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Word Pieces for Week Five How to Talk about Liars and Lying

Word Pieces for Week Five How to Talk about Liars and Lying. Prefix, Root, Suffix. Meaning. Known Highest To correct, set straight Old Negative prefix Time Negative prefix With, together With, together Verb suffix In In Herd, flock. Notus Summus Corrigo Vetus In- Chronos

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Word Pieces for Week Five How to Talk about Liars and Lying

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  1. Word Pieces for Week FiveHow to Talk about Liars and Lying Prefix, Root, Suffix Meaning Known Highest To correct, set straight Old Negative prefix Time Negative prefix With, together With, together Verb suffix In In Herd, flock • Notus • Summus • Corrigo • Vetus • In- • Chronos • Ana-, a- • Con- • Syn-, sym • -ize • Anti- • En-, em- • Grex, gregis

  2. Word Pieces for Week FiveHow to Talk about Liars and Lying Prefix, Root, Suffix Meaning Out Noun suffix To, toward Negative prefix To know Knowing All Before Negative prefix Apart Noun suffix added to verb Science, study • e-, ex- • -ness • Ad-, ag- • Un- • Scio • Sciens • Omnis • Pre- • Ne- • Se- • -ion • logos

  3. Words Associated with Lying • Notorious – famous, or infamous, for lying; tendency to falsify is well-known • Consummate – great skill • Incorrigible – too far gone to be reformed, impervious to rehabilitation • Inveterate – lying has become a deep-rooted habit • Congenital – lying had very early beginnings, as if from birth • Chronic – over and over • Pathological – an irresistible compulsion to lie, often for no rational reason; lying is a disease • Unconscionable – lack of regret or remorse • Glib – great smoothness • Egregious -viciousness of the lies

  4. General Meaning of These Words • Notorious – well-known for some bad quality, “ a notorious whiner” • Consummate – perfect, highly skilled, “consummate artistry at the keyboard” • Incorrigible – beyond reform, “an incorrigible pessimist” • Inveterate – long-accustomed, deeply habituated, “an inveterate smoker” • Congenital – happening at or during birth, “a congenital deformity” • Chronic – going on for a long time, or occurring again and again – “chronic appendicitis” • Pathological – diseased, “a pathological condition” • Unconscionable –without pangs of conscience, “unconscionable cruelty to children” • Glib – smooth, suspiciously fluent, “a glib witness” • Egregious - outstandingly bad or vicious, “an egregious error”

  5. Notorious • Consummate • Incorrigible • Inveterate • Congenital • Chronic • Pathological • Unconscionable • Glib • egregious • Beyond reform • Continuing over a long period of time; recurring • Diseased • From long-standing habit • Suspiciously smooth • Without conscience or scruples • Outstandingly bad or vicious • Unfavorably known • From birth • Finished, perfect, artistic

  6. Do you people become notorious for good acts? • Is Beethoven considered a consummate musical genius? • If a criminal is truly incorrigible, is there any point in attempting rehabilitation? • Does an inveterate smoker smoke only occasionally? • Is a congenital deformity one that occurs late if life? • Is a chronic invalid ill much of the time? • Is a pathological condition normal and healthy? • If a person commits an unconscionable act of cruelty, is there any regret, remorse, or guilt? • Is a glib talker awkward and hesitant in speech? • Is an egregious error very bad? • NO • YES • NO • NO • NO • YES • NO • NO • NO • YES

  7. Outstandingly vicious; so bad as to be in a class by itself • Starting at birth • Happening over and over again; continuing for a long time • Widely and infavorably known (as for antisocial acts, character weaknesses, immoral or unethical behavior, etc.) • Beyond correction • Smooth and persuasive; unusually, almost suspiciously, fluent • Long addicted to a habit • perfect in the practice of an art; extremely skillful • Unscrupulous; entirely without conscience • Diseased • Egregious • Congenital • Chronic • Notorious • Incorrigible • Glib • Inveterate • Consummate • Unconscionable • Pathological

  8. This person has gambled, day in and day out, for as long as anyone can remember – gambling has become a deep-rooted habit: A ___________ gambler. • Born with a clubfoot: A ____________ deformity. • Someone known the world over for criminal acts: A ____________ criminal. • An invading army kills, maims, and tortures without mercy, compunction, or regret: _____________ acts of cruelty • The suspect answers the detective’s questions easily, fluently, almost too smoothly: _____________ responses • A person reaches the acme of perfection as an actress or actor: A __________________ performer • No one can change someone’s absurdly romantic attitude toward life: An _________________ romantic • A mistake so bad that it defies description: An ___________ blunder • Drunk almost all the time, again and again and again – periods of sobriety are few and very, very far between: A _________________ alcoholic • Doctors find a persistent, dangerous infection in the body: A _______________ condition

  9. Notoriety • To consummate • Consummacy • Incorrigibility • Inveteracy • Genetics • Genealogy • Genesis • Hereditary • gene • State of artistic height • State of begin long established in a habit • Beginning, origin • Science of heredity • Bring to completion; top off • Study of ancestry • Referring to characteristics passed on to offspring by parents • Ill fame • Particle that transmits hereditary characteristics • State of being beyond reform or correction

  10. Does notoriety usually come to perpetrators of mass murders? • Is the product of a consummately skillful counterfeiter likely to be taken as genuine? • Is incorrigibility in a criminal a sign that rehabilitation is possible? • Is a geneticist interested in our parents’ characteristics? • Does inveteracy suggest that a habit is new? • When you consummate a deal, do you back out of it? • Is a veteran actress long experienced at her art? • Do genes determine heredity? • Is a genealogist interested in your family origins? • Is the genesis of something the final point? • Are hereditary characteristics derived from parents? • YES • YES • NO • YES • NO • NO • YES • YES • YES • NO • YES

  11. To complete • Wide and unfavorable reputation • Particle in the chromosome of a cell that transmits a characteristic from parent to offspring • Completion • Inability to be reformed • The science that deals with the transmission of characteristics from parents to children • Referring to a quality or characteristic that is inherited • Beginning or origin • Student of family roots or origins • Height of skill or artistry • Transmitted by heredity • Quality of a habit that has been established over many years • A person long experienced at a profession, art, or business • Pertaining to a study of family origins • Consummate • Notoriety • Gene • Consummation • Incorrigibility • Genetics • Hereditary • Genesis • Genealogist • Consummacy or consummateness • Genetic • Inveteracy or inveterateness • Veteran • genealogical

  12. Bellringer • Chronicity • Anachronism • Incongruity • Chronology • Chronometer • Chronometry • Synchronization • Pathology • Sympathy • Telepathy • something, or state of being, out of place • Timepiece; device that measures time very accurately • Condition of continual or repeated recurrence • Act of occurring, or of causing to occur, at the same time • Calendar of events in order of occurrence • Something, or someone, out of time • Measurement of time • a sharing or understanding of another’s feeling • ESP; communication from a distance • Disease; study of disease

  13. Bellringer • In order of time • Out of place • Lack of feeling • Measurer of time • Study of disease • Feeling of hostility or dislike • To occur, or cause to occur, at the same time or rate • Study of disease • Evoking sorrow or pity • Something out of time • State of recurring again and again • Extrasensory perception • Identification with the feelings of another • Happening at the same time or rate • Calendar of events in time

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