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12 Common English Words You’re Probably Using Wrong

12 Common English Words You’re Probably Using Wrong

12 Common English Words You’re Probably Using Wrong
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Sanction
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Cleave
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Restive
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Nonplussed
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Peruse
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Terrific
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Bemused
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Enormity
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Egregious
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Fulsome
© Sergii Gnatiuk/Shutterstock.com
Temper
© Panksvatouny/Shutterstock.com
Awful
© TylorOlsen/Shutterstock.com
12 Common English Words You’re Probably Using Wrong
Sanction
Cleave
Restive
Nonplussed
Peruse
Terrific
Bemused
Enormity
Egregious
Fulsome
Temper
Awful

12 Common English Words You’re Probably Using Wrong

English has earned a reputation for being unusually difficult, and the words on this list help explain why. Over centuries of Old English roots, French influence, shifting pronunciation, and everyday misuse, some familiar words have developed meanings that are confusing, contradictory, or far removed from where they began. A few can even mean two opposite things depending on how they are used.

Linguists often call these contronyms or Janus words, a reference to the two-faced Roman god who looks in opposite directions at once. Because their meanings depend so heavily on context, they can create uncertainty in legal documents, news headlines, instructions, and ordinary conversations.

Most of the time, the surrounding sentence makes the intended meaning clear. Sometimes, however, even context is not enough. Here are 12 English words that may mean the opposite of what you think.

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