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12 votes
7 answers
4k views

People who frequently travel in planes are called…?

What do you call people who travel in a plane? I know "passenger" is appropriate but that is also true for travelling in taxis, trains, ships, and buses. Also, a passenger suggests someone ...
Mari-Lou A's user avatar
  • 91.9k
0 votes
0 answers
47 views

What is the term for look that asks for thinking? And the question that incites thinking?

Imagine this scenario. Two people are having a conversation in which one is trying to explain something to the other. During the course of conversation, the exponent asks the other person a question ...
EMS's user avatar
  • 339
2 votes
3 answers
445 views

Looking for an opposite for the term 'tunnel vision'

What might be the opposite of tunnel vision? What I mean is instead of seeing only one's direct path, the person is so distracted by the texture of the sidelines, goes so far as to obscure the goal at ...
Samuel DuPont's user avatar
0 votes
2 answers
107 views

Inspiration catalyst? Looking for a term that describes seemingly out of the blue inspiration

I'm looking for a term for a curious situation that I've found myself in a couple of times. A person discusses a new concept/invention. I am a part of that conversation or simply overhear it. I ...
Lamar Latrell's user avatar
3 votes
3 answers
260 views

Is there a word for a person who can recognize valuable items that can be sold for much more than the current price?

We go to thrift stores & yard sales a lot. My 15-year-old has a knack for instantly recognizing items that are very valuable, and she's been doing it since she was 8. She found an original drawing ...
Mona Florowo's user avatar
2 votes
1 answer
390 views

A word to describe a person who loves anything related to celebrities/gossips/trends and is easily affected by them

I'd like to know a word to describe a person who loves celebrities, gossips, trends or anything that is popular and is easily affected by them. She said she had moved to Paris because she loved "...
EPRAIT's user avatar
  • 946
6 votes
2 answers
678 views

"Don't rock the boat" attitude [duplicate]

When someone tends to hesitate to acknowledge a problem and avoid involving trouble even if needed, is it ok to say in a negative nuance that He/She always has a "don't rock the boat" ...
EPRAIT's user avatar
  • 946
1 vote
2 answers
58 views

What do we call an object that is going to be, or is being, or has been consolidated?

What do we call an object that is a member in the action of consolidation? Is "consolidatee" a word? For example, I have two sets of objects that are going to be consolidated into one single ...
MILO's user avatar
  • 113
3 votes
5 answers
278 views

What terms describe humorous acceptance of a compliment?

My wife complimented a chef on his delicate fish cookery last night. Reply: "They're great, these boil-in-the-bag dishes." I complimented a violinist on his performance recently and ...
Anton's user avatar
  • 28.8k
0 votes
2 answers
135 views

What do you call the place that terminates a water channel?

What do you call the place that terminates a water channel, as in the image below? The channel terminates at the concrete wall. What is the name of that? Channel terminator? Channel barrier?
gruszczy's user avatar
  • 299
6 votes
3 answers
939 views

What's the word when someone tries to change the meaning of a statement by using different definitions for specific words?

For example the second amendment in the American constitution "the right of the people to keep and bear Arms" and someone argues that arms here means limbs when it clearly means guns. I ...
Stefan's user avatar
  • 79
2 votes
2 answers
2k views

Is there a word to describe a person who asks for advice when they know what they should do?

I constantly find myself being asked in my life by my friends and family for advice. Often, after listening to the friend or family member's dilemma, I find that the person who is asking for said ...
Musubidachi 's user avatar
1 vote
0 answers
72 views

Instilled - is there a better word or phrase specifically for a child getting their interest/love of something from a parent

I'm looking for something to better evoke the gratitude one might feel towards their parent (or anyone, but parent in this case) for sharing their love of something (music, reading, etc.) in such a ...
CaseyR's user avatar
  • 111
0 votes
1 answer
60 views

What does it mean for something to be "so-called"? [closed]

What does it mean if someone says, This is the so-called [noun] or This is the so-called "[noun]" What is the purpose of the addition of so-called? Are these sentences neutral or has ...
Fraïssé's user avatar
  • 169
2 votes
4 answers
126 views

Looking for a slang term to describe the act of picking valuable minerals from mining tailings

Someone once saw me picking out cashews from a bowl of mixed nuts and said I was [forgotten slang verb here]. I asked what that verb meant and she explained that it was a slang term that miners used ...
Evan Jones's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
36 views

Word for when someone intentionally ignores someone's valid excuse from a punishment and then enforces that punishment anyway?

Is there a word (or legal term) for when someone (usually an authority figure) intentionally does not acknowledge a person's justification from an adverse action, then enforces that adverse action ...
Fatima's user avatar
  • 1
0 votes
1 answer
83 views

Word/expression for the inherent ambiguity or difficulty of defining what constitutes a good outcome

TL;DR: I am in a need of a good, precise word or an expression capturing the notion that a computer science problem P remains open (just) because it is virtually impossible to specify/define what a ...
user35443's user avatar
  • 141
2 votes
4 answers
1k views

Is there an expression for ‘bad news’ when meant literally for negative news we get from the media?

We are checking bad news every day. Should we constantly be informed about all that _______ ? I need an idiom or expression for a context like the above.
Sasan's user avatar
  • 3,462
0 votes
1 answer
306 views

"Agriculture" including only plants and excluding animals

In English, "agriculture" includes the cultivation of both plants and animals for food. In some languages, a cognate such as "agricultura" (in Spanish) may contemplate only plants ...
Felipe G. Nievinski's user avatar
0 votes
0 answers
66 views

Single medical term for "taking a pulse"

I have been searching for a technical/medical term to use in place of "taking a pulse". I see some texts use "palpatory measurements" in place of the colloquial "taking a ...
r2d2's user avatar
  • 5
1 vote
1 answer
63 views

Trying to help but ending up causing more harm than good [duplicate]

I'm writing a paper on Romeo and Juliet and how Frair Lawrence and the Nurse are to blame for Romeo and Juliet's deaths and I'm looking for a word. I've looked at other posts but I just see the same ...
anna's user avatar
  • 11
7 votes
2 answers
2k views

Word(s) to describe persons that leave a company and have a lot of information in their heads that is lost [duplicate]

What would you call the situation/a person with a lot of knowledge about a company that leaves the company, and the information is no longer available because the person left? I'd like to use the word(...
v_i_m's user avatar
  • 119
2 votes
2 answers
540 views

What's the nuances when using "modicum"? Can I say "a modicum of coffee"?

I came across this word modicum, which seems a fancy way of saying a little bit. What's the nuances when using it? Can I say "a modicum of coffee"? -- I usually order latte with tiny amount ...
Til's user avatar
  • 131
0 votes
4 answers
80 views

Effect called when humans overvalue one good event after series of Bad events and Overexaggeration one single bad event after series of Good events

What is the effect called on humans when When you have seen series of bad events happen to you, and then the next tend to overvalue an negligible good thing happening as a gratitude or grand success ...
AMN's user avatar
  • 3,102
1 vote
1 answer
101 views

Reason, Discourse and Language

Reason (as in the cognitive skill, human property, logic latu sensu, thought) is translated in Greek as Λόγος. But Λογος is also the ability and the skill of persons to speak, write and word their ...
George Ntoulos's user avatar
0 votes
1 answer
67 views

How do we say we are not using a template?

What is the opposite of using a template for something? For example: Should I use a template for this or am I free to follow my own format? I would like to put it more eloquently/elegantly. Thank ...
GileBrt's user avatar
  • 580
4 votes
2 answers
831 views

What is the word for words that are 'two sides of the same coin'?

What is the word for words that are 'two sides of the same coin' as they are not always opposites... such as heads and tails. Complement? An example would be ball and strike in baseball. They are the ...
Randy Zeitman's user avatar
9 votes
8 answers
6k views

Is there an alternative term for "boyfriend" when talking about an elderly man? [duplicate]

An acquaintance of mine referred to her mother, aged 95, as having a "boyfriend", aged 104, in their assisted living facility. I find this word in this context inappropriate. I don't know ...
ab2's user avatar
  • 26.3k
-1 votes
2 answers
281 views

Is there a more British way to talk about tackling problems?

I can see that the Cambridge Dictionary is at least aware of the use of tackle meaning "come to grips with a problem" and I can see that the Sunday Times has used it on occasion. It still ...
lly's user avatar
  • 10.3k
2 votes
3 answers
533 views

A word, gesture or expression for a confident "shrug"

I am trying to look for a word, gesture or expression that represents a state of confident not knowing. So far I am using a shrug for this but when used often it starts to come off as very apathetic ...
FrontEnd's user avatar
  • 1,093

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