Word of the day

Word of the Day : October 9, 2018

ambivalent

adjective am-BIV-uh-lunt
Definition
: having or showing simultaneous and contradictory attitudes or feelings toward something : characterized by ambivalence

Did You Know?
The words ambivalent and ambivalence entered English during the early 20th century in the field of psychology. They came to us through the International Scientific Vocabulary, a set of words common to people of science who speak different languages. The prefix ambi- means “both,” and the -valent and -valence parts ultimately derive from the Latin verb valēre, meaning “to be strong.” Not surprisingly, an ambivalent person is someone who has strong feelings on more than one side of a question or issue.

 

Examples
Bianca was ambivalent about starting her first year away at college—excited for the new opportunities that awaited but sad to leave her friends and family back home.
“A new study from LinkedIn found that many people feel ambivalent in their careers—wondering if they should stay in the same job or take time to invest in learning new skills or even change to a new path altogether.” — Shelcy V. Joseph, Forbes, 3 Sept. 2018

Stranger Things Have Happened, by MwsR/ Poem Share

Drifting in a boat without a paddle

Sitting on a horse without a saddle

Climbing up a mountain without a rope

Wading in a pool without a float

Listening to the music no one can hear

Persevering through trials without you near

Standing on the edge without a grip

Losing lots of weight without one slip

Judging those around you, you do not even know

Teaching others who watch you even without trying to show

Stealing things just to give them away

Leaving something behind just in order to stay

Proposing something, yet taking the lead

Unhealthy alliances, yet you very much needed

Reading something you won’t understand

Writing poetry without using your hand

Tragic end to a beautiful night.

Following your heart, yet lost in spite.