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Collection 4: "Love's Vocabulary" by Diane Ackerman

25 words 226 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. intangible
    hard to pin down or identify
    Love is the great intangible.
  2. sedate
    characterized by dignity and propriety
    Frantic and serene, vigilant and calm, wrung-out and fortified, explosive and sedate—love commands a vast army of moods.
  3. skirmish
    a minor short-term fight
    Hoping for victory, limping from the latest skirmish, lovers enter the arena once again.
  4. lofty
    of high moral or intellectual value
    As lofty as the idea of love can be, no image is too profane to help explain it.
  5. profane
    grossly irreverent toward what is held to be sacred
    As lofty as the idea of love can be, no image is too profane to help explain it.
  6. forlorn
    marked by or showing hopelessness
    What a small word we use for an idea so immense and powerful it has altered the flow of history, calmed monsters, kindled works of art, cheered the forlorn, turned tough guys to mush, consoled the enslaved, driven strong women mad, glorified the humble, fueled national scandals, bankrupted robber barons, and made mincemeat of kings.
  7. convey
    serve as a means for expressing something
    How can love’s spaciousness be conveyed in the narrow confines of one syllable?
  8. etymology
    a history of a word
    If we search for the source of the word, we find a history vague and confusing, stretching back to the Sanskrit lubhyati (“he desires”). I’m sure the etymology rambles back much farther than that, to a one-syllable word heavy as a heartbeat.
  9. unassailable
    without flaws or loopholes
    In fact, in some European and South American countries, even murder is forgivable if it was “a crime of passion.” Love, like truth, is the unassailable defense.
  10. ennoble
    confer dignity or honor upon
    We think of love as a positive force that somehow ennobles the one feeling it.
  11. guise
    an artful or simulated semblance
    As with all intoxicants, love comes in many guises and strengths.
  12. piquant
    having an agreeably pungent taste
    It has a mixed bouquet, and may include some piquant ingredients.
  13. monotone
    unvarying in pitch
    Ironically, although we sometimes think of it as the ultimate Oneness, love isn’t monotone or uniform. Like a batik created from many emotional colors, it is a fabric whose pattern and brightness may vary.
  14. increment
    the amount by which something increases
    Since all we have is one word, we talk about love in increments or unwieldy ratios. “How much do you love me?” a child asks.
  15. unwieldy
    difficult to work with or manipulate
    Since all we have is one word, we talk about love in increments or unwieldy ratios. “How much do you love me?” a child asks.
  16. cliche
    a trite or obvious remark
    “Be precise, be individual, and be descriptive. But don’t use any cliches,” I caution them, “or any curse words.”
  17. inhibited
    held back or restrained or prevented
    Part of the reason for this assignment is that it helps them understand how inhibited we are about love.
  18. supple
    readily adaptable
    Without a supple vocabulary, we can’t even talk or think about it directly.
  19. gradation
    relative position in a ranked series
    On the other hand, we have many sharp verbs for the ways in which human beings can hurt one another, dozens of verbs for the subtle gradations of hate.
  20. paltry
    contemptibly small in amount or size
    Our vocabulary of love and lovemaking is so paltry that a poet has to choose among cliches, profanities, or euphemisms.
  21. euphemism
    an inoffensive expression substituted for an offensive one
    Our vocabulary of love and lovemaking is so paltry that a poet has to choose among cliches, profanities, or euphemisms.
  22. abacus
    a manual calculator with counters on rods or in grooves
    Mrs. Browning sent her husband a poetic abacus of love, which in a roundabout way expressed the sum of her feelings.
  23. calibrate
    make fine adjustments for optimal measuring
    Other lovers have tried to calibrate their love in equally ingenious ways.
  24. visceral
    coming from deep inward feelings rather than from reasoning
    People everywhere and everywhen understand the phenomenon of love, just as they understand the appeal of music, finding it deeply meaningful even if they cannot explain exactly what that meaning is, or why they respond viscerally to one composer and not another.
  25. phantasmagoria
    a constantly changing medley of real or imagined images
    Love also has many fashions, some bizarre and (to our taste) shocking, others more familiar, but all are part of a phantasmagoria we know.
Created on Tue May 26 12:03:30 EDT 2020 (updated Thu May 28 12:21:35 EDT 2020)

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