0
Tjang Kian Liong Posted 20 years ago
Vocabulary

What is the right word?

My global friends,

Please tell me the right "adjective" that can best describe the following situation, if there is such "adjective".

For example, when I am playing basketball, although my position is not very good, I have intended to jump and shoot the ball into the basket, but at that very moment I see a friend of mine under the basket and he is actually free (unguarded) and he is shouting to me so that I will pass the ball to him. However, at that moment I feel very ................ (please provide the adjective) and I just throw the ball towards the basket and not towards my friend.

I am going to say something like, I am just about to throw the ball towards the basket, or I am just a few fraction of a second to do it and I don't feel nice changing my plan suddenly by throwing the ball towards my friend. How would you discribe that situation?

Sorry, I sound a bit too long. Thank you very much.
  

Top answer

hotheaded, fiery, impetuous, stubborn?

  • hotheaded, fiery, impetuous, stubborn?
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

18 Answers
0
hotheaded, fiery, impetuous, stubborn?
0
I am not very sure, but I tend not to think so. Stubborn tends to be bad. I don't mean to say it is really bad. Another example: the telephone rings, but my hands are full of soap. I say to my sister, "Please answer the phone for me. I am ............. and I will finish washing my hands first."

I begin to believe there is no single word in English that can show this situation. But if any
0
For the phone example you could say "busy", "occupied" or "tied up", but obviously it's not appropriate for the basketball situation.

It's a difficult one!
0
How about just confident. You choose to throw the ball, maybe quite sure that you can make it, instead of passing the ball to your friend.
0
So it's a situation where you feel you should do one thing (pass to your friend, answer the phone) but you do something else instead (shoot for the hoop, wash your hands)? Have I got that right?

I can't think of an English word for that without a negative connotation (selfish?), but you say this is not a negative word you are looking for.

Hmmm...tricky.

contrary? Althoug
0
Is this about the feeling that you need to finish what you've started?
0
What about "you caught me midstream." Right in the middle of something that you have to finish.
0
ZeroxHow about just confident. You choose to throw the ball, maybe quite sure that you can make it, instead of passing the ball to your friend.
Not a bad word, as a matter of fact.
0
Confident would be the best word that fits your description.
0
First, thank you all for trying to help me. To be honest, I have not found the word that I want, I am sorry. By the way, once somebody told me the expression for that situation is "up to", but I am not very sure. The following dialog may show the context better:

Mother: "Sue, come here and bring me a pair of scissors, please."

Sue: "I am sorry, mom. I am writing my homework."

Related Questions