Emotional words such as «angry,» «upset,» «shy» and «painful» can all build a vocabulary to express feelings.
Use emotional words to describe the situation rather than letting people make assumptions about how you feel in a given situation.
A wonderful way to support children to manage their emotions is by using an abundance
of emotional words at home.
This usually happened when the interval reached around 50 milliseconds, but
when emotional words such as «love» or «fear» were used, it happened a few milliseconds earlier.
The result is in bearing with the embodiment theories: in fact, this view states that we normally
learn emotional words «first hand» in emotional contexts (our mother smiling as she asks us to smile at her, for example), whereas a second language is normally acquired in less emotional environments and using formal methods, as occurs, for example, at school.
«But people were not swayed
by emotional words, which were somehow powerless — even though the words were rated to be as emotive as the pictures.»
Persado uses significant in - market analysis, psychological research, and millions of in - market interactions to
classify emotional words and phrases into nineteen categories.
• Exaggerating the Language: Using excessive, over-flowery, or
emotional wording in your professional letter can make it come of as insincere.
To the best of your ability, avoid
using emotional words or trying to imply or incite a emotional response.
I love you libs getting yourselves all jazzed up throwing around all
these emotional words.
«It is
an emotional word, there will be an emotional response,» said Rabbi Kenneth Brander, dean of Yeshiva University's Center for the Jewish Future.
While hooked up to an EEG that tracked brain activity, study participants looked at neutral or
emotional words — table, desk, carpet, corpse, maggot, torture — followed by scrambled words.
Using a series of computational text analysis tools to measure the use of hedging or
emotional words, Srdan Medimorec and Gordon Pennycook, both PhD candidates in the Department of Psychology at Waterloo, examined two recent reports of opposing groups.
«Moving pictures, feeble words: Emotional images sway people more than
emotional words: Researchers find that emotive images alter people's behavior, while emotive words do not.»