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beguile
Civility
Decorum
Demeanor
Foolhardy
Glib
Ignoble
Mores
Provicial
Unseemly

2007-09-03 11:28:02 · 4 answers · asked by Rodney I 2 in Education & Reference Words & Wordplay

4 answers

I am not being provincial or glib when I say it is unseemly and foolhardy to ask others to do your homework for you.

You can bequile us with your charm, but your mores and civility are still suspect when you think others should do it for you. It is ignoble to try and fool us.

I know my demeanor is not the best and my decorum could use some work too, but I get upset when people are too lazy to do their own work.

2007-09-03 12:03:57 · answer #1 · answered by ghouly05 7 · 0 0

His unseemingly foolhardy demeanor betrayed his glib attempts to beguile his ignoble compatriots and thus exposed his lack of civility and decorum, making him appear most provincial in the extreme, mores the pity.

2007-09-03 18:38:42 · answer #2 · answered by zorrosblade 2 · 1 0

Don’t BEGUILE me with your CIVILITY or DECORUM. Your DEMEANOR is both FOOLHARDY and GLIB. While I may appear IGNOBLE, my MORES are actually PROVINCIAL in nature. So, your attempt to extract this information from me sir, is indeed most UNSEEMLY.

2007-09-03 18:44:00 · answer #3 · answered by Joker 1 6 · 0 0

Is this your homework? If so, then how do you expect to learn anything if you expect other people to do the work for you? Open up a dictionary, look up each word and then write your own sentences. Your teacher will be able to tell if it is not your own work.

2007-09-03 18:32:14 · answer #4 · answered by Tatsbabe 6 · 3 0

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