To “comprise” means to be made of, to contain, or to include.
Example: “The panel will comprise members of each university department.”
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“Amenable” means “open to persuasion.” It doesn’t necessarily mean you change your opinion about something, but that you’re willing to go along with the other person to avoid conflict, reach a conclusion, or in some other way keep things moving forward.
Example: “There are many movies I’d like to see this weekend, but I’m amenable to any suggestions or preferences you might have.”
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“Intransigent,” meaning stubborn and unwilling to compromise. It’s similar to “adamant,” but has the additional sense that the person is perhaps being inflexible just to be stubborn or contrary, and not for any firmly-held belief.
Example: “Although Jamie had already won the arguments over child custody and support payments, she remained intransigent in her insistence that her ex-husband also pay for all of the school uniforms.”
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“Utilitarian” means practical and functional, without anything that doesn’t contribute to that functionality. Six extra cup-holders in a car will not make the car run more smoothly.
Example: “IKEA is famous for its selection of utilitarian home furnishings, like unfinished wood shelving you assemble at home yourself.”
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People who work at a nursing home often wear uniforms that make them look alike. That’s what “uniform” means, after all: the same, without variation.
Example: “Those coffee shops do well because they train their servers to make the coffee drinks to a uniform level of quality, no matter where the store is located.”
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