I watched Diane Abbott on Question Time last night - it could take a whole thesaurus to describe her Thesaurus day is your opportunity to reintroduce yourself to that best friend of writers, the thesaurus. Whether you’re looking for a new word to spice up your vocabulary, or looking for precisely the right nuance to add to a sentence or phrase, a Thesaurus can be there to help you. While many of us don’t use the great expanse of verbiage that’s available to us, the expanse of language really gives us an amazing ability to express ourselves with beauty and precision. Poets have long used words in their melodious composition of phrases to evoke the most powerful images, knowing that “very happy” is all good and well, but “exultant” brings about an entirely different scene to mind. What makes an author truly expert is knowing how to blend together words and scenes to capture the mind and really bring across the personality of the characters in their stories. When all you can think of is a “brown” pond, it’s so much better to grab that Thesaurus and find that the word Bistre really captures the heart and meaning you’re looking for. Thesaurus day is when we can defenestrate our old vocabulary, and use the new space to help build up something a bit more elegant.
I’m glad you posted that as I was trying to work out what connection @Pudelwagen had made with his post and a thesaurus!
I saw a brown pond once .It was whilst at a camper festival in a little blue room where people who drink a lot might sleep . It is best not to use thes rooms and throw over the fence .
"... When all you can think of is a brown puddle, it’s so much better to grab that Thesaurus and find that the word "Bisto" really captures the heart and meaning you’re looking for ..."