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Anita_a Posted 21 years ago
Vocabulary

Learning new words

demur \dih-MUR\, intransitive verb:
1. To object; to take exception.
2. To delay.
noun:
1. The act of demurring.
2. Objection.
3. Delay.

It had been Letitia's wish, not Thaddeus's, that there
should be a child but, while wondering at the time what it
was going to be like to have a baby about the place, he did
not demur, and soon after Georgina's birth was surprised to
find his feelings quite startlingly transformed.
--William Trevor, [1]Death in Summer

She would ask to see something I had written, and I would
demur, saying that anything I had written was terrible, and
she would persist until I gave in and said, "If you
insist," and later she would proclaim that my work was not
terrible, my work was terrific.
--Rosemary Mahoney, [2]A Likely Story

All the same, she succeeded in exacting from him the
promise that ... he would depart Milan forthwith. Beyle
accepted this condition without demur and left Milan.
--W.G. Sebald, [3]Vertigo (translated by Michael Hulse)

One member of the staff who left his pass at home wrote on
the temporary pass he was given the name 'Heinrich Himmler'
and was admitted without demur.
--Noel Annan, [4]Changing Enemies
_______________________________________________________

Demur comes from Old French demorer, "to linger, to stay,"
from Latin demorari, from de- + morari, "to delay, to loiter,"
from mora, "a delay."
  

Top answer

perfervid \puhr-FUR-vid\, adjective: Ardent; impassioned; marked by exaggerated or overwrought emotion. Good movies evaporate, while the market is flooded with inanity. Critics can't do much to stop this, but when you read perfervid reviews of the latest commercial offerings it's plain that they do little to cool things down.

  • perfervid \puhr-FUR-vid\, adjective: Ardent; impassioned; marked by exaggerated or overwrought emotion.
  • Good movies evaporate, while the market is flooded with inanity.
  • Critics can't do much to stop this, but when you read perfervid reviews of the latest commercial offerings it's plain that they do little to cool things down.
  • --Armond White, "Best Movies, Saddest Culture," [1]New York Press, July 5, 2000 Years ago Philip Roth published a perspicacious essay on the pitfalls of writing satire, the gist of which was that the daily absurdities in our morning newspapers too often outdid even a novelist's most perfervid imaginings.
  • --Mordecai Richler, "Close Encounters of the Fourth Kind," [2]New York Times, April 11, 1999 Or under the button-down exterior of a familiar Westchester suburbanite was there a giant cockroach eager to mud-wrestle a man in black?
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2 Answers
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perfervid \puhr-FUR-vid\, adjective:
Ardent; impassioned; marked by exaggerated or overwrought
emotion.

Good movies evaporate, while the market is flooded with
inanity. Critics can't do much to stop this, but when you
read perfervid reviews of the latest commercial offerings
it's plain that they do little to cool things dow
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I don't think it is wise to post these without crediting the source, Anita-- it may not be wise to post them at all.

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