This is dope.
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English is such a wild language.
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Bend and unbend
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Neils Bohr always distinguished his negative intentioned meaning of #10 by qualifying it with ‘very’
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But isn't just sarcasm?
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Nowadays I'd say yes. But my older relatives really did mean to be nice with 'bless his heart'. It was just the nicest thing they could think of to say about some people, lol.
End of conversation
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Adjective opposites are only approximate. Sanction, cleave, enjoin are cleanest examples. (20 years on, still salty that GRE antonym tested def of 'plangent'...)
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Literally.
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“A bottle of fine wine” vs. “Is the wine good?” “It’s fine.”
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