Coruscate. A verb for sparkly data points.
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About this listen
Use the word coruscate to describe the morale of a team or the positiveness of a data point.
The word coruscate is a verb. It's used like the word flash or sparkle. The design team is flashing with good ideas. The conversion rates sparkle in the dashboard. But, take note, the word coruscate attempts to add more description to this flashing and sparkling. Coruscate is a more impressive type of flashing and sparkling and therefore will make you sound smart if you use it.
Instead of saying the sales figures flash good news across the division and sparkle with the effects of hard work. Simply say, the sales figures coruscate. Or, the design team is just coruscating with good ideas. This conveys that the news or ideas are beaming with a vivid light, that flashes and sparkles and gleams around the corporate office.
In summary. Coruscate is a verb and it means: "To emit vivid flashes of light; sparkle; scintillate; gleam." It's spelled in the title of this episode correctly, so look there for reference. In a meeting this week, use the word coruscate to describe something that flashes with vivid gleaming light. No one will know what you mean of course, but that's part of the fun of sounding really, really smart.