Sunday, June 16, 2019

Word of the Week 06/16/19: Inscrutable

From Dictionary.com:
1. incapable of being investigated, analyzed, or scrutinized; impenetrable.
2. not easily understood; mysterious; unfathomable:
3. incapable of being seen through physically; physically impenetrable:

From Cambridge Dictionary:
1. very difficult to understand or get to know
2. not showing emotions or thoughts and therefore very difficult to understand or get to know

From Vocabulary.com:
of an obscure nature

From Merriam-Webster:
You may have to scrutinize this word closely in order to speculate as to its origins, but there is at least one clue in this sentence. Inscrutable derives from the Late Latin adjective inscrutabilis, which can be traced back to the verb scrutari, meaning "to search or to examine." "Scrutari" is also the source of the English words "scrutinize" and "scrutiny."

Sunday, June 9, 2019

Word of the Week 06/09/19: Bucolic

From Dictionary.com:
1. of or relating to shepherds; pastoral
2. of, relating to, or suggesting an idyllic rural life

From Merriam-Webster:
We get bucolic from the Latin word bucolicus, which is ultimately from the Greek word boukolos, meaning "cowherd." When bucolic was first used in English in the early 17th century, it meant "pastoral" in a narrow sense - that is, it referred to things related to shepherds or herdsmen and in particular to pastoral poetry. Later in the 19th century, it was applied more broadly to things rural or rustic. Bucolic has also been occasionally used as a noun meaning "a pastoral poem" or "a bucolic person."


Sunday, June 2, 2019

Word(s) of the Week 06/02/19: Animal adjectives using the -ine suffix

acarine (mite, tick)
aedine, anopheline, culucine (mosquito)
alcelaphine, antilopine, bubaline (antelope)
anguine, anguilline, aspine, ophidian, serpentine, viperine (snake)
 - colubrine (gartersnake, king snake)
 - crotaline (rattlesnake)
 - elapine (cobra, coral snake, mamba)
 - pythonine (python)
arietine (ram)
asinine (donkey)

Sunday, May 26, 2019

Word of the Week 05/26/19: Imbroglio

From Merriam-Webster:
1a: an acutely painful or embarrassing misunderstanding
  b: scandal
  c: a violently confused or bitterly complicated altercation
  d: an intricate or complicated situation (as in a drama or novel)
2: a confused mass 
Imbroglio and "embroilment" are more than just synonyms; they're also linked through etymology. Both descend from the Middle French verb embrouiller (same meaning as "embroil"), from the prefix em-, meaning "thoroughly," plus brouiller, meaning "to mix" or "to confuse." ("Brouiller" is itself a descendant of an Old French word for broth.) Early in the 17th century, English speakers began using "embroil," a direct adaptation of "embrouiller." Our noun "embroilment," which also entered the language in the early 17th century, comes from the same source. Meanwhile, the Italians were using their own alteration of "embrouiller" : imbrogliare, meaning "to entangle." In the mid-18th century, English speakers embraced the Italian noun imbroglio as well.

From Vocabulary.com:
an intricate and confusing interpersonal or political situation

Sunday, May 19, 2019

Word of the Week 05/19/19: Abstemious

From Merriam-Webster:
Marked by restraint especially in the eating of food or drinking of alcohol.
Abstemious and "abstain" look alike, and both have meanings involving self-restraint or self-denial. Both get their start from the Latin prefix abs-, meaning "from" or "away," but "abstain" traces to "abs-" plus the Latin verb tenēre (meaning "to hold"), while "abstemious" gets its "-temious" from a suffix akin to the Latin noun temetum, meaning "intoxicating drink."

From Dictionary.com:
c.1600, from Latin abstemius "sober, temperate," from ab(s)- "from" (see ab-) + stem of temetum "strong drink," related to temulentus "drunken." Technically, of liquor, but extended in Latin to temperance in living generally.

NB from Vocabulary.com:
This word has the vowels a, e, i, o and u in alphabetical order; the adverb abstemiously adds the y.

Sunday, May 12, 2019

Word of the Week 05/12/19: Cromulent

From Wiktionary:
"Lisa the Iconoclast" is the sixteenth episode of The Simpsons' seventh season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on February 18, 1996. The episode features two neologisms, embiggen and cromulent, which were intended to sound like real words but are in fact completely fabricated (although it was later discovered that C. A. Ward had used "embiggen" in 1884). Embiggen, coined by Dan Greaney, has since been used in several scientific publications, while cromulent, coined by David X. Cohen, appeared in Dictionary.com's 21st Century Lexicon.

The showrunners asked the writers if they could come up with two words which sounded like real words, and these were what they came up with. The Springfield town motto is "A noble spirit embiggens the smallest man." Schoolteacher Edna Krabappel comments that she had never heard the word embiggen until she moved to Springfield. Ms. Hoover, another teacher, replies, "I don't know why; it’s a perfectly cromulent word." Later in the episode, while talking about Homer's audition for the role of town crier, Principal Skinner states, "He's embiggened that role with his cromulent performance."

The meaning of cromulent is inferred only from its usage, which indicates that it is a positive attribute. Dictionary.com defines it as meaning fine or acceptable. Ben Macintyre has written that it means "valid or acceptable".

Sunday, May 5, 2019

Word of the Week 05/05/19: Obsequious

From Grammarist:
Obsequious means servile, excessively obedient, overly-eager to please in a groveling manner. Obsequious enters the English language in the fifteenth century meaning prompt to serve, derived from the Latin word obsequiosus which means compliant, obedient, and from the Latin word obsequi meaning to accommodate oneself to the will of another. Obsequious behavior goes beyond compliance or obedience; it carries an unseemly connotation.

From Merriam-Webster:
An obsequious person is more likely to be a follower than a leader. Bear in mind that the word comes from the Latin root sequi, meaning "to follow." (The other contributor is the prefix ob-, meaning "toward.") "Sequi" is the source of a number of other English words, too, including "consequence" (a result that follows from an action), "sequel" (a novel, film, or TV show that follows an original version), and "non sequitur" (a conclusion that doesn’t follow from what was said before).

From Macmillan Dictionary:
Too eager to please someone, in a way that does not seem sincere

NB: not to be confused with obsequies, which are funeral rites