of speech, some of them startlingly apt, some of them
+merely far-fetched. He said a man had a _rough_ voice, as though the
+voice were like a cactus in its prickly irregularities. By _rough_ he
+meant what his fellows meant when they spoke of the voice as harsh,
+grating, jarring, discordant, inharmonious, strident, raucous, or
+unmusical. Going farther, that early poet said the weather was
+_rough_. He thought of clement weather as being smooth and even, but
+of inclement, severe, stormy, tempestuous, or violent weather as being
+full of projections to rend and harass one. Thus an everyday use of the
+term today was once wrenched and immoderate speech. Possibly the first man
+who heard of rough weather was puzzled for a moment, then amused or
+delighted as he caught the figure. It did not require great originality to
+think of a crowd as _rough_ in its movements. But our poet applied
+the idea to an individual. To him a rude, uncivil, impolite, ungracious,
+uncourteous, unpolished, uncouth, boorish, blunt, bluff, gruff, brusk, or
+burly person was as the unplaned lumber or the unpolished gem; and we
+imitative moderns still call such a man _rough_. But we do not think
+of the man as covered with projections that need to be taken off, unless
+forsooth we receive _rough_ treatment at his hands. And note how far
+we have journeyed from the original idea of the word when we say "I gave
+the report a _rough_ glance," meaning cursory, hasty, superficial, or
+incomplete consideration.
+
+Many very simple words, including several of those already treated in this
+chapter, are two-sided in that they are both literal and figurative.
+
+
+EXERCISE L
+
+Trace each of the following words from its literal to its figurative
+applications, giving synonyms for each of its uses.
+
+Open Bright Stiff Hard
+Low Cool Sharp Flat
+Keen Strong Dull Raw
+Small Odd Warm Deep
+Eccentric
+
+
+<Imperfectly Understood Facts and Ideas>
+
+Thus far in this chapter we have been considering many-sided words. We
+must now turn to a certain class of facts and ideas that deserve better
+understanding and closer analysis than we usually accord them.
+
+These facts and ideas are supposed to be matters of common knowledge. And
+in their broad scope and purport they are. Because acquaintance with them
+is taken for granted it behooves us to know them. Yet they are in reality
+complicated, and when we attempt to deal with them in detail, our
+assurance forsakes us. All of us have our "blind sides" intellectually--
+quake to have certain areas of discussion entered, because we foresee that
+we must sit idly by without power to make sensible comment. Unto as many
+as possible of these blind sides of ourselves we should pronounce the
+blessed words, "Let there be light." We have therefore to consider certain
+matters and topics which are supposed to belong to the common currency of
+social information, but with which our familiarity is less thoroughgoing
+than it should be.
+
+What are these facts and topics? Take for illustration the subject of
+aeronautics. Suppose we have but the vaguest conception of the part played
+or likely to be played by aircraft in war, commerce, and pleasure. Suppose
+we are not aware that some craft are made to float and others to be driven
+by propellers. Suppose such terms as Zeppelin, blimp, monoplane, biplane,
+hydroplane, dirigible have no definite import for us. Does not our
+knowledge fall short of that expected of well-informed men in this present
+age?
+
+Or take military terms. Everybody uses them--clergymen, pacifists,
+clubmen, social reformers, novelists, tramps, brick-layers, Big-Stickers.
+We cannot escape them if we would. We ourselves use them. But do we use
+them with precise and masterly understanding? You call one civilian
+colonel and another major; which have you paid the higher compliment? You
+are uncertain whether a given officer is a colonel or a major, and you
+wish to address him in such fashion as will least offend his sensitiveness
+as to rank and nomenclature; which title--colonel or major--is the less
+perilous? You are told that a major has command of a battalion; does that
+tell you anything about him? You are told that he has command of a
+squadron, of a brigade, of a platoon; do these changes in circumstances
+have any import for you? If not, you have too faltering a grasp upon
+military facts and terminology.
+
+The best remedy for such shortcomings is to be insatiably curious on all
+subjects. This of course is the ideal; nobody ever fully attains it.
+Nevertheless Exercise M will set you to groping into certain broad matters
+relevant to ordinary needs. Thereafter, if your purpose be strong enough,
+you will carry the same methods there acquired into other fields of
+knowledge.
+
+You may object that all this is as much mental as linguistic--that what is
+proposed will result in as large accessions of general information as of
+vocabulary. Let this be admitted. Deficiencies of language are often,
+perhaps almost invariably, linked with deficiencies of knowledge.
+To repair the one we must at the same time repair the other. This may seem
+a hard saying to those who seek, or would impart, mere glibness of phrase
+without regard for the substance--who worship "words, words, words"
+without thought of "the matter." There is such a thing as froth of
+utterance, but who has respect therefor or is deceived thereby? Speech
+that is not informed is like a house without a foundation. You should not
+desire to possess it. Abroad in this world of ours already are too many
+people who darken counsel by words without knowledge.
+
+
+EXERCISE M
+
+A second lieutenant is the commissioned officer of lowest grade in the
+United States army. Name all the grades from second lieutenant to the
+grade that is highest.
+
+An admiral is the officer of highest grade in the United States navy. Name
+all the grades down to that which is lowest.
+
+Name as many as possible of the different ranks of the clergy in the Roman
+Catholic Church, in the Church of England.
+
+Give ascendingly the five titles in the British nobility.
+
+Name the different kinds of vehicles.
+
+Name the different kinds of schools.
+
+Name all the different kinds of boats and ships (both ancient and modern)
+you can think of.
+
+Give the nautical term for the right side of a ship, for the left side of
+a ship, for the front, for the rear, for the forward portion, for the rear
+portion.
+
+Name the various kinds of bodies of water (oceans, rivers, lagoons, etc.)
+
+Give all the terms of relationship of persons, both by blood and by
+marriage. What relation to you is your grandfather's brother? your
+cousin's daughter?
+
+Name all the bones of the human head.
+
+Give the names of the different parts of a typical flower.
+
+Name as many elements as you can. What is the number usually given? What
+was the last element discovered, and by whom?
+
+Name the elements of which water is composed. Name the principal elements
+in the composition of the air.
+
+Make as long a list as possible (up to thirty) of words that appeal to the
+sense of sight (especially color words and motion words), to the sense of
+hearing, of smell, of taste, of touch.
+
+Find words descriptive of various expressions in the human face.
+
+Name all the terms you can associated with law, with medicine, with
+geology.
+
+Name the planets, the signs of the zodiac, as many constellations as you
+can.
+
+Name the seven colors of the spectrum, and for each name give all the
+synonyms you can. What are the primary colors? the secondary colors?
+
+Give the various races into which mankind has been divided, and the color
+of each.
+
+Name every kind of tree you can think of, every kind of flower, every kind
+of animal, every kind of bird.
+
+
+
+X
+
+ SUPPLEMENTARY LIST OF WORDS
+
+
+You have already mastered many words, but a glance at any page of the
+dictionary will convince you that you have not mastered all. Nor will you,
+ever. Their number is too great, and too many of them are abstrusely
+technical.
+
+Nevertheless there remain many words that you should bring into your
+vocabulary. Most of them are not extremely usual; on the other hand they
+are not so unusual that you would encounter them but once in a lifetime.
+The majority of them are familiar to you, perhaps; that is, you will have
+a general feeling that you have seen them before. But this is not enough.
+Do you know exactly what they mean? Can you, when the occasion comes, use
+them?-use them promptly and well? This is the test.
+
+Many of the words are absolutely new so far as this book is concerned.
+They have not been discussed or attached to any list. Many are not
+entirely new. They have appeared, but not received such emphasis that they
+are sure to stand fast in your memory. Or some cognate form of them may
+have been mastered, yet they themselves may remain unknown. Thus you may
+know _commendation_ but not _commendatory_, _credulous_ but not
+_incredulity_, _invalid_ but not _invalidate_ or
+_invalidity_. One of the best of all ways to extend your vocabulary
+is to make each word of your acquaintance introduce you to its immediate
+kinsmen, those grouped with it on the same page of the dictionary.
+
+This chapter puts you on your mettle. Hitherto you have been given
+instructions as to the way to proceed, Now you must shift for yourself.
+The words, to be sure, are corraled for you. But you must tame them and
+break them, in order that on them you may ride the ranges of human
+intercourse. If you have not yet learned how to subdue them to your will
+and use, it would be futile to tell you how. You have been put in the way
+of mastering words. The task that henceforth confronts you is your own.
+You must have at it unaided.
+
+It is true that, in the exercise that follows, specific help is given you
+on a limited number of the words. But this help is only toward discovering
+the words for yourself before you have seen them in a list. And for most
+of the words not even this meager assistance is given.
+
+
+EXERCISE - Supplementary
+
+Each of the following groups of words is preceded by sentences in which
+blanks should be filled by words from that group. But do your best to fill
+these blanks properly before you consult the group at all. You must learn
+to think of, or think up, the right word instead of having it pointed out
+to you.
+
+These benefits were not inherent in the course he had taken; they were
+purely ____. Anything which existed before Noah's flood is called ____.
+His left hand, which had ceased to grow during his childhood, was now
+withered from its long ____. Certain books once belonging to the Bible
+have been discarded by the Protestants as ____. When Shakespeare makes
+Hector quote Aristotle, who lived long after the siege of Troy, he is
+guilty of an ____. Whatever causes the lips to pucker, as alum or a green
+persimmon, is spoken of as ____.
+
+Abash, abbreviate, abduct, aberrant, aberration, abeyance, abhorrent,
+abject, abjure, aboriginal, abortive, abrade, abrasion, abrogate,
+absolution, abstemious, abstention, abstruse, accelerate, accentuate,
+acceptation, accessary, accession, accessory, acclamation, acclivity,
+accolade, accomplice, accost, acerbity, acetic, achromatic, acidulous,
+acme, acolyte, acoustics, acquiescence, acquisitive, acrimonious, acumen,
+adage, adamantine, addict, adduce, adhesive, adipose, adjudicate,
+adolescence, adulation, adulterate, advent, adventitious, aerial,
+affability, affidavit, affiliate, affinity, agglomerate, agglutinate,
+aggrandizement, agnostic, alignment, aliment, allegorical, alleviate,
+altercation, altruistic, amalgamate, amatory, ambiguity, ambrosial,
+ameliorate, amenable, amenity, amity, amnesty, amulet, anachronism,
+analytical, anathema, anatomy, animadversion, annotate, anomalous,
+anonymous, antediluvian, anterior, anthology, anthropology, antinomy,
+antiquarianism, antiseptic, aphorism, apocryphal, aplomb, apostasy,
+apparatus, apparition, appellate, appertain, appetency, apposite,
+approbation, appurtenance, aquatic, aqueous, aquiline, arbitrary, archaic,
+arduous, aromatic, arrear, articulate, ascetic, asperity, asphyxiate,
+asseverate, assiduity, assimilate, astringent, astute, atrophy, attenuate,
+auditory, augury, auscultation, austerity, authenticate, authenticity,
+auxiliary, avidity.
+
+The man wished to fight; he was in ____ mood. There is only a handful of
+these things; yes, a mere ____. Slight mishaps like these lead to quips
+and mutual ____. His conduct is odd, grotesque, ____.
+
+Baccalaureate, badinage, bagatelle, baleful, ballast, banality, baneful,
+beatitude, bellicose, belligerent, benefaction, beneficent, benison,
+betide, bibulous, bigotry, bizarre, bombastic, burlesque.
+
+This effect was not obtained all at once; it was ____. These subjects
+belong to the same general field of knowledge as those; the two sets
+are ____. He is a skilled judge of art, a ____. The Southern states were
+unwilling to remain in the Union; they could be kept only by ____. Monks
+take upon themselves the vow of ____. No, this animal does not live on
+vegetation; it is a ____ animal.
+
+Cacophonous, cadaverous, cadence, callow, calumny, capillary, captious,
+cardinal, carnal, carnivorous, castigate, cataclysm, catastrophe,
+category, causality, cavernous, celebrity, celibacy, censorious, ceramics,
+cerebration, certitude, cessation, charlatan, chimerical, chronology,
+circuitous, circumlocution, citation, clandestine, clarify, clemency,
+coadjutor, coagulate, coalesce, coercion, cogency, cognizant, cohesion,
+coincidence, collusion, colossal, comatose, combustible, commendatory,
+commensurate, commiserate, communal, compatibility, compendium,
+complaisant, comport, composite, compulsive, compulsory, computation,
+concatenate, concentric, concessive, concomitant, condign, condiment,
+condolence, confiscatory, confute, congeal, congenital, conglomerate,
+congruity, connivance, connoisseur, connubial, consensus, consistence,
+consort, constriction, construe, contentious, context, contiguity,
+contiguous, contingent, contortion, contravene, contumacious, contumacy,
+contumelious, convergent, conversant, convivial, correlate, corrigible,
+corroborate, corrosive, cosmic, covenant, crass, credence, crescent,
+criterion, critique, crucial, crucible, cryptic, crystalline, culmination,
+culpable, cumulative, cupidity, cursive, cursory, cutaneous, cynosure.
+
+His course was not prescribed for him by superiors; his powers were ____.
+The suppression of these anarchistic tendencies has required ____
+measures. She was just entering society, and was proving herself a popular
+____. Yes, this tree loses its leaves every year; it is a ____ tree. He
+pretends that his ____ are sound, because he can read the stars.
+
+Debilitate, debonair, debutante, decadence, decapitate, deciduous,
+declivity, decompose, decorous, dedicatory, deduction, deferential,
+deficiency, deglutition, dehiscence, delectable, delete, deleterious,
+delineate, deliquescent, demarcation, demimonde, demoniac, denizen,
+denouement, deprecate, depreciate, derelict, derogatory, despicable,
+desuetude, desultory, deteriorate, diacritical, diagnosis, diaphanous,
+diatribe, didactic, diffusive, dilatory, dilettante, dipsomania,
+dirigible, discommode, discretionary, discursive, disintegrate, disparity,
+dispensable, disseminate, dissimulation, dissonant, distain, divagation,
+divination, divulge, dolor, dorsal, drastic, dubiety, duress, dynamic.
+
+These facts do not circulate except among a limited group of people; they
+are therefore ____. The departure of the children of Israel from Egypt was
+a general ____. His philosophy, instead of conforming to a single system,
+was ____. Lamb wrote admirable letters; he has a delightful ____ style.
+The period at which our days and nights are of equal length is the ____
+period.
+
+Ebullient, ecclesiastical, echelon, eclectic, ecstatic, edict, eerie,
+effervescent, efficacious, effrontery, effulgence, effusion, egregious,
+eleemosynary, elicit, elite, elucidate, embellish, embryonic, emendation,
+emissary, emission, emollient, empiric, empyreal, emulous, encomium,
+endue, enervate, enfilade, enigmatic, ennui, enunciate, environ, epicure,
+epigram, episode, epistolary, epitome, equestrian, equilibrium,
+equinoctial, equity, equivocate, eradicate, erosion, erotic, erudition,
+eruptive, eschew, esoteric, espousal, estrange, ethereal, eulogistic,
+euphonious, evanescent, evangelical, evict, exacerbate, excerpt,
+excommunicate, excoriate, excruciate, execrable, exegesis, exemplary,
+exhalation, exhilarate, exigency, exodus, exonerate, exorbitant, exotic,
+expectorate, expeditious, explicable, explicit, expunge, extant,
+extemporaneous, extrinsic.
+
+He deceives himself by this argument, for the argument is utterly ____.
+No complicated action can be planned in absolute detail; much must depend
+on ____ circumstance.
+
+Fabricate, fabulous, facetious, factitious, fallacious, fallible,
+fastidious, fatuous, feasible, feculence, fecundity, felicitous,
+felonious, fetid, feudal, fiducial, filament, filtrate, finesse, flaccid,
+flagitious, floriculture, florid, fluctuate, foible, forfeiture,
+fortuitous, fractious, franchise, frangible, frontal, froward, furtive.
+
+The advice was both unasked and unwelcome; it was purely ____. Throughout
+the World War the ____ of Germany over the other Central European powers
+was unquestioned. Buffaloes naturally go together in herds; they are ____.
+
+Galaxy, galleon, garrulity, gesticulate, gormand, granivorous,
+grandiloquent, gravamen, gratuitous, gregarious, habitue, hallucination,
+harbinger, hardihood, heckle, hectic, hedonist, hegemony, heinous,
+herbivorous, heretic, hermaphrodite, heterodox, heterogeneous, hibernate.
+histrionic, hoidenism, homiletics, homogeneous, hydraulic, hypothesis.
+
+We cannot understand God's ways; they are ____. Nor need we expect to
+change them; they are ____. If an animal has no backbone, it is ____. A
+boy so confirmed in his faults that we cannot correct them is ____.
+
+Idiosyncrasy, illicit, immaculate, immanent, imminent, immobile, immure,
+immutable, impalpable, impeccable, impecunious, imperturbable, impervious,
+implacable, implicit, impolitic, imponderable, importunate, imprecation,
+impromptu, improvise, imputation, inadvertent, inamorata, inanity,
+incarcerate, inchoate, incidence, incision, incongruent, inconsequential,
+incontinent, incorporeal, incorrigible, incredulity, incumbent,
+indecorous, indigenous, indigent, indite, indomitable, ineluctable,
+inexorable, inexplicable, inferential, infinitesimal, infinitude,
+infraction, infusion, inhibit, innocuous, innuendo, inopportune,
+insatiable, inscrutable, insidious, inspissated, insulate, intangible,
+integral, integument, interdict, internecine, intractable, intransigent,
+intrinsic, inure, invalidate, inveigh, inveigle, invertebrate, invidious,
+irrefragable, irrefutable, irrelevant, irreparable, irrevocable, iterate.
+
+He overpraised people; he was always engaged in extravagant ____ of
+somebody or other. The small man who has written a book becomes
+pretentious at once and regards himself as one of the ____. Thatcher is
+always engaged in lawsuits; he is the most ____ man I ever saw.
+
+Jocose, jocund, jurisprudence, juxtaposition, kaleidoscopic, labyrinth,
+lacerate, lackadaisical, lacrimal, laity, lambent, lampoon, largess,
+lascivious, laudable, laudation, lavation, legionary, lethargic,
+licentious, lineal, lingual, literati, litigious, loquacity, lubricity,
+lucent, lucre, lucubration, lugubrious.
+
+Those soldiers are fighting, not for principle, but for pay; they are
+____. Iron that is not heated cannot be hammered into shape; it is not
+____.
+
+Machination, macrocosm, magisterial, magniloquent, maladroit, malfeasance,
+malignity, malleable, mandate, matutinal, medieval, mephitic, mercenary,
+mercurial, meretricious, metamorphose, meticulous, microcosm,
+misanthropic, misogyny, misprision, mitigate, monitor, mortuary,
+mundane, mutable.
+
+It is a government by the few; therefore an ____. All the men of influence
+in the state give offices to their kinsmen; the system is one of ____.
+Yes, grandfather is eighty years old today; he has become an ____.
+
+Nebulous, nefarious, negation, neophyte, nepotism, neurotic, noisome,
+nomenclature, nonchalant, non sequitur, nucleus, nugatory, obdurate,
+objurgation, obligatory, obloquy, obsequious, obsession, obsolete,
+obstreperous, obtrusive, obtuse, obverse, obviate, occult, octogenarian,
+officious, olfactory, oleaginous, oligarchy, ominous, onomatopceia,
+opacity, opaque, opprobrious, oracular, orthodox, oscillate, osculate,
+ostensible, ostentation, ostracize, outré, ovation, overture.
+
+In England the eldest son inherits the title and the estate, but Americans
+do not take to a system of ____. You are always putting off until tomorrow
+what you could do today; do you think it pays to ____ thus? An ambassador
+whose powers are unlimited is called an ambassador ____. Beasts or men
+that are given to plundering are ____.
+
+Pabulum, pageantry, paginate, palatial, palliate, palpable, panacea,
+panegyric, panorama, paradoxical, paramount, parasite, parochial,
+paroxysm, parsimonious, parturition, patois, patriarchal, patrician,
+patrimony, peccadillo, pecuniary, pedantic, pellucid, pendulous,
+penultimate, penurious, peregrination, perfunctory, peripatetic,
+periphery, persiflage, perspicacious, perspicuity, pertinacious,
+pharmaceutic, phenomenal, phlegmatic, phraseology, pictorial, piquant,
+pique, plagiarize, platitudinous, platonic, plebeian, plenipotentiary,
+plethora, pneumatic, poignant, polity, poltroon, polyglot, pontifical,
+portentous, posterior, posthumous, potent, potential, pragmatic, preamble,
+precarious, precocious, precursor, predatory, predestination, predicament,
+preemptory, prelate, preliminary, preposterous, prerequisite, prerogative,
+presentiment, primogeniture, probation, probity, proclivity,
+procrastinate, prodigal, prodigious, prodigy, profligate, progenitor,
+proletarian, prolific, prolix, promiscuous, promissory, propaganda,
+propensity, prophylactic, propinquity, propitiatory, propitious,
+proprietary, prorogue, proselyte, prototype, protuberant, provender,
+proximity, prurient, psychical, psychological, puerile, pugnacious,
+puissant, punctilious, pungent, punitive, pusillanimous, putrescent,
+pyrotechnics.
+
+The coil of wire, being ____, instantly resumed its original shape. Some
+one must arrange these papers for publication; will you be their ____?
+Poe's mind had a bent toward ____: it could reason out a whole chain of
+circumstances from one or two known facts. He showed a disposition not to
+comply with these instructions; yes, he was ____.
+
+Rabbinical, rancorous, rapacious, ratiocination, rational, raucous,
+recalcitrant, recant, recapitulate, recession, reciprocal, reciprocate,
+recluse, recondite, recreant, recrudescence, rectilinear, rectitude,
+recumbent, redactor, redress, redound, refractory, refulgent, rejuvenate,
+relevant, rendezvous, rendition, reparation, repercussion, repertory,
+replenish, replete, replevin, reprehend, reprobate, repulsive, requisite,
+rescind, residue, residuum, resilient, resplendent, resurgence,
+resuscitate, reticulate, retribution, retrograde, retrospect, rigorous,
+risible, rodomontade, rudimentary, ruminate.
+
+His position carries no responsibility; it is a ____. The moon revolves
+about the earth, and is therefore the earth's ____. His work keeps him at
+his desk all day; it is ____ work. Your words incite men to disorder and
+rebellion; they are ____.
+
+Saccharine, sacerdotal, sacrament, sacrilege, salient, salubrious,
+sardonic, satellite, saturnine, schism, scurrilous, sectarian, secular,
+sedative, sedentary, seditious, sedulous, segregate, seismograph,
+senescent, sententious, septuagenarian, sequester, sibilant, similitude,
+sinecure, sinuous, solicitous, solstice, somnolent, sophisticated,
+sophistry, sorcery, spasmodic, specious, spirituelle, splenetic,
+spontaneity, sporadic, spurious, stipend, stipulate, stoical, stricture,
+stringency, stultify, stupendous, sublimity, suborn, subpoena, subsidiary,
+subsidy, substratum, subtend, subterfuge, subterranean, subvention,
+subvert, sudorific, supercilious, supernal, supervene, supine,
+supposititious, surreptitious, surrogate, surveillance, susceptible,
+sustenance, sycophantic, syllogism, sylvan, symmetrical, symposium,
+synchronize, synonymous, synopsis, synthesis.
+
+The small stream flows into the larger one and is its ____. The thick
+glass roof lets through sufficient light for us to see by; it is ____. You
+will not find him hard to manage; he has spirit enough, yet is ____.
+
+Tactile, tangible, tantamount, temerity, tenable, tenacious, tentative,
+tenuous, termagant, terrestrial, testimentary, thaumaturgic, therapeutic,
+titular, torso, tortuous, tractable, traduce, transcendent,
+transfiguration, transient, transitory, translucent, transverse, travesty,
+tribulation, tributary, truculent, truncate, turbid, turpitude, tyro.
+
+He is so extravagantly fond of his wife that I should call him ____.
+Christ died for others; it was a ____ death. The most notable quality in
+Defoe's narrative is its likeness to actual facts, or in a word, its ____.
+
+Ubiquity, ulterior, ululation, umbrage, unanimous, undulate, urbanity,
+usurious, uxorious, vacillate, vacuous, vandalism, variegate, velocity,
+venal, venereal, venial, venous, veracious, verdant, verisimilitude,
+vernacular, versatile, vestal, vibratory, vicarious, vicissitude,
+virulence, viscid, viscous, vitiate, vitreous, vituperate, vivacious,
+volatile, volition, voluminous, voluptuary, voluptuous, voracious, votive,
+vulnerable, whimsical, zealot.
+
+
+
+XI
+
+ RETROSPECT
+
+
+DO you never, while occupying a dental chair and deploring the necessity
+that drives you to that uncomfortable seat, admire the skill of the
+dentist in the use of his instruments? A great many of these instruments
+lie at his hand. To you they appear bewildering, so slightly different are
+they from each other. Yet with unerring readiness the dentist lays hold of
+the one he needs. Now this facility of his is not a blessing with which a
+gracious heaven endowed him. It is the consequence and reward of hard
+study, and above all of work, hard work.
+
+You have been ambitious of like skill in the manipulation of words. Had
+you not been, you would never have undertaken this study. You have
+perceived that when you speak or write, words are your instruments. You
+have wished to learn how to use them. Now for every idea you shall ever
+have occasion to express await throngs of vocables, each presenting its
+claims as a fit medium. These you must pass in instantaneous review, these
+you must expertly appraise, out of these you must choose the words that
+will best serve your purpose. With practice, you will make your selections
+unconsciously. You will never, of course, quite attain the infallibility
+of the dentist; for linguistic instruments are more numerous than dental,
+and far more complex. But you will more and more nearly approximate the
+ideal, will more and more nearly find that right expression has become
+second nature with you.
+
+All this is conditioned upon labor faithful and steadfast. Without labor
+you will never be adept. At the outset of our study together we warned you
+that, though we should gather the material and point the way, you yourself
+must do the work. This book is not one to glance through. It is one to
+dwell with, to toil with. It exacts much of you--makes you, for each page
+you turn, pay with the sweat of your brain.
+
+But, assuming that you have done your part, what have you gained? Without
+answering this question at all fully, we may at this juncture engage in a
+brief retrospect.
+
+First of all, you have rid yourself of the notion that words are dead
+things, unrealities worthy of no more than wooden and mechanical
+employment. As much as anything else in the world, words are alive and
+responsive, are fraught with unmeasured possibilities of good or ill.
+You have taken due cognizance of the fact that words must be considered in
+the aggregate as well as individually, and have reckoned with the pitfalls
+and dangers as well as with the advantages of their use in combination.
+But the basis of everything is a keener knowledge of words severally. You
+have therefore come to study words with the zest and insight you exhibit
+(or should exhibit) in studying men. Incidentally, you have acquired the
+habit of looking up dictionary definitions, not merely to satisfy a
+present need, but also to add permanently to your linguistic resources.
+
+You have carried the study of individuals farther. You have come to know
+words inside and out. Such knowledge not only assists you in your dealings
+with your contemporaries; it illuminates for you great literature of the
+past that otherwise would remain obscure. How much keener, for example, is
+your understanding of Shakespeare's passage on the Seven Ages of Man
+because of your thorough acquaintance with the single word
+_pantaloon_! How quickly does the awe for big words slip from you
+when you perceive that _precocious_ is in origin the equivalent of
+_half-baked_! What intimacy of insight into words you feel when you
+find that a _companion_ is a _sharer of one's bread_! What a
+linking of language with life you discover when you learn the original
+signification of _presently_, of _idiot_, of _rival_, of
+_sandwich_, of _pocket handkerchief_! And what revelations as
+into a mystic fraternalism with words do you obtain when you confront
+such a phrase as "the bank _teller_" or "cut to the _quick_"!
+
+Not only have words become more like living beings to you; you have
+learned to think of them in relations analogous to the human. You can
+detect the blood kinship, for example, between _prescribe_ and
+_manuscript_, and know that the strain of _fact_ or _fie_ or _fy_ in
+a word is pretty sure to betoken making or doing. You know that there are
+elaborate intermarriages among words. You recognize _phonograph_, for
+example, as a married couple; you even have confidential word as to the
+dowry brought by each of the contracting parties to the new verbal
+household.
+
+You have discovered, further, that the language actually swarms with
+"pairs"--words joined with each other not in blood or by marriage but
+through meaning. You have so familiarized yourself with hundreds of these
+pairs that to think of one word is to call the other to mind.
+
+Finally, and in many respects most important of all, you have acquired a
+vast stock of synonyms. You have had it brought to your attention that the
+number of basic ideas in the world is surprisingly small; that for each of
+these ideas there is in our language one generic word; that most people
+use this one word constantly instead of seeking the subsidiary term that
+expresses a particular phase of the idea; and that you as a builder of
+your vocabulary must, while holding fast to the basic idea with one hand,
+reach out with the other for the fit, sure material of specific words. Nor
+have you rested in the mere perception of theory. You have had abundant
+practice, have yourself covered the ground foot by foot. You can therefore
+proceed with reasonable freedom from the commoner ideas of the human mind
+to that expression of definite aspects of them which is anything but
+common.
+
+You have not, of course, achieved perfection. There still is much for you
+to do. There always will be. Nevertheless in the ways just reviewed, and
+in various other ways not mentioned in this chapter, you have made
+yourself verbally rich. You are one of the millionaires of language. When
+you speak, it is not with stammering incompetence, but with confident
+readiness. When you write, it is with energy and assurance in the very
+flow of the ink. Where you had long been a slave, you have become a
+freeman and can look your fellows in the eye. You have the best badge of
+culture a human being can possess. You have power at your tongue's end.
+You have the proud satisfaction of having wrought well, and the
+inspiration of knowing that whatever verbal need may arise, you are
+trained and equipped to grapple with it triumphantly.
+
+
+
+APPENDICES
+
+
+_Appendix I_
+
+ THE DRIFT OF OUR RURAL POPULATION CITYWARD
+ (An editorial)
+
+To an individual who from whatever motives of personal advantage or mere
+curiosity has made himself an observer of current tendencies, the drift of
+our rural population cityward gives food for serious reflection. This
+drift is one of the most pronounced of the social and economic phenomena
+of the day. Its consequences upon the life, welfare, and future of the
+great nation to which we are proud to acknowledge our whole-hearted
+allegiance are matters of such paramount importance to all concerned that
+we should turn aside more often than we do from the distracting exactions
+of our ordinary activities to give them prolonged and earnest
+consideration.
+
+A generation or so ago human beings were content to spend the full term of
+their earthly existence amid rural surroundings, or if in their declining
+days they longed for more of the comforts and associations which are among
+the cravings of mortality, it was an easy proposition to move to the
+nearest village or, if they were too high and mighty for this simple
+measure to satisfy them, they could indulge in the more grandiose
+performance of residing in the county seat. But nowadays our people want
+more. Rich or poor, tall or dumpy, tottering grandmothers or babies in
+swaddling-clothes, they long for ampler pastures. Their brawny arms or
+hoary heads must bedeck nothing less than the metropolis itself, and
+perchance put shoulders to the wheel in the incessant grind of the urban
+treadmill. Can you beat it? Unquestioned profit does not attend the
+migration. It stands to reason that some of the very advantages sought
+have been sacrificed on the altar of the drift cityward. Let us say you
+have your individual domicile or the cramped and sunless apartment you dub
+your habitation within corporate limits. Does that mean that the
+privileges of the city are at your disposal, so that you have merely to
+reach forth your hand and pluck them? Well, hardly! You certainly do not
+reside in the downtown section, or if you do, you wish to heaven you
+didn't. And you can reach this section only with delay and inconvenience,
+whether in the hours of business or in the subsequent period devoted to
+the glitter of nocturnal revelry and amusement.
+
+But whatever the disadvantages of the city, the people who endure them are
+convinced that to go back to the vines and figtrees of their native heath
+would be jumping out of the frying pan into the fire. Why? Well, for one
+thing, there is no such thing as leisure in the areas that lie beyond
+those vast aggregations of humanity which constitute our cities. Not only
+are there innumerable and seemingly interminable chores that must follow
+the regular occupations of the day, but a thousand emergencies due to
+chance, weather, or the natural cussedness of things must be disposed of
+as they arise, regardless of what plans the rustic swain cherishes for the
+use of his spare time. Urban laborers have contrived by one means or
+another to bring about a limitation of the number of hours per diem they
+are forced to toil. To the farmers such an alleviation of their hardships
+is not within the realm of practicability. They kick about it of course.
+They say it's a blooming nuisance. But neither their heartburnings nor
+their struggles can efface it as a fact.
+
+Again, the means of entertainment are more limited, and that by a big lot,
+with the farmer than with those who dwell in the cities. It is all very
+well to talk about the blessings of the rural telephone, rural free
+delivery, and the automobile. These things do make communication easier
+than it used to be, but after all they're only a drop in the bucket and do
+little to stop the drift cityward. We may remark just here that if you
+live a thousand miles from nowhere and are willing to drive your Tin
+Lizzie into town for "the advantages," you aren't likely to get much even
+along the line of the movies, and you'll get less still if what you're
+after is an A-1 school for your progeny.
+
+Finally, the widespread impression that the farmer is a bloated and
+unscrupulous profiteer has done much to disgust him with his station and
+employment in life. We don't say he's the one and only when it comes to
+the virtues. Maybe he hasn't sprouted any wings yet. What if he hasn't?
+The cities, with their brothels, their big business, and their municipal
+governments--you wouldn't have the face to say that there's anything wrong
+with them, now would you? Oh, no! Of course not! The farmer pays high for
+his machinery and goes clear to the bottom of his pocketbook when he has
+to buy shoes or a sack of flour, but let him have a steer's hide or a
+wagon load of wheat to sell, and it's somebody else's ox that's gored.
+Consumers pay big prices for farm products, goodness knows, but they don't
+pay them to the farmer. Not on your tintype. The middleman gets his, you
+needn't question that. We beg pardon a thousand times. We mean the
+middle_men_. There's no end to those human parasites.
+
+And so farmer after farmer breaks up the old homestead and contributes his
+mite to the drift cityward. What will be the result that comes out of it
+all? The effect upon the farmer deserves an editorial all to itself. Here
+we must limit ourselves to the effects on the future of our beloved
+American nation. And even these we can now do no more than mention; we
+lack space to elaborate them. One effect, if the tendency continues, will
+be such a reduction in home-produced foodstuffs that we shall have to
+import from other countries lying abroad a good portion of the means of
+our physical sustenance, and shall face such an increase in the cost of
+the same that thousands and thousands of our people will find it
+increasingly harder as the years pass by to maintain their relative
+economic position. Another effect will be that our civilization, which to
+this point has sprawled over broad acres, will become an urban
+civilization, penned in amid conditions, restraints, privations, and
+perhaps also opportunities unprecedented in our past history and unknown
+to the experience we have had hitherto. A final effect will be that our
+most conservative class, the rural populace, will no longer present
+resistance that is formidable to the innovations which those who hold
+extreme views are forever exhorting us to embrace; and the result may well
+be that the disintegration of this staying and stabilizing element in our
+citizenship--one that retards and mollifies if it does not inhibit
+change--will produce consequences in its train which may be as dire as
+they are difficult to foretell.
+
+
+_Appendix_ 2
+
+ CAUSES FOR THE AMERICAN SPIRIT OF LIBERTY
+ (From the _Speech on Conciliation with the Colonies_)
+ By EDMUND BURKE
+
+In this character of the Americans, a love of freedom is the predominating
+feature which marks and distinguishes the whole; and as an ardent is
+always a jealous affection, your Colonies become suspicious, restive, and
+untractable whenever they see the least attempt to wrest from them by
+force, or shuffle from them by chicane, what they think the only advantage
+worth living for. This fierce spirit of liberty is stronger in the English
+Colonies probably than in any other people of the earth, and this from a
+great variety of powerful causes; which, to understand the true temper of
+their minds and the direction which this spirit takes, it will not be
+amiss to lay open somewhat more largely.
+
+First, the people of the Colonies are descendants of Englishmen. England,
+Sir, is a nation which still, I hope, respects, and formerly adored, her
+freedom. The Colonists emigrated from you when this part of your character
+was most predominant; and they took this bias and direction the moment
+they parted from your hands. They are therefore not only devoted to
+liherty, but to liberty according to English ideas, and on English
+principles. Abstract liberty, like other mere abstractions, is not to be
+found. Liberty inheres in some sensible object; and every nation has
+formed to itself some favorite point, which by way of eminence becomes the
+criterion of their happiness. It happened, you know, Sir, that the great
+contests for freedom in this country were from the earliest times chiefly
+upon the question of taxing. Most of the contests in the ancient
+commonwealths turned primarily on the right of election of magistrates; or
+on the balance among the several orders of the state. The question of
+money was not with them so immediate. But in England it was otherwise. On
+this point of taxes the ablest pens, and most eloquent tongues, have been
+exercised; the greatest spirits have acted and suffered. In order to give
+the fullest satisfaction concerning the importance of this point, it was
+not only necessary for those who in argument defended the excellence of
+the English Constitution to insist on this privilege of granting money as
+a dry point of fact, and to prove that the right had been acknowledged in
+ancient parchments and blind usages to reside in a certain body called a
+House of Commons. They went much farther; they attempted to prove, and
+they succeeded, that in theory it ought to be so, from the particular
+nature of a House of Commons as an immediate representative of the people,
+whether the old records had delivered this oracle or not. They took
+infinite pains to inculcate, as a fundamental principle, that in all
+monarchies the people must in effect themselves, mediately or immediately,
+possess the power of granting their own money, or no shadow of liberty can
+subsist. The Colonies draw from you, as with their life-blood, these ideas
+and principles. Their love of liberty, as with you, fixed and attached on
+this specific point of taxing. Liberty might be safe, or might be
+endangered, in twenty other particulars, without their being much pleased
+or alarmed. Here they felt its pulse; and as they found that beat, they
+thought themselves sick or sound. I do not say whether they were right or
+wrong in applying your general arguments to their own case. It is not
+easy, indeed, to make a monopoly of theorems and corollaries. The fact is,
+that they did thus apply those general arguments; and your mode of
+governing them, whether through lenity or indolence, through wisdom or
+mistake, confirmed them in the imagination that they, as well as you, had
+an interest in these common principles.
+
+They were further confirmed in this pleasing error by the form of their
+provincial legislative assemblies. Their governments are popular in an
+high degree; some are merely popular; in all, the popular representative
+is the most weighty; and this share of the people in their ordinary
+government never fails to inspire them with lofty sentiments, and with a
+strong aversion from whatever tends to deprive them of their chief
+importance.
+
+If anything were wanting to this necessary operation of the form of
+government, religion would have given it a complete effect. Religion,
+always a principle of energy, in this new people is no way worn out or
+impaired; and their mode of professing it is also one main cause of this
+free spirit. The people are Protestants; and of that kind which is the
+most adverse to all implicit submission of mind and opinion. This is a
+persuasion not only favorable to liberty, but built upon it. I do not
+think, Sir, that the reason of this averseness in the dissenting churches
+from all that looks like absolute government is so much to be sought in
+their religious tenets, as in their history. Every one knows that the
+Roman Catholic religion is at least coeval with most of the governments
+where it prevails; that it has generally gone hand in hand with them, and
+received great favor and every kind of support from authority. The Church
+of England too was formed from her cradle under the nursing care of
+regular government. But the dissenting interests have sprung up in direct
+opposition to all the ordinary powers of the world, and could justify that
+opposition only on a strong claim to natural liberty. Their very existence
+depended on the powerful and unremitted assertion of that claim. All
+Protestantism, even the most cold and passive, is a sort of dissent. But
+the religion most prevalent in our Northern Colonies is a refinement on
+the principle of resistance; it is the dissidence of dissent, and the
+protestantism of the Protestant religion. This religion, under a variety
+of denominations agreeing in nothing but in the communion of the spirit of
+liberty, is predominant in most of the Northern Provinces, where the
+Church of England, notwithstanding its legal rights, is in reality no more
+than a sort of private sect, not composing most probably the tenth of the
+people. The Colonists left England when this spirit was high, and in the
+emigrants was the highest of all; and even that stream of foreigners which
+has been constantly flowing into these Colonies has, for the greatest
+part, been composed of dissenters from the establishments of their several
+countries, who have brought with them a temper and character far from
+alien to that of the people with whom they mixed.
+
+Sir, I can perceive by their manner that some gentlemen object to the
+latitude of this description, because in the Southern Colonies the Church
+of England forms a large body, and has a regular establishment. It is
+certainly true. There is, however, a circumstance attending these Colonies
+which, in my opinion, fully counterbalances this difference, and makes the
+spirit of liberty still more high and haughty than in those to the
+northward. It is that in Virginia and the Carolinas they have a vast
+multitude of slaves. Where this is the case in any part of the world,
+those who are free are by far the most proud and jealous of their freedom.
+Freedom is to them not only an enjoyment, but a kind of rank and
+privilege. Not seeing there, that freedom, as in countries where it is a
+common blessing and as broad and general as the air, may be united with
+much abject toil, with great misery, with all the exterior of servitude;
+liberty looks, amongst them, like something that is more noble and
+liberal. I do not mean, Sir, to commend the superior morality of this
+sentiment, which has at least as much pride as virtue in it; but I cannot
+alter the nature of man. The fact is so; and these people of the Southern
+Colonies are much more strongly, and with an higher and more stubborn
+spirit, attached to liberty than those to the northward. Such were all the
+ancient commonwealths; such were our Gothic ancestors; such in our days
+were the Poles; and such will be all masters of slaves, who are not slaves
+themselves. In such a people the haughtiness of domination combines with
+the spirit of freedom, fortifies it, and renders it invincible.
+
+Permit me, Sir, to add another circumstance in our Colonies which
+contributes no mean part towards the growth and effect of this untractable
+spirit. I mean their education. In no country perhaps in the world is the
+law so general a study. The profession itself is numerous and powerful;
+and in most provinces it takes the lead. The greater number of the
+deputies sent to the Congress were lawyers. But all who read, and most do
+read, endeavor to obtain some smattering in that science. I have been told
+by an eminent bookseller, that in no branch of his business, after tracts
+of popular devotion, were so many books as those on the law exported to
+the Plantations. The Colonists have now fallen into the way of printing
+them for their own use. I hear that they have sold nearly as many of
+Blackstone's Commentaries in America as in England. General Gage marks out
+this disposition very particularly in a letter on your table. He states
+that all the people in his government are lawyers, or smatterers in law;
+and that in Boston they have been enabled, by successful chicane, wholly
+to evade many parts of one of your capital penal constitutions. The
+smartness of debate will say that this knowledge ought to teach them more
+clearly the rights of legislature, their obligations to obedience, and the
+penalties of rebellion. All this is mighty well. But my honorable and
+learned friend on the floor, who condescends to mark what I say for
+animadversion, will disdain that ground. He has heard, as well as I, that
+when great honors and great emoluments do not win over this knowledge to
+the service of the state, it is a formidable adversary to government. If
+the spirit be not tamed and broken by these happy methods, it is stubborn
+and litigious. _Abeunt studia in mores_. This study renders men
+acute, inquisitive, dexterous, prompt in attack, ready in defence, full of
+resources. In other countries, the people, more simple, and of a less
+mercurial cast, judge of an ill principle in government only by an actual
+grievance; here they anticipate the evil, and judge of the pressure of the
+grievance by the badness of the principle. They augur misgovernment at a
+distance, and snuff the approach of tyranny in every tainted breeze.
+
+The last cause of this disobedient spirit in the Colonies is hardly less
+powerful than the rest, as it is not merely moral, but laid deep in the
+natural constitution of things. Three thousand miles of ocean lie between
+you and them. No contrivance can prevent the effect of this distance in
+weakening government. Seas roll, and months pass, between the order and
+the execution; and the want of a speedy explanation of a single point is
+enough to defeat a whole system. You have, indeed, winged ministers of
+vengeance, who carry your bolts in their pounces to the remotest verge of
+the sea. But there a power steps in that limits the arrogance of raging
+passions and furious elements, and says, _So far shalt thou go, and no
+farther_. Who are you, that you should fret and rage, and bite the
+chains of nature? Nothing worse happens to you than does to all nations
+who have extensive empire; and it happens in all the forms into which
+empire can be thrown. In large bodies the circulation of power must be
+less vigorous at the extremities. Nature has said it. The Turk cannot
+govern Egypt and Arabia and Kurdistan as he governs Thrace; nor has he the
+same dominion in Crimea and Algiers which he has at Brusa and Smyrna.
+Despotism itself is obliged to truck and huckster. The Sultan gets such
+obedience as he can. He governs with a loose rein, that he may govern at
+all; and the whole of the force and vigor of his authority in his center
+is derived from a prudent relaxation in all his borders. Spain, in her
+provinces, is, perhaps, not so well obeyed as you are in yours. She
+complies, too; she submits; she watches times. This is the immutable
+condition, the eternal law of extensive and detached empire.
+
+Then, Sir, from these six capital sources--of descent, of form of
+government, of religion in the Northern Provinces, of manners in the
+Southern, of education, of the remoteness of situation from the first
+mover of government-from all these causes a fierce spirit of liberty has
+grown up. It has grown with the growth of the people in your Colonies, and
+increased with the increase of their wealth; a spirit that unhappily
+meeting with an exercise of power in England which, however lawful, is not
+reconcilable to any ideas of liberty, much less with theirs, has kindled
+this flame that is ready to consume us.
+
+
+_Appendix 3_
+
+ PARABLE OF THE SOWER
+ (Matthew 13:3,8 and 18-23)
+
+And he spake many things unto them in parables, saying,
+Behold, a sower went forth to sow;
+
+And when he sowed, some seeds fell by the way side,
+and the fowls came and devoured them up:
+
+Some fell upon stony places, where they had not much earth:
+and forthwith they sprung up, because they had no deepness of earth:
+
+And when the sun was up, they were scorched;
+and because they had no root, they withered away.
+
+And some fell among thorns; and the thorns sprung up, and choked them:
+
+But other fell into good ground, and brought forth fruit,
+some an hundredfold, some sixtyfold, some thirtyfold.
+
+Hear ye therefore the parable of the sower.
+
+When any one heareth the word of the kingdom, and understandeth it not,
+then cometh the wicked one, and catcheth away that which was sown in his
+heart. This is he which received seed by the way side.
+
+But he that received the seed into stony places, the same is he
+that heareth the word, and anon with joy receiveth it.
+
+Yet he hath not root in himself, but dureth for a while: for when
+tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, by and by he is
+offended.
+
+He also that received seed among the thorns is he that heareth the word;
+and the care of this world, and the deceitfulness of riches, choke the
+word, and he becometh unfruitful.
+
+But he that received seed into the good ground is he that heareth the
+word, and understandeth it; which also beareth fruit, and bringeth forth,
+some an hundredfold, some sixty, some thirty.
+
+
+_Appendix 4_
+
+ THE SEVEN AGES OF MAN
+ _(As You Like It, II, vii, 139-166)_
+ By WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE
+
+
+All the world's a stage,
+And all the men and women merely players:
+They have their exits and their entrances;
+And one man in his time plays many parts,
+His acts being seven ages. At first the infant,
+Mewling and puking in the nurse's arms.
+And then the whining school-boy, with his satchel,
+And shining morning face, creeping like snail
+Unwillingly to school. And then the lover,
+Sighing like furnace, with a woful ballad
+Made to his mistress' eyebrow. Then a soldier,
+Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard
+Jealous in honor, sudden and quick in quarrel,
+Seeking the bubble reputation
+Even in the cannon's mouth. And then the justice,
+In fair round belly with good capon lin'd,
+With eyes severe, and beard of formal cut,
+Full of wise saws and modern instances;
+And so he plays his part. The sixth age shifts
+Into the lean and slipper'd pantaloon,
+With spectacles on nose and pouch on side,
+His youthful hose well say'd, a world too wide
+For his shrunk shank; and his big manly voice,
+Turning again toward childish treble, pipes
+And whistles in his sound. Last scene of all,
+That ends this strange eventful history,
+Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
+Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.
+
+
+_Appendix 5_
+
+ THE CASTAWAY
+ (From _Robinson Crusoe_)
+ By Daniel Defoe
+
+And now our case was very dismal indeed; for we all saw plainly that the
+sea went so high that the boat could not escape, and that we should be
+inevitably drowned. As to making sail, we had none, nor, if we had, could
+we have done anything with it; so we worked at the oar towards the land,
+though with heavy hearts, like men going to execution; for we all knew
+that when the boat came near the shore, she would be dashed in a thousand
+pieces by the beach of the sea. However, we committed our souls to God in
+the most earnest manner; and the wind driving us towards the shore, we
+hastened our destruction with our own hands, pulling as well as we could
+towards land.
+
+What the shore was, whether rock or sand, whether steep or shoal, we knew
+not; the only hope that could rationally give us the least shadow of
+expectation, was if we might happen into some bay or gulf, or the mouth of
+some river, where by great chance we might have run our boat in, or got
+under the lee of the land, and perhaps made smooth water. But there was
+nothing of this appeared; but as we made nearer and nearer the shore, the
+land looked more frightful than the sea.
+
+After we had rowed, or rather driven, about a league and a half, as we
+reckoned it, a raging wave, mountain-like, came rolling astern of us, and
+plainly bade us expect the _coup de grâce_. In a word, it took us
+with such a fury that it overset the boat at once; and separating us as
+well from the boat as from one another, gave us not time hardly to say,
+"O God!" for we were all swallowed up in a moment.
+
+Nothing can describe the confusion of thought which I felt, when I sank
+into the water; for though I swam very well, yet I could not deliver
+myself from the waves so as to draw breath, till that wave having driven
+me, or rather carried me, a vast way on towards the shore, and having
+spent itself, went back, and left me upon the land almost dry, but half
+dead with the water I took in. I had so much presence of mind, as well as
+breath left, that seeing myself nearer the mainland than I expected, I got
+upon my feet, and endeavored to make on towards the land as fast as I
+could, before another wave should return and take me up again; but I soon
+found it was impossible to avoid it; for I saw the sea come after me as
+high as a great hill, and as furious as an enemy, which I had no means or
+strength to contend with: my business was to hold my breath, and raise
+myself upon the water, if I could; and so by swimming to preserve my
+breathing, and pilot myself towards the shore if possible; my greatest
+concern now being that the wave, as it would carry me a great way toward
+the shore when it came on, might not carry me back again with it when it
+gave back towards the sea.
+
+The wave that came upon me again buried me at once twenty or thirty feet
+deep in its own body, and I could feel myself I carried with a mighty
+force and swiftness towards the shore a very great way; but I held my
+breath, and assisted myself to swim still forward with all my might. I was
+ready to burst with holding my breath, when as I felt myself rising up,
+so, to my immediate relief, I found my head and hands shoot out above the
+surface of the water; and though it was not two seconds of time that I
+could keep myself so, yet it relieved me greatly, gave me breath and new
+courage. I was covered again with water a good while, but not so long but
+I held it out; and finding the water had spent itself, and began to
+return, I struck forward against the return of the waves, and felt ground
+again with my feet. I stood still a few moments to recover breath, and
+till the waters went from me, and then took to my heels, and ran with what
+strength I had, farther towards the shore. But neither would this deliver
+me from the fury of the sea, which came pouring in after me again; and
+twice more I was lifted up by the waves and carried forwards as before,
+the shore being very flat.
+
+The last time of these two had well-nigh been fatal to me; for the sea
+having hurried me along, as before, landed me, or rather dashed me,
+against a piece of a rock, and that with such force as it left me
+senseless, and indeed helpless, as to my own deliverance; for the blow,
+taking my side and breast, beat the breath as it were quite out of my
+body; and had it returned again immediately, I must have been strangled in
+the water; but I recovered a little before the return of the waves, and
+seeing I should be covered again with the water, I resolved to hold fast
+by a piece of the rock, and so to hold my breath, if possible, till the
+wave went back. Now, as the waves were not so high as at first, being
+nearer land, I held my hold till the wave abated, and then fetched another
+run, which brought me so near the shore that the next wave, though it went
+over me, yet did not so swallow me up as to carry me away; and the next
+run I took I got to the mainland; where, to my great comfort, I clambered
+up the cliffs of the shore, and sat me down upon the grass, free from
+danger and quite out of the reach of the water. I was now landed, and safe
+on shore, and began to look up and thank God that my life was saved, in a
+case wherein there was some minutes before scarce any room to hope. I
+believe it is impossible to express, to the life, what the ecstasies and
+transports of the soul are when it is so saved, as I may say, out of the
+very grave: and I do not wonder now at that custom, when a malefactor, who
+has the halter about his neck, is tied up, and just going to be turned
+off, and has a reprieve brought to him--I say, I do not wonder that they
+bring a surgeon with it, to let him blood that very moment they tell him
+of it, that the surprise may not drive the animal spirits from the heart,
+and overwhelm him.
+
+ "For sudden joys, like griefs, confound at first."
+
+I walked about on the shore, lifting up my hands, and my whole being, as I
+may say, wrapt up in a contemplation of my deliverance; making a thousand
+gestures and motions, which I cannot describe; reflecting upon all my
+comrades that were drowned, and that there should not be one soul saved
+but myself; for, as for them, I never saw them afterwards, or any sign of
+them, except three of their hats, one cap, and two shoes that were not
+fellows.
+
+I cast my eyes to the stranded vessel, when, the breach and froth of the
+sea being so big, I could hardly see it, it lay so far off; and
+considered, Lord! how was it possible I could get on shore?
+
+After I had solaced my mind with the comfortable part of my condition, I
+began to look round me, to see what kind of place I was in, and what was
+next to be done: and I soon found my comforts abate, and that, in a word,
+I had a dreadful deliverance: for I was wet, had no clothes to shift me,
+nor anything either to eat or drink, to comfort me; neither did I see any
+prospect before me but that of perishing with hunger, or being devoured by
+wild beasts: and that which was particularly afflicting to me was, that I
+had no weapon, either to hunt and kill any creature for my sustenance, or
+to defend myself against any other creature that might desire to kill me
+for theirs. In a word, I had nothing about me but a knife, a tobacco-pipe,
+and a little tobacco in a box. This was all my provision; and this threw
+me into terrible agonies of mind, that for awhile I ran about like a
+madman. Night coming upon me, I began with a heavy heart, to consider what
+would be my lot if there were any ravenous beasts in that country, seeing
+at night they always come abroad for their prey.
+
+All the remedy that offered to my thoughts, at that time, was to get up
+into a thick busby tree, like a fir, but thorny, which grew near me, and
+where I resolved to sit all night, and consider the next day what death I
+should die, for as yet I saw no prospect of life. I walked about a furlong
+from the shore, to see if I could find any fresh water to drink, which I
+did to my great joy; and having drunk, and put a little tobacco in my
+mouth to prevent hunger, I went to the tree, and getting up into it,
+endeavored to place myself so that if I should sleep I might not fall. And
+having cut me a short stick, like a truncheon, for my defense, I took up
+my lodging; and being excessively fatigued, I fell fast asleep, and slept
+as comfortably as, I believe, few could have done in my condition, and
+found myself more refreshed with it than I think I ever was on such an
+occasion.
+
+When I waked it was broad day, the weather clear, and the storm abated, so
+that the sea did not rage and swell as before; but that which surprised me
+most was, that the ship was lifted off in the night from the sand where
+she lay, by the swelling of the tide, and was driven up almost as far as
+the rock which I at first mentioned, where I had been so bruised by the
+wave dashing me against it. This being within about a mile from the shore
+where I was, and the ship seeming to stand upright still, I wished myself
+on board, that at least I might save some necessary things for my use.
+
+When I came down from my apartment in the tree, I looked about me again,
+and the first thing I found was the boat, which lay, as the wind and sea
+had tossed her up, upon the land, about two miles on my right hand. I
+walked as far as I could upon the shore to have got to her; but found a
+neck, or inlet, of water between me and the boat, which was about half a
+mile broad; so I came back for the present, being more intent upon getting
+at the ship, where I hoped to find something for my present subsistence.
+
+A little after noon I found the sea very calm and the tide ebbed so far
+out, that I could come within a quarter of a mile of the ship. And here I
+found a fresh renewing of my grief; for I saw evidently that if we had
+kept on board, we had been all safe: that is to say, we had all got safe
+on shore, and I had not been so miserable as to be left entirely destitute
+of all comfort and company, as I now was. This forced tears to my eyes
+again; but as there was little relief in that, I resolved, if possible, to
+get to the ship-, so I pulled off my clothes, for the weather was hot to
+extremity, and took the water. But when I came to the ship, my difficulty
+was still greater to know how to get on board; for, as she lay aground,
+and high out of the water, there was nothing within my reach to lay hold
+of. I swam round her twice, and the second time I espied a small piece of
+rope, which I wondered I did not see at first, hanging down by the
+fore-chains so low that, with great difficulty, I got hold of it, and by
+the help of that rope got up into the forecastle of the ship. Here I found
+that the ship was bulged, and had a great deal of water in her hold; but
+that she lay so on the side of a bank of hard sand, or rather earth, that
+her stern lay lifted up upon the bank, and her head low, almost to the
+water. By this means all her quarter was free, and all that was in that
+part was dry; for you may be sure my first work was to search, and to see
+what was spoiled and what was free. And, first, I found that all the
+ship's provisions were dry and untouched by the water, and being very well
+disposed to eat, I went to the bread-room, and filled my pockets with
+biscuit, and ate it as I went about other things, for I had no time to
+lose. I also found some rum in the great cabin, of which I took a large
+dram, and which I had, indeed, need enough of to spirit me for what was
+before me. Now I wanted nothing but a boat, to furnish myself with many
+things which I foresaw would be very necessary to me.
+
+It was in vain to sit still and wish for what was not to be had; and this
+extremity roused my application. We had several spare yards, and two or
+three large spars of wood, and a spare topmast or two in the ship: I
+resolved to fall tp work with these, and I flung as many of them overboard
+as I could manage for their weight, tying every one with a rope, that they
+might not drive away. When this was done I went down the ship's side, and
+pulling them to me I tied four of them together at both ends, as well as I
+could, in the form of a raft, and laying two or three short pieces of
+plank upon them, crossways, I found I could walk upon it very well, but
+that it was not able to bear any great weight, the pieces being too light.
+So I went to work, and with the carpenter's saw I cut a spare topmast into
+three lengths, and added them to my raft, with a great deal of labor and
+pains. But the hope of furnishing myself with necessaries encouraged me to
+go beyond what I should have been able to have done upon another occasion.
+
+My raft was now strong enough to bear any reasonable weight. My next care
+was what to load it with, and how to preserve what I laid upon it from the
+surf of the sea: but I was not long considering this. I first laid all the
+planks or boards upon it that I could get, and having considered well what
+I most wanted, I first got three of the seamen's chests, which I had
+broken open and emptied, and lowered them down upon my raft; the first of
+these I filled with provisions--viz., bread, rice, three Dutch cheeses,
+five pieces of dried goat's flesh (which we lived much upon), and a little
+remainder of European corn, which had been laid by for some fowls which we
+brought to sea with us, but the fowls were killed. There had been some
+barley and wheat together; but, to my great disappointment, I found
+afterwards that the rats had eaten or spoiled it all. As for liquors, I
+found several cases of bottles belonging to our skipper, in which were
+some cordial waters; and, in all, about five or six gallons of arrack.
+These I stowed by themselves, there being no need to put them into the
+chest, nor any room for them. While I was doing this, I found the tide
+began to flow, though very calm; and I had the mortification to see my
+coat, shirt, and waistcoat, which I had left on shore upon the sand, swim
+away. As for my breeches, which were only linen, and open-kneed, I swam on
+board in them and my stockings. However, this put me upon rummaging for
+clothes, of which I found enough, but took no more than I wanted for
+present use, for I had other things which my eye was more upon; as, first,
+tools to work with on shore: and it was after long searching that I found
+out the carpenter's chest, which was indeed a very useful prize to me, and
+much more valuable than a ship-lading of gold would have been at that
+time. I got it down to my raft, whole as it was, without losing time to
+look into it, for I knew in general what it contained.
+
+My next care was for some ammunition and arms. There were two very good
+fowling-pieces in the great cabin, and two pistols. These I secured first,
+with some powder-horns, a small bag of shot, and two old rusty swords. I
+knew there were three barrels of powder in the ship, but knew not where
+our gunner had stowed them; but with much search I found them, two of them
+dry and good, the third had taken water. Those two I got to my raft, with
+the arms. And now I thought myself pretty well freighted, and began to
+think how I should get to shore with them, having neither sail, oar, nor
+rudder; and the least capful of wind would have overset all my navigation.
+
+I had three encouragements: first, a smooth, calm sea; secondly, the tide
+rising, and setting in to the shore; thirdly, what little wind there was
+blew me towards the land. And thus, having found two or three broken oars,
+belonging to the boat, and besides the tools which were in the chest, two
+saws, an axe, and a hammer, with this cargo I put to sea. For a mile, or
+thereabouts, my raft went very well, only that I found it drive a little
+distant from the place where I had landed before: by which I perceived
+that there was some indraught of the water, and consequently, I hoped to
+find some creek or river there, which I might malze use of as a port to
+get to land with my cargo.
+
+As I imagined, so it was. There appeared before me a little opening of the
+land. I found a strong current of the tide set into it; so I guided my
+raft as well as I could, to keep in the middle of the stream.
+
+But here I had like to have suffered a second shipwreck, which, if I had,
+I think verily would have broken my heart; for, knowing nothing of the
+coast, my raft ran aground at one end of it upon a shoal, and not being
+aground at the other end, it wanted but a little that all my cargo had
+slipped off towards the end that was afloat, and so fallen into the water.
+I did my utmost, by setting my back against the chests, to keep them in
+their places, but could not thrust off the raft with all my strength;
+neither durst I stir from the posture I was in; but holding up the chests
+with all my might, I stood in that manner near half an hour, in which time
+the rising of the water brought me a little more upon a level; and a
+little after, the water still rising, my raft floated again, and I thrust
+her off with the oar I had into the channel, and then driving up higher, I
+at length found myself in the mouth of a little river, with land on both
+sides, and a strong current or tide running up. I looked on both sides for
+a proper place to get to shore, for I was not willing to be driven too
+high up the river; hoping in time to see some ship at sea, and therefore
+resolved to place myself as near the coast as I could.
+
+At length I spied a little cove on the right shore of the creek, to which,
+with great pain and difficulty, I guided my raft, and at last got so near,
+that reaching ground with my oar, I could thrust her directly in. But here
+I had like to have dipped all my cargo into the sea again; for that shore
+lying pretty steep-that is to say, sloping--there was no place to land but
+where one end of my float, if it ran on shore, would lie so high, and the
+other sink lower, as before, that it would endanger my cargo again. All
+that I could do was to wait till the tide was at the highest, keeping the
+raft with my oar like an anchor, to hold the side of it fast to the shore,
+near a flat piece of ground, which I expected the water would flow over;
+and so it did. As soon as I found water enough, for my raft drew about a
+foot of water, I thrust her upon that flat piece of ground, and there
+fastened or moored her, by sticking my two broken oars into the ground-one
+on one side, near one end, and one on the other side, near the other end;
+and thus I lay till the water ebbed away, and left my raft and all my
+cargo safe on shore.
+
+
+
+_Appendix 6_
+
+ READING LISTS
+
+One of the best ways to _know_ words is through seeing them used by
+the masters. For this reason, as well as for many others, you should read
+extensively in good literature. The following lists of prose works may
+prove useful for your guidance. They are not intended to be exclusive, not
+intended to designate "the hundred best books." Rather do they name some
+good books of fairly varied types. These are not all of equal merit, even
+in their use of words. Some use words with nice discrimination, some with
+splendid vividness and force. For each author only one or two books are
+named, but in many instances you will wish to read further in the author,
+perhaps indeed his entire works.
+
+<Biography and Autobiography>
+
+Boswell, James: _Life of Samuel Johnson_
+Bradford, Gamaliel: _Lee the American; American Portraits, 1875-1900_
+Franklin, Benjamin: _Autobiography_
+Grant, U. S.: _Personal Memoirs_
+Irving, Washington: _Life of Goldsmith_
+Paine, A. B.: _Life of Mark Twain_
+Walton, Izaak: _Lives_
+
+<Essays, Adventure, etc.>
+
+Addison, Joseph: _Spectator Papers_
+Bryce, Sir James: _The American Commonwealth_
+Burke, Edmund: _Speech on Conciliation_
+Burroughs, John: _Wake Robin_
+Chesterton, G. K.: _Heretics_
+Crothers, S. M.: _The Gentle Reader_
+Dana, R. H., Jr.: Two _Years Before the Mast_
+Darwin, Charles: _Origin of Species_
+Emerson, R. W.: _Essays_
+Irving, Washington: _Sketch Book_
+Lincoln, Abraham: _Speeches and Addresses_
+Lucas, E. V.: _Old Lamps for New_
+Macaulay, T. B.: _Essays_
+Muir, John: _The Mountains of California_
+Thoreau, H. D.: _Walden_
+Twain, Mark: _Life on the Mississippi_
+
+<Fiction>
+
+Allen, James Lane: _The Choir Invisible_
+Austen, Jane: _Pride and Prejudice_
+Barrie, Sir James M.: _Sentimental Tommie_
+Bennett, Arnold: _The Old Wives' Tale_
+Blackmore, R. D.: _Lorna Doone_
+Bunyan, John: _Pilgrim's Progress_
+Cable, G. W.: _Old Creole Days_
+Conrad, Joseph: _The Nigger of the Narcissus_
+Defoe, Daniel: _Robinson Crusoe_
+Dickens, Charles: _David Copperfield_
+Eliot, George: _Adam Bede_
+Galsworthy, John: _The Patrician_
+Goldsmith, Oliver: _The Vicar of Wakefield_
+Hardy, Thomas: _The Return of the Native_
+Harte, Bret: _The Luck of Roaring Camp_ (short story)
+Hawthorne, Nathaniel: _The Scarlet Letter_
+Hergesheimer, Joseph: _Java Head_
+Hudson, W. H.: _Green Mansions_
+Kingsley, Charles: _Westward Ho_!
+Kipling, Rudyard: _Plain Tales from the Hills_ (short stories)
+London, Jack: _The Call of the Wild_
+Merrick, Leonard: _The Man Who Understood Women (volume of short
+stories); _The Actor Manager_
+Mitchell, S. Weir: _Hugh Wynne, Free Quaker_
+Norris, Frank: _The Octopus_
+Poe, Edgar Allan: _The Fall of the House of Usher_ (short story)
+Poole, Ernest: _The Harbor_
+Scott, Sir Walter: _Ivanhoe_
+Smith, F. Hopkinson: _Colonel Carter of Cartersville_
+Stevenson, R. L.: _Treasure Island_
+Tarkington, Booth: _Monsieur Beaucaire_
+Thackeray, W. M.: _Vanity Fair_
+Twain, Mark: _Huckleberry Finn_
+Wells, H. G.: _Tono Bungay_
+Wharton, Edith: _Ethan Frome_
+Wister, Owen: _The Virginian_
+
+
+ INDEX.
+
+The index comprises, besides miscellaneous items, four large classes of
+matter: (1) topics, including many minor ones not given separate textual
+captions; (2) all individual words and members of pairs explained or
+commented on in the text; (3) the key syllables, but not the separate
+words, of family groups; (4) the first or generic term, but not the other
+terms, in all assemblies of synonyms; hence, this book can be used as a
+handbook of ordinarily used synonyms.
+
+_Abandon_, Synonyms of,
+_Abase_, Synonyms of,
+_Abettor_, Synonyms of,
+_Abolish_, Synonyms of,
+_Abridge_
+Abstract vs. concrete terms. Also see _Words_
+_Absurd_
+_Accumulate_
+_Acknowledge_, Synonyms of,
+_Acquit_, Synonyms of,
+_Act_ family
+_Active_, Synonyms of,
+_Advise_, Synonyms of,
+Aeronautics, Familiar terms in,
+_Affair_
+_Affect_
+_Affecting_, Synonyms of,
+_Affront_, Synonyms of,
+_Afraid_, Synonyms of,
+_Ag_ family
+_Agnostic_, Synonyms of,
+_Allay_, Synonyms of,
+_Allopath_
+_Allow_, Synonyms of,
+_Altitude_
+_Amicable_
+_Amuse_, Synonyms of,
+Analysis. See _Vocabulary_ and _Synonyms_
+Analysis, Rhetorical,
+Anglo-Saxon words in modern English. See _Native words_
+_Anim_ family
+_Anni, annu_ family
+_Announce_, Synonyms of,
+_Answer_, Synonyms of,
+_Antipathy_, Synonyms of,
+Antonyms
+_Appreciate_
+_Apprehend_
+_Apricot_
+_Ardor_
+_Argument_
+_Artful_
+_Artifice_, Synonyms of,
+_Ascend_
+_Ascend_, Synonyms of,
+_Ascribe_
+_Ascribe_, Synonyms of,
+_Ask_, Synonyms of,
+_Assail_
+_Associate_, Synonyms of,
+_Attach_, Synonyms of,
+_Attack_; Synonyms of,
+_Attention_
+_Audi, auri_ family
+Audience, Adapting discourse to,
+_Auto_ family
+_Avert_
+_Awkward_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Backhanded_
+_Bald heads_
+_Bare_
+_Base_
+_Bear_
+_Bedlam_
+_Beef_
+_Begin_, Synonyms of,
+_Belief_, Synonyms of,
+_Belittle_, Synonyms of,
+_Bind_, Synonyms of,
+_Bit_, Synonyms of,
+_Bite_, Synonyms of,
+Blood relationships between words.
+ Small groups of words so related. Also see _Words_
+_Bluff_, Synonyms of,
+_Boast_, Synonyms of,
+_Body_, Synonyms of,
+_Bold_
+_Bombastic_, Synonyms of, Books of synonyms, List of,
+_Boor_
+_Boorish_, Synonyms of,
+_Booty_, Synonyms of,
+Boys, Kinds of,
+_Brand, brun_ family
+_Break_
+_Break_, Synonyms of,
+_Breakfast_
+_Bridegroom_
+_Bright_
+_Brittle_, Synonyms of,
+_Brotherly_
+_Building_, Synonyms of,
+Burke, Edmund. See _Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty_
+_Burn_ family
+_Burn_, Synonyms of,
+_Burn with indignation_
+_Busy_, Synonyms of,
+_By and by_
+
+_Cad_ family
+_Calf_
+_Call_, Synonyms of,
+_Calm_, Synonyms of,
+_Cant_ family
+_Cap(t)_ family
+_Capricious_
+_Care_, Synonyms of,
+_Careful_, Synonyms of,
+_Cart before the horse_,
+_Cas_ family
+"Castaway, The" (Defoe). Comments and assignments on,
+"Causes for the American Spirit of Liberty" (Burke).
+ Comments and assignments on,
+_Cede, ceed, cess_ family
+_Ceive, ceit, cept_ family
+_Celebrate_, Synonyms of, Celibates, Verbal,
+_Censure_
+_Cent_ family
+_Cent_ family
+_Charm_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Charm_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Chant_ family
+_Cheat_, Synonyms of,
+Child. See _How a child becomes acquainted_, etc.
+_Choke_, Synonyms of,
+_Choose_, Synonyms of,
+_Chron_ family
+_Church_
+_Churl_
+_Cid_ family
+_Cide_ family
+_Cigar_
+_Cip_ family
+_Circumstances_
+_Cis(e)_ family
+Classes of words, in general, (also see _Words_);
+ in your own vocabulary,
+Classic words, distinguished from native; in modern English,
+_Clear_
+_Clodhopper_
+_Close_
+_Close the door to_,
+_Coax_, Synonyms of,
+_Cold_
+Coleridge, S. T., Quotation from,
+_Color_, Synonyms of,
+_Combine_, Synonyms of,
+_Comfort_, Synonyms of,
+_Common_
+_Companion_
+_Complain_, Synonyms of,
+_Conchology_
+_Concise_, Synonyms of,
+_Condescend_, Synonyms of,
+_Condition_
+_Confirm_, Synonyms of,
+_Confirmed_, Synonyms of,
+_Confound_
+_Congregate_
+_Connect_, Synonyms of,
+Connotation
+_Constable_
+_Contagious_
+_Continual_, Synonyms of,
+_Continuous, continual_
+_Contract_, Synonyms of,
+_Conversation_
+_Copy_, Synonyms of,
+_Cordiality_
+_Corp(s)_ family
+_Corrode_
+_Corrupt_, Synonyms of,
+_Costly_, Synonyms of,
+_Coterie_, Synonyms of,
+_Counterfeit_
+_Courage_, Synonyms of,
+_Course_ family
+_Coxcomb_
+_Crafty_
+_Crease, cresce, cret, crue_ family
+_Cred, creed_ family
+_Crestfallen_
+_Crisscross_
+_Critical_, Synonyms of,
+_Criticism_
+_Crooked_, Synonyms of,
+_Cross_
+_Cross_, Synonyms of,
+_Crowd_, Synonyms of,
+_Crowsfeet_
+_Crude_
+_Cruel_, Synonyms of,
+_Cry_
+_Cry_, Synonyms of,
+_Cunning_
+_Cur_ family
+_Cure_ family
+_Curious_, Synonyms of,
+_Cut_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Daily_
+_Dainty_, Synonyms of,
+_Daisy_
+_Dandelion_
+_Danger_, Synonyms of,
+_Darken_, Synonyms of,
+_Dead_, Synonyms of,
+_Deadly_, Synonyms of,
+_Death_, Synonyms of,
+_Decay_, Synonyms of,
+_Deceit_, Synonyms of,
+_Deceptive_, Synonyms of,
+_Decorate_, Synonyms of,
+_Decorous_, Synonyms of,
+_Deface_, Synonyms of,
+_Defeat_, Synonyms of,
+_Defect_, Synonyms of,
+Definitions, of words; Dictionary vs. informal;
+ How to look up in a dictionary,
+Defoe, Daniel. See _The Castaway_
+_Degrade_
+_Delay_, Synonyms of,
+_Demean_
+_Democrat_
+_Demon_
+_Demoralize_, Synonyms of,
+_Deny_, Synonyms of,
+_Deportment_, Synonyms of,
+_Deprive_, Synonyms of,
+Description
+_Despise_, Synonyms of,
+_Despondency_, Synonyms of,
+_Destroy_, Synonyms of,
+_Detach_, Synonyms of,
+_Determined_, Synonyms of,
+_Deviate_
+_Devilish_
+_Devout_, Synonyms of,
+_Dexterity_
+_Dic, dict_ family
+Dictionaries, List of; How to use,
+_Die_, Synonyms of,
+_Differ_
+_Difficulty_, Synonyms of,
+_Dign_ family
+_Dilapidated_
+_Dip_, Synonyms of,
+_Dirty_, Synonyms of,
+_Disaster_
+_Discernment_, Synonyms of,
+_Discharge_
+Discords, Verbal
+Discourse, at first hand; adapted to audience,
+_Disease_, Synonyms of,
+_Disgraceful_, Synonyms of,
+_Disgusting_, Synonyms of,
+_Dishonor_, Synonyms of,
+_Disloyal_, Synonyms of,
+_Dispel_, Synonyms of,
+_Dissatisfied_, Synonyms of,
+_Diurnal_
+_Divide_, Synonyms of,
+_Do_, Synonyms of,
+_Doctrine_, Synonyms of,
+_Doom, Doomsday_
+_Dream_, Synonyms of,
+_Dress_, Synonyms of,
+"Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward, The" (Editorial),
+ Comments and assignments,
+_Drink_, Synonyms of,
+_Drip_, Synonyms of,
+_Drunk_, Synonyms of,
+_Dry_, Synonyms of,
+_Duc, duct_ family
+_Dull_
+_Dur(e)_ family
+
+_Early_, Synonyms of,
+_Eat_, Synonyms of,
+Editorial. See _The Drift of Our Rural Population Cityward_
+_Effect_
+_Egregious_
+_Ejaculate_
+_Elicit_, Synonyms of,
+_Embarrass_, Synonyms of,
+_Embrace_
+_Encroach_, Synonyms of,
+_End_, Synonyms of,
+_Enemy_
+_Enemy_, Synonyms of,
+_Engine_
+_Enni_ family
+_Enormity, enormousness_
+_Enough_, Synonyms of,
+_Entice_, Synonyms of,
+_Erase_, Synonyms of,
+_Error_ family
+_Error_, Synonyms of,
+_Estimate_, Synonyms of,
+_Eternal_, Synonyms of,
+_Eu_ family
+_Eugenics_
+_Ex_ family
+_Examination_
+_Example_, Synonyms of,
+_Exceed_, Synonyms of,
+_Exclude_
+_Excuse_, Synonyms of,
+_Expand_, Synonyms of,
+_Expel_, Synonyms of,
+_Experiment_, Synonyms of,
+_Explain_, Synonyms of,
+Explanation (Exposition)
+_Explicit_, Synonyms of,
+_Expression_
+
+_Face_, Synonyms of,
+_Fact_ family
+_Faculty_, Synonyms of,
+_Failing_, Synonyms of,
+_Fair_
+_False_
+_Fame_, Synonyms of,
+Families, Verbal,
+_Famous_, Synonyms of,
+_Fashion_, Synonyms of,
+_Fast_
+_Fast_, Synonyms of,
+_Fasten_ Synonyms of,
+_Fat_, Synonyms of,
+_Fate_, Synonyms of,
+_Fatherly_
+_Fawn_, Synonyms of,
+_Fear_, Synonyms of,
+_Feat, fect, feit_ family
+_Feign_, Synonyms of,
+_Fellow_
+_Feminine_, Synonyms of,
+_Fer_ family
+_Fertile_, Synonyms of,
+_Fic(e)_ family
+_Fiddle_
+_Fiendish_, Synonyms of,
+_Fight_, Synonyms of,
+_Financial_, Synonyms of,
+_Fin(e)_ family
+_Firm_
+_Fit_, Synonyms of,
+_Flag, The_
+_Flame_, Synonyms of,
+_Flat_
+_Flat_, Synonyms of,
+_Flatter_, Synonyms of,
+_Flect, flex_ family
+_Flee_, Synonyms of,
+_Fleeting_, Synonyms of,
+_Flexible_, Synonyms of,
+_Flit_, Synonyms of,
+_Flock_, Synonyms of,
+_Flock together_
+_Flow_, Synonyms of,
+_Flu, fluence, flux_ family
+_Foe_
+_Follow_, Synonyms of,
+_Follower_, Synonyms of,
+_Fond_
+_Fond_, Synonyms of,
+_Force_, Synonyms of,
+_Foretell_, Synonyms of,
+_Fort_ family
+Fossils in modern English, List of,
+_Found_ family
+_Fract, frag_ family
+_Fracture_
+_Frank_, Synonyms of,
+Franklin, Benjamin, and _Spectator Papers_,
+_Fraternal_
+_Free_
+_Free_, Synonyms of
+French and Norman-French words occurring in modern English
+_Freshen_, Synonyms of,
+_Fret_
+_Friendly_
+_Friendly_, Synonyms of,
+_Frighten_, Synonyms of,
+_Frigid_
+_Frown_, Synonyms of,
+_Frugal_, Synonyms of,
+_Frustrate_, Synonyms of,
+_Fug(e)_ family
+_Fuse_ family
+_Fy_ family
+
+_Game_, Synonyms of,
+_Gather_, Synonyms of,
+_Gen_ family
+General facts and ideas with which acquaintance assumed,
+General ideas, as best basis for study of synonyms,
+General vs. specific terms. Also see _Words_
+Genus and species
+_Ger, gest_ family
+Germanic words in modern English
+_Get_, Synonyms of,
+_Get on to_
+"Gettysburg Address" (Lincoln); Comments on,
+_Ghost_
+_Ghost_, Synonyms of,
+_Gift_, Synonyms of,
+_Give_, Synonyms of,
+_Glad_, Synonyms of,
+_Go out of one's way_
+_Good_
+_Good_ family
+_Goodby_
+_Grade_ family
+_Gram_ family
+_Grand_, Synonyms of,
+_Graph_ family
+_Gray hair_
+_Great_
+_Greedy_
+Greek prefixes List of,
+Greek stems, List of,
+Greek words in modern English
+_Greet_, Synonyms of,
+_Gress_ family
+_Grief_, Synonyms of,
+_Grieve_, Synonyms of,
+_Groom_
+_Grudgingly_
+_Guard_, Synonyms of,
+_Guileless_
+
+_Hab_ family
+_Habit_, Synonyms of,
+_Habitation_, Synonyms of,
+_Hale_ family
+_Half-baked_
+_Harass_, Synonyms of,
+_Hard_
+_Harmful_, Synonyms of,
+_Harsh_
+_Haste_, Synonyms of,
+_Hate_, Synonyms of,
+_Hatred_, Synonyms of,
+_Have_, Synonyms of,
+_Hayseed_
+_Head foremost_
+_Headstrong_, Synonyms of,
+_Heal_ family
+_Healthful_, Synonyms of,
+_Heathen_
+_Heavy_, Synonyms of,
+_Height_
+_Help_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Help_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Hesitate_, Synonyms of,
+_Hib_ family
+_Hide_, Synonyms of,
+_High_, Synonyms of,
+_Highstrung_
+_Hinder_ Synonyms of,
+_Hint_, Synonyms of,
+_Hot_ family
+_Hole_, Synonyms of,
+_Holy_, Synonyms of,
+_Home_
+_Homeopath_
+_Homesickness_
+_Hopeful,_ Synonyms of,
+_Hopeless_, Synonyms of,
+_Hose_
+_House_
+How a child becomes acquainted with the complexity of life and language
+_Hug_,
+_Humor_
+_Hussy_
+_Idiot_
+_Idle_
+_Ig_ family
+_Ignorant_, Synonyms of,
+_Imp_
+Imperfectly understood facts and ideas
+_Impolite_, Synonyms of,
+_Importance_, Synonyms of,
+_Imposter_, Synonyms of,
+_Imprison_, Synonyms of,
+_Improper_, Synonyms of,
+_Impure_, Synonyms of,
+_In a minute_
+_Inborn_, Synonyms of,
+_Incense_
+_Incite_, Synonyms of,
+_Incline_, Synonyms of,
+_Inclose_, Synonyms of,
+_Increase_, Synonyms of,
+_Indecent_, Synonyms of,
+_Infantry_
+_Infectious_
+_Ingenious_
+_Inner_
+_Innocent_
+_Innuendo_
+_Insane_, Synonyms of,
+_Insanity_, Synonyms of,
+_Insinuate_
+_Insipid_, Synonyms of,
+_Instances_
+_Instigate_
+_Insult_
+_Intention_, Synonyms of,
+_Internal_
+_Interpose_, Synonyms of,
+_Investigate_
+_Irreligious_, Synonyms of,
+_Irritate_, Synonyms of,
+_It_ family
+"Ivanhoe" (Scott), Quotation from,
+_Ject_ family
+_Join_, Synonyms of,
+_Journey_, Synonyms of,
+_Jud_ family
+_Jump on_
+_Junct_ family
+_Jur, jus_ family
+_Jure_ family
+_Just_
+
+Key-syllables, Variations in form of; Misleading resemblance between;
+ Lists of,
+_Kick_
+_Kill_, Synonyms of,
+_Kind_, Synonyms of,
+_Kindle_, Synonyms of,
+Kinships between words. See _Blood relationships between words;
+ Marriages between words; Words_
+_Knave_
+_Knowledge_
+
+_Lack_, Synonyms of,
+_Lame_, Synonyms of,
+_Large_, Synonyms of,
+_Late_ family
+Latin prefixes, List of,
+Latin stems, List of,
+Latin words in modern English. See _Classic words_
+_Laugh_, Synonyms of,
+_Laughable_, Synonyms of,
+_Lead_, Synonyms of,
+_Lect, leg_ family
+_Lengthen_, Synonyms of,
+_Lessen,_ Synonyms of,
+_Lewd_
+_Liberal_, Synonyms of,
+_Lie_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Lie_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Lig_ family
+_Likeness_, Synonyms of,
+_Limp_, Synonyms of,
+_List_, Synonyms of,
+Literal vs. figurative terms and applications. Also see _Words_
+_Loc, loco, local, locate_ family
+_Locu_ family
+_Log_ family
+_Look_, Synonyms of,
+Loose use of words
+_Loquy_ family
+_Lord_
+_Lose steam_
+_Loud_, Synonyms of,
+_Love_
+_Love_, Synonyms of,
+_Low,_ Synonyms of,
+_Loyal_, Synonyms of,
+_Luc, lum, lus_ family
+_Lude, lus_ family
+_Lunatic_
+_Lurk_, Synonyms of,
+_Lust_
+
+_Make_, Synonyms of,
+_Make one's pile_
+_Man_, as a generic term,
+_Man, manu_ family
+_Mand_ family
+_Manifest_, Synonyms of,
+_Manly_
+_Many_, Synonyms of,
+Many-sided words
+_Margin_, Synonyms of,
+_Marriage_, Synonyms of,
+Marriages between words. Also see _Words_
+_Marshal_
+_Masculine_, Synonyms of,
+_Matinée_
+_Matrimonial_, Synonyms of,
+_Meaning_, Synonyms of,
+_Meet_, Synonyms of,
+_Meeting_, Synonyms of,
+_Melt_, Synonyms of,
+_Memory_, Synonyms of,
+_Mercy_, Synonyms of,
+_Mere, merely_
+_Meter, metri_ family
+Military terms, Familiar
+_Mis(e), mit_ family
+_Misrepresent_, Synonyms of,
+_Mix_, Synonyms of,
+_Mob_ family
+_Model_, Synonyms of,
+_Modern_
+_Mono_ family
+_Mort_ family
+_Mortal_
+_Mortify_
+_Mot(e)_ family
+_Mother_
+_Motive_, Synonyms of,
+_Move_ family
+_Move_, Synonyms of,
+_Mot(e)_ family
+
+_Name_, Synonyms of,
+Narration
+_Nasturtium_
+_Nat(e)_ family
+Native words, distinguished from classic; in modern English,
+_Near_, Synonyms of,
+_Neat_, Synonyms of,
+_Needful_, Synonyms of,
+_Negligence_, Synonyms of,
+_New_, Synonyms of,
+_Nice_, Synonyms of,
+_Nickname_
+_Noble_ family
+_Noise_
+_Noisy_, Synonyms of,
+_Nostalgia_
+_Nostril_
+_Nostrum_
+_Not(e), nor(e)_ family
+_Noticeable_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Objective_
+_Occupation_, Synonyms of,
+_Offspring_
+_Old_, Synonyms of,
+_Ology_ family
+_Omen, ominous_
+Opposites
+_Order_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Order_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Oversight_, Synonyms of,
+_Ox_
+
+_Pacify_, Synonyms of,
+_Pagan_
+Pairs, Three types of; Lists of or assignments in; as Synonyms,
+_Pale_, Synonyms of,
+_Pan_ family
+_Pantaloon_
+"Parable of the Sower"; Comments and assignments on,
+"Parable of the Prodigal Son"; Comments on,
+Parallels
+Paraphrasing
+_Pard_
+_Parlor_
+_Parson_
+_Part_, Synonyms of,
+Parts of Speech, Wrong,
+_Pass, path_ family
+_Pastor_
+_Paternal_
+_Patience_, Synonyms of,
+_Patter_
+_Pay_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Pay_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Ped_ family
+_Pen_
+_Pend, pense_ family
+_Penetrate_, Synonyms of,
+_Perspiration_
+_Pet_ family
+_Petit, petty_ family
+_Petr, peter_ family
+_Phil(e)_ family
+_Phone_ family
+_Pin-money_
+_Pity_, Synonyms of,
+_Place_, Synonyms of,
+_Plain_
+_Plan_, Synonyms of,
+_Playful_, Synonyms of,
+_Plentiful_, Synonyms of,
+_Plic(ate), ply_ family
+_Plunder_, Synonyms of,
+_Pocket handkerchief_
+_Pod_ family
+_Poli_ family
+_Polite_
+_Polite_, Synonyms of,
+_Pond_ family
+_Ponder_
+_Pone, pose_ family
+_Poor_
+_Porcine_
+_Pork_
+_Port_ family
+_Portent, portentous_
+_Poten(t)_ family
+_Poverty_, Synonyms of,
+_Precocious_
+_Prehend_ family
+_Preposterous_
+_Presbyterian_
+_Presently_
+_Pretty_, Synonyms of,
+_Prise_ family
+_Prob_ family
+_Prod up_
+_Profitable_, Synonyms of,
+_Progeny_
+_Prompt_, Synonyms of,
+_Proud_, Synonyms of,
+_Pull_, Synonyms of,
+_Pulse_ family
+_Punish_, Synonyms of,
+_Push_, Synonyms of,
+_Put(e)_ family
+_Puzzle_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Qualm_
+_Quarrel_, Synonyms of,
+_Quean_
+_Queer_, Synonyms of,
+_Quick_
+Quickly, Dame
+_Quiet_
+Quotations from literature, embodying old senses of words
+
+_Raise_, Synonyms of,
+_Rash_, Synonyms of,
+Reading Lists
+_Rebellion_, Synonyms of,
+_Recant_
+_Recover_, Synonyms of,
+_Recrudescence_
+_Reflect_, Synonyms of,
+_Refuse_
+_Regret_, Synonyms of,
+_Relate_, Synonyms of,
+_Relinquish_, Synonyms of,
+_Renounce_, Synonyms of,
+_Replace_, Synonyms of,
+_Reprove_, Synonyms of,
+_Republican_
+_Repulsive_, Synonyms of,
+_Requital_, Synonyms of,
+_Residence_
+_Responsible_, Synonyms of,
+_Reveal_, Synonyms of,
+_Reverence_, Synonyms of,
+_Rich_, Synonyms of,
+_Ridicule_, Synonyms of,
+_Right_
+_Ripe_, Synonyms of,
+_Rise_
+_Rise_, Synonyms of,
+_Rival_
+_Robber_, Synonyms of,
+_Rog, rogate_ family
+_Rogue_, Synonyms of,
+_Rough_
+_Round_, Synonyms of,
+_Routine_
+_Rub_, Synonyms of,
+_Ruminate_
+_Run_, Synonyms of,
+_Rapt_ family
+_Rural_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Sabotage_
+_Sad_, Synonyms of,
+_Sal, sail_ family
+_Salary_
+_Sandwich_
+_Sans_
+_Sarcasm_
+_Satiate_, Synonyms of,
+_Saws_
+_Say_, Synonyms of,
+Scandinavian words in modern English
+_Science, scit(e)_ family
+_Scoff_, Synonyms of,
+Scott, Sir Walter, Quotation from,
+_Scribe, script_ family
+_Secret_, Synonyms of,
+_Sect_ family
+_Secu, sequ_ family
+_Sed_ family
+_See_, Synonyms of,
+_Seep_, Synonyms of,
+_Sell_
+_Sell_, Synonyms of,
+_Sens(e), sent_ family
+_Serious_
+"Seven Ages of Man, The" (Shakespeare); Comments and assignments on,
+_Severe_
+Shakespeare, William. See _The Seven Ages of Man_
+_Shamefaced_
+_Shape_, Synonyms of,
+_Share_, Synonyms of,
+_Sharp_
+_Sharp_, Synonyms of,
+_Shear_ family
+_Shine_, Synonyms of,
+_Shore_ family
+_Shore_, Synonyms of,
+_Shorten_
+_Shorten_, Synonyms of,
+_Show_ (noun), Synonyms of,
+_Show_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Shrink_, Synonyms of,
+_Shun_, Synonyms of,
+_Shy_, Synonyms of,
+_Side_
+_Sid(e)_ family
+_Sidetrack_
+_Sign_ family
+_Sign_, Synonyms of,
+_Silent_, Synonyms of,
+_Silly_
+_Simple_, Synonyms of,
+_Sing_, Synonyms of,
+_Sing another tune_
+_Sinister_
+_Sist_ family
+_Skilful_, Synonyms of,
+_Skin_, Synonyms of,
+_Slander_, Synonyms of,
+Slang
+_Sleep_, Synonyms of,
+_Sleepy_, Synonyms of,
+Slovenliness
+_Slovenly_, Synonyms of,
+_Sly_, Synonyms of,
+_Smell_, Synonyms of,
+_Smile_, Synonyms of,
+_Smoke in one's pipe_
+_Solitary_, Synonyms of,
+_Solve, solu_ family
+_Song_, Synonyms of,
+_Soon_
+Sources for modern English, Variety of,
+_Sour_, Synonyms of,
+_Sow_
+_Speak_, Synonyms of,
+_Spect, spic(e)_ family
+"Spectator Papers, The" (Addison)
+_Speech_, Synonyms of,
+_Spend_, Synonyms of,
+_Spire, spirit_ family
+_Spirit_
+_Spond, spons(e)_ family
+_Spot_, Synonyms of,
+_Spruce_, Synonyms of,
+_Sta, sti_ family
+_Stale_, Synonyms of,
+_Stay_, Synonyms of,
+_Stead_ family
+_Steal_, Synonyms of,
+_Steep_, Synonyms of,
+_Stiff_
+_Stingy_, Synonyms of,
+_Stirrup_
+_Storm_, Synonyms of,
+_Straight_, Synonyms of,
+_Strain, string, strict_ family
+_Strange_, Synonyms of,
+_Strike_, Synonyms of,
+_Strong_
+_Strong_, Synonyms of,
+_Struct, stru(e)_ family
+_Stubborn_, Synonyms of,
+_Stupid_, Synonyms of,
+_Suave_, Synonyms of,
+_Subjective_
+_Succeed_, Synonyms of,
+_Succession_, Synonyms of,
+_Sue_ family
+_Sullen_, Synonyms of,
+_Sult_ family; Superfluous details,
+_Supernatural_, Synonyms of,
+_Suppose_, Synonyms of,
+_Surprise_, Synonyms of,
+_Swearing_, Synonyms of,
+_Sweat_
+_Swine_
+Synonyms, Necessity for; Similar not identical in meaning;
+ List of books of; How to acquire; Analysis of your use of;
+ Progress from the general to the specific;
+ Pertinent rather than comprehensive; Lists of, or assignments in,
+ (also see _Pairs_)
+
+_Tact_ family
+_Tail_ family
+_Tain_ family
+_Take down a notch_
+_Take hold of_
+_Take the hide off_
+_Take umbrage_
+_Talk_ (noun)
+_Talk_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Talkative_, Synonyms of; Tameness,
+_Tang_ family
+_Teach_, Synonyms of,
+_Tear_, Synonyms of,
+Telegrams and night letters
+_Ten, tent_ family
+_Tend, tens, tent, ten_ family
+_Tender_
+Tennyson, Alfred, Quotation from,
+_Tension_
+_Term, termin_ family
+_Ter(re), terra_ family
+_Thank your lucky stars_
+_Thesis, theme_ family
+Thing(s)
+_Thoughtful_, Synonyms of,
+_Throw_, Synonyms of,
+_Throw in the shade_
+_Throw out a remark_
+_Tin_ family
+_Tire_, Synonyms of,
+_Tool_, Synonyms of,
+_Tone_
+Tone, Unity of. See _Discords, Verbal_
+_Tort_ family
+_Track_
+_Tract, tra(i)_ family
+Translation
+_Trifle_, Synonyms of,
+Triteness
+_Trivial_
+_Trust_, Synonyms of,
+_Truth_
+_Try_, Synonyms of,
+_Tum_ family
+_Turb_ family
+_Turn_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Ugly_, Synonyms of,
+_Umpire_
+_Understood_
+_Unsophisticated_
+_Unwilling_, Synonyms of,
+
+_Vade, vasion_ family
+_Vail, vol(e)_ family
+_Vain_
+_Vapid_
+_Veal, veau_
+_Vend_
+_Vene, vent_ family
+_Veracity_
+_Vers(e), vert_ family
+_Vid_ family
+_Villain_
+_Vince, vict_ family
+_Vinegar_
+_Violin_
+_Vir_ family
+_Virile_
+_Virtue_
+_Vis_ family
+_Viv(e)_ family
+_Voc, voke_ family
+Vocabulary, Ready, wide, or accurate; Speaking or writing;
+ Analysis of your own
+_Volve, volute_ family
+_Voluntary_
+_Voracious_
+Vulgar
+
+_Walk_. Synonyms of,
+_Watchful_, Synonyms of,
+Wave (noun), Synonyms of,
+Wave (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Weak_
+_Weak_, Synonyms of,
+_Weariness_, Synonyms of,
+_Wearisome_, Synonyms of,
+_Classes of words, Abstract vs.
+_Wench_
+_Wet_ (adjective), Synonyms of,
+_Wet_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Wheedle_
+Whim,_ Synonyms of,
+Whip, Synonyms of,
+Whole_ family
+_Wicked_, Synonyms of,
+_Wild_
+_Willing_
+_Wind_, Synonyms of,
+_Wind_ (verb), Synonyms of,
+_Winding_, Synonyms of,
+_Wis, wit_ family
+Wisdom
+_Wise_, Synonyms of,
+_Wizard_
+_Wonderful_, Synonyms of,
+Wordiness
+Words, as realities; as instruments; to be learned in various ways;
+ like people; in combination; Individual; to learn first; The past of;
+ Buried meanings of; Poetry of; Dignified and unassuming;
+ Literal, concrete, and specifc; General; Exaggerative; Debased;
+ as celibates; related in blood or by marriage;
+ examined for relationships; related in meaning; often confused;
+ Native and classic; Many-sided; Supplementary list of.
+ Also see _concrete terms, Literal vs. figurative terms,
+ General vs. specific terms, Slang, Vocabulary, Synonyms, Fossils,
+ Loose use of words
+_Work_, synonyms of,
+_Workman_, Synonyms of,
+_Worm in_
+_Write_, Synonyms of,
+Writing as an aid to memory
+_Wrong_
+
+_Yearn_, Synonyms of,
+Young, Synonyms of,
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Century Vocabulary Builder
+by Creever & Bachelor
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CENTURY VOCABULARY BUILDER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10073-8.txt or 10073-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/0/7/10073/
+
+Produced by Stan Goodman, Charles M. Bidwell and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS," WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's
+eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII,
+compressed (zipped), HTML and others.
+
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over
+the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed.
+VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving
+new filenames and etext numbers.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000,
+are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to
+download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular
+search system you may utilize the following addresses and just
+download by the etext year.
+
+ http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext06
+
+ (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99,
+ 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90)
+
+EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are
+filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part
+of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is
+identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single
+digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For
+example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234
+
+or filename 24689 would be found at:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689
+
+An alternative method of locating eBooks:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL
+
+
diff --git a/old/10073-8.zip b/old/10073-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..bde7e8f
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/10073-8.zip
Binary files differ