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Tabloid
A tabloid is a
newspaper, especially one that's smaller than a traditional daily paper and
focuses on sensational news items.
A tabloid is more likely to
print celebrity gossip or crime stories with large photographs than news about
international issues or the economy, especially on the front page. Tabloids
aren't taken entirely seriously as journalism, although they are very popular
and tend to sell well. The word tabloid originally
meant "small tablet of medicine" in the 1880's. By 1900, it also
meant "a compressed form of anything," including journalism.
Plebeian
In Roman times, the lower
class of people was the plebeian class. Today, if something is plebeian, it is of the common people.
She loves adventurous life and
that’s why, rejected him because of his plebeian taste about life.
When you hear the word plebeian used to describe a form of art or taste, it means that
while something is liked by a lot of people, it may not be of the highest quality
or taste. Both soap operas and reality television shows have been described as
plebeian forms of entertainment. A member of the plebeian class is known as a
pleb, which is pronounced "pleeb."
Manifold
Manifold is a smarty-pants way to say "varied,"
"many," or "multiple." There are many good ansay the
benefits of learning new words are manifold.
Manifold sounds like "many fold," which is what it is
— something with many features, like a wallet with lots of folds so stuffed
with junk that makes you sit funny when it's in your back pocket. As an
adjective, manifold loves to appear in books, like Mrs. Gryce in Edith
Wharton's "The House of Mirth," whose "domestic duties were
manifold." As a noun, a manifold is a pipe
branching into many openings, often found in car engines.
Hone
The verb hone means to
sharpen skills. When you practice shooting baskets every day after school, you
are honing your skills as a basketball player.


Hone, the verb, literally means to sharpen with a hone, a
whetstone used to sharpen cutting tools. Use hone to describe
someone working hard, perfecting or sharpening skills, as in "She is honing her skills as an actress by working in community
theater." Hone, which rhymes with phone, is from the Old English word, han, meaning "stone, rock."
Impresario
An impresario is a
promoter: someone who books, promotes, and organizes shows such as concerts.

Impresario comes from an
Italian word for a businessperson, and in English it especially refers to
someone in the promotion business. In the music business, Bill Graham was a
famous impresario who arranged concerts for huge bands such as The Rolling Stones
and Pink Floyd. An impresario signs a band — or other entertainment — and makes
a deal with the venue. Impresarios then arrange advertising and promotion to
alert fans and arrange for tickets to be sold. Impresarios make shows happen.
e.g.
Some impresarios are exploring
ways to mitigate the impact of business closures in the age of coronavirus
Zibaldone
A zibaldone is an Italian vernacular commonplace book. The
word means "a heap of things" or "miscellany" in Italian.


The earliest such books were
kept by Venetian merchants in the fourteenth century, taking the form of a
small or medium-format paper codex



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