We decided to blorpize the process.
verb
(to+verb=infinitive form of verb)
You're targeting the wrong demographic.
Contravene is a verb meaning "to violate or go against." Is the word being used right in the following sentence?
The company's contravene of the law enraged the politician.
No. Contravention, the noun form, would work.
This type of fish has a long rostrum (nose or snout) that is shaped like a tool you'd use for cutting wood.
sawfish
I need some blorp, and I need it fast!
noun
You could replace the word with another noun. The word is being modified by the word some, and it's also functioning as the direct object of need. (Direct objects get the action of the verb and answer the question "What?" as in, "I verb what?": I kicked what? I kicked THE BALL. I ate what? I ate THE CANDY. Direct objects are nouns.)
The demographic data tells a different story.
adjective
Coeval is an adjective meaning "of the same time period." Is the word used correctly in the following sentence?
[The] two stars [are] thought to be coeval because they have nearly the same mass and brightness
Yes.
Sentence from Merriam-Webster
Dory from Finding Nemo is what kind of fish?
blue tang
What a blorpful evening!
adjective
(The word blorpful is modifying the noun evening.)
Their polytheism was evident from the many temples in the city.
noun
Temporize is a verb meaning "to stall for time." Is the word being used correctly in this sentence?
Unable to marry Stella without destroying Vanessa, or to openly welcome Vanessa without destroying Stella, he was ' thus involved in the most miserable embarrassment; he continued to temporize.
Yep.
(Sentence from sentence.yourdictionary.com)
Multiple fish are capable of walking or living outside of water, at least temporarily. I've listed seven. Name any of them.
Northern snakehead
Mudskipper
Leaping blenny
Climbing perch
Walking catfish
Mangrove rivulus
Sculpin
That was blorpably unacceptable.
adverb
Note the "ly."
The word is modifying unacceptable, which is an adjective. Adverbs modify anything that isn't a noun.
The polytheistic beliefs led them to build many temples in order to avoid offending any gods.
adjective
Lexical is an adjective meaning "of or relating to the words/vocab of a language." Is this word being used right in the following sentence?
The word "quit" is not in my lexical.
No.
A better word here would be lexicon, a noun.
The mangrove rivulus normally lives in pools of water, but when these pools up, the fish have a survival trick. For up to 66 days, they can live outside of the water by packing themselves inside of WHAT?
damp spaces in rotten wood
I stared blorp the box.
preposition
But let's be real here. Prepositions are function words, and they are pretty stable. We don't invent new prepositions the way we invent new nouns or verbs. It's highly likely you know all of the prepositions you'll ever need for the rest of your life.
No need to equivocate. Just tell the truth.
verb
Eulogy (n.): a formal speech praising a person who has died
Eulogize (v.): to make a formal speech praising a person who has died; to praise
Which word fits?
There's no need to ________________ a man who caused so much grief.
eulogize
Males that are too small to scare of competitors may change their color pattern and body shape to look female in order to sneak past larger males and mate with females.
Cuttlefish