| Sentence |
Clues |
Prediction |
Part of speech |
Real Definition |
My sentence |
| ) In society more and more aware of its manifold cultures and subcultures we have been educated to be familiar and comfortable. |
State of cultures and being educated on them |
Manifold- different cultures |
adj |
Manifold- adj. Marked by diversity or variety. |
Milwaukee is said to be a very manifold city. |
| ) Now others blame affluence, or say it has something to do with permissive upbringing. |
Upbringing |
Affluence- The way of a persons life style |
noun |
Affluence-noun. an abundant flow or supply |
A very wealthy family has a affluence of money flow. |
| ) Now others blame affluence, or say its has something to do with permissive u |
The way of upbringing. Blaming. Npbringing.ot something good |
Permissive- When an adult is careless raising his or her children |
-adj |
Permissive-adj. Granted on sufferance |
In Neeceys lullaby Ruby treated all her children with permissive actions. |
| It of course goes without saying that economic feasibility limit’s the tether of what can or cannot be done for land. |
Limits, economic, what can or cant be done |
Feasibility- Economic structure |
noun |
Feasibility-noun. Capable of being done or carried out. |
The seniors had a large feasibility for a senior prank, knowing they had a graduating class of 700 |
| If of course goes without say that economic feasibility limit’s the tether of what can or cannot be done for land. |
Limits, of what can or cant be done |
Tether- results of something |
noun |
Tether-noun. The limit of one's strength or resources |
When Bill Clinton stepped down from office he lost the tether he once held in office. |
| It didn’t know then what every one knows now about leukemia and various kinds of carcinoma birth defects. |
Birth defects, cancer |
Carcinoma- serious birth defects |
noun |
Carcinoma-noun. a malignant tumor of epithelial origin |
Doctors are trying to find a cure for carcinoma. |
| As I sat on the top of my omnibus , I had a good view of him |
On top, could see then |
Omnibus- High seat view around |
noun |
Omnibus-noun. A usually automotive public vehicle designed to carry a large number of passengers : BUS |
I got stuck behind the omnibus trying to get into my elementary parking lot. |
| Newton traced in them two expressions of a single concept. gravitation: are in that sense his free creation |
concept, his creation, free |
Gravitation- an act that is free for everyone |
Gravitation-noun |
Gravitation-noun. A force manifested by acceleration toward each other of two free material particles or bodies or of radiant-energy quanta |
The cars produced gravitation as they accelerated during the race. |
| Today I hear bilingual educators say that children lose degree of “individuality” by becoming assimilated into public society. |
Educators of some degree. |
Bilingual- Highly educated profession or professionals. |
Bilingual-adj. |
Bilingual-adj. Having or expressed in two languages |
Most language majors bilingual during college. |
| In twenty-three years-an eye blink in our linguistic history-the new little word that evolved from cryptic buss to an automatism. |
Evolved, grew ? |
Linguistic- History in the making |
Linguistic-adj. |
Linguistic-adj. of or relating to language |
In the hmong culture they linguistic the American language. |
| In twenty-three years-an eye blink in our linguistic history-the new little word that evolved from cryptic buss to an automatism. |
Evolved, words |
Cryptic- some little words that are un noticeable at times. |
Cryptic-adj |
Cryptic-adj. Having or seeming to have a hidden or ambiguous meaning |
Polly was cryptic when I told her there was nothing wrong. |
| These inadvertently made beings are caught in twisting web of motive and desire. |
Beings, meaning people. |
Inadvertently- not normal people |
Inadvertently noun |
Inadvertently noun-not focusing the mind on a matter |
Most children with Attention Deficit Disorder inadvertently pay attention in school |
| Mr.Lincoln passing on from this scene to Washington where he was inaugurated , amid armed cavalry, and sharpshooters at every point. |
Amid, armed , sharpshooters |
Inaugurated- In way of harm |
Inaugurated noun |
Inaugurated noun-to induct into an office with suitable ceremonies |
I’m not sure of many presidents with inaugurated these days. |
| However certain implications, always tacitly understood, which gave a more precise meaning to the term. |
understood, more meaning |
Implications- trying to understand something, give more meaning |
Implications- noun |
Implications- noun-the act of implying : the state of being |
Ray gave many implications that he was okay. |
| )However certain implications, always tacitly understood, which gave a more precise meaning to the term. |
a way of understanding |
Tacitly- a rude way of understanding something. |
Tacitly-adj |
Tacitly-adj- expressed or carried on without words or speech |
The tacitly way my mother scolds me rarely last very long. |
| However certain implications, always tacitly understood, which gave a more precise meaning to the term. |
meaning to something. |
Precise- A good meaning to an important topic. |
Precise-adj |
Precise-adj- exactly or sharply defined or stated |
The doctor sounded very precise when he told me only to take my medications once a day. |
| Profit by segregation have become insensitive to the problems of the masses. |
Profit of some sort. |
Insensitive- being unfair about a problem |
Insensitive- adj |
Insensitive- adj. lacking feeling or tact |
My aunt was insensitive about the funeral. |
| This point has been put trenchantly in a fable by Karl Popper |
At a point? |
Trenchantly- Something bad |
Trenchantly-adj |
Trenchantly-adj. Keen or sharp. |
The army has to be trenchantly awake during the war. |
| This point has been put trenchantly in a fable by Karl Popper. |
At a point? |
Fable- sticky situation |
Fable-noun |
Fable-noun. a fictitious narrative or statement |
Many old time stories my grandparents told me were fables. |
| While these results fit well with the prevalence of risky behavior. |
Result of. Fit well with. |
Prevalence- Saw something |
Prevalence-noun |
Prevalence-noun- Powerful or dominate. |
Men were thought to be prevalence to women to earlier years. |
| Three patterns, then, emerge in our misestimates |
Emerge, guess or think |
Misestimates- To give an educated guess. |
Misestimates-prefix- |
Misestimates-prefix- badly : wrongly |
Many children set up for adoption have been Misestimates |
| And all this risk has been seen against a background of mortality from cause of outside human control. |
People doing something inhuman like |
Morality- Someone teaching moals |
Morality-noun |
Morality-noun. a literary or other imaginative work teaching a moral lesson |
Community service teaches you morality of other peoples living conditions. |
| And excise more or less scrupulously and buckle up religiously, I am obsessed with immortality |
On set schedule |
Scrupulously- Doing things at the same time every day. |
Scrupulously-adj |
.Scrupulously-adj. having moral integrity : acting in strict regard for what is considered right or proper |
Most priest have high scrupulously to there god above. |
| The criticisms inductivism are certainly valid and I welcome its dethroning during the past thirty years |
Valid, “de” taking away something |
Dethroning- Taking someone off of royalty |
Dethroning-transitive verb. |
Dethroning-transitive verb. to remove from a throne or place of power or prominence |
I king was beheaded and dethroned. |
| ) Inductivism also depicted science as a heartless, almost inhuman discipline. |
Heartless, inhuman |
Depicted- Brought less worth to mean |
Depicted- transitive verb |
Depicted- transitive verb. to represent by or as if by a picture |
Since I am away at college my mother depicted many pictures to show people what I look like. |