1 / 14

Going against the grain & Ha-Ha

Going against the grain & Ha-Ha. Week 3. Going Against the Grain. debunk ( dih BUNK). to expose the falseness of Many years ago, Galileo helped to debunk the myth that the world was flat. deleterious (del uh TEER ee us). having a harmful effect; injurious

lauren
Download Presentation

Going against the grain & Ha-Ha

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Going against the grain & Ha-Ha Week 3

  2. Going Against the Grain

  3. debunk (dih BUNK) • to expose the falseness of • Many years ago, Galileo helped to debunk the myth that the world was flat.

  4. deleterious (del uh TEER ee us) • having a harmful effect; injurious • Although it seems unlikely, taking too many vitamins can actually have a deleterious effect on your health.

  5. disingenuous (dis in JEN yoo us) • not straightforward; crafty • Gelman was rather disingenuous; although he seemed to be simply asking about your health, he was really trying to figure out how many days you’d been absent.

  6. disparate (DIS puh rut) • fundamentally distinct or different • All of the many disparate members of the alliance were unable to agree on many things.

  7. fabricated (FAB ruhkait id) • made; concocted in order to deceive • Lars fabricated the story to make it seem as though he was honest and upright when, in fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

  8. recalcitrant (ruh KAL sihtrunt) • defiant of authority; stubborn; not easily managed • Kent was a recalcitrant student who wouldn’t do anything his teachers told him to do.

  9. spurious (SPER ee us) • not genuine; false • The ad for White-O toothpaste made a spurious claim when it said it could whiten your teeth, clean your oven, and wash your car at the same time.

  10. capricious (kuh PREE shus) • impulsive and unpredictable • My capricious purchase of the lime-green dress turned out to be a big mistake; I hated it upon closer inspection.

  11. Ha-Ha

  12. wry (RYE) • dryly humorous, often with a touch of irony • His sense of humor was very wry; in fact, sometimes you couldn’t tell if he was kidding or not.

  13. lampoon (n) or (v) (lam POON) • a broad satirical piece; or to broadly satire • Saturday Night Live is famous for the way it lampoons people in the news.

  14. parody (PAIR uh dee) • an artistic work that imitates the style of another work for comic effect • Saturday Night Live is also famous for its parodies of popular movies.

More Related