It S Very Cute

It S Very Cute




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It S Very Cute
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When To Use "Charismatic" Vs. "Charming"







The Gory Meaning Behind The Word "Sarcophagus"







3 Tips For Using "Have" vs. "Has" Correctly







Why Dictionary.com Chose This Word To Describe 2020







What Is The Real Difference Between "Empathy" And "Sympathy"?







Did You Know These Phrases Are Actually Repetitive?







Where Does The Phrase "Thoughts And Prayers" Come From?







Why Do We Say "Trick Or Treat" On Halloween?







How Did April Reign Create The Hashtag #OscarsSoWhite?

Screen #1: Have you ever had someone tell you to “find your niche”? [say nich]
Screen #2: A niche is (definition screen format):
[noun] a place or position suitable or appropriate for a person or thing.
[adjective] pertaining to or intended for a market niche; having specific appeal.
Screen #3: But should it actually be pronounced as [nich]? If so, why do so many people say [neesh]?
Screen #4: Niche is borrowed directly from the French. It actually comes from the word nicher meaning “to make a nest.”
Screen #5: Both pronunciations: [nich] and [neesh] are common in American and British English.
Screen #6: The pronunciation of [neesh] preserves the pronunciation of the word in French. While the pronunciation of [ nich ] is more Anglicized—that is, more in line with native English sounds.
Screen #7: Dictionaries generally give [nich] as the typical pronunciation, but the alternative [neesh] may be gaining ground.
Screen #8: Some people may even use both, depending on context.
Screen #9: So what is the correct way to pronounce niche ?
Screen #10: There isn’t one! Pick your favorite or play around with pronunciation.
Screen #11: Sometimes we can have fun with the English language!
1. harmony of or agreement in feeling, as between persons or on the part of one person with respect to another.
2. the fact or power of sharing the feelings of another, especially in sorrow or trouble; fellow feeling, compassion, or commiseration.
Screen 5: In other words, sympathy is when you feel bad for another person … but you don’t know what it is like to be in their shoes.
Screen 6: Empathy entered English a few centuries after sympathy —in the late 1800s.
Screen 7: Psychologists began using empathy as a translation for the German term Einfühlung and the concept that a person could project their own feelings onto an object.
Screen 8: Empathy means (definition screen layout):
the psychological identification with or vicarious experiencing of the feelings, thoughts, or attitudes of another.
Screen 9: In other words, empathy is the ability to imagine oneself in the situation of another, experiencing the emotions, ideas, or opinions of that person.

When To Use "Charismatic" Vs. "Charming"


The Gory Meaning Behind The Word "Sarcophagus"


3 Tips For Using "Have" vs. "Has" Correctly


Why Dictionary.com Chose This Word To Describe 2020


What Is The Real Difference Between "Empathy" And "Sympathy"?


Did You Know These Phrases Are Actually Repetitive?


Where Does The Phrase "Thoughts And Prayers" Come From?


Why Do We Say "Trick Or Treat" On Halloween?


How Did April Reign Create The Hashtag #OscarsSoWhite?

Puppies are undeniably cute , as are toddlers, bunnies, and Baby Yoda. Beyond that, however, cute just doesn’t always cut it. 
An adjective, cute is defined as “ attractive, especially in a dainty way; pleasingly pretty.” It sounds nice enough, and there are certainly cases in which it’s used with the best of intentions. In other cases, however, it’s a patronizing pat on the head or a verbal cop-out. Add an – s y , making cutesy , and it becomes even more condescending. At best, cute is simply overused. 
It’s been used for centuries too, first recorded around 1615–25. Cute is shortened from acute . This loss of an initial unstressed sound (compare ‘ bout and about ) has, well, a cute name: aphesis .
So, what can you say instead of cute ? We, of course, have some ideas . Here are a few. 
If you stop in a cozy, new coffee shop or stay at a picturesque bed and breakfast, instead of telling friends it was cute , you may want to describe it as charming instead. Cute can describe cartoon characters on a bedroom wall, but charming , which means “pleasing or delightful,” sets a more specific scene. It’s also a good word to use when describing people who are particularly pleasant.
First evidence of the word can be found in Middle English around 1250–1300. It stems from the word charm , which means “a power of pleasing or attracting, as through personality or beauty.” Charm is itself derived from the Latin for “song,” carmen . How lovely!
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We often describe a charismatic person as charming . They are confident and magnetic. They tell great stories but know how to listen. We want to be around them and follow them.
But, we would never describe a charming house, outfit, or book, no matter how attractive they are, as charismatic . Let’s break the spell of these two similarly compelling words.
Being charismatic is “having charisma.” Found in English in the 17th century, charisma comes from an ancient Greek root, charis [ kah -ris], meaning “gift” or “favor.” It was historically used in the Christian Bible for “divine grace,” that is, a spiritual power or talent given from God.
In the late 19th century, the German sociologist Max Weber [ vey -bur] likened this Christian charisma to leaders who have some extraordinary quality that gives them influence or authority over others. Martin Luther King Jr., for instance, had such charisma .
By the mid-20th century, charismatic was being used of people, like teachers, politicians, or speakers, who motivate or move us. They have a kind of charm that draws us in.
Which brings us to charming , which, of course, “has charm.” In the 1300s, when charm enters English from French, it referred to a “magic spell.” The word ultimately is from the Latin carmen [ kahr -m uh n], a “song” or “incantation,” which the ancients would chant hoping it would bring various successes in life.
A charming smile or story , then, puts us under its metaphorical spell. This is how charming comes to mean “alluring” more generally, a sense that came about in the 1600s.
So, a charming person isn’t necessarily charismatic. Though we do casually describe someone who is dynamic and likable as charismatic , we tend to reserve charismatic for people who truly inspiring or influential.
And, while a charismatic person is often charming in some way, charming is a nice way of calling not just people but also places and things as “pleasing” or “delightful.”
Unless it’s that charming little house your realtor wants to show you. That means it’s old—and needs a lot of work. Don’t let your charismatic Realestate Agent fool you!
Screen #1: Sarcophagus may be one of those words you learned in a museum or history class and never thought about again.
Screen #2: But the origin of the word sarcophagus is so fittingly odd and gross, we had to share it.
Screen #3: First, a sarcophagus is (definition screen format):
a stone coffin, especially one bearing sculpture, inscriptions, etc., often displayed as a monument.
Screen #4: Remember King Tut? Yup, he was buried in a sarcophagus .
Screen #5: Sarcophagus is pronounced like this: (voice-over saying word).
Screen #6: OK, enough of the basics—let’s explore where this historical word came from.
Screen #7: The word sarcophagus comes from a Greek word meaning “flesh-consuming.”
Screen #8: The Greeks believed there was a kind of stone thought to consume the flesh of corpses, and so it was used for coffins.
Screen #9: So sarcophagus not only describes the coffin but also the stone used for the coffins.
Screen #10: So, for the ancients, not only did the coffins provide a resting place for the dead, they also were thought to eat up the corpses with their flesh-consuming stone.
Screen 1: Do you know how to use have and has correctly?
Screen 2: Have and has are both forms of the verb to have. To have primarily means “to possess, own, hold for use, or contain.” (definition screen layout)
Screen 3: Tip #1: If you’re speaking in the first person, use have.
Screen 4: Have is the conjugation of to have that’s used when:
Screen 5: Tip #2: Has is the conjugation of to have that’s used when:
Screen 6: Tip #3: Have or has can be used with the past participle form of another verb to create the present perfect tense.
Screen 7: So what is the present perfect tense?
Screen 8: The present perfect tense is used to show that the action of the verb was completed previously (not in the present).
Screen 9: The same rules apply as before.
Screen 10: [aha moment signoff from other scripts]


absentee vote, acquit, asymptomatic, Black Lives Matter, conspiracy theory, contact tracing, defund, doomscrolling, flatten the curve, frontliner, furlough, infodemic, Karen, lockdown, PPE, quarantine, social distancing, superspreader, rona, Zoom fatigue, pandemic
The pandemic changed the dictionary …
Dictionary.com saw many trends in 2020 …
and the pandemic shaped them all in some way.
These words were all top searches by you on Dictionary.com this year,
yet the one thing that ties them together is the …
Pandemic is Dictionary.com’s Word of the Year for 2020.
The word pandemic ultimately comes from the Greek pân , “all,” and dêmos , “people”—all people
Without a doubt, the pandemic affected all people, all over the world.
And the many ways the pandemic runs through the events and terms of 2020 …
only reinforced our decision to name pandemic our 2020 Word of the Year.
The pandemic has wreaked social and economic disruption on a historic scale and scope.
All other events for most of 2020, from the protests for racial justice to a heated presidential election, were shaped by the pandemic .
Despite its hardships, the pandemic inspired the best of our humanity: resilience and resourcefulness in the face of struggle.
The pandemic has made us acquire and invent new words to understand the world.
And the team at Dictionary.com will be here alongside you for it all …
continuing to document, explain, and share the words that are helping us make sense of our new reality.
Dictionary.com is passionate about our role in giving you the information you need about changing words—in a changing world.
Screen 1: Where did the seven deadly sins come from … and what do they mean?
Screen 2: Long ago, like really long ago, in the late 6th century, Pope Gregory I first listed the seven deadly sins .
Screen 3: For his list, Pope Gregory drew from the ideas of Evagrius Ponticus, a 4th century Christian monk who identified eight evils humans should resist.
Screen 4: In the 13th century, Christian theologian Thomas Aquinas further wrote about the seven deadly sins , which he called “capital vices.”
Screen 5: Capital comes from the Latin caput , “head.”
Screen 6: As you can tell, he believed the seven deadly sins were the cause of all other offenses.
Screen 7: About a century after Aquinas, capital began to mean “deadly” in English … and that’s how the capital vices became the deadly sins for good.
Screen 8: So what are the seven deadly sins ?
Screen 1: What is the difference between empathy and sympathy ?
Screen 2: Both sympathy and empathy have roots in the Greek term páthos, meaning “suffering, feeling.”
Screen 3: But sympathy is the older of the two terms. It entered English in the mid-1500s.
Well, you’re actually drinking tea tea .
That’s right. Chai already means “tea.”
Of course it was! The whole point of a surprise is that it’s unexpected .
No surprise here: Naan bread is delicious.
But if you order it this way, you’re really asking for bread bread .
As a bonus, we’ll leave you with this.
You really don’t have to say “added bonus.”
A bonus is something that’s already extra!
When tragedies happen, social media fills up with thoughts and prayers .
So, how did this phrase get so popular?
Theories on the history of thoughts and prayers vary,
but it is often traced back to the Columbine High School massacre in 1999.
People felt unable to do anything tangible to take away the pain of the victims’ families and the survivors.
And politicians felt restricted in what they could say because
the tragedy was directly related to the contentious gun debates.
On their own, the words aren’t inherently bad.
Thoughts typically refer to thinking positively for a victim and hoping they recover quickly.
Prayers generally implies that a person will pray for a quick recovery.
Criticism lies in the lack of action that goes along with these words.
If thoughts and prayers truly feels heartfelt to you, then by all means, say that.
But, if there are other ways you can support someone during a trying time, stick to that.
Trick or Treat is the quintessential Halloween greeting …
The custom is believed to have been borrowed from England, Scotland, and Ireland.
They practiced guising or mumming …
… which means performing a song, card trick, or story for a treat.
The routine took hold in the US in the ‘30s,
Some adults were angered by the entitlement of asking for treats.
Rumor has it that in a 1947 Halloween parade,
the Madison Square Boys Club held a banner that read: “American Boys Don’t Beg.”
and we’ve been trick or treating excitedly since the 1950s!
Hi. I’m April Reign, the creator of OscarsSoWhite.
In January of 2015, I was still a practicing attorney, um, and I had no connection whatsoever to the entertainment field, other than the fact that I was a rabid consumer of film. Uh, so the Oscars particularly were like my Super Bowl. There were special snacks involved. I’d rope off the TV so everybody knew this was mommy’s night. I’d watch the pre-show, the show, the after show, the show the next day. Everything about the Oscars I loved.
Uh, so I was… That morning, January 2015, I was watching the nominations on one of the morning television shows, and it just struck me for no particular reason that year because, unfortunately, it happened both before then and since, um, there were no people of color nominated in any of the acting categories. 20 different spots. So I picked up my phone, um, which is typically embedded in my forearm, and got on social media and tweeted, “OscarsSoWhite they asked to touch my hair.” And that was it. I then went on to work, uh, and then when I checked in on Twitter around lunchtime, the hashtag based on that one tweet was then trending internationally.
Um, as I said, this was a very organic campaign, I guess. I wasn’t even planning for it to be a campaign or a movement initially. Uh, I was just thinking out loud. (laughs) Very often, I think out loud on Twitter to share my thoughts, um, with my followers and whoever is interested.
I know generally, having had hashtags go internationally viral both before OscarsSoWhite and since, that hashtags have to be short, um, first and foremost. You know, in January of 2015, we were still relegated to 140 characters, not the 280 that we have now, uh, so every single letter, every single word or phrase matters. Um, and so I knew that OscarsSoWhite was short. I was hoping that it was to the point, (laughs) even though, um, years later, people still pretend at least to misunderstand what my meaning was with that phrase. Um, and I was hoping that it would be memorable. And, in fact, it was. Uh, and so now, um, here we are now in year six of OscarsSoWhite, and people are still using the hashtag. And, in fact, um, the phrase has broadened. You know, now there is a JournalismSoWhite and an EducationSoWhite and even a BrooklynSoWhite, none of which I started, um, I think that goes to show that, um, when you are doing something that makes sense that can be universal, and that’s what you want a hashtag to be, people may take it and riff off of it, um, to make it their own, and then I think that’s great.
Um, so hashtags sh- should be short, they should be to the point, um, they should ensure that your message is getting across in just that one phrase, um, and hopefully they are memorable.
To people who are interested in creating their own viral movements or campaigns, um, you know, I would say you can absolutely start on social media, but don’t stay there. Um, remember that there are people who don’t use social media (laughs), surprisingly enough, uh, so you need to meet people where they are. Hashtags are great for getting a conversation going, and hopefully that conversation will continue, even if you’re not leading it. Um, but you also need to write. You need to speak. Um, i- but if you have an issue that touches your heart, um, something that you feel passionate about, um, something that you want to see changed, absolutely get on social media, regardless of the size of your platform, and start talking about it using that hashtag, and then get your friends, family, and followers involved, um, to help you with your campaign. Good luck.
In some cases, people use cute to describe mischievous or contrary behavior, as in when your 8-year-old shoves straws up his nose in a restaurant, pretending to be a walrus (“Stop trying to be cute!”) or when you’re reprimanding your sassy-mouthed teenager (“Don’t you get cute with me!”). What you might call that behavior instead is cheeky .
Defined as “ impudent; insolent,” cheeky behavior doesn’t usually cross the naughty line, but it gets close. It’s a bit saucy , but not flat-out offensive. Cheeky is also often used to describe humor that pushes boundaries. The word is first recorded around 1855–60, and stems from the word cheek , a
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