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Of course not.

Of course not.

Our last President certainly doesn't speak like that.![]()

That's what I thought. In high school I used to be a "flowery" writer who tried to impress others by using fancy words. 99% of the time, no one could understand what the heck I was saying. I now stick to using basic vocabulary along with condensed sentence structure. Doing the latter shows more intelligence than doing the former.![]()
Its entirely possible that an English teacher came up with this sentence as a vocabulary exercise and as a way to get students prepared to detect certain rhythms and styles of writing as they read. I can see this for a high school English class.
The questions I would bring up with the students with this sentence are:
1. What does the sentence mean to you?
2. What words do you not know? Based on the context clues, write a definition for each word.
3. Is there a certain pattern or rhythm to this sentence that could be defined as a certain type of literature? If so, what is the pattern, and define the type of literature this sentence falls in to.
4. After having analyzed this sentence - paraphrase the sentence into your own words.
5. Was writing this sentence effective writing?
Stuff like that encourages students to think more about the stuff they're reading.
One of those... "Don't quit your day job" Type of deal.
I used to be like that in the 6th grade. Never mind the fact I couldn't pronounce the words I knew. I still can't pronounce them.

I also had difficulty with pronunciation only in my case, it wasn't because of my hearing. It was just because the words were far too advanced for me to use.
I should have known that I wasn't going to trick my 9th grade English teacher by using a word which contained 4 syllables and would only be used by a Ph.D.![]()
I dont use words that are difficult to pronouce, just words that make one think, so they go look it up for the meaning. It can widen one's vocabulary. I'm a believer that the wider vocabulary you have, the better you are able to express yourself in written or spoken form. The only thing you need to keep in mind is your audience. Don't use language that is overly complicated for them. As Hear Again said, when speaking to a general audience, it is better to use simpler terms and structure so that you are able to articulate yourself more clearly.

“I do not know where family doctors acquired illegibly perplexing handwriting nevertheless, extraordinary pharmaceutical intellectuality counterbalancing indecipherability, transcendentalizes intercommunications incomprehensibleness”.
But it is funny. Seems like he is making fun of the Doctors handwriting on the RX.
Could be. It depends on what criticism your applying to it, and how you read it.