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  1. 4 天前 · Browse the Thesaurus. Make your writing more precise and effective with the Merriam-Webster Thesaurus. Our unique ranking system helps you find the right word fast—from millions of synonyms, similar words, and antonyms. An indispensable English language reference.

  2. You can choose from a basic selection of bullet points at the basic three horizontal lines icon by clicking on the arrow beside it. In some programs, such as Microsoft Word, you can also add other symbols to use as bullet points. Go to “Define new bullet” and select from the options there. You can also copy a bullet symbol • and paste it ...

  3. Similes and metaphors are familiar ways to convey complex ideas through language. These are just two examples of rhetorical devices and there are plenty more where they came from. A figure of speech by which a part is put for the whole (such as fifty sail for fifty ships), the whole for a part (such as society for high society), the species for the genus (such as cutthroat for assassin), the ...

  4. 33 Transition Words and Phrases. 'Besides,' 'furthermore,' 'although,' and other words to help you jump from one idea to the next. Transitional terms give writers the opportunity to prepare readers for a new idea, connecting the previous sentence to the next one. Many transitional words are nearly synonymous: words that broadly indicate that ...

  5. How Strong is Your Vocabulary? Take our 10-question quiz to find out — and maybe learn some new words along the way. You can try it as often as you'd like (we have dozens of different versions). You'll have 10 seconds to answer each question. The faster you answer, the higher your score. The harder the question, the higher your score.

  6. 0:06. Enter. Reveal answer. Twofer Goofers are pairs of rhyming words that form a nonsensical phrase. Use the clue to find the rhyme and solve the puzzle.

  7. The tail wagging the dog is an idiom that usually refers to something important or powerful being controlled by something less so. Its earliest use is in the 1858 play Our American Cousin. The 1997 film Wag the Dog shortened the phrase and added the additional meaning of "superfluous (military) action in order to distract from domestic scandal."

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