Zanimljive i nesvakidašnje engleske reči – eleutheromania

Eleutheromania

eleutheromania

noun – A great desire for or obsession with freedom.

Eleutheromania means to have an extreme desire for or obsession with freedom. The word also refers to a mania or frantic passion for freedom. An individual having such a mania is known as eleutheromaniac.

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Internet sleng – šta zapravo znači i kako je nastao LOL

Laughing out loud, Verbalisti_
LOL
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A. int. Originally and chiefly in the language of electronic communications: ‘ha ha!’; used to draw attention to a joke or humorous statement, or to express amusement.

B. n. An instance of the written interjection ‘LOL’.

In 2011, the internet slang term “LOL” (laughing out loud) has been added to the Oxford English Dictionary. When the Oxford English Dictionary traced the origins of the acronym, they discovered 1980s computer fanatics were responsible. The oldest written records of “LOL” (used to mean laughing out loud) are in the archives of Usenet, an early internet discussion forum.

Many mistake “LOL” for “lots of love”, leading to some unintended “LOLs”, such as the infamous tale of the mother who wrote: “Your grandmother has just passed away. LOL.”

Love it or loathe it, “lol” is now a legitimate word in our lexicon.

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Engleski kroz zabavu – dreamt

“Dreamt” je jedina engleska reč koja se završava sa “mt”

Dreamt is the only English word that ends in the letters mt

dream

drēm/
verb
past tense: dreamt; past participle: dreamt
  1. experience dreams during sleep.
    “I dreamed about her last night”
    synonyms: daydream, be in a trance, be lost in thought, be preoccupied, be abstracted, stare into space, muse, be in la-la land More

    “she’s always dreaming”
    • see, hear, or feel (something) in a dream.
      “maybe you dreamed it”
      synonyms: have a dream, have a nightmare More

      “she dreamed about her own funeral”
    • indulge in daydreams or fantasies, typically about something greatly desired.
      “she had dreamed of a trip to Italy”
      synonyms: fantasize about, daydream about; More

      wish for, hope for, long for, yearn for, hanker after, set one’s heart on;
      aspire to, aim for, set one’s sights on
      “I dreamt of making the Olympic team”
    • waste one’s time in a lazy, unproductive way.
  2. contemplate the possibility of doing something or that something might be the case.
    “I wouldn’t dream of foisting myself on you”
    synonyms: think, consider, contemplate, conceive

    “I wouldn’t dream of being late”

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite funny and/or ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Engleske reči koje se vraćaju u modu – fanboy i fangirl

Fangirls

fanboy/fangirl

noun – A passionate fan of various elements of geek culture (e.g. sci-fi, comics, Star Wars, video games, anime, hobbits, etc.), but who lets his passion override social graces.

Example: At the mall I almost got mowed over by some Star Wars fanboy on his skateboard.

If your love of Sherlock, Doctor Who, or, indeed, any cultural phenomenon crosses the borderline between admiration and fanaticism, then chances are you’ve been labelled a fanboy or fangirl. They are simple compounds from the words fan and boy or girl, but predate Benedict Cumberbatch and Matt Smith by some decades – indeed, you could have been a fanboy back when Sherlock Holmes was originally still being published, since the OED currently dates fanboy’s first appearance in print to 1919 (the original Sherlock Holmes stories were published between 1887 and 1927). Fangirl wasn’t too far behind, in 1934. At the moment the OED doesn’t include verbal uses of these words, but the Oxford Corpus suggests these are growing in popularity.
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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Retke ili neobične reči u engleskom jeziku – cataglottism

Retke reci u engleskom jeziku - cataglottism_

cataglottism

pronunciation | ‘kat-a-“glot-iz-m

noun – kissing using the tongue, French kissing. Sometimes implies force. Derives from Greek cato (down) and glotta/glossa (tongue). ‘Cataglottism’ is a rarely used, and is one of those weird English words.

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Nesvakidašnje i nove engleske reči – clinomania

Clinomaniac, FunVOCAB by Verbalisticlinomania

noun – an obsession with bed rest; an excessive and irrational desire to stay in bed

ClinomaniacClinomania comes from Greek meaning the obsession of sleeping. Clinomania is also known as dysania.

There are numerous illnesses, diseases and disorders that can lead to tiredness, but clinomania is different. Clinomania is much more serious than not wanting to get out of bed on a cold day or on the Monday following a weekend of partying, yet it is not related to any disease or illness. People who suffer from clinomania often stay in bed all day, sometimes for several days at a time, often missing work and other social and family obligations.

There doesn’t appear to be a wealth of information available online about clinomania yet. In fact, it isn’t even mentioned in the online Merriam-Webster dictionary we often refer to.

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Omiljene reči u engleskom jeziku čuvenog lingviste Dejvida Kristala – blogorrhea

Blogeri

Britanac Dejvid Kristal (David Crystal), jedan od najpoznatijih lingvista u svetu, govori o svojim omiljenim rečima u engleskom.

omijljene engleske reci blogorrheablogorrhea

noun
1. To write a blog entry just for the sake of posting an entry, not because you have done anything interesting today.
I couldn’t really think of anthing good to blog about, so my last post was real blogorrhea.
2. A blog characterized by excessive commenting on irrelevant facts. We say that the blogger suffers from uncontrollable verbal discharge or blogorrhea.
This guy’s blog is full of useless crap. It is like his brain just burst with projectile blogorrhea.
3. Writing a blog while highly intoxicated. Therefore, spilling your guts, all your secrets, and naming all the people you hate in the world.
Last night I had blogorrhea after I got home from the bar. When I woke up in the morning I realized it was too late, it had been read and could not be taken back.

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!

Rečnik zanimljivih engleskih reči – wheedle

Engleski recnik - Definition of wheedle in Englishwheedle
Pronunciation: /ˈwiːd(ə)l/

verb 
-dled, -dling. 

1. to try to influence (a person) by flattering or beguiling words or acts; cajole.
2. to persuade (a person) by such words or acts: She wheedled him into going with her.
3. to obtain (something) by artful persuasions: I wheedled a new car out of my father.
4. to use beguiling or artful persuasions.

Other example citations:
use endearments or flattery to persuade someone to do something or give one something: she wheedled her way on to the guest list [with object]:she had wheedled us into employing her brother

Derivatives
noun – wheedler
adverbwheedlingly

Origin:
Mid 17th century: perhaps from German wedeln ‘cringe, fawn’, from Wedel ‘tail, fan’

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Language is alive and forever changing. Approximately 25,000 new words are introduced into English on an annual basis. In the spirit of teaching you vocabulary skills in an entertaining way and to keep you with a finger on the linguistic pulse, the language network Verbalisti brings favourite ‘new’ words and expressions to the language in our FunVOCAB. Click here and enjoy!