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ARE YOU
AT A LOSS FOR WORDS?
Ask yourself these questions:
■ DO YOU ALWAYS USE THE PROPER WORD?
■ DO YOU KNOW HOW TO PRONOUNCE IT?
■ DO YOU KNOW HOW TO AVOID ILLITERATE EXPRESSIONS?
■ DO YOU SPEAK EASILY
AND WITHOUT EMBARRASSMENT?
Word power means success. Tests have proven again and again that people who do not possess large vocabularies are the ones who fail in today's competitive world. Modern life demands verbal knowledge. The person who can say what he means comes out on top in business, in school and in his personal affairs.
WORD POWER MADE EASY will help you to achieve a fluent, powerful and effective vocabulary in three weeks. Utilizing the latest methods of research, it is simple, easy and entertaining to use. Now you can own this new edition of this authoritative book for an exceptionally low price.
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Previews available in: English
Showing 8 featured editions. View all 31 editions?
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1
Word Power Made Easy: The Complete Three-Week Vocabulary Builder
2010-12-15, Wolfenden Press
in English
1446525198 9781446525197
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2
Word Power Made Easy: The complete handbook for building a superior vocabulary
1979, Pocket Books
in English
- Expanded and completely rev. ed.
0671424165 9780671424169
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3 |
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5
Word power made easy: the complete three-week vocabulary builder
1963, Permabooks of Canada
Paperback
in English
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7
Word power made easy: the complete three-week vocabulary builder.
1949, Doubleday
in English
- [1st ed.]
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Book Details
First Sentence
"1 HOW TO TEST YOUR PRESENT VOCABULARY If you are the average adult, your vocabulary is barely one-and-one-half times as large as that of a child of ten. And you know only one fourth as many words as the average college sophomore. But that's the least of it— What is infinitely more significant is that you are now increasing your vocabulary at no more than one one hundredth your rate when you were in the lower grades of elementary school These accusations may sound insulting—but they are not intended to be. They are only an attempt to get you to face the facts about vocabulary development that educational testing has turned up in recent years. Let us examine some of these facts. According to a typical investigation by Professor Robert H. Seashore, chairman of the Department of Psychology of Northwestern University, the average child of ten knows the meanings of 34,300 different terms, and since his sixth year has been learning new words at the rate of 5000 a year. The results of a similar investigation, conducted by Columbia University Professor George W. Hartmann among the students of the Alabama Institute of Technology, show that the average college sophomore has a vocabulary of approximately two hundred thousand words. How do these figures compare with your own? I have obtained data on adult vocabularies by testing hundreds of students in the Adult Education Program of the City College of New York. These data show:..."
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- Created November 8, 2008
- 5 revisions
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May 14, 2025 | Edited by Drini | Merge works |
April 13, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Linked existing covers to the edition. |
December 15, 2009 | Edited by WorkBot | link works |
December 12, 2009 | Edited by 186.84.4.134 | Edited without comment. |
November 8, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from The Laurentian Library MARC record |