0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views3 pages

Vocabulary

The document defines 15 vocabulary words related to meetings, language, agriculture, consumerism, and skills. It provides the definition and an example for each word. The words include gist, adjournment, chair, cognates, phonology, denotation, monoculture, freegan, hard skills, soft skills, upcycling, planned obsolescence, treadmill, and perceived obsolescence. References for the definitions are also included at the end.

Uploaded by

api-705662751
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
41 views3 pages

Vocabulary

The document defines 15 vocabulary words related to meetings, language, agriculture, consumerism, and skills. It provides the definition and an example for each word. The words include gist, adjournment, chair, cognates, phonology, denotation, monoculture, freegan, hard skills, soft skills, upcycling, planned obsolescence, treadmill, and perceived obsolescence. References for the definitions are also included at the end.

Uploaded by

api-705662751
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 3

Lizaidy Ortiz Rodriguez

INGL4021-M03
Prof. Le Compte

Vocabulary words:

1. Gist- The gist is the most important element of information (without the details).
Example: I got the gist of the last meeting.

2. Adjournment- Adjournment is when something ends (it can be a conversation,


meeting, etc)
Example: The class was adjourned at 10:00 a.m.

3. Chair- The person in charge of the meeting or organization is the chair.


Example: Professor Le Compte is the chair of the class.

4. Humane mousetraps- It is a trap that does not kill the mice.


Example: Humane mousetraps are less dangerous compared to the wooden
mousetrap.

5. Cognates- Cognates are words that are similar in different languages.


Example: One example of a cognate is the word Hospital.
-We are going to the Hospital. (English version)
-Vamos para el Hospital. (Spanish version)

6. Phonology- Phonology is the study of the sounds in different languages.


Example: The s in the word “helps” sounds like an s, but the s in the word “crabs”
sounds like a z.

7. Denotation- Denotations are the main meaning of the word.


Example: The denotation of the word “snake” is a reptile with a long body and no
legs.

8. Monoculture- Monoculture is only growing one type of crop or one type of animal
on a farm.
Example: Extensive irrigation for corn monoculture depletes water resources.

9. Freegan- According to the Cambridge Dictionary, freegans are “people who


chooses to eat food that is not bought from a shop, especially food that other
people, shops, or organizations throw away, so that food is not wasted.”
Example: Freegans are people who never pay for food.

10. Hard skills- The things you learned in school or professional environment are
hard skills.
Example: Laboratory skills such as PCR or managing a microscope are hard
skills.

11. Soft skills- The social abilities are soft skills.


Example: Leadership and teamwork are good examples of soft skills.

12. Upcycling- Upcycling can be defined as the process of creating something


new that has more value than the original.
Example: Upcycling is a good solution to help the environment.

13. Planned obsolescence- The term planned obsolescence means that a


product is being made for the dump. That is to say, to be useless as
quickly as possible.
Example: Phones, like iPhones, are created to last a maximum of three
years and then begin to damage.

14. Treadmill- Treadmill is like a cycle of repeated work. It has no positive


effects and no end.
Example: The steps in the treadmill are:
a. Buying a new pair of shoes
b. Go to work
c. Watch an announcement that tells you to buy another pair of
shoes
-REPEAT-

15. Perceived obsolescence- The term perceived obsolescence is used when


consumers are convinced to throw away products that are still perfectly
useful, so they buy another model.
Example: Carlos bought the iPhone 15 because it has a better camera.
References:

Cambridge english dictionary: Definitions & meanings. (n.d.).


https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/

You might also like