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Showing posts with label Jeeves. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeeves. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 June 2014

Are You Very Very Sure of This? #4

English: Kaley Cuoco
English: Kaley Cuoco (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
For these few weeks, I’m looking at how writers very often use ‘very’, which is very bad, as you know very well.

Okay; very silly, but you know we all do it: use ‘very’ to modify a verb or an adjective rather than search for something stronger that will say the same thing, but better. So, here are a few examples to make it easier for you to reject the easy option. 
Choose with care; synonyms aren’t always exact matches, so consider context. And bear in mind that, like you, I have my prejudices.

Very capable – skilled, accomplished, dexterous, efficient, masterful, competent, smart, resourceful, Jeeves.
Very roomy – commodious, spacious, expansive, capacious, cavernous, voluminous, vast, Baggy Trousers.
Very hot – fiery, scalding, fervent, white-hot, smouldering, blazing, incandescent, ardent, molten, Kaley Cuoco.
Very wet – dripping, soaked, drenched, saturated, deluged, sopping, waterlogged, swamped, drowned, David Cameron.
Very conventional – conforming, conservative, orthodox, ingrained, unoriginal, traditional, customary, Republican.
Very strong – vigorous, unyielding, lusty, irresistible, omnipotent, powerful, overwhelming, overpowering, Popeye.
Very dirty – filthy, squalid, grimy, befouled, polluted, slovenly, unwashed, mucky, sleazy, soiled, Professional Footballer.
Very stupid – asinine, idiotic, senseless, fatuous, inane, foolish, risible, ludicrous, simple, apish, Religious Extremist.


This is the fourth lot; there’ll be a few more next week.

Sunday, 3 July 2011

Stuart's Daily Word Spot: Foil


Foil: noun - metal hammered or rolled into a thin sheet; also, metallized plastic film; a heraldic representation of a leaf; thin layer of any material, a paring; thin leaf of metal placed under a precious stone to increase its brilliance or under a transparent substance to give it the appearance of a precious stone; a sheet of metal foil, tin amalgam, fixed behind the glass in a mirror to act as the reflector; something or person setting off another by contrast; architecture - small arcs between cusps on a Gothic window or arch.
In literature, foils are characters who react to one another’s quirks; like Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, or Jeeves and Wooster.

‘Shirley wrapped Simon’s sandwiches in aluminium foil to keep them fresh for his trek across the desert.’

‘Ernie Wise acted as a foil for Eric Morecambe’s jokes.’