I want your drama, the touch of your hand, Gaga sings. So continue being whiny and demanding of people’s attention because you’re doing what the word told you to.
![another word for content as a noun another word for content as a noun](https://d65im9osfb1r5.cloudfront.net/thesaurus.net/cognitive-content.png)
Well, modern drama queens, now you know that your random unexpected events are just as dramatic as the minor problems you choose to exaggerate. “Exaggerating the importance of something minor” is not really the same thing as an “unexpected event”. It sounds worse than it is, but that’s because drama took a turn for the worse when the informal meaning took over. I had my share of marital/suburban/girly drama in the last year. I wonder what they called their drama queens then? Back in 16th century Greece, it meant to do, or act. I don’t mean “acting” drama, I mean the petty, attention-seeking situations that people who are bored with their lives try to cultivate to seem more interesting, or to fabricate to make other people miserable. Lady Gaga is a good example of drama, huh? I hate to admit that Lady Gaga inspired my blog’s revival post… but in my defense, it was an a Capella version of her song Bad Romance. Other frequentative word pairs are: prate/prattle, nest/nestle, crack/crackle… know any more fun ones? So it seems everyone before the ’30s was sparkling in… jewels and metals? We need to go back to that and ban the glitter! On a side note: glitter was invented in 1934 (possible follow-up post feels likely). This would make sense why I was confused that the spark definition was almost like sparkle, except lacking the “flashes of light.” I wonder why I didn’t learn about this in college… Sparkle goes back to Middle English, where it was used as a form of spark (an Old English word). The thought creeps me out.Įnglish words like sparkle, that are a diminutive or frequentative (a word that indicates repeated action) of another word, aren’t really being made anymore, they’re not productive.
#Another word for content as a noun skin#
At one time in my life, I thought it was a great idea to roll glitter onto my skin to sparkle for hours on end.
![another word for content as a noun another word for content as a noun](https://img-cdn.tnwcdn.com/image?fit=1200%2C1200&height=1200&url=https%3A%2F%2Fcdn0.tnwcdn.com%2Fwp-content%2Fblogs.dir%2F1%2Ffiles%2F2020%2F05%2Fai-generator-dictioanry-words.png)
![another word for content as a noun another word for content as a noun](https://englishgrammarhere.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/Another-word-for-Unique-What-is-another-synonym-word-for-Unique-1280x720.png)
And sometimes the glitter falls off and doesn’t want to leave my skin. As a big fan of all things Disney princess, I have to accept that some of those things come with glitter.