Word for same way of thinking

synonyms for way of thinking

  • attitude
  • character
  • mind
  • mindset
  • outlook
  • personality
  • psychology
  • sense
  • understanding
  • IQ
  • brainpower
  • brains
  • cast
  • comprehension
  • disposition
  • headset
  • intellect
  • makeup
  • rationality
  • reasoning
  • routine
  • wit
  • frame of mind
  • intelligence quotient
  • mental age
  • turn of mind
  • attitude
  • desire
  • determination
  • eye
  • feeling
  • judgment
  • mood
  • opinion
  • point of view
  • sentiment
  • view
  • will
  • wish
  • bent
  • conviction
  • disposition
  • fancy
  • humor
  • impulse
  • intention
  • leaning
  • liking
  • notion
  • outlook
  • persuasion
  • pleasure
  • purpose
  • strain
  • temper
  • temperament
  • thoughts
  • tone
  • urge
  • vein
  • attitude
  • ethos
  • mentality
  • psyche
  • behaviorism
  • medicine
  • mind
  • therapy
  • mental make-up
  • mental processes
  • personality study
  • psych
  • science of the mind
  • what makes someone tick
  • where head is at
  • attitude
  • demeanor
  • frame of mind
  • inclination
  • mental state
  • mood
  • perspective
  • philosophy
  • point of view
  • sentiment
  • temperament
  • air
  • approach
  • belief
  • character
  • disposition
  • headset
  • opinion
  • position
  • stance
  • stand
  • standpoint
  • view
  • mental outlook
  • angle
  • attitude
  • opinion
  • orientation
  • outlook
  • perspective
  • position
  • standpoint
  • Anschauung
  • frame of reference
  • optique
  • private opinion
  • slant
  • two cents’ worth
  • attitude
  • medicine
  • therapy
  • behaviorism
  • mental make-up
  • mental processes
  • personality study
  • psych
  • science of the mind
  • where head is at
  • attitude
  • bias
  • feeling
  • idea
  • opinion
  • passion
  • position
  • tendency
  • thought
  • view
  • affect
  • conception
  • conviction
  • disposition
  • emotionalism
  • eye
  • inclination
  • inclining
  • judgment
  • leaning
  • mind
  • partiality
  • penchant
  • persuasion
  • posture
  • predilection
  • propensity
  • romanticism
  • sensibility
  • sentimentality
  • slant
  • softheartedness
  • tenderness
  • affectivity
  • hearts and flowers
  • overemotionalism
  • tender feeling
  • angle
  • attitude
  • eye
  • opinion
  • orientation
  • outlook
  • perspective
  • position
  • slant
  • standpoint
  • viewpoint
  • Anschauung
  • frame of reference
  • optique
  • private opinion
  • two cents’ worth
  • attitude
  • concept
  • consideration
  • feeling
  • impression
  • judgment
  • mind
  • notion
  • opinion
  • point of view
  • sentiment
  • thought
  • conception
  • conviction
  • deduction
  • eye
  • inference
  • persuasion
  • say-so
  • slant
  • twist
  • close-up
  • judgment call
  • two cents’ worth
  • value judgment

On this page you’ll find 226 synonyms, antonyms, and words related to way of thinking, such as: attitude, character, mind, mindset, outlook, and personality.

  • dislike
  • disinclination
  • physicality
        • concrete
        • thing
        • antipathy
        • disbelief
        • disinclination
        • disinterest
        • dislike
        • hate
        • hatred
        • indifference

            Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

            SYNONYM OF THE DAY

            OCTOBER 26, 1985

            WORDS RELATED TO WAY OF THINKING

            • air
            • angle
            • approach
            • belief
            • demeanor
            • disposition
            • frame of mind
            • headset
            • inclination
            • leaning
            • mental state
            • mindset
            • mood
            • notion
            • opinion
            • outlook
            • perspective
            • philosophy
            • point of view
            • position
            • posture
            • predilection
            • reaction
            • school of thought
            • sentiment
            • slant
            • stance
            • stand
            • standpoint
            • temper
            • temperament
            • thinking
            • vantage point
            • view
            • viewpoint
            • way of looking
            • way of thinking
            • where one is at
            • IQ
            • attitude
            • brainpower
            • brains
            • cast
            • character
            • comprehension
            • disposition
            • frame of mind
            • headset
            • intellect
            • intelligence quotient
            • makeup
            • mental age
            • mind
            • mindset
            • outlook
            • personality
            • psychology
            • rationality
            • reasoning
            • routine
            • sense
            • turn of mind
            • understanding
            • way of thinking
            • wit
            • attitude
            • bent
            • conviction
            • desire
            • determination
            • disposition
            • eye
            • fancy
            • feeling
            • humor
            • impulse
            • intention
            • judgment
            • leaning
            • liking
            • mood
            • notion
            • opinion
            • outlook
            • persuasion
            • pleasure
            • point of view
            • purpose
            • sentiment
            • strain
            • temper
            • temperament
            • thoughts
            • tone
            • urge
            • vein
            • view
            • way of thinking
            • will
            • wish
            • air
            • approach
            • attitude
            • belief
            • character
            • demeanor
            • disposition
            • frame of mind
            • headset
            • inclination
            • mental outlook
            • mental state
            • mood
            • opinion
            • perspective
            • philosophy
            • point of view
            • position
            • sentiment
            • stance
            • stand
            • standpoint
            • temperament
            • view
            • way of thinking
            • attitude
            • behaviorism
            • ethos
            • medicine
            • mental make-up
            • mental processes
            • mentality
            • mind
            • personality study
            • psych
            • psyche
            • science of the mind
            • therapy
            • way of thinking
            • what makes someone tick
            • where head is at
            • Anschauung
            • angle
            • attitude
            • frame of reference
            • opinion
            • optique
            • orientation
            • outlook
            • perspective
            • position
            • private opinion
            • slant
            • standpoint
            • two cents’ worth
            • way of thinking

            Roget’s 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

            Is there a word that means «a way of thought»?

            For example, whether someone is interested or not, it is simply how he thinks. Whether someone is confident or not, it is simply how he thinks. So «interest» and «confidence» are simply «ways of thinking».

            I was thinking of the word «mental», however «mental» means «relating to the mind» which is too broad. For example, «tiredness» would be «relating to the mind», but it isn’t a «way of thought».

            What’s another word to mean «a way of thought»?

            RegDwigнt's user avatar

            RegDwigнt

            96.4k39 gold badges305 silver badges399 bronze badges

            asked May 5, 2012 at 4:57

            Pacerier's user avatar

            6

            Would «mindset» fit the bill, or is that too passive a concept?

            answered May 5, 2012 at 14:44

            Jennifer Davis's user avatar

            2

            Perhaps you are looking for:

            Frame of mind: mental attitude or outlook

            answered May 5, 2012 at 5:52

            Jim's user avatar

            JimJim

            33.2k10 gold badges74 silver badges126 bronze badges

            I think you are looking for words like ‘opinion’, ‘perspective’, ‘conception’, ‘assumption’, ‘presumption’, inference’, ‘point-of-view’ etc.

            answered May 5, 2012 at 5:55

            Fr0zenFyr's user avatar

            Fr0zenFyrFr0zenFyr

            2,3192 gold badges17 silver badges22 bronze badges

            Weltanschauung is a germanic word with an English usage that correlates to this. It translates literally to «world view» but, as M-W defines, means «a comprehensive conception or apprehension of the world especially from a specific standpoint.»

            That may be too broad for what you are looking for. You could also try «solipsistic» «characteristic» or «idiosyncratic.»

            answered May 5, 2012 at 13:43

            Jefferson Bailey's user avatar

            The phrase «state of mind» describes what you’re after.

            answered May 5, 2012 at 5:17

            Optimal Cynic's user avatar

            2

            psycho-paths ;-) Just Kidding… I second the suggestion of using idiosyncratic. It suits your specifications considerably well.

            answered May 5, 2012 at 14:35

            Lex Luengas's user avatar

            I think another possibility is “attitude”, but most of the previous answers look good to me.

            answered May 6, 2012 at 3:57

            Lubin's user avatar

            LubinLubin

            1294 bronze badges

            1

            Mentality is defined as: a habitual or characteristic mental attitude that determines how you will interpret and respond to situations; the characteristic attitude of mind or way of thinking of a person or group; cast or turn of mind; a way of thinking; mental inclination or character.

            You can say someone has, for example, a confident mentality or a victim mentality.

            answered May 5, 2012 at 15:04

            JLG's user avatar

            JLGJLG

            23.1k1 gold badge42 silver badges99 bronze badges

            I’ve heard the use of adjective mind before.

            To an Eastern mind, raised on Go, territory is more important than the soldiers used to capture it.

            To those Western minds raised on Chess, protecting the nobles is the most important.

            Community's user avatar

            answered May 5, 2012 at 5:42

            Quasiperfect's user avatar

            image1266751644

            To muse is to ponder or to think, and since the Muses are the source of inspiration for poetry, art, comedy, music, and dance in ancient Greek religion and myth, it might make sense to think of them also as the inspiration for deep thoughts. Except that they aren’t.

            The muse that is the noun meaning “a source of inspiration” or, when capitalized, one of the nine Muses, indeed comes from the Greek name for them, which passed through Latin and French to English.

            But the muse that is the verb meaning “to become absorbed in thought” comes from a different source: the Middle French word muse, meaning “the mouth of an animal” or “snout.” It’s assumed that the facial expression when one is thinking is what connects this word to absorption and reflection, and that the French verb had come to mean “to gape, to stare, to idle, to muse” because of the face one makes when lost in thought.

            Though it may not share etymological roots with the Muses, the verb muse does have a relative in English that connects in a more literal way with their shared past: muzzle.

            image45944258

            When we ponder, we think carefully about something. Another synonym is weigh, as in “to weigh a serious decision”—a word that connects with ponder more literally than you may think. Ponder came to English from a French word with the same meaning, ponderer, but its ultimate root is the Latin word pondus, meaning “weight.”

            Weigh and weight come from Old English and ponder comes from Latin through French, a familiar situation which has left us an embarrassment of riches when it comes to English synonymy.

            Other common words that derive from pondus have to do with things that are hanging, heavy, or a unit of weight itself:

            pendant

            ponderous

            pound

            image1909183583

            Because we cannot see thoughts, the words we use to describe the process of thinking are usually figurative, like the difference in the uses of active in “running to keep active” and “an active imagination.” We often “turn over” an idea. Thoughts can nevertheless be (figuratively) agitating, which gets us to the root of cogitate. Cogitate means “to think carefully and seriously about something,” and it comes from the Latin cogitare (“to think”), itself formed from the combination of ¬co- meaning “together” and agitare meaning “to drive” or “to agitate”—the root of agitate in English and, in this case, another figurative use of language, since it could also mean “to turn over in the mind” in Latin.

            Cogitate became the Latin-based verb synonym for the Old English-derived think, and cogitation the synonym for the noun thought. Here it’s used in the King James Bible:

            Hitherto is the end of the matter. As for me Daniel, my cogitations much troubled me, and my countenance changed in me: but I kept the matter in my heart.

            Other words derived from cogitare have fallen out of active use in English, but they show that this fancy way of saying “to think” was a rich source of vocabulary. These words were entered in Merriam-Webster’s Unabridged edition of 1934:

            cogitable “thinkable”

            cogitabund “deep in thought; thoughtful”

            cogitent “thinking”

            cogitative “given to thought; meditative”

            cogitativity “cognitive power or action”

            image1882664610

            Sometimes we “weigh» thoughts, sometimes we “turn them over,» and other times they give us something to “chew on.» At least that’s what the verb ruminate literally means: it comes from the Latin word ruminari, meaning “to chew the cud,” as in what cows do. Ruminari comes from the Latin word for the cow’s first stomach, rumen, and is also the root of the word for the category of mammals that have 3- or 4-chambered stomachs and two-toed feet, ruminants, which includes cattle, deer, giraffes, goats, and sheep.

            Ruminate has been used as a fancy way to say “to think about” since the Renaissance in the 1500s, at a time when academic and philosophical writing was usually done by people with a strong background in Latin.

            image1402653426

            We distinguish between thoughts and ideas, and, unsurprisingly, there are verbs in English for producing both. The usage of these verbs, however, is extremely imbalanced: think is, of course, a fundamental part of our vocabulary and is very frequently used, but ideate is not.

            You might think that ideate is simply some kind of annoying recent business jargon, but in fact its use in English dates back to the 1600s, when it referred to Platonic philosophy, meaning “to form an idea or conception of.” When referring to an abstract or perfect example of something, we also use a word related to idea, Platonic ideal.

            Another related word is ideation, meaning “the capacity or the act of forming or entertaining ideas.” This word is used in specific contexts, such as in psychological assessments (“suicidal ideation”) and the creative aspect of technical jobs (“software-based ideation,” “digital strategy, ideation, and innovation.”)
            The fact is, ideate means something slightly different from think, since it expresses a clear goal: “to form an idea.” This is a useful distinction in fields like design and information technology:

            “There’s a template for where all the numbers should be,” [Martin] Grann explains. You kind of feel it’s a little bit hard to ideate and to be creative when you have such strong guidelines and direction.”—
            Shaunecy Ferro, Co.Design, 9 October 2014

            This is particularly true for the human-centered design process — empathize, define, ideate, prototype, test — as outlined by the Institute of Design at Stanford, also known as «the d.school»— Amanda Enayati, CNN.com, 19 June 2012

            image536024305

            Smart is an Old English-derived word; intellectual is a Latin-derived word. Like most synonyms, they overlap rather than duplicate meanings. And like most pairs of words with one each from these particular family groups, the one with roots in Old English is the everyday, household word (“knowledgeable”) while the one with Latin roots is more fancy and hifalutin (“chiefly guided by the intellect rather than emotion”). There is a related and arguably fancier word meaning “thinking”: intellection. Intellection means “the act of the intellect” or “exercise of the intellect,” a synonym of thought and reasoning.

            The greater emotional distance of many Latin-derived words in English makes intellection a perfect term for dispassionate analysis, and has been used in theological writing and literary criticism for centuries:

            The severall opinions of philosophers concerning the manner how intellection is wrought or produced.— Thomas Jackson, A treatise containing the originall of vnbeliefe, misbeliefe, or misperswasions concerning the veritie, vnitie, and attributes of the Deitie, 1625

            But time and again in her first two essay collections, Against Interpretation and Styles of Radical Will, she argued for a more sensuous, less intellectual approach to art. It was an irony lost on no one, except perhaps her, that she made those arguments in paragraphs that were marvels of strenuous intellection.— Richard Lacayo, TIME, 10 January 2005

            Outside of these contexts, intellection serves a way of emphasizing thought or thinking in a positive way and contrasting it with the alternative:

            Rather, [the fidget spinner] enables and even encourages the setting of one’s own interests above everyone else’s. It induces solipsism, selfishness, and outright rudeness. It does not, as the Rubik’s Cube does, reward higher-level intellection.— Rebecca Mead, The New Yorker, 12 May 2017

            image1018574763

            The Greek word meaning “to think” or “to perceive” came to English as noesis, meaning “purely intellectual knowledge” or “a process or act of thinking.” The adjective noetic means “of, relating to, or based on the intellect.” Its use in philosophical and psychological writing shows that it is perhaps the most abstract of our “thought” words:

            As such, quantum theory has opened the door to a noetic, mind-based universe. Reality, we would infer, is mind-made.— Deepak Chopra, The Huffington Post, 29 October 2012

            While-out-of-body experiences have the character of a perceptual illusion (albeit a complex and singular one), near-death experiences have all the hallmarks of mystical experience, as William James defines them passivity, ineffability, transience, and a noetic quality.— Oliver Sacks, Musicophilia, 2007

            Noetic is also used in connection with the supernatural: the former astronaut Ed Mitchell founded a center for the study of paranormal phenomena and consciousness called the Institute of Noetic Sciences.

            A more down-to-earth use of the word is as a synonym for “thoughtful” sometimes used for humor:

            Someone recently asked if people actually understand my columns. I don’t understand them sometimes. I attempt to be noetic, but can often come off as verbose and obtuse, if not borderline lugubrious. Until then, I’m doing my best to be compunctious.— Jim Magdefrau, Des Moines Register, 25 October 2017

            image625748559

            Pensive comes from the French verb penser, meaning “to think.” The literal meaning of pensive, therefore, is “thoughtful,” but it came to English with a downcast attitude. Samuel Johnson defined the word this way in 1755:

            Sorrowfully thoughtful; sorrowful; mournfully serious; melancholy

            Shakespeare used pensive in this sense:

            Now, brother of Clarence, how like you our choice,
            That you stand pensive, as half malcontent?— Henry VI, Part III, Act IV, Scene I

            My leisure serves me, pensive daughter, now.
            My lord, we must entreat the time alone.— Romeo and Juliet, Act IV, Scene I

            This melancholy mood continues today in our use of the word: though it can have the more neutral meaning of “musingly or dreamily thoughtful,” it also means “suggestive of sad thoughtfulness.”

            Cerebration

            image1179169193

            The Latin word for brain was borrowed into English whole: cerebrum can refer either to the front part of the brain that is believed to be where thoughts occur or more generally as a synonym of brain itself. Scientists study both conscious and unconscious brain activity, and a technical term based on cerebrum for the latter, “unconscious cerebration,” was coined in the mid-19th century to distinguish it from what we might know of as “thinking.”

            Cerebration (“mental activity,” “thought”) and the verb that derived from it a few years later, cerebrate (“to use the mind,” “to think”) have the technical, medical, and psychological overtones that come from Latin-derived vocabulary in a research field. Consequently, its use is sometimes distinctly technical:

            Such exercise may well increase aerobic capacity, as these investigators have convincingly demonstrated, but does it stimulate cerebration or prevent boredom?— Samuel Vaisrub, JAMA Vol. 243 No. 20, 1980

            And also used in a jocular way as a very formal-sounding synonym for “thought”:

            Although the coining of a neologism is abundantly appealing, I cannot claim the word «feminal» as a product of my own cerebrations.— William Safire, I Stand Corrected, 1984

            Its use can also convey a shade of emotional distance:

            Nolan is now one of the greatest and most inventive movie technicians. He also lists the Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges near the top of the people who influenced him, which signals his taste for cerebration, and can be seen in some of his earlier movies, like Memento and Insomnia. But the most Borgesian quality in Nolan’s work is his cool detachment from the world he describes. — Jonathan Raban, theStranger.com, 17 June 2017

            One impediment to greater usage of cerebration is its similarity to celebration, which can make it easily misunderstood. In fact, much evidence shows clear misspellings: when you read about a “boisterous cerebration,” it should make you stop and think.

            image996164488

            The Latin root word that gave us ratio and rational also gave us ratiocination, pronounced /rat-ee-oh-suh-NAY-shun/ or /rash-ee-oh-suh-NAY-shun/. It means “the process of exact thinking” or “a reasoned train of thought.” In Latin, ratio meant “reason” or “computation,” and the mathematical connotation of this word made it appealing for those describing a machinelike thinking process. Edgar Allan Poe used it to describe his story The Murders in the Rue Morgue, considered the first detective story as we now know them, as “a tale of ratiocination.” Unsurprisingly, the most famous character of the new genre was also the possessor of perhaps the most machinelike brain in fiction, Sherlock Holmes. And ratiocination is a favorite word used to describe him:

            Holmes’s famous ratiocination is now at the service of a man of action.— David Denby, The New Yorker, 4 January 2010

            One of the characters in the Ritchie film remarks that there is a fragility beneath all Holmes’s logic and ratiocination, and it’s true. Mr. Downey’s character is as needy as he is superior.— Charles McGrath, The New York Times, 6 January 2010

            Those cases — and Sherlock Holmes’s ratiocinations — are fated to remain forever untold, mentioned in Dr. Watson’s chronicles but never explained beyond these baroque references, with their nearly comic grotesqueries.— Edward Rothstein, The New York Times, 15 February 2014

            The adjective ratiocinative is occasionally encountered in similar contexts:

            Early in »Sherlock Holmes» — and also again, later on — the famous sleuth demonstrates his ratiocinative powers in a way undreamed of by his creator, Arthur Conan Doyle.— A.O. Scott, The New York Times, 25 December 2009

            The verb ratiocinate is also sometimes seen:

            But we’re here to see Downey ratiocinate his way in and around the movie, and Ritchie indulges him and us.— Ty Burr, The Boston Globe, 25 December 2009

            Ratiocinate is a pretty fancy way of saying “to think,” and usually draws attention to itself as a very technical and logical word. It received an unusual note at its definition in our Unabridged edition of 1934:

            To reason discursively or according to a logical process ; —now usually humorous

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            and its decisions, but I will always be a Ukrainian.

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            Многие дончане думают так же. Можно по-разному относиться к нашей власти и ее решениям,

            но я всегда буду украинцем.

            The

            answers to your question is always that it begins with

            the

            individual-the individual that is convinced that this is

            the way

            to live,

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            Ответы на твой вопрос всегда такие, что это начинается с индивидуума- индивидуума, который убежден, что это является путем жизни,

            и он хочет жить с другими людьми, которые думают так же.

            icon https://st.tr-ex.me/img/material-icons/svg/open_in_new/baseline.svg

            What’s more, now it’s not only our own belief that we are as secure as a company can be,

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            Более того, в настоящее время не только мы сами верим, что мы защищены настолько, насколько это возможно,

            но и ведущая швейцарская компания SGS и ISO думают так же.

            icon https://st.tr-ex.me/img/material-icons/svg/open_in_new/baseline.svg

            Since

            the

            members of a group reach a consensus and rarely encounter those who dispute it,

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            Поскольку члены группы достигают консенсуса и редко сталкиваются с теми, кто спорит с этим,

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            MEDICAL DOCTOR»I’m on

            the same

            team because I think the same way and I see

            the same

            injustice of psychiatry with my patients.

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            ВРАЧ« Я в одной команде с ГКЧП, потому что я думаю точно так же и вижу ту

            же

            несправедливость психиатрии по отношению к моим пациентам».

            icon https://st.tr-ex.me/img/material-icons/svg/open_in_new/baseline.svg

            When she grows up, this fir? To which I have always said, and now I think the same way, that in 35-40 years old,

            the

            fruit tree often ends its age, and

            the

            spruce just gains its beauty.

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            На что я всегда говорил, и сейчас думаю так же, что в 35- 40 лет плодовое дерево

            часто заканчивает свой век, а ель только набирает свою красоту.

            That’s what he wanted her to

            think, 

            the same way he wanted you to

            think

            that he rescued you.

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            Это он хотел, чтобы она

            так

            думала, так же как хотел, чтобы ты думала, что он спас тебя.

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            Евреи и палестинцы не могут думать одинаково.

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            Думаешь, над ним издевались так же?

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            Думаешь, Мелоди чувствует себя так же?

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            On

            the

            set, we were always

            thinking 

            the same way, and this is very valuable!

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            На съемочной площадке мы были вместе и смотрели в одну сторону, а это большая ценность!

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            I just don’t

            think

            I feel the same way about you as you do me.

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            Просто я не думаю, что чувствую к тебе то же, что ты ко мне.

            I have

            the

            impression that many of my colleagues think

            the 

            same way,» Siluanov said.

            He recalled that

            the

            issue of high national debt remains an urgent one despite

            the

            positive measures being taken by

            the

            European Union regarding Greece and

            the

            actions of

            the

            European Central Bank to promote liquidity.

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            Мне показалось, что многие представители государств мыслят в этом же ключе»,- отметил Силуанов и напомнил,

            что проблема высоких уровней госдолгов по-прежнему актуальна, несмотря на положительную оценку мер, предпринятых Европейским союзом в отношении Греции и действий Европейского ЦБ по предоставлению ликвидности.

            At

            the

            opening ceremony on multilingualism in international organizations, held in Geneva in November 1998,

            the

            Secretary-General of

            the

            International Organization of La Francophonie, Mr. Boutro Boutros-Ghali,

            stated that if all States were to speak

            the same

            language, think

            the same way

            and act

            the same way,

            there would be a great risk of a totalitarian system establishing itself on an international scale, because through

            the

            words that are used, a way of

            thinking

            and a vision of

            the

            world are expressed.

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            На церемонии открытия конференции по вопросу о многоязычии в международных организациях, которая проводилась в ноябре 1998 года в Женеве, Генеральный секретарь Международной организации франкоязычных стран г-н Бутрос Бутрос- Гали отмечал, что если бы народы всех государств говорили на одном языке,

            одинаково мыслили и действовали, то существовала бы серьезная угроза возникновения тоталитарной системы международных масштабов, поскольку в словах отражается образ мышления и видение мира.

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            I should be able to

            think the 

            same

            way.

            context icon

            Я должна уметь думать так же как она.

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            English

            Language lets us communicate with each other and share our ideas. Some linguists even suggest that language shapes our knowledge and thought. So, expanding our vocabulary by learning new, interesting words can help us communicate better and have more ideas.

            The average English speaking knows around 12,000 -25,000 words, yet the Oxford English Dictionary contains full entries for 171,476 words in current use. So, most of us are missing out on knowing, using, and enjoying thousands of interesting words.

            Some linguists suggest that if we don’t have a word for a certain, it is almost impossible to understand that concept. Linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf was an early proponent of this idea, suggesting different linguistic systems affected the thoughts and behaviour of language users.

            He studied the language of the Brazilian Piraha people and found that they have no word for quantity. In their language, there is just a word for one, and a word for more than one. This meant that they did not understand the concept of quantity in the same way that we do.

            So, if specific words can help us to understand concepts and broaden our knowledge and understanding of the world, it is worth spending some time learning some new, and interesting words.

            Here are 15 interesting words to get you started on the journey to crafting a more varied and effective vocabulary.

            1. Logophile

            I am assuming that as you are reading this article, you may be something of a logophile or ‘lover of words’. Logophile comes from the Greek ‘logos’ meaning speech and ‘phile’ meaning lover or friend.

            2. Quixotic

            This interesting word is derived from the lead character in Don Quixote written by Miguel de Cervantes. In the novel, Quixote decides to become a knight in order to defend the helpless and destroy the wicked.

            Because of this character, we call someone Quixotic if they are unrealistically optimistic or have a comically chivalrous approach to life.

            Interestingly, the word scrooge was coined in the same way, a scrooge being a mean person and coming from the character Scrooge in Dickens’ A Christmas Carol.

            3. Liminal

            Liminal means on the edge of things or between things. It describes marshy landscapes that are neither really land or sea. However, it can also be used to describe states of consciousness. Dreams often occur in the liminal state between sleeping and waking.

            4. Esoteric

            The word esoteric is used to describe special knowledge that is available only to a select group of people. Belief systems that rely on secret information and practices are often described as esoteric.

            Examples of esoteric doctrines include Masonic Lodges, the Theosophical Society, and the Eleusinian mysteries.

            5. Numinous

            Numinous is a delightful word that means spiritual or supernatural. The word can be applied to anything that is mysterious or surpasses our human understanding.

            6. Epistemology

            Epistemology is the study of knowledge. This branch of philosophy is specifically concerned with the origin, nature, methods, and limits of human knowledge. So, I guess it really describes the process of thinking about thinking.

            7. Schadenfreude

            Though schadenfreude is a lovely sounding word, feeling it is not something to be proud of. Schadenfreude means experiencing pleasure or satisfaction from the trouble, failure or humiliation of others.

            8. Loquacious

            Most of us know someone who is a little loquacious. They talk – a lot! Unfortunately, most of the things they talk about are interesting only to them. This makes them the worst person to get stuck with at a dinner party.

            9. Hubris

            Hubris is a concept that originated in ancient Greece and today describes excessive presumption, exaggerated pride or self-confidence – even arrogance. It’s a shame that such a nice word describes such a horrible personality trait.

            10. Bibliophile

            A Bibliophile is a lover of books. The word comes from the Greek biblion ‘book’ + philos ‘lover or friend’. Bibliophiles have a particular interest in beautiful or rare books and many also collect antiques and first editions.

            11. Eurhythmic

            Eurhythmic means having an aesthetically pleasing rhythm or structure. So, I guess that’s what makes it the perfect name for a band.

            12. Fugacious

            Fugacious means fleeting or transient. It is similar to the even more attractive ephemeral, which means lasting a very short time.

            Many things in life are beautiful but fleeting, the life of a mayfly, the moment the sun goes down on a glorious summer’s day, or the brief time a rainbow decorates the sky. Perhaps it is their fugacious nature that makes these moments so special.

            13. Elysian

            If something is elysian, it is blissful or delightful. The word comes from the Greek “Elysian field,” where the heroic and the virtuous go after death. So, I suppose it is similar to heavenly.

            14. Metanoia

            Metanoia describes a profound, usually spiritual, transformation. This unusual word perfectly describes the process of changing one’s mind, heart, spiritual direction, or way of life in a radical way.

            This seems like a good word to use instead of the overused ‘enlightened’ or ‘spiritual awakening‘.

            15. Lollygag

            Lollygag is my favorite new interesting word. It means to spend time in an aimless or lazy way, to idle about or goof off. So, I guess lollygagging is the perfect way to spend an afternoon.

            So that’s enough interesting words for today. I am off to spend the afternoon lollygagging.

            We’d love to hear your favourite interesting words. Please share them with us in the comments.

            References:

            1. www.collinsdictionary
            2. www.oed.com
            • Author
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            Contributing writer at Learning Mind

            Kirstie Pursey holds a diploma in creative writing from the Open University and works as a writer, blogger, and storyteller. She lives in London with her family of people, dogs, and cats. She is a lover of reading, writing, being in nature, fairy lights, candles, fireside, and afternoon tea.

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