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Saturday, July 31, 2010

"temperament" - Word of the Day from the OED

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temperament, n.

SECOND EDITION 1989  

({sm}t{ope}mp{schwa}r{schwa}m{schwa}nt)  Also 5 temperment. [ad. L. temper{amac}mentum due mixture, f temper{amac}re to TEMPER: see -MENT. So Fr. tempérament (16th c. in Godef. Compl.).] 

    I.    {dag}1. A moderate and proportionable mixture of elements in a compound; the condition in which elements are combined in their due proportions.

?a1412 LYDG. Two Merch. 303 Yiff..heete or blood passe his temperament, In to a fevere anoon a man it leedith. 1576 NEWTON Lemnie's Complex. (1633) 50 Crasis or Temperament..is an agreement, and conveniency of the first qualities and Elements among themselves: Or, an equall mixture or proportion of the qualities of the Elements, wherein no excesse blame-worthy or faulty is to be found. 1658 PHILLIPS, Temperament, a moderate and proportionable mixture of any thing, but more peculiarly of the four humours of the body. 1684 tr. Bonet's Merc. Compit. IV. 124 The cure of a wasting Flux..consists in the restitution of the temperament. 1684 J. P. tr. Frambresar. Art Physick i. 18 A Temperament is a proportion of the four chief Elementary Qualities proper for the true exercise of the Natural Functions.

    {dag}2. State or condition with respect to the proportion of ingredients or manner of mixing; consistence, composition; mixture. Obs.

1471 RIPLEY Comp. Alch. IV. xiv. in Ashm. Theat. Chem. Brit. (1652) 147 A temperament not so thyk as the Body ys, Nother so thyn as Water. 1610 P. BARROUGH Meth. Physick VIII (1639) 469 Boyle it again until it come to the temperament of an ointment. 1641 MILTON Reform. II. Wks. 1851 III. 57 The best founded Commonwealths..have aym'd at a certaine mixture and temperament, partaking the severall vertues of each other State. 1660 N. INGELO Bentiv. & Ur. II (1682) 203 That the Soul is not a Temperament of Corporeal Humours is manifest. a1673 J. CARYL in Spurgeon Treas. Dav. Ps. lxvi. 12 A due temperament of heat and cold, of dryness and moistness.

    II.    {dag}3. In the natural philosophy of the Middle Ages: The combination of supposed qualities (hot or cold, moist or dry) in a certain proportion, determining the nature of a plant or other body (= COMPLEXION n. 1); characteristic nature; known spec. as universal temperament (cf. 6). Obs.

1471 RIPLEY Comp. Alch. I. xviii. in Ashm. Theat. Chem. Brit. (1652) 133 For soe to temperment ys brought our Stone, And Natures contraryose, fower be made one. 1578 LYTE Dodoens I. lxvi. 97 Some men write of this herbe [Water Plantayne], that it is of temperament colde and dry. 1612 WOODALL Surg. Mate Wks. (1653) 209 Let no man attribute to all salts one temperament. 1665 G. HAVERS P. della Valle's Trav. E. India 70 Of temperament, 'tis held to be hot, and good to promote digestion. a1677 HALE Prim. Orig. Man. II. iv. 153 The experience of various temperaments and operations of those Herbs.

    4. The condition of the weather or climate as resulting from the different combinations of the qualities, heat or cold, dryness or humidity; climate. Obs. or arch.

1610 P. BARROUGH Meth. Physick IV. xiii. (1639) 245 Of all temperaments of the aire, the worst is that which is hot and moist. 1684 R. WALLER Nat. Exper. 10 Not onely from the season of the Year, and temperament of the Air, but from the Nature of the Soils and Countries themselves. 1713 DERHAM Phys.-Theol. I. ii. 17 The Cause assigned to malignant, epidemical Diseases;{em}and that is, an hot and moist Temperament of the Air. 1822-34 Good's Study Med. (ed. 4) I. 459 Change of air..where the difference of temperament, or even of temperature, can be rendered very considerable. 1875 JOWETT Plato (ed. 2) I. 492 The temperament of their seasons is such that they have no disease.

    {dag}5. Condition with regard to warmth or coldness; = TEMPERATURE 7. Obs.

1658 A. FOX Würtz' Surg. IV. i. 304 Wound Unguents and wound Plaisters should alwaies stand in one temperament. a1704 LOCKE Elem. Nat. Phil. xi. (1754) 51 Bodies are denominated hot and cold in proportion to the present temperament of that part of our body to which they are applied. 1741 Compl. Fam.-Piece II. iii. 352 To keep up your Heat to the same Temperament. 1799 Phil. Mag. III. 419 A given quantity of cold water, or water of any given temperament.

    6. In mediæval physiology: The combination of the four cardinal humours (see HUMOUR n. 2b) of the body, by the relative proportion of which the physical and mental constitution were held to be determined; known spec. as animal temperament; also, The bodily habit attributed to this, as a sanguine, choleric, phlegmatic, or melancholic temperament (see the adjs.). See TEMPER n. 8.
  In modern use the term temperament and the names of the four temperaments continue, without any theory of combination of humours.

1628 FELTHAM Resolves II. [I.] xxx. 95 Though the soule be not caused by the body; yet in the generall it followes the temperament of it. 1652 BP. HALL Invisible World II. §1 Galen was not a better Physician than an ill Divine, while he determines the soul to be the complexion and temperament of the prime qualities. 1657 TOMLINSON Renou's Disp. 10 That [Medicament]..which..doth work a manifest mutation on our bodies,..either in temperament, in matter or form. 1676 DRYDEN Aurengzebe Ded., Our Minds are perpetually wrought on by the Temperaments of our Bodies. 1727-41 CHAMBERS Cycl. s.v., The ancient physicians brought these animal temperaments to correspond with the universal temperament..: the sanguine temperament was supposed to coincide with hot and moist, the phlegmatic with cold and moist [etc.]. 1818 T. L. PEACOCK Nightmare Abb. i, This gentleman was naturally of an atrabilarious temperament. 1836 A. WALKER Beauty in Wom. 202 The ancients classed individuals in one or other of four temperaments, founded on the hypothesis of four humours,..the red part [of the blood], phlegm, yellow, and black bile... Hence were derived the names of the sanguine, the phlegmatic, the choleric, and the melancholic temperaments. 1843 R. J. GRAVES Syst. Clin. Med xxxi. 421 Edward Fitzgerald, labourer,..temperament sanguineous.

    7. Constitution or habit of mind, esp. as depending upon or connected with physical constitution; natural disposition; = TEMPER n. 9.

1821 BYRON Juan III. liii, He was a man of a strange temperament. 1842 MRS. BROWNING Grk. Chr. Poets 135 The poetic temperament. 1843 LYTTON Last Bar. III. v, Despite this general smoothness of mien, his temperament was naturally irritable [and] quick. 1856 EMERSON Eng. Traits, Truth Wks. (Bohn) II. 55 A slow temperament makes them less rapid and ready than other countrymen. 1868 M. E. BRADDON Dead Sea Fr. III. v. 64 Visions..such..as the man of sanguine temperament can always evolve. 1873 HAMERTON Intell. Life I. iv. (1875) 25 The active temperament likes physical action for its own sake. 1891 Speaker 2 May 534/1 The unbiassed temperament which is essential to the true historian. 1894 W. B. CARPENTER Son of Man amg. Sons of Men v, Temperament is a convenient phrase to describe those qualities and dispositions which belong to him from birth.

    III. The action or fact of tempering.

    8. Moderating, moderation; lightening, alleviation, mitigation; due regulation. Obs. or arch

1475 Rolls of Parlt. VI. 144/2 That a dewe moderation and temperament be observed. 1576 NEWTON Lemnie's Complex. (1633) 2 Unlesse he have the knowledge of his owne body, and be ripe and skilfull in the temperament thereof. 1697 BP. PATRICK Comm. Exod. xxii. 11 But there were some Temperaments of this Law; for every Man was not admitted to purge himself by an Oath. 1861 Temple Bar Mag. IV. 54 That a certain temperament of speed was ensured.

    9. The action of duly combining or adjusting different principles, claims, etc.; adjustment, compromise. Obs. or arch.

1660 Trial Regic. 12 There is that excellent Temperament in our laws, that..the King cannot rule, but by His Laws. 1678 SIR G. MACKENZIE Crim. Laws Scot. II. xxiv. §6 (1699) 261 By this just Temperament, the Interest of the Common~wealth, and the Imbicility of Minors are both salved. 1686 F. SPENCE tr. Varillas' Ho. Medicis 52 The friends of Piero..propounded a temperament which equally fitted the king of Naples and duke of Milan's turn. 1790 BURKE Fr. Rev. 86 These admit no temperament and no compromise. 1794 {emem} Corr. (1844) IV. 253 There is no medium,{em}there is no temperament, there is no compromise with Jacobinism. 1818 HALLAM Mid. Ages (1872) II. iv. 43 As a fortunate temperament of law and justice with the royal authority.

    b. A middle course or state between extremes of any kind; a medium, mean. Obs. or arch.

1604 R. CAWDREY Table Alph., Temperament, temperatenesse, meane, or due proportion. 1656 BLOUNT Glossogr., Temperament,..a moderation, mean or measure. 1697 tr. C'tess D'Aunoy's Trav. (1706) 45 Wearied and tired, roasted by the heat of the Sun, or frozen by the Snows (for there is seldom any Temperament between these Two Extreams). 1741 MIDDLETON Cicero II. xi. 476 Rewards and punishments; in which..as in every thing else, a certain medium and temperament is to be observed. 1823 BENTHAM Not Paul 249 The causes..of this temperament{em}this mezzo termino{em}this middle course. 1827 HALLAM Const. Hist. (1876) I. ii. §4. 88 A judicious temperament, which the reformers would have done well to adopt in some other points.

    10. Mus. The adjustment of the intervals of the scale (in the tuning of instruments of fixed intonation, as keyboard instruments), so as to adapt them to the purposes of practical harmony: consisting in slight variations of the pitch of the notes from true or ‘just’ intonation in order to make them available in different keys; a particular system of doing this. (Sometimes extended to any system of tuning, including that of just intonation.)
  The chief temperaments that have been practically used are mean-tone temperament (see MEAN TONE); and equal temperament (now almost universal), in which the octave is divided into twelve (theoretically) equal semitones, so that the variations of pitch are evenly distributed throughout all keys.

1727-41 CHAMBERS Cycl., Temperament,..in music, denotes a rectifying or mending the false or imperfect concords, by transferring to them part of the beauty of the perfect ones. 1788 CAVALLO in Phil. Trans. LXXVIII. 242 This alteration of the just lengths of strings, necessary for adapting them to several key-notes, is called the temperament 1881 BROADHOUSE Mus. Acoustics 354 Mean tone temperament was perfected by Salinas, A.D. 1577. Ibid. 356 The principle usually adopted at the present day for all keyed instruments is that called ‘Equal Temperament’, which professes to divide the octave into twelve exactly equal parts, though it does not actually so divide it. 1898 STAINER & BARRETT Dict. Mus. Terms 437/1 The question of melodic progressions, as affecting the excellence of temperaments, is too extensive for our limits.

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Sclaff:
a poor golf stroke in which the club head hits the ground before hitting the ball

Friday, July 30, 2010

Today's Word: hermitage

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(noun)
[HUR-mi-tidj] Play Word

1. the abode of a hermit or a group of hermits; an abbey

2. a place where one can live in seclusion; a hideaway or retreat: "I think of it as my private hermitage now -- even though it's nothing more than patch of grass by the river where I can pitch my tent and smell the trees."

3. a palace in St. Petersburg built by Catherine II, now in use as an art museum


Origin:
Approximately 1300; from Old French, 'hermitage', or 'ermitage', from 'heremite': religious recluse, or 'hermite': hermit; from Late Latin, 'ermita'; from Greek, 'eremites': person of the desert, from 'eremia': desert, from 'eremos': uninhabited.

In Action:
"Ever upbeat, he likens his switch from the outside world to his Internet hermitage as a move from a beautiful beachfront property to a scenic mountain spot. 'I have not had any time to miss anything,' he said.

The former UPS computing systems manager has had trouble finding shoes, but not potential wives. Women from all over the world have proposed online. But DotComGuy considers himself an 'old-fashioned kind of guy.'"

Richard Stenger. 'Does DotComguy live in e-utopia or a publicity hut?' CNN.com (January 25, 2000).

On that Note:
The Hermitage is also the name of one of the most magnificent museums in the world. Located in the northern city of St. Petersburg, Russia, the State Hermitage Museum rests on a picturesque bank of the Neva River. St. Petersburg is so far north that the sun does not fully go down in the summer and from June 11th to July 2nd, the nights are as bright as early evening.

One of the Hermitage's main buildings is the Winter Palace. Designed with the explicit goal of surpassing all European palaces in beauty, the 240 room structure was completed in 1762. The palace was the official residence of Russian royalty until the 1917 revolution, when the Romanovs were dethroned and murdered. The buildings and collections of the State Hermitage Museum are largely attributed to Catherine the Great, an avid art collector who ruled Russia for 34 years.

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casuistry: Dictionary.com Word of the Day

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Word of the Day for Friday, July 30, 2010

casuistry \KAZH-oo-uh-stree\, noun:

1. Specious, deceptive, or oversubtle reasoning, esp. in questions of morality.
2. The application of general ethical principles to particular cases of conscience or conduct.

The popular objection to casuistry is similar to the popular objection to the maxim that the ends justify the means.
-- John Dewey, Experience and Nature and Human Nature
"And how will it work in infinite time? It's nothing but casuistry, casuistry. It's a way of explaining my own impotence."
-- Isaac Bashevis Singer, The Seance

Casuistry comes from the French casuiste and the Latin casus, "case," perhaps related to making a case or justifying behavior.


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A.Word.A.Day--meretricious

 Wordsmith.orgThe Magic of Words 

Jul 30, 2010
This week's theme
Words that aren't what they appear to be

This week's words
artificer
noisome
psychopomp
fulsome
meretricious

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meretricious

PRONUNCIATION:
(mer-i-TRISH-uhs)

MEANING:
adjective:
1. Appealing in a cheap or showy manner: tawdry.
2. Based on pretense or insincerity.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin meretricius, meretrix (prostitute), from merere (to earn money).

USAGE:
"For most of the 20th century John Singer Sargent's skills as a portraitist were deemed to be meretricious."
Waldemar Januszczak; A Dirty Old Man And the Sea?; The Sunday Times (London, UK); Jul 11, 2010.

Explore "meretricious" in the Visual Thesaurus.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Morality is the custom of one's country and the current feeling of one's peers. Cannibalism is moral in a cannibal country. -Samuel Butler, writer (1835-1902)

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A.Word.A.Day--meretricious

 Wordsmith.orgThe Magic of Words 

Jul 30, 2010
This week's theme
Words that aren't what they appear to be

This week's words
artificer
noisome
psychopomp
fulsome
meretricious

Make a gift that
keeps on giving,
all year long:
A gift subscription of AWAD or give the gift of books
Discuss
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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

meretricious

PRONUNCIATION:
(mer-i-TRISH-uhs)

MEANING:
adjective:
1. Appealing in a cheap or showy manner: tawdry.
2. Based on pretense or insincerity.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin meretricius, meretrix (prostitute), from merere (to earn money).

USAGE:
"For most of the 20th century John Singer Sargent's skills as a portraitist were deemed to be meretricious."
Waldemar Januszczak; A Dirty Old Man And the Sea?; The Sunday Times (London, UK); Jul 11, 2010.

Explore "meretricious" in the Visual Thesaurus.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Morality is the custom of one's country and the current feeling of one's peers. Cannibalism is moral in a cannibal country. -Samuel Butler, writer (1835-1902)

Sponsors' messages:
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Learnt a lot from vicissitudes of life, I am a student of life, A work in progress, currently(sic) an overweight body but a beautiful mind, Another human seeking happiness. I believe in sharing and absorbing wisdom irrespective of the source. (aa no bhadraa kratavo...)