A special Friday posting. woo hoo!
Thanks to Henry Oyama and others like him, there is little need to use the word miscegenation.
DEF:
n.
The interbreeding of different races or of persons of different racial backgrounds.
Cohabitation, sexual relations, or marriage involving persons of different races.
A mixture or hybridization: "There was musical miscegenation at a time when segregation was the common rule" (Don McLeese).
//-->[Latin miscēre, to mix; see meik- in Indo-European roots + genus, race; see genə- in Indo-European roots + -ation.]
//--> mis·ceg'e·na'tion·al adj.
20 March 2009
19 March 2009
MALAISE + MORIBUND
A mundane malaise is weighing me down. Moreover, my macrocosm is malodorous with a malaise, that we can only wish were on the verge of being moribund.
MALAISE DEF:
n.
[French, from Old French : mal-, mal- + aise, ease; see ease.]
MORIBUND DEF:
adj.
[Latin moribundus, from morī, to die; see mer- in Indo-European roots.]
mor'i·bun'di·ty (-bŭn'dĭ-tē) n., mor'i·bund'ly adv.
(American Heritage)
BONUS DEF - MUNDANE:
adj.
[Middle English mondeine, from Old French mondain, from Latin mundānus, from mundus, world.]
mun·dane'ly adv., mun·dane'ness, mun·dan'i·ty (-dān'ĭ-tē) n.
Here is my maundering M day full of M words. Not as amusing as the P alliterative day, but the malaise is making me morose. Perhaps, you all thought I was relinquishing my word of the day throne, but you get several words for the price of one posting.
Bonus Bonus DEF:
maun·der
MALAISE DEF:
n.
- A vague feeling of bodily discomfort, as at the beginning of an illness.
- A general sense of depression or unease: "One year after the crash, the markets remain mired in a deep malaise" (New York Times).
[French, from Old French : mal-, mal- + aise, ease; see ease.]
MORIBUND DEF:
adj.
- Approaching death; about to die.
- On the verge of becoming obsolete: moribund customs; a moribund way of life.
[Latin moribundus, from morī, to die; see mer- in Indo-European roots.]
mor'i·bun'di·ty (-bŭn'dĭ-tē) n., mor'i·bund'ly adv.
(American Heritage)
BONUS DEF - MUNDANE:
adj.
- Of, relating to, or typical of this world; secular.
- Relating to, characteristic of, or concerned with commonplaces; ordinary.
[Middle English mondeine, from Old French mondain, from Latin mundānus, from mundus, world.]
mun·dane'ly adv., mun·dane'ness, mun·dan'i·ty (-dān'ĭ-tē) n.
Here is my maundering M day full of M words. Not as amusing as the P alliterative day, but the malaise is making me morose. Perhaps, you all thought I was relinquishing my word of the day throne, but you get several words for the price of one posting.
Bonus Bonus DEF:
maun·der
(môn'dər, män'-) Pronunciation Key intr.v. maun·dered, maun·der·ing, maun·ders
[Probably dialectal variant of meander (probably influenced by wander).] |
18 March 2009
UNKEMPT
Only unkempt musicians can participate in the West by Southwest music festival. That is the rule.
DEF: adj.
Not combed: unkempt hair.
Not properly maintained; disorderly or untidy: an unkempt garden. See Synonyms at sloppy.
Unpolished; rude.
//-->[Middle English unkemd : un-, not; see un-1 + kembed, past participle of kemben, to comb (from Old English cemban; see gembh- in Indo-European roots).]
//-->
( American Heritage)
DEF: adj.
Not combed: unkempt hair.
Not properly maintained; disorderly or untidy: an unkempt garden. See Synonyms at sloppy.
Unpolished; rude.
//-->[Middle English unkemd : un-, not; see un-1 + kembed, past participle of kemben, to comb (from Old English cemban; see gembh- in Indo-European roots).]
//-->
( American Heritage)
05 March 2009
OGLE
I think the reason the 36 hour ride bicyclists on the Mall are there is because they have a yen to be ogled in their tight, little bike outfits.
DEF:
v. tr.
To stare in an impertinent, flirtatious, or amorous manner.
n. An impertinent, flirtatious, or amorous stare.
[Perhaps from Low German oghelen, oegeln, frequentative of oegen, to eye, from oghe, oge, eye; see okw- in Indo-European roots.]
o'gler n.
Bonus definition:
Yen-n. A strong desire or inclination; a yearning or craving.
intr.v. yenned, yen·ning, yens
To have a strong desire or inclination; yearn.
[Chinese (Cantonese) uên, hope, wish, equivalent to Chinese (Mandarin) yuàn.]
For two days now I have ridden my bicycle through the Mall on campus and seen these super-fit guys riding their cycles with their back wheels in the stand that allows them to do a stationary ride trying to figure out what they are doing there and, of course, noticing their fitness. This morning noticing that I was noticing their fitness, I figured that they should be my inspiration for the word of the day? week?
DEF:
v. tr.
- To stare at.
- To stare at impertinently, flirtatiously, or amorously.
To stare in an impertinent, flirtatious, or amorous manner.
n. An impertinent, flirtatious, or amorous stare.
[Perhaps from Low German oghelen, oegeln, frequentative of oegen, to eye, from oghe, oge, eye; see okw- in Indo-European roots.]
o'gler n.
Bonus definition:
Yen-n. A strong desire or inclination; a yearning or craving.
intr.v. yenned, yen·ning, yens
To have a strong desire or inclination; yearn.
[Chinese (Cantonese) uên, hope, wish, equivalent to Chinese (Mandarin) yuàn.]
For two days now I have ridden my bicycle through the Mall on campus and seen these super-fit guys riding their cycles with their back wheels in the stand that allows them to do a stationary ride trying to figure out what they are doing there and, of course, noticing their fitness. This morning noticing that I was noticing their fitness, I figured that they should be my inspiration for the word of the day? week?
24 February 2009
PURLOIN
I'm baaackkk!!!
Purloining purple paper is a particularly passionate perpetration.
DEF:
v. tr.
To steal, often in a violation of trust. See Synonyms at steal.
v. intr.
To commit theft.
[Middle English purloinen, to remove, from Anglo-Norman purloigner : pur-, away (from Latin prō-; see pro-1) + loign, far (from Latin longē, from longus, long; see del-1 in Indo-European roots).]
pur·loin'er n.
Thank you to Angela for starting the chain of events that led to the purloining and to Zaid, my lovely nephew, who at one point started most of his words with "p" which led to my love of sentences full of "p" words.
Purloining purple paper is a particularly passionate perpetration.
DEF:
v. tr.
To steal, often in a violation of trust. See Synonyms at steal.
v. intr.
To commit theft.
[Middle English purloinen, to remove, from Anglo-Norman purloigner : pur-, away (from Latin prō-; see pro-1) + loign, far (from Latin longē, from longus, long; see del-1 in Indo-European roots).]
pur·loin'er n.
Thank you to Angela for starting the chain of events that led to the purloining and to Zaid, my lovely nephew, who at one point started most of his words with "p" which led to my love of sentences full of "p" words.
06 February 2009
LURID
I realize that publishers think lurid covers to draw in readers, but do they ever think that they are, also, scaring away readers who are horrified by the luridness of the cover or simply too embarrassed to walk around with such a book.
DEF: adj.
DEF: adj.
- Causing shock or horror; gruesome.
- Marked by sensationalism: a lurid account of the crime. See Synonyms at ghastly.
- Glowing or shining with the glare of fire through a haze: lurid flames.
- Sallow or pallid in color.
05 February 2009
VILLAINY
If I were a Zoroastrian -- according to what I learned in class today -- I would believe that good would triumph over villainy. However, Tuesday's miscreant has not left me in such a hopeful and positive frame of mind.
DEF:
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
DEF:
1. | the actions or conduct of a villain; outrageous wickedness. |
2. | a villainous act or deed. |
3. | Obsolete. villeinage. |
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006.
04 February 2009
MISCREANT
Some miscreant stole the lovely and puffy and warm down jacket lent to me by the kind Heba out of my suitcase, when I was flying back to Tucson. Freeze, scumbag, freeze!
DEF:
DEF:
Main Entry: | miscreant1 |
Part of Speech: | adj |
Definition: | disbelieving; heretical |
Etymology: | Middle French mes- 'mis-' + croire 'to believe' |
Main Entry: | miscreant1 |
Part of Speech: | n |
Definition: | a disbeliever; heretic |
Etymology: | Middle French mes- 'mis-' + croire 'to believe' |
Main Entry: | miscreant2 |
Part of Speech: | adj |
Definition: | depraved; behaving badly |
Etymology: | Middle French mes- 'mis-' + croire 'to believe' |
Main Entry: | miscreant2 |
Part of Speech: | n |
Definition: | a scoundrel; reprobate |
Etymology: | Middle French mes- 'mis-' + croire 'to believe' |
31 January 2009
LAME
Lame is not have a word of the day daily.
DEF:
(urbandictionary.com)
I am so guilty. Sorry!
DEF:
just plain stupid, un-original, or lifeless. barbed wire tattoos, butterflies, and tribal tattoos are lame, they say a lot about the person who gets them. sarah got a butterfly tattoo on her lower back. that's so lame, i'd rather get a dick on mine, at least i'll be more original. |
I am so guilty. Sorry!
25 January 2009
PROCLIVITIES
We all know Allison's proclivities -- watching pretty young girls.
Also, my proclivity to procrastination has become glaringly obvious in that I have posted the word of the day only once in a month. Bad me.
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Also, my proclivity to procrastination has become glaringly obvious in that I have posted the word of the day only once in a month. Bad me.
DEF:
–noun, plural -ties.
–noun, plural -ties.
natural or habitual inclination or tendency; propensity; predisposition: a proclivity to meticulousness. |
07 January 2009
TRANSGRESSION
Upon seeing Christian juicing blood oranges, his landlady acted as if he had committed a transgression, while it was a mere solecism.
Apparently, juicing blood oranges is not the done thing in Tunisia.
DEF:
n.
1400–50; late ME <>trānsgressiōn- (s. of trānsgressiō) a stepping across.
(American Heritage)
Sorry for the tardy postings. A two week break makes on lazy.
Apparently, juicing blood oranges is not the done thing in Tunisia.
DEF:
n.
- A violation of a law, command, or duty: "The same transgressions should be visited with equal severity on both man and woman" (Elizabeth Cady Stanton). See Synonyms at breach.
- The exceeding of due bounds or limits.
- A relative rise in sea level resulting in deposition of marine strata over terrestrial strata.
1400–50; late ME <>trānsgressiōn- (s. of trānsgressiō) a stepping across.
(American Heritage)
Sorry for the tardy postings. A two week break makes on lazy.
01 January 2009
18 December 2008
EFFULGENT
The effulgent sanctuary of the University Closure is rapidly approaching.
DEF:
adj. Shining brilliantly; resplendent. See Synonyms at bright.
[Latin effulgēns, effulgent-, present participle of effulgēre, to shine out : ex-, ex- + fulgēre, to shine; see bhel-1 in Indo-European roots.]
(American Heritage)
"Effulgent rays of light." --Cowper.
OK a serious usage of effulgent:
It is a rare day in Arizona that there are no effulgent rays of light.
DEF:
adj. Shining brilliantly; resplendent. See Synonyms at bright.
[Latin effulgēns, effulgent-, present participle of effulgēre, to shine out : ex-, ex- + fulgēre, to shine; see bhel-1 in Indo-European roots.]
(American Heritage)
"Effulgent rays of light." --Cowper.
OK a serious usage of effulgent:
It is a rare day in Arizona that there are no effulgent rays of light.
17 December 2008
TASSEOMANCY
Would tasseomancy be considered more or less scientific than astrology?
[;-) JC, you know I don't love you less -- and perhaps more -- because you are interested in astrology.]
Tasseography (also known as tasseomancy or tassology) is a divination or fortune-telling method that interprets patterns in tea leaves, coffee grounds, or wine sediments.
The terms derive from the French word tasse (cup), which in turn derives from the Arabic tassa (cup), and the Greek suffixes -graph, -logy, and -mancy (divination).
(Wikipedia)
We love obscure words that we can use to confound others. *evil, self-aggrandizing laugh echoes hollowly in mad business manager's office* OK. Really how often can one use such words that you read in historical novels.
16 December 2008
SOLECISM
When my parents' arrival in town is imminent, worries about solecisms move to the forefront of my mind (and possibly, my sister's though she says she doesn't care).
That is not to say that I don't enjoy either noticing or pointing out the solecisms others utter.
DEF:
n.
[Latin soloecismus, from Greek soloikismos, from soloikizein, to speak incorrectly, from soloikos, speaking incorrectly, after Soloi (Soli), an Athenian colony in Cilicia where a dialect regarded as substandard was spoken.]
(American Heritage)
That is not to say that I don't enjoy either noticing or pointing out the solecisms others utter.
DEF:
n.
- A nonstandard usage or grammatical construction.
- A violation of etiquette.
- An impropriety, mistake, or incongruity.
[Latin soloecismus, from Greek soloikismos, from soloikizein, to speak incorrectly, from soloikos, speaking incorrectly, after Soloi (Soli), an Athenian colony in Cilicia where a dialect regarded as substandard was spoken.]
(American Heritage)
15 December 2008
PUGNACIOUS
In a pugnacious (not a characteristic typically associated with her) tone of voice, Anne stated that if the Dean's office was closing early we would, too.
DEF: adj. Combative in nature; belligerent. See Synonyms at belligerent.
[From Latin pugnāx, pugnāc-, from pugnāre, to fight, from pugnus, fist; see peuk- in Indo-European roots.]
pug·na'cious·ly adv., pug·na'cious·ness, pug·nac'i·ty (-nās'ĭ-tē) n.
SOURCE:
CMES staff meeting re: holiday break
DEF: adj. Combative in nature; belligerent. See Synonyms at belligerent.
[From Latin pugnāx, pugnāc-, from pugnāre, to fight, from pugnus, fist; see peuk- in Indo-European roots.]
pug·na'cious·ly adv., pug·na'cious·ness, pug·nac'i·ty (-nās'ĭ-tē) n.
SOURCE:
CMES staff meeting re: holiday break
12 December 2008
INSOUCIANT
Angela asked the meaning of my email address "duyen_hn" and I told her that Duyen is my Vietnamese name, hn is for Hanoi. Duyen means charming and insouciant.
DEF:
(Webster's Millenial)
DEF:
Part of Speech: | adj |
Definition: | unconcerned, undisturbed; carefree and nonchalant |
Etymology: | Latin in- + soucier 'to disturb' |
11 December 2008
OBSTRUCTIONIST
Bureaucracy by design is obstructionist not facilitative. We need to keep that in mind when dealing with one.
DEF:
n. One who systematically blocks or interrupts a process, especially one who attempts to impede passage of legislation by the use of delaying tactics, such as a filibuster.
(American Heritage)
INSPIRATION:
My job.
DEF:
n. One who systematically blocks or interrupts a process, especially one who attempts to impede passage of legislation by the use of delaying tactics, such as a filibuster.
(American Heritage)
INSPIRATION:
My job.
10 December 2008
OCCLUDE
At times, the University bureaucracy creates occlusions rather than mere obstacles.
DEF:
–verb (used with object)
(Dictionary.com)
DEF:
–verb (used with object)
1. | to close, shut, or stop up (a passage, opening, etc.). |
2. | to shut in, out, or off. |
3. | Physical Chemistry. (of certain metals and other solids) to incorporate (gases and other foreign substances), as by absorption or adsorption. |
09 December 2008
OFFICIOUS
Officiousness is the frequent refuge of middle management. It gives me a rash.
adj.
(American Heritage)
Usage: Impertinent, Officious, Rude. A person is officious who obtrudes his offices or assistance where they are not needed; he is impertinent when he intermeddles in things with which he has no concern. The former shows a want of tact, the latter a want of breeding, or, more commonly, a spirit of sheer impudence. A person is rude when he violates the proprieties of social life either from ignorance or wantonness. "An impertinent man will ask questions for the mere grafication of curiosity; a rude man will burst into the room of another, or push against his person, inviolant of all decorum; one who is officious is quite as unfortunate as he is troublesome; when he strives to serve, he has the misfortune to annoy." --Crabb. See Impudence, and Insolent.
(Webster's Unabridged)
Thanks to the boss of the boss of CMES' cleaner who asked "Has anyone shared with you that bicycles are not allowed in the building?"
adj.
- Marked by excessive eagerness in offering unwanted services or advice to others: an officious host; officious attention.
- Informal; unofficial.
- Archaic Eager to render services or help others.
(American Heritage)
Usage: Impertinent, Officious, Rude. A person is officious who obtrudes his offices or assistance where they are not needed; he is impertinent when he intermeddles in things with which he has no concern. The former shows a want of tact, the latter a want of breeding, or, more commonly, a spirit of sheer impudence. A person is rude when he violates the proprieties of social life either from ignorance or wantonness. "An impertinent man will ask questions for the mere grafication of curiosity; a rude man will burst into the room of another, or push against his person, inviolant of all decorum; one who is officious is quite as unfortunate as he is troublesome; when he strives to serve, he has the misfortune to annoy." --Crabb. See Impudence, and Insolent.
(Webster's Unabridged)
Thanks to the boss of the boss of CMES' cleaner who asked "Has anyone shared with you that bicycles are not allowed in the building?"
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