PLZ PLZ HELP Use "odious good taste" and "trifling with" in two different sentences.
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Odious good taste- He has an odiously good taste in music.
Trifling with- Mr. Hart was seen trifling with his students' grades.
The given words are phrases that can be and are used more in a negative connotation than a positive one.
- The word "odious" refers to something that smells awful and is not good.
- So, to use it with "good taste", becomes an oxymoron.
- Now, an oxymoron is when two or more contrasting words are put or used together in a sentence.
- The sentence for "odious good taste" is - He has an odiously good taste in music.
- For the second phrase, "trifling" refers to an act of disapproval, or not serious, trivial, insignificant, etc.
- So, the sentence will be - Mr. Hart was seen trifling with his students' grades.
the literary technique of using an oxymoron in a sentence makes two contradictory terms work together. And it is also how the above sentences are formed.
Learn more about oxymoron here:
brainly.in/question/29394329
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the wind always somewhere trifling with
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