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micaelo Jun 9th, 2008 04:19 am

incredulous vs sceptical
 
In the following multiple choice exercise:
"A lot of people are ... about the benefits of nuclear power."
A disbelieving B sceptical C incredulous D unconvincing
The answer key gives "B sceptical" as the correct answer. However, I really can't see why "C incredulous" is incorrect here. Could somebody give me a hand with this one, please? Thanks

susan53 Jun 14th, 2008 05:11 am

Re: incredulous vs sceptical
 
My first reaction was : incredulous (= surprised) that something has happened; sceptical (= doubtful) that something is true. That's how I think I'd use them and I suspect it's what the test wanted.

But then I checked, and in fact I don't think it is wrong. Maybe it's one of those words which is gradually changing its meaning.

I googled "incredulous about" and got a lot of references including this one from The Times Higher Education website which seems to see the two words as complementary, if not synonymous :

.... summaries of each particular case study are necessarily brief and may leave a sceptical reader somewhat incredulous about the interpretations offered. ...

The difference in meaning still exists of course. Incredulous implies you are surprised or shocked by something as well as disbelieving. It has a sort of "Oh, come off it" feel to it. Whereas sceptical is less emotional, it just implies that you have your doubts.

So in this context (ie talking about benefits), personally I thought sceptical was more likely - to check I Googled both incredulous about the benefits (1 result) and sceptical about the benefits (2,670 results).

This suggests that sceptical and benefits are in fact more likely to collocate (occur together) than incredulous and benefits. But it's a matter of frequency of usage, not of grammar or meaning. Anyone who wants to be incredulous about the benefits of something is free to do so.

Hope that helps.
Sue

Eric18 Jul 31st, 2008 03:10 pm

Re: incredulous vs sceptical
 
Sue - That was an excellent bit of research. I'm going to borrow your trick of Googling phrases and counting responses.

Thanks!

susan53 Aug 1st, 2008 03:44 am

Re: incredulous vs sceptical
 
When you do, do it from the advanced search page and use the regions setting to get only US, UK, Australian or whatever version of English you want. Otherwise you may get results from sites written by non-native speakers who have simply made a mistake.

Eric18 Sep 27th, 2008 06:43 pm

Re: incredulous vs sceptical
 
Good point!

I learn some new computer trick almost every day. Thanks for sharing your tech savvy.


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