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Svetllana [295]
2 years ago
14

which word best completes the sentence? unfortunately, his poor performance yesterday wasn't simply an ____. aspersion, abnegati

on, approbation, aberration, arrogation​
English
1 answer:
vazorg [7]2 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Based on these definitions I searched, I would go with aspersion since the guy's reputation would fall.

Explanation:

aspersion: an attack on the reputation or integrity of someone or something.

abnegation: the act of renouncing or rejecting something.

approbation: approval or praise.

aberration: a departure from what is normal, usual, or expected, typically one that is unwelcome.

arrogation​: to claim or seize without justification

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Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language is one of the most famous dictionaries in history. First published in 1755, the dictionary took just over eight years to compile, required six helpers, and listed 40,000 words. Each word was defined in detail, the definitions illustrated with quotations covering every branch of learning. It was a huge scholarly achievement, a more extensive and complex dictionary than any of its predecessors – the comparable French Dictionnaire had taken 55 years to compile and required the dedication of 40 scholars.

A group of London booksellers first commissioned Johnson’s dictionary, as they hoped that a book of this kind would help stabilize the rules governing the English language. In the preface to the book, Johnson explains how he had found the language to be ‘copious without order, and energetic without rules. In his view, English was in desperate need of some discipline: ‘wherever I turned my view … there was perplexity to be disentangled, and confusion to be regulated’. However, in the process of compiling the dictionary, Johnson recognized that language is impossible to fix because of its constantly changing nature, and that his role was to record the language of the day, rather than to form it.

Johnson details how languages change over time. However much the lexicographer may want to fix or 'embalm' his language, new words, phrases, and pronunciations are constantly appearing, whether brought from abroad by merchants and travelers, extracted from the workrooms of geometricians, and physicians or found in the minds of poets.

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Explanation:

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