small words
English
Noun
- language that is easy to understand
- 1853, James Spencer Cannon, Lectures on Pastoral Theology, Charles Scribner, page 152:
- Wisely did the translators of our English Bible use small words, which impart a beauty and force to innumerable passages in their excellent version.
- 1982, William Hammond, Leadership Education III, Air Force Junior ROTC, Air University, page 4:
- Use small words. You probably wouldn't like to have to use your dictionary to read this book. Your readers won't want to use a dictionary either; so, use words which describe your thoughts and are easily understood by the reader.
- 1997, Irene Lober, Promoting Your School: A Public Relations Handbook, R&L Education, →ISBN, page 89:
- Use words that clearly convey your thoughts. Use small words where you can; do not try to use large words to impress people. Remember that your audience wants to understand what you are saying, so make it easy for them.
- 2017, David Debord, Neptune's Key: A Tattered Sails Novel, Tattered Sails, →ISBN, page 49:
- Fine, but you might want to use small words so Blackwood can keep up.
- 2020, Roderick P. Hart, Trump and Us: What He Says and Why People Listen, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 30:
- What does it mean to be incapable of rephrasing a thought, of turning it around in one's mind in fresh ways? What does it mean to use small words almost exclusively (“We're going to have very, very strong vetting. I call it extreme vetting, and we're going very strong on security”)? It means that people can understand you, that they do not become lost in the fog.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see small, words.
Antonyms
- (antonym(s) of “language that is easy to understand”): big words, large words
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