Make Your Point > Archived Issues > ARMCHAIR
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I bet you could list some feisty terms for people who offer their opinion when no one asked for it.
Since 1809 or so, we've used the word "armchair" in English to mean "totally without experience or knowledge, and offered as if seated in a cozy armchair."
Part of speech:
Pick the adjective "armchair" when you want to dismiss someone's comments or suggestions as totally lacking in authority. In two quick syllables, it conveys all the sauciness of words like "uninformed," "ignorant," "uneducated," and "unqualified." And it's much easier to say, spell, and understand than the more colorful synonym "ultracrepidarian" (which also means "offering comments or opinions outside the realm of your own expertise").
"I will attempt to discover human 'truths' without any laboratory work, clinical trials or data collection. I will be, in the great tradition of 16th-century scientists, an Armchair Expert."
Explain the meaning of "armchair," the adjective, without saying "unqualified" or "amateur."
Fill in the blanks: "(Some app, website, book, show, game, or other thing) appeals to the armchair (type of person) in me."
Try to spend 20 seconds or more on the game below. Don’t skip straight to the review—first, let your working memory empty out.
1.
Opposites of ARMCHAIR, the adjective, could be
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