Do you know??
Another word for a plagiarist is a ‘brain-sucker’; the word’s first recorded appearance in print (in 1781) was in reference to booksellers.
By the way, one of the most interesting fact about book instead giving knowledge is EXPERIENCE !
Who said we only get the experience through what we faced? It was not at all. Despite of tour, hardship and sort of all the other things, we also learn through experience via BOOKs.
Find a suitable books according your emotion and mood ! |
Books are the great cure for certain people. They said that books are the best therapist. Who we are to judge on these people by saying them wrong?
There is an analogy, why some people can cry while reading a novel?
who ever cry over this novel?? |
It is just a book with all those long word and sentences. Also with same plot as the other book sometimes. But why people can cry and angry while reading over one non-living thing (book).
Ask you brain!! Ask your heart!! Keep thinking and you will find out...
Before that, there are 'ilmus' that we wanna share to all of you.. Some rare words..:
UHTCEARE: This highly useful word means ‘lying awake before dawn worrying’. It appears in the Anglo-Saxon poem ‘The Wife’s Lament’, and has recently become more widely known thanks to Mark Forsyth, who includes it in his book The Horologicon.
QUAKE-BUTTOCK: This is another term for a coward, and appears in the plays of seventeenth-century playwrights Beaumont and Fletcher. We reckon it should be revived.
ACCISMUS: A very handy way of referring to ‘the pretended refusal of something one keenly desires’. It dates from 1565, showing that manners have been much the same for the last four or five centuries.
METANOIA: This is the act or process of changing your mind; the word first appeared in English in a 1577 book on rhetoric and style.
QUIDNUNC: A useful word for a gossip, or nosy person. It comes from the Latin for ‘what now?’ because such a person is always trying to find out what the latest news is on something.
THRASONICAL: Next time someone’s being rather boastful in your presence (whether a ‘humble brag’ or otherwise) why not remark on how ‘thrasonical’ they’ve been. They may well think you’re paying them a compliment, but in reality you’re observing just how bloomin’ big-headed they’re being. The adjective ‘thrasonical’ is derived from Thraso, a braggart soldier who appears in a comedy by the Roman playwright Terence.
CUNCTATION: This word refers to the action of putting something off. The seventeenth-century poet Robert Herrick used it in a poem, but we’d wager it has never been in widespread use. However, it’s a rather nicer way of admitting you’re procrastinating or, if you will, merely being lazy, without admitting too much.
LORTHEW: In the Middle Ages, the word ‘lorthew’ was another name for a teacher, but it’s the derivation which many teachers may find particularly apt. The word comes from two Old English words meaning ‘teacher’ and ‘slave’.
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