expletive
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Expletive \Ex"ple*tive\, a. [L. expletivus, from expletus, p. p.
of explere to fill up; ex out+plere to fill, akin to plenus
full: cf. F. expl['e]tif. See {Full}.]
Filling up; hence, added merely for the purpose of filling
up; superfluous. "Expletive imagery." --Hallam.
[1913 Webster]
Expletive phrases to plump his speech. --Barrow.
[1913 Webster]
from
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Expletive \Ex"ple*tive\, n.
A word, letter, or syllable not necessary to the sense, but
inserted to fill a vacancy; an oath.
[1913 Webster]
While explectives their feeble aid to join,
And ten low words oft creep in one dull line. --Pope.
[1913 Webster]
from
Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
81 Moby Thesaurus words for "expletive":
battology, bedizenment, blurt, curse, cuss, cuss word, de trop,
dirty name, dirty word, dispensable, duplication,
duplication of effort, dysphemism, ecphonesis, ejaculation,
embellishment, epithet, excess, exclamation, expendable,
extravagance, fat, featherbedding, filler, filling, foul invective,
frill, frills, frippery, gingerbread, gratuitous, in excess,
iterative, luxury, macrology, naughty word, needless, needlessness,
no-no, nonessential, oath, obscenity, ornamentation, outburst,
overadornment, overlap, padding, payroll padding, pleonasm,
pleonastic, profane oath, prolix, prolixity, redundance,
redundancy, redundant, reiterative, repetitious, spare, stammering,
stuttering, supererogatory, superfluity, superfluous,
superfluousness, swear, swearword, tautologic, tautological,
tautologism, tautologous, tautology, to spare, uncalled-for,
unessential, unnecessariness, unnecessary, unneeded, verbose,
verbosity, wordy
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