Make Your Point > Archived Issues > EXTEMPORANEOUS
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Oooh, extemporaneous. It takes a long time to say. And it means "done without any preparation time." It's related to other words about time, as well as weather, like tempo, temporary, contemporary, tempest, temperature, and of course, time, all of which trace back to the Latin tempus, meaning "time, or season."
"Extemporaneous" has Latin bits that mean, approximately, "without time (to prepare)."
Part of speech:
When you want a more formal, more serious-sounding adjective than "improvised," "on-the-spot," or "on-the-fly," pick "extemporaneous."
"He sings, dances and does extemporaneous impersonations of everyone from the Russian ballet mistress from his school to the British director on 'Baby Driver,' Edgar Wright."
Explain the meaning of "extemporaneous" without saying "off-the-cuff" or "spur-of-the-moment."
In an episode of Firefly, when a crowd chants excitedly for Jayne to give a speech, he gives it his best shot. He's not the greatest extemporizer ever:
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.
The opposite of EXTEMPORANEOUS is
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