

Building a Better Vocabulary
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S1 A1 – Five Principles for Learning Vocabulary
29 januari 201533 minToss aside the rote memorization of childhood and explore the cognitive science behind the five core principles of effective vocabulary learning: definition, context, connections, morphology, and semantic chunking. Through interactive examples, see how you can improve your ability to remember the definition of a new word or a long list of familiar terms.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A2 – The Spelling-Meaning Connection
29 januari 201531 minUnlock the English language's powerful morphological system with a concept known as the spelling-meaning connection, and see how our spelling system makes a lot more sense than you may have originally thought. Then, learn how to create a vocabulary notebook that effectively organizes all the words you will learn for best recall.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A3 – Words for Lying, Swindling, and Conniving
29 januari 201530 minBegin building your vocabulary in earnest with this look at wonderful words to describe liars and the lies they tell. Learn trenchant words to describe the cheats, swindlers, charlatans, scam artists, barracudas, sharks, and sharpies, and their hustles, flimflams, and double-dealings. Reveal the nuances of meaning between similar words like specious and spurious.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A4 – Words That Express Annoyance and Disgust
29 januari 201532 minTurn now to annoying people and their irksome, vexing, irritating, nettlesome, and exasperating behavior. Tease apart the differences between words that use the Latin root quir/ques, and those that spring from the word queror. Then, study words that describe excess - from sickly sweet, sappy, and sentimental words to downright offensive and disgusting ones.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A5 – Fighting Words and Peaceful Words
29 januari 201531 minEnglish is replete with lively, hard-hitting words to describe conflict and harmony. Delve into the morphology and etymology of words relating to war and peace, including examining two high-utility Latin roots, bell and pac. Add some pugnacious words to your everyday lexicon, including melee, contumacious, and donnybrook.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A6 – Going beyond Dictionary Meanings
29 januari 201532 minHow can you ensure that new words don't slip from your memory? Professor Flanigan shares effective and fun strategies to reinforce your vocabulary knowledge, including a clever graphic organizer that anchors your new word to words you already know, and a game designed by a leading expert in reading and vocabulary.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A7 – Wicked Words
29 januari 201532 minUse the Latin prefix mal to generate over a dozen rich vocabulary words, all of which concern things that are bad, evil, or done poorly. Then, learn a fun, albeit archaic, term of contempt, and get a firm understanding of the difference between invidious and insidious.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A8 – Words for Beginnings and Endings
29 januari 201532 minGo beyond Latin to learn a word for inexperience that has its roots in Old English. Distinguish between people who are innocent and naive, new to a skill, or pretending to know more than they do. Then, turn to words for endings, and learn why we say "immortal," and not "inmortal."Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A9 – Words Expressing Fear, Love, and Hatred
29 januari 201532 minAgoraphobia. Xenophobia. Claustrophobia. Investigate words that describe fear. Then, using the Greek root phil/phile and the Latin root amor, build words relating to love. Finally, embrace your inner misanthrope with words about hatred, which spring from the Greek verb misein.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A10 – Words for the Everyday and the Elite
29 januari 201530 minWill you be hobnobbing with the hoity-toity gentry or the hoi polloi? Gain even more words to enrich your vocabulary when it comes to describing things that are ho-hum and others that are high class. You'll even learn a useful synonym for trite remarks, hackneyed phrases, and platitudes.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A11 – Words from Gods and Heroes
29 januari 201532 minForge a link between the tales of Greek and Roman gods and heroes and the English vocabulary words they inspired. What is the difference between a herculean task and a Sisyphean one? What Gordian knots do you have in your life? Discover the answers here.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A12 – Humble Words and Prideful Words
29 januari 201534 minBegin with a story about Odysseus and his hubris. Then, explore other words about people who think too much or too little about themselves, including a fascinating word that has a positive connotation when it refers to a voice, but a negative connotation when it refers to speech or writing.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A13 – High-Frequency Greek and Latin Roots
29 januari 201532 minPower up your "morphological radar" and gain the ability to spot Latin and Greek word parts in unfamiliar words, aiding you in uncovering their definitions. Investigate words using the affixes eu-, dis-, in-, pre-, post-, and dys-; then, turn to words that build from the roots man, umbr, tract, and therm.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A14 – Words Relating to Belief and Trust
29 januari 201533 minTurn now to precise and powerful words for facets of trust and belief. Study words that have their roots in the church, but have expanded their reach into other areas of life. Use your knowledge of Greek roots to show the difference in the belief of an apostle (stellein) and an apostate (stenai).Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A15 – Words for the Way We Talk
29 januari 201534 minStudy the fascinating stories behind words that describe how we speak - from the laconic Spartans to the pithy Jedi master to the loquacious ventriloquist. At the end, return to Greece for the story behind a word inspired by the Athenian orator Demosthenes and his opinions about King.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A16 – Words for Praise, Criticism, and Nonsense
29 januari 201532 minContinue your study with a useful word that describes the verbal equivalent of meandering. Then, turn to the Bible for a word derived from the Old Testament prophet, Jeremiah, who prophesied the imminent downfall of the Kingdom of Judah. Finally, discover a word for playful banter that English borrowed from French.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A17 – Eponyms from Literature and History
29 januari 201532 minStep back in time and learn about words inspired by the great men, women, and places of literature and history. English is replete with a host of lively eponyms, such as bloomers, sideburns, and sandwich. Learn about the fascinating people and stories behind eight excellent eponyms.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A18 – Thinking, Teaching, and Learning Words
29 januari 201531 minBegin with a fun psycholinguistic experiment that shows how your brain processes new words. Explore the work of some major scholars of learning and language - Skinner, Watson, Chomsky - and get an exegesis of erudition. Delve into the process of language acquisition, including why a child might say, "I winned the game, Daddy!"Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A19 – Words for the Diligent and the Lazy
29 januari 201532 minFrom polished professionals to slothful slackers,cover a wide range of words to describe work ethic. Dig into the nuances that separate similar words like tenacious and pertinacious. Expand your knowledge of the Latin root fac (to make or do) to include alternate spellings and a useful suffix.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A20 – Words That Break and Words That Join
29 januari 201530 minUsing the Latin roots rupt and junct, create a list of words related to breaking and joining. Discover the fascinating subject of Janus words such as cleave, which means to split apart and to stick close together. Finally, explore a variety of words that describe groups or gatherings of people.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A21 – Some High-Utility Greek and Latin Affixes
29 januari 201529 minAdd some powerful Greek and Latin affixes to your vocabulary notebook. Explore intriguing etymologies for words like abdicate (which originally had nothing to do with royalty) and antediluvian (a word with ties to the Bible that got a new lease on life). Don't absquatulate now, there are more great words to come!Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A22 – Cranky Words and Cool Words
29 januari 201530 minWhat's the difference between someone who is irascible, one who is testy, and another who is dyspeptic? What about the difference between stoic and stolid? Professor Flanigan's stories from his childhood and from pop culture vividly illustrate the new words you'll learn here.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A23 – Words for Courage and Cowardice
29 januari 201532 minYou likely know that the word courage comes from the Latin cor/cord, meaning heart. Explore words for different kinds of courage, including false courage, cheeky courage, and reckless courage. Then study the flip side with words about cowardice. Leap from Latin to Yiddish to Middle French to Old Italian!Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A24 – Reviewing Vocabulary through Literature
29 januari 201533 minTake stock of your accomplishments thus far with a review like no other! You will be able to test your knowledge by relating the words you have learned to some of the most colorful characters in literature, as written by Oscar Wilde, Moliere, James Joyce, J.R.R. Tolkien, and others.Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köpS1 A25 – Words for Killing and Cutting
29 januari 201531 minTurn to dark words to discuss terrible deeds. The Latin word caedo, meaning, "to cut" or "to kill," is at the root of many of these words, such as genocide and homicide. Learn a unique word that refers to both the crime and its perpetrator, then focus on words that stem from the root seg/sect, meaning, "to cut."Kostnadsfri provperiod på The Great Courses Living eller köp