I am looking for a verb (or phrasal verbs) for describing the act of someone who seemingly speaks confidently on a topic he/she isn't actually sure of (he/she knows it inside). It is not like "bullshitting" because that person sounds like he/she actually knows stuff and is able to fool people (but in reality is just making bold claims, promises, spilling unsubstantiated facts walking in circle in retrospect). It is usually coming out of someone who is an "elite" in society, or is trained/experienced in public speaking.
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You sound like you're asking for A ... but not A. – Edwin Ashworth Dec 08 '19 at 23:34
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Realted: What is a word or phrase for someone who professes to know something but actually .... – Edwin Ashworth Dec 08 '19 at 23:38
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I don't understand the distinction you're trying to make between speaking confidently without knowledge and B.S.ing. – nnnnnn Dec 09 '19 at 01:06
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'Talking out of ignorance' suits but you want one word. The superlative is 'talking out of volumes of ignorance'. – Nigel J Dec 09 '19 at 11:48
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I echo @nnnnnn's comment which echoes my first comment, and wonder why there's still only one CV for lack of clarity. – Edwin Ashworth Dec 09 '19 at 17:00
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@Edwin well, I guess judging what is considered bullshit is a subjective issue so not everyone would have a consistent interpretation. Smart people/real expert may be able notice sth is BS no matter how hard the presenter tries to "beautify" the things they are saying. But not so much for average people, they won't think it is BS if they can be fooled by the candy wrap. – y chung Dec 09 '19 at 17:18
3 Answers
To do this is to ultracrepidate ("to criticize beyond the sphere of one's knowledge" -- Chambers). But I wouldn't like speculate on how likely it is that your listeners know that word.
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1I suppose one has to upvote this for the subtly self-deprecating self-referentiality. But was this the 1843 Chambers? – Edwin Ashworth Dec 09 '19 at 19:35
Dogmatizing is the closest I can think of. When someone is being dogmatic they're stating their opinions as if they're facts.
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I suggest "pontificate." In the example provided the writer completes by means of adverbials the sense of speaking confidently about things the person does not master or should not speak about:
What these interviews generally come down to is an invitation to writers to pontificate upon things for which it is either unseemly for them to speak (the quality of their own work) or upon which they are unfit to judge (the state of the cosmos). — Joseph Epstein
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I'm tempted to suggest "potificate", but I won't. Maybe "privyledge"? – Hot Licks Dec 08 '19 at 23:21
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1One can pontificate about a subject in which one is competent. The verb refers to the manner of expressing content, it says nothing about the exactitude of what is said. – Nigel J Dec 09 '19 at 11:47
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@NigelJ I agree. However, the verb carries a derogatory connotation that makes it appropriate to refer to cases where people talk nonsense. – Gustavson Dec 09 '19 at 13:24
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I am waiting for a few more days (I added some more details), if no more better answers I will accept this as the best one. – y chung Dec 09 '19 at 16:57