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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

univocal

[ yoo-niv-uh-kuhl, yoo-nuh-voh- ]

adjective

having only one meaning; unambiguous.

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More about univocal

Like its cousin equivocal, univocal derives from the Latin 措單 meaning voice. Whereas the prefix equi- means equal, uni- means one. Univocal dates to 153545.

how is univocal used?

When then-Fox News chief Roger Ailes was presented with allegations of sexual harassment first in a bombshell lawsuit, later in published reports his response was univocal: Deny, deny, deny.

Erik Wemple, "Harvey Weinstein's puzzling legal threat against the New York Times," Washington Post, October 6, 2017

For any given element–event, character, development–is never simply univocal or one-sided but generally has two or more valences: it is serious and ironic, pathos-charged and parodic, apocalyptic and farcical, critical and self-critical.

Dominick LaCapra, History, Politics, and the Novel, 1987
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penumbra

[ pi-nuhm-bruh ]

noun

a shadowy, indefinite, or marginal area.

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More about penumbra

The noun penumbra is composed of the Latin adverb paene almost and the Latin noun umbra s堯硃餃棗滄. Paene is not usual in Latin compounds, the most frequent being paeninsula (paeneinsula) peninsula and paenultimus (梯襲紳喝梭喧勳鳥喝莽) almost last, second last,” especially the second last syllable (penultimate is often misused in English to mean ultimate, last). Penumbra (paenumbra) does not occur in Classical or Medieval Latin; it is a New Latin coinage by the German mathematician and astronomer Johann Kepler (1571-1630). Penumbra entered English in the 17th century.

how is penumbra used?

… I couldn’t figure out why I was hearing it in the penumbra of an old-growth floodplain forest in South Carolina, a forest that once stretched as far north as Upper Virginia and as far west as East Texas.

Rosalind Bentley, "Among the Majestic Trees in Congaree, Slipping Into Silence," New York Times, July 16, 2018

It’s a daring move, an attempt to trace the penumbra of abuse across a shattered psyche.

Ron Charles, "Roddy Doyle was determined to write a novel that shocked--and succeeded," Washington Post, October 17, 2017
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51勛圖 of the day

ghosting

[ goh-sting ]

noun

Informal. a. the practice of suddenly ending all contact with a person without explanation, especially in a romantic relationship: He was a victim of ghosting. b. Also called French goodbye, Irish goodbye. the act of leaving a social event or engagement suddenly without saying goodbye: Ghosting might be the best option if we want to get home before midnight.

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More about ghosting

The dating sense of ghosting is first recorded in 200510. Its possibly linked to the expression get ghost to leave immediately, which gained popularity in 1990s hip-hop.

how is ghosting used?

In the case of ghosting, a lack of accountability has brought out the worst in humanity, but applying behavioral science to UX design could be the key to unlocking the solution and with it the next billion dollar idea, paving the way for a new era of ghost-free online dating.

Jack Rogers, "Ghosting -- Dating's Billion Dollar Problem?" Forbes, August 28, 2018

Among younger generations, ghosting has almost become a new vocabulary in which no response is a response, says Amanda Bradford, CEO and founder of The League, a dating app. Now, that same behavior is happening in the job market, says Bradford, whos experienced it with engineering candidates who ghosted her company.

Chip Cutter, "People are 'ghosting' at work, and it's driving companies crazy," LinkedIn, June 23, 2018
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