Jack’s Winning Words 5/2/17
“If you’re not part of the solution, you’re part of the precipitate.” (Henry Tillman) This quote is an example of a paraprosdokianism, where a sentence has an unexpected conclusion. In high school chemistry we did solution/precipitate experiments. In high school English I learned that the word, precipitate, means, a cause. I read this truism somewhere …“You’re either part of the solution, or part of the problem.” That fits many world and personal situations. ;-) Jack
FROM BB IN ILLINOIS: So fun and surprising. I recall the precipitate; it’s been a long time since college chemistry.====JACK: I most often used precipitate, in terms of "starting something." In today's political world, words seem to be the precipitate.
FROM BLAZING OAKS: Well, that's a new one! Although the "truism" is not...hopefully we're wise enough to realize when we are one or the other!! :-( ====JACK: Try to work paraprosdokian into a conversation today and see what response you get. First, practice saying the word.
FROM TARMART REV: . . always wanting to be part of a solution, in deed!====JACK: It's no fun being part of the problem.
FROM DAZ IN COLORADO: There is no middle ground Work on the solution or you may not like the one you get handed to you.====JACK: It may be trite, but it's true...Not to decide is to decide. Those who "don't want to get involved" are involved, whether they like it, or not.
There is no middle ground Work on the solution or you may not like the one you get handed to you.
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