otázka | Odpoveď | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
It is easy to misuse statistics to falsely convince the uninformed
|
to use something incorrectly,
|
|||
1. Williams abused his position as mayor to give jobs to his friends. 2. People think that emotional abuse isn't as bad as physical abuse,
|
use something in a way that will cause damage or harm
|
|||
Many of those quack doctors were busy selling their own, often more dangerous diet cures.
|
someone who dishonestly claims to have specialist knowledge in a particular field, usually in medicine.
|
|||
Most medical practices were based on a fearful quackery, and most of the doctors were butchers or just crazy.
|
the word for the actions of quacks.
|
|||
Are We Turning CBD Into Snake Oil?
|
negative words for someone who lies about their identity, perhaps pretending to be a doctor when in fact they’re not.
|
|||
a bad journalist - perhaps someone who writes stories that are sensational but not completely factual. It’s a journalist or writer with no integrity.
|
||||
politicians chase headlines over evidence-based policy
|
policy which is based on proper scientific evidence.
|
|||
Transparency has always been a very important issue for the Council.
|
he word we use to refer to making information available and open for everyone
|
|||
As the liquid cools it becomes cloudy and opaque.
|
opposite of transparent, but this is usually just used for things you can’t see through. We don’t usually talk about opaque companies or opaque research.
|
|||
you can partly see through, like glass that is frosted and lets in light, but you can’t see detail
|
||||
Jane is one of the most reliable people in the office and she is a genuine asset to the company.
|
We use it in everyday English for various things, like to describe people you can rely on.
|
|||
This technology is very unreliable.
|
opposite to reliable
|
|||
I think we need to get a new car. We just can’t rely on this one any more.
|
phrasal verb associated with the adjective reliable
|
|||
It’s important to avoid bias in scientific studies because it can cause the results to be misleading.
|
is a preference for or against something. (Political bias, gender bias, racial bias)
|
|||
I rely on your unbiased opinion
|
opposite to biased
|
|||
Brexit has been a complete disaster so far largely because of the incompetence of government ministers in their negotiations with the EU.
|
This is the lack of skill or ability to do your job properly.
|
|||
Naturally, if you are running a company you want to employ competent people so you can rely on them to do their jobs properly.
|
opposite to inccompetence
|
|||
Efficacious and efficacy are the words used in the pharmaceutical industry, by medical professionals and doctors when discussing how a drug works under test conditions.
|
Both of these words (effectiveness and efficacy) mean when something works in the way that was intended. Another way to say this is to say that it works well.
|
|||
It wasn't the most effective way to solve this problem
|
||||
Steve badly misinterpreted the statistics of the survey.
|
misinterpreting data, research, results, information, figures, facts etc, means drawing the wrong conclusions from it.
|
|||
If you are an auditor you might scrutinise the financial records of a company to make sure there is no evidence of fraud.
|
To scrutinise something means to examine it very carefully in a lot of detail.
|
|||
his essay could use some professional scrutiny
|
||||
The way in which the courts handle such claims has been the subject of close scrutiny.
|
(=be examined)
|
|||
Anti-perspirant deodorant is the stuff that we typically put into our armpits
|
spaces under your arms where your arms join your body
|
|||
He always perspires when he's lying.
|
||||
When you get sick like that it’s normal to check your throat and neck to see if your glands are swollen
|
A gland is an organ in the body which produces something the body needs, like hormones or sweat.
|
|||
Clogged nose, Clogged roads, A clogged drain or sink
|
Clogged basically means blocked, but it’s when stuff (like dirt) blocks something that usually allows things to flow smoothly.
|
|||
At first glance, the place seemed deserted.
|
at first glance means when you first look at something quickly, without taking time to look at the details.
|
|||
chemicals added to products to improve their appearance, taste, lifespan etc. Additives are usually considered to be a bad thing.
|
||||
It’s full of fruit with no artificial preservatives or colourings.
|
are more specific types of additives which are put into products to preserve them, so they don’t go off, get mouldy, go stale or decompose.
|
|||
Malaria that is invulnerable to drugs is spreading across the world.
|
If you are invulnerable to something, it means it can’t harm you and you can’t be affected by it.
|
|||
Tourists are more vulnerable to attack, because they do not know which areas of the city to avoid.
|
able to be easily physically, emotionally, or mentally hurt, influenced, or attacked
|
|||
The police need concrete evidence of an offence before they can prosecute someone.
|
||||
That sounds a bit vague, so here’s a concrete example.
|
||||
The placebo could be powerful because it meets some psychological need for attention and treatment.
|
the pill that patients are told is real medicine but which actually contains no medicine
|
|||
There has been a startling increase in the numbers of homeless people
|
it is surprising and unusual. It makes you go “OH!”
|
|||
You startled me! I didn't hear you come in.
|
to do something unexpected that surprises and sometimes worries a person or animal:
|
|||
It’s likely to rain tomorrow.
|
If something is likely, it will probably happen or is expected
|
|||
Archeologists made a chilling discovery when they uncovered some mass execution graves.
|
This means that it makes you feel frightened, disturbed, scared.
|
|||
I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to push you.’ ‘Don’t worry, no harm done.’
|
||||
If you don’t warm up properly, exercise may do more harm than good.
|
||||
t's best to take what he says with a pinch of salt - he's always exaggerating.
|
This idiom means that you don’t need to believe what the person says.
|