GRE Vocabulary Sentences - Trip n' T'Pol Style!
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 11:28 am
So I thought about actually putting this up as a fic but... that would be kind of unfair, because it's really just a string of sentences. It just strays in and out of storytelling, so instead it's just going to go into a thread. I'll be practicing vocabulary A LOT, and perhaps relating it to something I know well will help to memorize them. Here is
Trip and T'Pol's GRE Study Guide - Part 1
Many would find alcoholism aberrant to Trip’s typical disposition.
Malcolm was forced to abscond from the public eye after his supposed death.
For T’Pol to serve as Trip’s advocate, were he to get in any legal trouble onboard Enterprise, would be a conflict of interests if Starfleet knew of their relationship.
Trip felt that T’Pol was aggrandizing the situation when she found T’Mir eating by herself as she walked in.
My fiction is like an amalgamation of romance, science fiction and spy suspense.
The precise nature of Trip and T’Pol’s relationship between the end of the Xindi mission and T’Pol’s trip to Vulcan in which she married Koss is ambiguous, leaving room for creation exploration and interpretation.
The scent of chamomile of her neckline was ambrosial as he leant in to kiss her.
The appearance of a 1911 in Star Trek, though awesome, would be somewhat anachronistic.
Trip and T’Pol’s relationship is considered by some to be anomalous.
Trip’s dialect can come across as antediluvian in some instances but many women find it quite charming.
T’Pol’s antipathy towards Tucker when they first met came to a fever pitch before they eventually found common ground and T’Pol came to know him as a man of character and kindness.
Too many times, Captain Archer found himself arbitrating a dispute between his Science Officer and Chief Engineer, though little did he know they would later settle their disputes over candles and broken bed frames.
Only one so close and so connected to Trip’s heart as T’Pol could possibly have assuaged the grief over the loss of his sister.
Not even the gulf of many light years could attenuate the powerful spark of telepathic intimacy stretched between Trip and T’Pol.
In the face of a strict and seemingly stern disapproval of his presence, it was quite audacious of Trip to offer to fix a few of T’Les’ home appliances.
If only Trip had averred his feelings for T’Pol as T’Les suggested, she may not have gone through with the wedding, and their feelings would have been out in the open.
The sight of a Vulcan cradling a tiny baby atop the steps of a rural home in southern Mississppi was anything but banal.
T’Pol’s love for Trip lay as barefaced as the baby in her arms as they looked over the plain grass and held one another in stillness.
Trip blandished Archer repeatedly to consider going after T’Pol and the away team with a strike team on a bold rescue operation, but Archer would have none of it.
Archer was somewhat given to bombast in the diplomatic quarter, but kept his orders swift and to the point on duty.
Though it was a breach of shipboard protocol, Trip and T’Pol planned to marry soon after the loss of their daughter, Elizabeth.
As quickly as her little body had grown from nothing, Trip and T’Pol’s openness with their feelings for one another burgeoned with her very passing.
Though a loudspeaker of emotional chaos at times, Trip was also a rock, a buttress on which T’Pol could steady herself in times of great strain.
Trip was known for cadging the Captain out of extra repair time while in dry-dock to make sure Enterprise was in prime shape.
T’Pol was not known for caprice before marrying Trip, but the injection of his human humor into her life inspired her to let slip a joke here and there.
Trip and T’Pol feared strong castigation from Starfleet Command immediately after making known their scheduled nuptials.
T’Pol’s fateful reception of the reproachful message from Koss regarding their delayed marriage is considered a catalyst for Trip and T’Pol’s romantic involvement.
News of having been thrown 117 years back in time was caustic to the morale of the crew, almost to the breaking point.
The skilled execution of chicanery is a talent Malcolm never truly mastered due in part to his amiable and trustworthy nature.
Archer feared that as time went by, the crew would grow complacent of their mission and the gravity of its success in over a century’s time.
While widely known for her calm exterior, T’Pol’s passion for Trip would unleash in a conflagration of intimacy when the two found time alone.
The corporeal expression of love is only a single dimension of a multifaceted structure that is the indefatigable web adjoining the hearts and spirits of Trip and T’Pol.
Corporal love, though transient, was also a powerful conduit through which Trip’s human mind could reach out and touch T’Pol’s much more developed telepathic centers.
Early instances of inflamed arguments between Trip and T’Pol corroborated later discovery of contention between them, capable of seething passionately in both union and disagreement.
When she chose to marry Koss, continuing to work side by side with T’Pol forced Trip into craven withdrawal from her.
Phlox bore a measure of culpability for the catalyst the made way for physical culmination of Trip and T’Pol’s emotional attachment.
A dearth of experienced combat leadership before the Romulan War would have had costly consequences in the first engagements of the war.
Trip did his best to abstain from showing open affection for T’Pol whenever in the presence of a Human or Vulcan in deference to her emotional boundaries.
Soon after it became public knowledge that a Vulcan and a Human were to be married, the press quickly depicted the two as star-crossed lovers from disparate corners of the galaxy, aided by strained relations between Starfleet and Vulcan.
Trip’s weakness was an absolute lack of capacity to stomach the deprecation of his wife by a mob, and responding to the heckling lead to disastrous consequences.
He felt that the press was depredating the misfortune of their lost child, ignoring their privacy and airing their personal business publically.
Starfleet immediately descried that the two would not be allowed to serve in immediately subordinate positions aboard a starship any longer.
Much of Vulcan’s wind-swept deserts are dry, desiccated husks in comparison to the barrens of Earth’s most perilous deserts.
The leader of a fundamentalist cult delivered a vitriolic diatribe from his pulpit to a massive television audience on the abhorrence God held for a Human-Vulcan mixed marriage.
When T’Pol finally gave an interview, her demeanor was anything but diffident.
She quickly disabused the public of the notion that she and Trip had secretly been seeing one another since she began serving aboard Enterprise.
T’Pol did not disparage Reverend Sommers for his remarks, but relayed her husband’s disappointment that so many people would listen to words of such hate in an era in which humans believed themselves to be enlightened.
Dispassionate but engaging, conversant, and even funny – T’Pol’s interview shocked the world and delivered a new perspective on Vulcans to a great number of Humans who had never personally interacted with one.
The religious faction accused her of dissembling the truth of her and Trip’s relationship, of concealing the truth of accused improprieties.
While initially dogged in its obsession with the pairing of the two, the attention of the press eventually died down, as did the political and religious powder keg their story was thought to provoke.
The public soon began to see the church’s objection to a Vulcan-Human union for the dogmatic, antediluvian anachronism of centuries gone by for what it truly was.
While initially eclectic, this string of Trip-and-T’Pol-related sentences has meandered somewhat reliably into an actual storyline!
The efficacy of Phlox’s initial attempts to recreate Paxton’s genetic experiments while eliminating his errors met with great failure.
Despite negative religious attention and dogged media obsession, Trip and T’Pol received an effluence of well wishes and fan mail not just from Trip’s friends and family, but from countless strangers worldwide.
T’Pol always found the touch of Tucker’s hands emollient and disarming; he was always able to soften her defenses and reach her emotions.
For many years, Trip sought to emulate the leadership characteristics of his good friend and mentor, Jonathan Archer, but eventually had to seek his own counsel when command fell to him in the captain’s absence.
Archer’s encomium before the crowd of diplomats hailed the birth of the Federation.
After her first family reunion, T’Pol found that Trip’s accent, as well as his eccentricities, were endemic to the Tucker family.
While humans can tolerate great variations in temperature, the cold absolutely enervates the Vulcans – it is their greatest combat weakness.
This, perhaps more than any political dispute, worked to engender difference and distrust between the Vulcans and the Andorians over the many centuries.
When they first met, T’Pol’s enigmatic stare often aggravated Trip to no end.
Trip and T'Pol's GRE Study Guide - Part 1
Many would find alcoholism aberrant to Trip’s typical disposition.
Malcolm was forced to abscond from the public eye after his supposed death.
For T’Pol to serve as Trip’s advocate, were he to get in any legal trouble onboard Enterprise, would be a conflict of interests if Starfleet knew of their relationship.
Trip felt that T’Pol was aggrandizing the situation when she found T’Mir eating by herself as she walked in.
My fiction is like an amalgamation of romance, science fiction and spy suspense.
The precise nature of Trip and T’Pol’s relationship between the end of the Xindi mission and T’Pol’s trip to Vulcan in which she married Koss is ambiguous, leaving room for creation exploration and interpretation.
The scent of chamomile of her neckline was ambrosial as he leant in to kiss her.
The appearance of a 1911 in Star Trek, though awesome, would be somewhat anachronistic.
Trip and T’Pol’s relationship is considered by some to be anomalous.
Trip’s dialect can come across as antediluvian in some instances but many women find it quite charming.
T’Pol’s antipathy towards Tucker when they first met came to a fever pitch before they eventually found common ground and T’Pol came to know him as a man of character and kindness.
Too many times, Captain Archer found himself arbitrating a dispute between his Science Officer and Chief Engineer, though little did he know they would later settle their disputes over candles and broken bed frames.
Only one so close and so connected to Trip’s heart as T’Pol could possibly have assuaged the grief over the loss of his sister.
Not even the gulf of many light years could attenuate the powerful spark of telepathic intimacy stretched between Trip and T’Pol.
In the face of a strict and seemingly stern disapproval of his presence, it was quite audacious of Trip to offer to fix a few of T’Les’ home appliances.
If only Trip had averred his feelings for T’Pol as T’Les suggested, she may not have gone through with the wedding, and their feelings would have been out in the open.
The sight of a Vulcan cradling a tiny baby atop the steps of a rural home in southern Mississppi was anything but banal.
T’Pol’s love for Trip lay as barefaced as the baby in her arms as they looked over the plain grass and held one another in stillness.
Trip blandished Archer repeatedly to consider going after T’Pol and the away team with a strike team on a bold rescue operation, but Archer would have none of it.
Archer was somewhat given to bombast in the diplomatic quarter, but kept his orders swift and to the point on duty.
Though it was a breach of shipboard protocol, Trip and T’Pol planned to marry soon after the loss of their daughter, Elizabeth.
As quickly as her little body had grown from nothing, Trip and T’Pol’s openness with their feelings for one another burgeoned with her very passing.
Though a loudspeaker of emotional chaos at times, Trip was also a rock, a buttress on which T’Pol could steady herself in times of great strain.
Trip was known for cadging the Captain out of extra repair time while in dry-dock to make sure Enterprise was in prime shape.
T’Pol was not known for caprice before marrying Trip, but the injection of his human humor into her life inspired her to let slip a joke here and there.
Trip and T’Pol feared strong castigation from Starfleet Command immediately after making known their scheduled nuptials.
T’Pol’s fateful reception of the reproachful message from Koss regarding their delayed marriage is considered a catalyst for Trip and T’Pol’s romantic involvement.
News of having been thrown 117 years back in time was caustic to the morale of the crew, almost to the breaking point.
The skilled execution of chicanery is a talent Malcolm never truly mastered due in part to his amiable and trustworthy nature.
Archer feared that as time went by, the crew would grow complacent of their mission and the gravity of its success in over a century’s time.
While widely known for her calm exterior, T’Pol’s passion for Trip would unleash in a conflagration of intimacy when the two found time alone.
The corporeal expression of love is only a single dimension of a multifaceted structure that is the indefatigable web adjoining the hearts and spirits of Trip and T’Pol.
Corporal love, though transient, was also a powerful conduit through which Trip’s human mind could reach out and touch T’Pol’s much more developed telepathic centers.
Early instances of inflamed arguments between Trip and T’Pol corroborated later discovery of contention between them, capable of seething passionately in both union and disagreement.
When she chose to marry Koss, continuing to work side by side with T’Pol forced Trip into craven withdrawal from her.
Phlox bore a measure of culpability for the catalyst the made way for physical culmination of Trip and T’Pol’s emotional attachment.
A dearth of experienced combat leadership before the Romulan War would have had costly consequences in the first engagements of the war.
Trip did his best to abstain from showing open affection for T’Pol whenever in the presence of a Human or Vulcan in deference to her emotional boundaries.
Soon after it became public knowledge that a Vulcan and a Human were to be married, the press quickly depicted the two as star-crossed lovers from disparate corners of the galaxy, aided by strained relations between Starfleet and Vulcan.
Trip’s weakness was an absolute lack of capacity to stomach the deprecation of his wife by a mob, and responding to the heckling lead to disastrous consequences.
He felt that the press was depredating the misfortune of their lost child, ignoring their privacy and airing their personal business publically.
Starfleet immediately descried that the two would not be allowed to serve in immediately subordinate positions aboard a starship any longer.
Much of Vulcan’s wind-swept deserts are dry, desiccated husks in comparison to the barrens of Earth’s most perilous deserts.
The leader of a fundamentalist cult delivered a vitriolic diatribe from his pulpit to a massive television audience on the abhorrence God held for a Human-Vulcan mixed marriage.
When T’Pol finally gave an interview, her demeanor was anything but diffident.
She quickly disabused the public of the notion that she and Trip had secretly been seeing one another since she began serving aboard Enterprise.
T’Pol did not disparage Reverend Sommers for his remarks, but relayed her husband’s disappointment that so many people would listen to words of such hate in an era in which humans believed themselves to be enlightened.
Dispassionate but engaging, conversant, and even funny – T’Pol’s interview shocked the world and delivered a new perspective on Vulcans to a great number of Humans who had never personally interacted with one.
The religious faction accused her of dissembling the truth of her and Trip’s relationship, of concealing the truth of accused improprieties.
While initially dogged in its obsession with the pairing of the two, the attention of the press eventually died down, as did the political and religious powder keg their story was thought to provoke.
The public soon began to see the church’s objection to a Vulcan-Human union for the dogmatic, antediluvian anachronism of centuries gone by for what it truly was.
While initially eclectic, this string of Trip-and-T’Pol-related sentences has meandered somewhat reliably into an actual storyline!
The efficacy of Phlox’s initial attempts to recreate Paxton’s genetic experiments while eliminating his errors met with great failure.
Despite negative religious attention and dogged media obsession, Trip and T’Pol received an effluence of well wishes and fan mail not just from Trip’s friends and family, but from countless strangers worldwide.
T’Pol always found the touch of Tucker’s hands emollient and disarming; he was always able to soften her defenses and reach her emotions.
For many years, Trip sought to emulate the leadership characteristics of his good friend and mentor, Jonathan Archer, but eventually had to seek his own counsel when command fell to him in the captain’s absence.
Archer’s encomium before the crowd of diplomats hailed the birth of the Federation.
After her first family reunion, T’Pol found that Trip’s accent, as well as his eccentricities, were endemic to the Tucker family.
While humans can tolerate great variations in temperature, the cold absolutely enervates the Vulcans – it is their greatest combat weakness.
This, perhaps more than any political dispute, worked to engender difference and distrust between the Vulcans and the Andorians over the many centuries.
When they first met, T’Pol’s enigmatic stare often aggravated Trip to no end.