| >To catalyze something means to speed it up. (...) I don't see the problem with this. Could you be more specific? The problem with this is that "make it happen faster" is already clear and sufficient. People understand it -- including people who don't have an idea what "catalyst" means (for me it's a totally transparent word, as its origin and etymology come from my language. YMMV). If you want to dress it up to make it sound more impressive, then you're not communicating effectively. And if you include 3-4 other unecessary buzzwords in the same sentense you're just name-dropping words. "I saw a very puissant pismire lifting 100 times its weight in a sweven yesterday". Do you see anything wrong with this sentense? http://www.thefreedictionary.com/pismire
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/puissant
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/sweven (Except if you're a chemist, and you use the word "catalyst" as it applies to your terminology) |
I disagree. Catalyze is more succinct. In addition, to catalyze has the connotation of making change happen via the injection of a catalyst, thus connecting the agent of change with the change it brings. It's a better word.
Catalyst is not a difficult vocabulary word, nor a particularly uncommon word. Compare it's frequency to the words you used: http://books.google.com/ngrams/graph?content=catalyst%2C+pui...