mindmap root((EXTRA)) extradite To deliver an accused criminal from one place to another where the trial will be held.
🌱Picked up by the Colorado police for burglary, he's being extradited to Mississippi to face trial for murder. 🌳Extradition from one state to another is generally a straightforward process. But extradition may become more complicated when two countries are involved, even though most countries have signed treaties stating that they will send criminals to the country where they are wanted. Many countries often won't send their own citizens to another country for trial; countries that don't permit the death penalty may not agree to send a suspect back to face such a penalty; and most countries won't extradite someone accused of political crimes. When extradition seems unlikely, a country may actually kidnap someone from another country, but this is illegal and rare. extrapolate To extend or project facts or data into an area not known in order to make assumptions or to predict facts or trends.
🌱Economists predict future buying trends partly by extrapolating from current economic data. 🌳Scientists worry about the greenhouse effect because they have extrapolated the rate of carbon-dioxide buildup and predicted that its effect on the atmosphere will become increasingly severe. On the basis of their extrapolations, they have urged governments and businesses to limit factory and automobile emissions. Notice that it's acceptable to speak of extrapolating existing data (to produce new data), extrapolating from existing data (to produce new data), or extrapolating new data (from existing data)—in other words, it isn't easy to use this word wrong. extrovert A person mainly concerned with things outside him- or herself; a sociable and outgoing person.
🌱These parties are always full of loud extroverts, and I always find myself hiding in a corner with my drink. 🌳Extrovert (sometimes spelled extravert) means basically "turned outward"—that is, toward things outside oneself. The word was coined by the eminent psychologist C. G. Jung in the early 20th century. The opposite personality type, in Jung's view, was the introvert.Extroverts seem to be favored by societies such as ours, even though introverts seem to be on average more mentally gifted. Psychologists have said that the only personality traits that can be identified in newborn infants are shyness and lack of shyness, which are fairly close to—but not really the same as—introversion and extroversion. extraneous 1、 Existing or coming from the outside.
2、 Not forming an essential part; irrelevant.
🌱Be sure your essays are well focused, with any discussion of extraneous topics kept to a minimum. 🌳Extraneous and strange both come from the same Latin word, extraneus, which basically meant "external" or "coming from outside." But unlike strange, extraneous is a slightly formal word, often used by scientists and social scientists. Researchers always try to eliminate extraneous factors (or "extraneous variables") from their studies. A researcher conducting a psychological test, for example, would try to make sure that the people were tested under the same conditions, and were properly divided according to gender, age, health, and so on.


    EXTRA is Latin for "outside" or "beyond." So anything extraterrestrial or extragalactic takes place beyond the earth or the galaxy. Something extravagant, such as an extravaganza, goes way beyond the normal. And extra is naturally a word itself, a shortening of extraordinary,"beyond the ordinary."🌸