Pocket Posh Word Power: 120 Words to Make You Sound Intelligent

Pocket Posh Word Power: 120 Words to Make You Sound Intelligent

by Wordnik
Pocket Posh Word Power: 120 Words to Make You Sound Intelligent

Pocket Posh Word Power: 120 Words to Make You Sound Intelligent

by Wordnik

eBook

$4.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Adorn your conversations with precise and elegant words such as muliebrity, insouciant, extirpate, and vitiate, all found inside Pocket Posh Word Power: 120 Words to Make You Sound Intelligent.

This Pocket Posh Word Power collection promises a gargantuan vocabulary boost inside an effortlessly portable, ergonomic package that features fun cover embellishments, an elastic band closure, and a convenient lay-flat binding. In addition, each entry provides pronunciation, part of speech, definition, usage in a sentence, and etymology information.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781449408879
Publisher: Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC
Publication date: 05/31/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Wordnik is a place for all the words, and everything known about them. Their goal is to show you as much information as possible, as fast as they can find it, for every word in English, and to give you a place where you can make your own opinions about words known. Traditional dictionaries make you wait until they've found what they consider to be "enough" information about a word before they will show it to you. Wordnik knows you don't want to wait. Before founding Wordnik, Erin McKean edited The New Oxford American Dictionary. She continues to serve as the editor of the language quarterly Verbatim and is the author of multiple books, including That's Amore and the entire Weird and Wonderful Words series. She maintains multiple blogs, including "A Dress a Day" and "Dictionary Evangelist." "Ms. McKean is part of the next wave of top lexicographers who have already or may soon take over guardianship of the nation's language, and who disprove Samuel Johnson's definition of a lexicographer as 'a harmless drudge.'" —The New York Times
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews