• Cosmic Cleric
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    571 year ago

    tendentious

    ten·den·tious /tenˈdenSHəs/ adjective expressing or intending to promote a particular cause or point of view, especially a controversial one. “a tendentious reading of history”

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      Thank you. I’m not too proud to say I didn’t know this word. And, you saved me looking it up. When I was a kid, my dad got tired of defining words for me when I was reading a book, so he taught me to use a dictionary. From then on, I’ve read with a dictionary next to me.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        81 year ago

        Thank you. I’m not too proud to say I didn’t know this word.

        You’re welcome, and yeah I had no idea what that word meant either, its why I looked it up in the first place.

    • @samus12345
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      51 year ago

      New word for me, too. Odd, considering how incredibly relevant it is nowadays!

      • ChiwaWithMujicanoHat
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        41 year ago

        It’s a very common word in other languages (Spanish) but my brain didn’t even process it correctly the first time I saw it in English lol

        • @dasgoat
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          21 year ago

          Very common word in Dutch too, but the Spanish did at one point rule the low countries before we kicked them out, so.

    • Venia Silente
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      41 year ago

      Thanks for taking the time to explain it to others, which I should have done beforehand. Admittedly when I wrote that post I was thinking of the term “tenacious” which means something completely different, and that distracted me from noticing I was using a perhaps obscure word.