Building a Better Vocabulary

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Lecture 7: Wicked Words


z To remember malcontent, make a connection to a person you know
who is always complaining, and write that person’s name down in
your vocabulary notebook next to the word malcontent.

z A great synonym for a complainer or whiner is a NYHWFKHU. Kvetch
is an Americanism from Yiddish that literally means “to squeeze,
pinch, or press.” Visualize yourself being squeezed or pinched by
the constant complaints of a malcontent.

Malaise (noun)

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z An easy way to remember malaise is by morphological analysis,
that is, breaking the word down by meaning part. We already know
that mal- means “bad.” The second part of the word, aise, is related
to the English word ease. Thus, malaise is the condition of being
“ill at ease.”

z In the newspaper, you may see the phrase “economic malaise,”
referring to an economy that is stagnant or in recession. Such an
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investors may be vaguely ill at ease about the future.

Maladroit (adjective)

Awkward, clumsy, tactless, or bungling.

z Thousands of words have been and continue to be created in our
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words. Maladroit is a perfect example.
ż Someone who is adroit is skilled, agile and clever, or
resourceful. People can be adroit physically, such as dancers,
or adroit in other areas, such as politicians, who might be
clever and resourceful in working the system to further their
own agendas.
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