Library

Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 5:22
Duration 13:07
Loaded: 0.00%
 
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:00

    Since at least 213 BCE, book burnings have been a reaction to the power of the written

  • 00:05

    word.

  • 00:06

    When roasting paper in a giant circle went out of style (at least in the intellectual

  • 00:12

    sphere), governments would take it upon itself to ban books.

  • 00:17

    However, when we talk about book bannings today, at least in the Western World,  we

  • 00:23

    are usually discussing a specific choice made by individual schools, school districts, and

  • 00:28

    libraries made in response to the moralistic outrage of some group.

  • 00:34

    This, while still hotly-contested and controversial, is still nothing in comparison to the ways

  • 00:41

    books have been removed, censored, and outright destroyed in the past.

  • 00:47

    Along with their authors.

  • 00:49

    So on that happy note, let’s … explore how the seemingly innocuous book has survived

  • 00:56

    centuries of the ban hammer.

  • 01:07

    Historically speaking there are usually three big reasons books are banned: Religion, morality,

  • 01:14

    and politics.

  • 01:18

    Back in the BCE era, entire ideas, religions, and political movements were wiped out.

  • 01:25

    Not with a mass tweet, but with book burnings and sometimes, if things were really intense,

  • 01:31

    people burnings as well.

  • 01:35

    One of the earliest documented examples in North America is the burning of Aztec and

  • 01:40

    Mayan manuscripts in the 1560s by Catholic priests and the Conquistadors.

  • 01:46

    In Tudor England during the schism between the Church of England and the Roman Catholic

  • 01:51

    Church, depending on which monarch was arbitrarily in power and which religion they followed

  • 01:58

    your choice of religious book could get you murdered.

  • 02:04

    This was done, as French writer and historian Lucien X. Polastron explains in “Books on

  • 02:10

    Fire: The Destruction of Libraries Throughout History:”

  • 02:11

    “Because, as the lawmakers of ancient China and the Nazis in Czechoslovakia decided, an

  • 02:16

    educated people cannot be governed; because the conquered peoples must change the history

  • 02:23

    of their beliefs, like the Aztecs; because only the illiterate can save the world, a

  • 02:29

    common theme of the millenarian preachers of every era; because the nature of a great

  • 02:36

    collection of books is a threat to the new power.”

  • 02:41

    Historians point to Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin as the first book in the

  • 02:46

    United States to experience a ban on a national scale.

  • 02:51

    Many Southern states prohibited the sale of the book stating that it stoked the flames

  • 02:57

    abolition and Uncle Tom’s Cabin is often considered the book that helped start the

  • 03:02

    Civil War.

  • 03:04

    Which … is a hot take, but whatever.

  • 03:09

    One place you could call the Billboard Hot 100 of Banned books is the Index Librorum

  • 03:15

    Prohibitorum, or List of Prohibited Books.

  • 03:18

    This was a list of books and other publications deemed heretical by the Vatican.

  • 03:24

    If you were Catholic you could not read this content without permission from a priest or

  • 03:32

    higher.

  • 03:33

    (prayer hands)

  • 03:34

    This included romantic texts, astronomy, science, and anything else the Church saw as antithetic

  • 03:40

    to their faith.

  • 03:41

    Victor Hugo--Over it Copernicus and Galileo -- Cancelled

  • 03:46

    Rousseau -- ya gotta go

  • 03:48

    Funny enough Charles Darwin’s ​On the ​Origin of Species was not listed among

  • 03:53

    the banned texts in question.

  • 03:56

    Things that make you go hmmm.

  • 04:00

    It was banned from the library of Trinity College, Cambridge and in the United States,

  • 04:06

    kept out of many schools.

  • 04:08

    In Tennessee the book and teaching of evolution were banned until as late as 1967.

  • 04:16

    In Nazi Germany the government burned thousands of books written by Jewish authors, “communists”,

  • 04:24

    and “others”.

  • 04:26

    Included were the works of Albert Einstein, Sigmund Freud, Ernest Hemingway, Helen Keller,

  • 04:32

    Lenin, Jack London, Karl Marx, Upton Sinclair, Stalin, and Leon Trotsky

  • 04:39

    Those are political and religious reasons, but sometimes a book can get in trouble for

  • 04:44

    being too … risque.

  • 04:47

    Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray is, according to Literary Professor Nicholas

  • 04:52

    Frankel, “one of the first novels in the English language to explore the nature of

  • 04:56

    homoerotic and homosexual desire.”

  • 05:00

    Charles Whibley, mentee of W.E.

  • 05:02

    Henley--the English poet, editor and critic, who fun fact was also the inspiration for

  • 05:07

    Long John Silver--reviewed Dorian as such:

  • 05:11

    “[...]Mr Oscar Wilde has again been writing stuff that were better unwritten; and while

  • 05:16

    The Picture of Dorian Gray, which he contributes to Lippincott’s, is ingenious, interesting,

  • 05:22

    full of cleverness, and plainly the work of a man of letters, it is false art—for its

  • 05:29

    interest is medico-legal; it is false to human nature—for its hero is a devil, it is false

  • 05:35

    to morality—for it is not made sufficiently clear that the writer does not prefer a course

  • 05:42

    of unnatural iniquity to a life of cleanliness, health and sanity.

  • 05:47

    [...]

  • 05:48

    Mr. Wilde has brains, and art, and style; but if he can write for none but outlawed

  • 05:52

    noblemen and perverted telegraph-boys, the sooner he takes to tailoring (or some other

  • 05:59

    decent trade) the better for his own reputation and the public morals.”

  • 06:04

    –The Scots Observer, July 5th, 1890

  • 06:11

    And this is the response to the edited version that Wilde’s publishers made, where, according

  • 06:16

    to Frankel they cut out 500 words from the original typescript without Wilde’s knowledge.

  • 06:22

    When Wilde was put on trial for his homosexuality--“gross indecency” officially-- in 1895, his novel

  • 06:30

    was used as evidence that lead to his conviction.

  • 06:33

    This prudishness didn’t just exist for the posh british victorians.

  • 06:37

    We in America had Anthony Comstock, an “anti-vice activist.”

  • 06:43

    He sounds … fun

  • 06:45

    Comstock got Congress to pass “The Comstock Law”  on March 3, 1873, which prohibited

  • 06:51

    the mailing of “pornographic” materials.

  • 06:53

    His definition of the term was murky at best.

  • 06:58

    Anatomy textbooks, doctors’ pamphlets dealing with reproduction, Oscar Wilde, and even The

  • 07:05

    Canterbury Tales were deemed too sexy to send through the mail.

  • 07:10

    A bunch of “comstockery” I say.

  • 07:15

    Amy Werbel, Professor of the History of Art at the Fashion Institute of Technology, put

  • 07:22

    it aptly:

  • 07:23

    “Comstock most typically engaged in “direct censorship” when he seized and destroyed

  • 07:29

    materials to prevent their public circulation.

  • 07:33

    Direct censorship in any society, no matter how repressive, is just one means through

  • 07:38

    which discourse is limited.

  • 07:41

    Concern about the possibility of censorship in many cases results in an unwillingness

  • 07:45

    of artists and writers to risk producing potentially indictable work, resulting in self-censorship.

  • 07:53

    As individuals respond to perceived limits in this manner, a new “canon” is formed,

  • 07:59

    shaping the perception of what speech is considered to be normal or transgressive.

  • 08:05

    This process of “social censorship” typically serves to amplify the voices of those who

  • 08:10

    already hold power and to reduce, marginalize, and silence the expressions of those who are

  • 08:17

    vulnerable.”

  • 08:18

    Two legal cases that really helped  move the conversation in a different direction

  • 08:22

    were The United States v. One Book Called Ulysses  in 1933 and R v Penguin Books in

  • 08:30

    1960.

  • 08:31

    The United States v. One Book Called Ulysses centered around Irish author James Joyce’s

  • 08:37

    Ulysses: a book that I absolutely respect and hold in high esteem

  • 08:42

    The court argued that the book was obscene and Random House argued that the content was

  • 08:47

    protected by the first amendment.

  • 08:49

    Ultimately judge John M. Woolsey stated that the novel was “serious” and that Joyce

  • 08:54

    was “sincere and honest” in using a stream of consciousness to explore the mentality

  • 08:59

    of its characters.

  • 09:00

    Subsequently the book was finally allowed to enter the United States as a result.

  • 09:05

    In  R v Penguin Books Ltd the book in question was D.H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover

  • 09:12

    which is a book about a noble woman who has an affair with her gardener.

  • 09:17

    Landscaping can be hot I guess.

  • 09:19

    During the trial Mervyn Griffith-Jones, the prosecutor, asked the jury to decide if the

  • 09:24

    book was obscene and if it had enough “literary merit”

  • 09:27

    "Would you approve of your young sons, young daughters—because girls can read as well

  • 09:33

    as boys—reading this book?

  • 09:35

    Is it a book you would have lying around your own house?

  • 09:40

    Is it a book that you would even wish your wife or your servants to read?"”

  • 09:46

    Wives and servants … reading … about pleasure ...I GASP

  • 09:55

    Aldous Huxley, in a handwritten deposition to the defence team: "Lady Chatterley's Lover

  • 10:01

    is an essentially wholesome book ... That a beautiful and serious work of art should

  • 10:06

    run the risk of being banned because its creator ... chose to make use of certain words that

  • 10:12

    it is conventional to regard it as shocking – this is surely the height of absurdity."

  • 10:18

    It seemed like the jury agreed with Huxley and they ultimately voted that the book was

  • 10:24

    not obscene.

  • 10:25

    Finally in 1973 with Miller v. California the US Supreme Court finally tweaked its definition

  • 10:33

    of obscenity from that of "utterly without socially redeeming value" to that which lacks

  • 10:39

    "serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value."

  • 10:45

    Progress?

  • 10:48

    Today LGBTQ books and books written by authors of color depicting the complexities of their

  • 10:53

    life are still often challenged.

  • 10:56

    Banned Books Week was started in 1982 in response to a sudden surge in the number of challenges

  • 11:03

    to books in schools, bookstores and libraries.

  • 11:07

    Additionally, every year, the American Library Association puts out their list of the Top

  • 11:12

    Ten Most Challenged Books.

  • 11:14

    In 2019, eight out of the 10 had to do with LGBTQIA content.

  • 11:20

    As Judith Krug, one of the founders of Banned Books week put it in 1972:

  • 11:23

    “... librarians are trained as librarians; we have absolutely no training or expertise

  • 11:29

    in being censors.

  • 11:31

    Our job--and yours--is not to limit the horizons of a child, be he six or twelve, ten or twenty.

  • 11:38

    Our jobs are to provide all the ammunition we possibly can to enable a child to expand

  • 11:44

    his horizons.

  • 11:45

    The right of any individual to read is an absolute necessity in a democratic society.”

  • 11:51

    Book banning is not about morality it is about control.

  • 11:56

    Controlling the scope of the imagination and smothering it before it can truly grow.

  • 12:02

    It is fine to expose children to complicated books, but doing so asks us to talk to children,

  • 12:09

    not just lecture them.

  • 12:10

    We limit the scope of the imagination if we start policing the quality of a book based

  • 12:15

    on subjective moral ideologies.

  • 12:19

    Should we be conscious of the kind of work we expose to children?

  • 12:24

    Of course, but banning books because they include LGBTQ families or because they talk

  • 12:30

    candidly about the realities of marginalized existence, ignores that there are children in those

  • 12:36

    families and in those realities who need these books.

  • 12:40

    To quote from Krug again, “...‘Intellectual freedom” is the right of any person to believe

  • 12:45

    what he wants on any subject and to express his beliefs orally or graphically, publicly

  • 12:52

    or privately, as he deems appropriate.

  • 12:55

    The ability to express one’s opinions, however… does not really mean very much if there is

  • 13:01

    not someone to hear what he is saying, to read what he is writing, or to view what he

  • 13:07

    is producing through other methods.

  • 13:09

    And so, the definition of intellectual freedom has a second integral part and that is total

  • 13:16

    and complete freedom of access to all information and ideas regardless of the medium of communication

  • 13:23

    used.

  • 13:24

    Information and ideas, in turn, give a man something to think about, to consider, to

  • 13:29

    weigh prior to coming to his own opinion and decisions.

  • 13:33

    Once these opinions and decisions are formed (and sometimes before!), he, too, is free

  • 13:38

    to express his beliefs.

  • 13:40

    And so we have a circle.

  • 13:42

    The circle breaks, however, if either the ability to produce or access the productions

  • 13:48

    is stifled.”

  • 13:49

    So in life we have a choice, do we want to be Team Comstock or Team Wilde?

  • 13:56

    Choose wisely.

All

The example sentences of CLEVERNESS in videos (13 in total of 13)

full adjective of preposition or subordinating conjunction cleverness noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction plainly adverb the determiner work noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner man noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction letters noun, plural , it personal pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present false adjective art noun, singular or mass proper noun, singular for preposition or subordinating conjunction its possessive pronoun
a determiner testament noun, singular or mass to to the determiner cleverness noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner creative adjective team noun, singular or mass , is verb, 3rd person singular present that preposition or subordinating conjunction if preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun never adverb see verb, non-3rd person singular present kim proper noun, singular again adverb , she personal pronoun
warmer noun, singular or mass , getting verb, gerund or present participle colder noun, singular or mass - and coordinating conjunction much adjective cleverness noun, singular or mass still adverb has verb, 3rd person singular present to to be verb, base form applied verb, past participle in preposition or subordinating conjunction interpreting verb, gerund or present participle that preposition or subordinating conjunction
stupid adjective cleverness noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction maybe adverb it personal pronoun would modal work verb, base form the determiner lyrics noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner song noun, singular or mass were verb, past tense just adverb the determiner recitation noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction
the determiner sony proper noun, singular quite adverb matcesh proper noun, singular up preposition or subordinating conjunction to to the determiner bose proper noun, singular in preposition or subordinating conjunction terms noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction design noun, singular or mass cleverness noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb think verb, base form it personal pronoun has verb, 3rd person singular present
a determiner cavalry noun, singular or mass colonel noun, singular or mass who wh-pronoun quickly adverb became verb, past tense known verb, past participle for preposition or subordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun cleverness noun, singular or mass , tactical adjective savvy noun, singular or mass , and coordinating conjunction the determiner loyalty noun, singular or mass he personal pronoun inspired verb, past tense in preposition or subordinating conjunction his possessive pronoun men noun, plural .
inspired verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner cleverness noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner idea noun, singular or mass , maxwell proper noun, singular sat verb, past tense down adverb with preposition or subordinating conjunction pencil noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction paper noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction put verb, base form together adverb
smiling verb, gerund or present participle while preposition or subordinating conjunction showing verb, gerund or present participle you personal pronoun all predeterminer this determiner because preposition or subordinating conjunction i personal pronoun still adverb ca modal n't adverb comprehend verb, base form the determiner amount noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction cleverness noun, singular or mass
but coordinating conjunction regardless adverb of preposition or subordinating conjunction who wh-pronoun or coordinating conjunction what wh-pronoun killed verb, past tense the determiner changer noun, singular or mass , i personal pronoun hope verb, non-3rd person singular present we personal pronoun can modal appreciate verb, base form its possessive pronoun cleverness noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction
men noun, plural back adverb then adverb didn proper noun, singular t proper noun, singular care noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction cleverness noun, singular or mass ; they personal pronoun were verb, past tense only adverb interested adjective in preposition or subordinating conjunction women noun, plural who wh-pronoun were verb, past tense
but coordinating conjunction in preposition or subordinating conjunction english adjective a determiner fox noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present associated verb, past participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction cunning verb, gerund or present participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction cleverness noun, singular or mass there existential there 's verb, 3rd person singular present something noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner fox noun, singular or mass 's possessive ending
of preposition or subordinating conjunction my possessive pronoun brain noun, singular or mass as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner lot noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner cleverness noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner show noun, singular or mass does verb, 3rd person singular present n't adverb transcend verb, base form the determiner show verb, base form itself personal pronoun which wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present
changing verb, gerund or present participle the determiner brightness noun, singular or mass experienced verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner observer noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner in preposition or subordinating conjunction hand noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction no determiner small adjective amount noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction cleverness noun, singular or mass , we personal pronoun can modal

Use "cleverness" in a sentence | "cleverness" example sentences

How to use "cleverness" in a sentence?

  • Emotion will always win over coolness and cleverness. It's when a scene works emotionally and it's cool and clever, then it's great. That's what you want.
    -Quentin Tarantino-
  • Writing is good, thinking is better. Cleverness is good, patience is better.
    -Hermann Hesse-
  • A man likes his wife to be just clever enough to appreciate his cleverness, and just stupid enough to admire it.
    -Israel Zangwill-
  • The height of cleverness is in one's ability to be very clever without seeming clever at all.
    -Criss Jami-
  • Thus, though I have heard of successful military operations that were clumsy but swift, cleverness has never been seen associated with long delays.
    -Sun Tzu-
  • If put to the pinch, an ounce of loyalty is worth a pound of cleverness.
    -Elbert Hubbard-
  • It is a great act of cleverness to be able to conceal one's being clever.
    -Francois de La Rochefoucauld-
  • Cleverness is cheap. It is faith that He praises.
    -George MacDonald-

Definition and meaning of CLEVERNESS

What does "cleverness mean?"

/ˈklevərnəs/

noun
Fact of being clever or intelligent.

What are synonyms of "cleverness"?
Some common synonyms of "cleverness" are:
  • intelligence,
  • brilliance,
  • genius,
  • intellect,
  • precocity,
  • precociousness,
  • talent,
  • ability,
  • capability,
  • competence,
  • proficiency,
  • education,
  • learnedness,
  • erudition,
  • bookishness,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.

What are antonyms of "cleverness"?
Some common antonyms of "cleverness" are:
  • stupidity,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.