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Mon 13 Jun, 2005 07:47 pm
Hi! I would like to know what is the meaning of two words: "provasive" and "enstrong". Thanks!!
Hi harbinger,
I wonder if you could give me context?
I don't think either of them as written are words; for "provasive" I think "pervasive", for "enstrong" I think "empower" or "headstrong."
They sound oddly like pharmaceutical products.
Provasive and enstrong
Hi! These are explicit examples "they have a provasive effects on their neighborhoods and local society that cannot be denied if you've experienced some of it , or "these expectations are so provasive that the customer takes them for granted". I know the word "pervasive", but the problem is that it's written "provasive" not "pervasive". Another examples:"enstrong the competitiveness of hungarian agriculture", or "we intend to present our project, which main interest is to enstrong ,multiethnic communities". I am absolutely sure that it's written "provasive" and "enstrong".
I found these same examples on the internet by Googling the two words. They are errors, some written by non-native English speakers. "Provasive" is a misspelling of "pervasive" and "enstrong" is merely a word that the writer made up (to indicate "strengthen") because it seemed like it made sense.