Conceit: Arrogance ::Tirade : ?
Answers
I'm a bit confused as to the difference between arrogant and conceited.
From my understanding, arrogance is the equivalent of being confident and letting everyone know how great you are. For example, achieving the top of a leaderboard and then boasting extensively about the victory.
Conceit, I believe, is similar in that you may be boasting, but it's based more on unfounded measure. For example, they may make third place in the a race against the arrogant man, but they feel they would have gotten first place if only they had gotten a little more sleep. Conceit comes in their coping with not being so great, while the arrogant individual will at least admit defeat and be unable to rub their greatness in someone's face.
What are the exact differences between these words?
From Merriam-Webster:
Arrogance - an attitude of superiority manifested in an overbearing manner.
Conceit - excessive appreciation of one's own worth or virtue.
Clearly the two words have considerable overlap in meaning in some contexts - though we never say, for example, "He conceitedly elbowed her aside", or "Describing terrorists as 'freedom fighters' is an arrogance that doesn't work", so they're certainly not complete synonyms.
For OP's purposes it may suffice to note that on average arrogance is more "external" - how a person acts towards others, and conceit is more "internal"
An arrogant person will boast about how wonderful they are. A conceited person will just assume that you know how fantastic they are, and if you don't, you are probably not worth talking to.
A person who is both will assume you know how wonderful they were yesterday, but will have to tell you how phenomenal they are today.
Conceited means being excessively proud of oneself while arrogance is the act of being stiffnecked .
Answer:
Outbursts
Explanation:
Conceit - excessive pride in oneself. Hence, Arrogance.
Tirade - a long, angry speech of criticism or accusation. Hence, Outbursts