Tuesday, March 4, 2008 (it's the day of the great command!)
Word of the Day
Interrogate (transitive verb) — to question formally; to question systematically
Word in a Sentence: In the fantasy novel Choices Meant for Gods, Chariss gets in trouble for killing a spy after interrogating him, and teases Nigel with the memory. "I think I care, but not enough to get mad and interrogate you over it. If it's something important, you'll tell me what it is." — page 208, Choices Meant for Gods (full context is in yesterday's "A Sappy Scene" post)
Your turn! What formal inquiries can you come up with today? Any good sentences with our vocabulary Word of the Day in them?
"Some days, I just want the dragon to win."
Tags: word of the day, grammar, fantasy novel, Choices Meant for Gods, dragon, interrogate
Word of the Day
Interrogate (transitive verb) — to question formally; to question systematically
Word in a Sentence: In the fantasy novel Choices Meant for Gods, Chariss gets in trouble for killing a spy after interrogating him, and teases Nigel with the memory. "I think I care, but not enough to get mad and interrogate you over it. If it's something important, you'll tell me what it is." — page 208, Choices Meant for Gods (full context is in yesterday's "A Sappy Scene" post)
Your turn! What formal inquiries can you come up with today? Any good sentences with our vocabulary Word of the Day in them?
"Some days, I just want the dragon to win."
Tags: word of the day, grammar, fantasy novel, Choices Meant for Gods, dragon, interrogate
Labels: grammar, interrogate, word of the day
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