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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

"achievement, n." - Word of the Day from the OED

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Your word for today is: achievement, n.

achievement, n.
Pronunciation: Brit. /əˈtʃiːvm(ə)nt/, U.S. /əˈtʃivm(ə)nt/
Forms: lME achieuement, 15 achiuement, 15 atcheament in sense 2, 15 atchieuement, 15 atchieument, 15 atchiuement, 16–18 atchievement, 16– achievement.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French achevement, Middle French achievement (French achèvement) the action of finishing or completing something (mid 13th cent. in Old French), accomplishment (1338) < acheverachieve v. + -ment-ment suffix. Compare earlier achieving n.
With sense 2 compare hatchment n.1; it is possible that this sense may have originated as a reinterpretation of hatchment n.1, understood as a contracted form (compare forms at that entry).
 1.
 a. The action of achieving something; completion, accomplishment, successful execution.
Also with modifying prefix, as non-achievement, over-, under-achievement, etc. (see at first element).
1477 Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 149With thachieuement of these deuises the kyng Oetes approched‥the shippe.
1490 Caxton tr. Eneydos sig. A i,Alle thystorye of his aduentures that he had er he cam to the achieuement of his conquest of ytalye.
1576 T. Newton tr. L. Lemnie Touchstone of Complexions ii. f. 15,All the instruments‥of the Senses‥attayne thereby stablenes, for the atchieuement of their functions and charges.
c1592 Faire Em sig. A3,The blisse That hangs on quicke atchiuement of my loue.
1603 R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 182He would vndertake the atchieument of that exploit.
1689 P. Bellon Court Secret ii. 16Whosoever once set his Hand to that Plough‥was not to look back, but to go forwards,‥being confident, that the more perillous, the more glorious the Achievement of the thing would be.
1705 D. Manley Queen Zarah ii. 33They might spur on my Hopes to the Atchievement of my Desires.
a1762 Lady M. W. Montagu Educ. in R. Dodsley Coll. Poems (1763) IV. 45Ne for th'atchievement of this great emprize The want of means or counsel may ye dread.
1815 R. Southey Roderick ix. 19So it be lawful, and within the bounds of possible atchievement.
1860 'G. Eliot' Mill on Floss II. iv. ii. 162The poor lad brought his first quarter's money, with a delicious sense of achievement, and gave it to his father.
1878 B. Taylor Prince Deukalion i. vi. 46What virtue lies More in achievement than its hot desire?
1905 E. Wharton House of Mirth i. x. 179A life in which achievement seemed as squalid as failure.
1946 Nature 3 Aug. 155/1The relatively rapid achievement of cationic equilibrium between perfusate and soil.
1998 Textile Horizons May 18/3Mexico is a land of achievement, architecture, and much learning.
2007 Marketing 2 May 57 (advt.)To earn a place on our Board, you'll a have a bulletproof record of achievement in developing marketing client relationships.
 b. Something that has been achieved; an action or result accomplished through effort, skill, or courage; a feat.
1583 B. Melbancke Philotimus 73The custom of ye Carthaginians, by which they wore so many ringes in their chaines, in signe of honour, as they had bene at victorious atchieuements.
1591 W. Raleigh Rep. Fight Iles of Açores sig. A4,[They] were all sent backe againe to their countries, to witnesse and recount the worthy achieuements of their inuincible and dreadfull Nauy.
1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) xi. lxix. 291We intreate of great Achiuements done By English, in contrarie Clymes.
1678 T. Jordan Triumphs of London in J. B. Heath Some Acct. Worshipful Company of Grocers (1869) 522You might see an hundred persons confusedly scrambling in the dirt for the frail atchievement of a bunch of raisins.
1767 F. Fawkes tr. Theocritus Idylliums xxiv. 233And each achievement where fair fame is sought, Harpalycus, the son of Hermes, taught.
1794 R. J. Sulivan View of Nature II. 367The many and great atchievements attributed to heroes of the first ages.
1824 T. F. Dibdin Library Compan. 161The achievements of Agincourt and Waterloo.
1831 D. Brewster Life I. Newton xix. 328The achievements of genius, like the source from which they spring, are indestructible.
1877 Spirit of Times 24 Nov. 454/2That banquet was a 'feast of intellect', as well as a culinary achievement of the highest order.
1934 P. Hutchison in N.Y. Times Bk. Rev. 9 Sept. 2/3'The Fly,' as a pure achievement in horror fiction‥must be ranked as one of the world's masterpieces within that disagreeable genre.
1964 Ann. Reg. 1963 185Among other notable American achievements in space during the year was the launching of a communications satellite.
1996 E. Lovelace Salt xi. 199He would add to his achievements the ability to sing any of the current calypsos and at least the chorus of the older ones.
2007 Daily Tel. 13 June 20/1The reopened Royal Festival Hall is a rare achievement of modesty and taste.
 2. Heraldry. Originally: an escutcheon or armorial device, esp. one granted in recognition of a distinguished feat. Later: a representation of all the armorial devices to which a bearer of arms is entitled. Formerly also: †a square or diamond-shaped panel or canvas with a deceased person's armorial bearings, affixed to his or her house during mourning or placed in a church; cf. hatchment n.1
1572 J. Bossewell Wks. Armorie f. 106v,All whiche atchieuementes before displayed, is within the Garter cotized of two Lions de ermine.
1586 J. Ferne Blazon of Gentrie 186The creast, tymber, mantell, or worde, bee no part of the coat-armour; they be addicions called atcheaments.
1610 J. Guillim Display of Heraldrie vi. v. 263An Atchievement, according to Leigh, is the Armes of euery Gentleman wel Marshalled with the Supporters, Helme, Wreath and Creasts, etc.
1753 T. Gray Long Story in Designs R. Bentley 14To raise the cieling's fretted height, Each pannel in achievements cloathing.
1868 A. P. Stanley Hist. Mem. Westm. Abbey iv. 201Graves, piled with the standards and achievements of the noble families of Florence.
1914 F. J. Grant Man. Heraldry (rev. ed.) 53Achievement, the coat of arms (helmet, crest, mantling, motto) fully emblazoned according to the rules of heraldry.
1990 Antiquaries Jrnl. 70 73The central corbel supports an architrave with broken triangular segmented pediment, enclosing an achievement of arms.
Compounds
 C1.  a. General attrib. (chiefly Educ. and Psychol.).
 achievement age n.
1921 Univ. Illin. Bur. Educ. Res. Bull. 6 5Medians are the mental age norms, which are used as a basis for translating the point scores into *achievement ages.
1986 Learning Disability Q. 9 216/2Each‥child's predicted score was translated into age months to arrive at an expected achievement age.
 achievement gap n.
1956 Washington Post 13 Oct. 14/4The validity of this judgment is questionable, as it is based, in many instances on a comparison of achievement records of Negro and white pupils, while it overlooks one of the main causes of the *achievement gap—inequality of the dual system of education.
2000 N.Y. Times 3 Aug. a28/4For eight years, the achievement gap in our schools has grown worse, poor and disadvantaged children falling further and further behind.
 achievement orientation n.
1951 D. C. McClelland Personality x. 357If independence training is begun before the child is really capable of performing‥the skills required of him, his thinking is likely to be colored thereafter by an *achievement orientation.
2003 Contemp. Sociol. 32 696/2Some may quibble with the use of educational expectations as an indicator of achievement orientation.
 achievement test n.
1921 Univ. Illin. Bur. Educ. Res. Bull. 6 5The plan consists of establishing for the *achievement tests mental age norms which are used to supplement the usual grade norms.
1999 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 18 Nov. 20/2European countries have similar achievement tests, such as the baccalauréat , the Abitur , and the Laurea.
 b. Objective.
 achievement-oriented adj.
1950 Social Forces 28 384/2The problems of tenure and seniority in our kind of *achievement-oriented society reflect this fact.
2003 Jrnl. Contemp. Hist. 38 374Sports are the mirror image of—rather than an emancipatory alternative to—the repressive, exploitive, achievement-oriented world of work.
 C2.
 achievement motivation n. motivation or drive to excel or attain goals.
1949 D. McClelland & A. M. Liberman in Jrnl. Personality 18 247Our measures‥are not reflecting simply a temporary motivational state but do in fact represent‥the level of *achievement motivation a subject maintains over a period of months.
2005 Time 14 Nov. 51/3Ongoing studies‥have measured achievement motivation—lab language for ambition—in identical siblings separated at birth.
 achievement quotient n. a numerical measure of a student's actual achievement relative to his or her potential achievement; cf. accomplishment quotient n. at accomplishment n.Compounds; abbreviated AQ.
1921 Univ. Illin. Bur. Educ. Res. Bull. 6 5Provision is made for comparing a pupil's achievement score‥with the norm corresponding to his mental age by dividing his achievement age by the standard score for his mental age. This quotient is called the *Achievement Quotient.
1996 Jerusalem Post (Nexis) 26 Sept. 3/2The achievement quotient listed above is almost certainly not matched in the recent history of any other Western (or, for that matter, non-Western) country in the world.


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[Increase My Vocabulary]

Commission on the Status of Women:
the commission of the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations that is concerned with the status of women in different societies

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Today's Word: ablutophobia

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This week's theme is: Irrational Fears.
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(noun)
[ah-bloo'-tah-FOE-bee-ah] Play Word

1. pathological fear of washing or bathing: "Until Sasha discovered the joys of splashing, she would scream through her nightly bath like a baby with ablutophobia."


Origin:
Approximately 1880; from Latin, 'ablutio': a washing + Greek, '-phobia,' from 'phobos': fear.

In action:
"The play, directed by Mark Rucker with wicked irreverence, is deliberately quirky and then some. The events in Edna's life include a badly written skit about date rape, the mischievous theft of a shipment of Handi Wipes and an attack of ablutophobia (which results in a repeated failure to shower). The issues include grief, forgiveness, fear of the negatively transforming powers of adulthood and the exhausting battle involved in fighting and forging identity."

Anita Gates. "Young Heroines, at Work and at Play," [Theater Review] The New York Times (November 12, 2006).

"Her character, Edna, is stuck in a dead-end job and begins to have flashbacks of her brother, who was killed in Iraq. The last time she saw him, he wouldn't get out of an empty tub. She, in turn, develops ablutophobia, refusing to bathe.

'She gets dirtier and dirtier,' Woodward says. 'I never leave the stage, which is kind of interesting. We're going to put grease in my hat and dirt on the stage. Not glamorous, really, at all.'"

Lisa Bornstein. "Play lures L.A. stars to Boulder," [Theater Review: 'The Mistakes Madeline Made'] Rocky Mountain News (August 2, 2007).

"Elizabeth Meriwether's discomfiting comedy concerns ablutophobia--the fear of washing. Edna's brother Buddy (Thomas Sadoski) had once spent several grubby weeks living in her bathtub, and he seems to have infected Edna with his neurosis. Buddy has equated ablution with absolution. He's seen terrible events in the Mideast-- events that he, as a Westerner, feels some culpability for. Since he can't absolve himself, he can't bear to bathe. In a flashback, he explains to Edna, 'You're going to take a shower and everything will fall off of you, everything that stuck to you...You can let yourself be clean, you can do that.'"

Alexis Soloski. "Naked angels play high jinks with hygiene; Radiohole lose their sea legs," The Village Voice (May 2, 2006).

"Seymour Segnit, of The Phobia Clinic, has never met a phobia that couldn't be overcome in less than 24 hours, from Ablutophobia (washing) to Zoophobia (animals). The Oxford educated expert's techniques have liberated hundreds of thousands from torment worldwide."

"ExpertSource: Experts Available to Discuss Tips on Keeping New Year's Resolutions," Business Wire (December 12, 2005).

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Tune in tomorrow for: MYSOPHOBIA

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A.Word.A.Day--ventifact

 Wordsmith.orgThe Magic of Words 

Dec 14, 2010
This week's theme
Words made with combining forms

This week's words
exogamy
ventifact

A ventifact from Huizen, the Netherlands
A ventifact from Huizen, Holland
Photo: Marco Langbroek

Erratum
In yesterday's A THOUGHT FOR TODAY the author should have been shown as Samuel Butler the novelist (1835-1902), not Saumel Butler the poet (1612-1680).
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ventifact

PRONUNCIATION:
(VEN-tuh-fact)

MEANING:
noun: A stone shaped, polished, or faceted by windblown sand.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin venti- (wind), from ventus (wind) + factum (something made), from facere (to make or do). First recorded use: 1911. Also see yardang.

USAGE:
"On that last trip, I knelt by the river and took a stone from the deep pockets of my wind pants. It was a black ventifact, an igneous rock. During eons of exposure to the wind, its surface had become smooth and polished."
Bill Green; Adventure in Antarctica; The Plain Dealer (Cleveland, Ohio); Oct 1, 1995.

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A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Nationalist pride, like other variants of pride, can be a substitute for self-respect. -Eric Hoffer, philosopher and author (1902-1983)

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"explore, v." - Word of the Day from the OED

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Your word for today is: explore, v.

explore, v.
Pronunciation:/ɛkˈsplɔə(r)/
Etymology: < French explore-r, < Latin explōrā-re to search out.
Usually explained as < ex- out + plōrāre to make to flow, < pluĕre to flow.
 1.
 a. trans. To investigate, seek to ascertain or find out (a fact, the condition of anything). Also with indirect question as obj.
1585 Queen Elizabeth I in W. B. Scoones Four Cent. Eng. Lett. (1880) 29Stratagems‥by‥sondry meanes to be explored.
1630 P. Massinger Renegado v. iii. sig. L1,A cunning spie sent to explore The Cities strength, or weakenesse.
1697 Dryden tr. Virgil Georgics ii, in tr. Virgil Wks. 72Let the Learned Gard'ner‥Explore the Nature of each sev'ral Tree.
1715 Pope tr. Homer Iliad I. i. 84Let some Prophet‥Explore the Cause of great Apollo's Rage.
1823 C. Lamb Mackery End in Elia 177Who or what sort of persons inherited Mackery End‥we‥determined some day to explore.
1862 C. Merivale Hist. Rom. under Empire (1871) V. xlii. 165The imperator resolved to explore, disguised‥the real temper of his soldiers.
b. To search for; to find by searching; to search out. Obs.
?1615 G. Chapman tr. Homer Odysses (new ed.) ii. 328,I now am bound‥to explore My long-lack'd father.
1700 Dryden tr. Ovid Meleager & Atalanta in Fables 112With his pointed Dart Explores the nearest Passage to his Heart.
1712 Pope Messiah in Spectator No. 349,The good Shepherd‥Explores the lost, the wand'ring Sheep directs.
1769 O. Goldsmith Rom. Hist. I. 255The Alps, over which he was to explore a new passage into Italy.
1822 T. Taylor tr. Apuleius Metamorphosis 59Exploring‥a fit opportunity.
 c. To try, make proof of. (A Latinism.)
1667 Milton Paradise Lost ii. 632Satan‥toward the Gates of Hell Explores his solitary flight.
 2.
 a. To look into closely, examine into, scrutinize; to pry into (either a material or immaterial object). In later use coloured by association with 3.
1599 J. Davies Nosce Teipsum 95Her selfe in instants doth all things explore, For each thing present.
1729 T. Cooke Tales 92Some unexperienc'd Fool her Eyes explore.
1747 J. Wesley Primitive Physic (1762) p. ix,They explored the several Kinds of‥vegetable Substances.
a1800 W. Cowper On Mischievous Bull,Wood-peckers explore the sides Of rugged oaks for worms.
1817 J. Mill Hist. Brit. India II. v. viii. 683Of no man‥was the public conduct so completely explored.
1825 C. Lamb Superannuated Man in London Mag. May 71,I digress into Soho, to explore a book-stall.
1849 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. I. 440 (note),The Dutch archives have been too little explored.
1867 R. W. Emerson May-day 170He looketh seldom in their face, His eyes explore the ground.
 b. To examine by touch; to probe (a wound). Cf. exploration n.1b.
1767 B. Gooch Pract. Treat. Wounds I. 66The finger is better than any instrument to explore some kinds of wounds.
1785 W. Cowper Task iv. 361The learned finger never need explore Thy vig'rous pulse.
1870 W. C. Bryant tr. Homer Iliad I. iv. 114The physician must explore thy wound.
 3.
 a. esp. To search into or examine (a country, a place, etc.) by going through it; to go into or range over for the purpose of discovery. Fig. phr. to explore every avenue (or to explore avenues), to investigate every possibility.
a1616 F. Beaumont Loving at First Sight in Poems (1653),Not caring to observe the wind Or the new sea to explore.
1697 Dryden tr. Virgil Pastorals iv, in tr. Virgil Wks. 18Another Typhis shall new Seas explore.
1733 Pope Ess. Man iii. 105Who bid the Stork, Columbus-like, explore Heav'ns not his own?
1781 W. Cowper Retirem. 151The busy race‥explore Each creek.
1791 J. Boswell Life Johnson anno 1783 II. 443[Paraphrasing Johnson:] He‥recommended us to explore Wapping.
1845 M. Pattison Ess. (1889) I. 10It is the old historical lands of Europe that the lover of history longs to explore.
1867 M. E. Herbert Cradle Lands vii. 194We spent a couple of hours‥exploring the ruins.
fig.
1868 F. Max Müller Chips III. v. 118He had explored the modern languages of Europe.
1869 J. Martineau Ess. Philos. & Theol. 2nd Ser. 235The Scotch School‥entered the mind to explore it.
1922 G. Edwards From Crow-scaring to Westminster xii. 142,I intended to explore every avenue during the next few days before the final crash came to secure peace.
1926 Sat. Rev. 16 Oct. 446/2He‥explores every avenue which may lead him to a point of vantage whence to view his life in its new meaning.
1927 Rev. Eng. Stud. Oct. 432Our politicians are said to deal with dominant issues and to explore avenues.
1940 N. Mitford Pigeon Pie xv. 232In war-time we are bound to explore every avenue, whether it is likely to be productive of results, or not.
 b. intr. To conduct operations in search for.
1872 R. B. Smyth Mining Statist. 27A large expenditure of public money in exploring for coal.
1919 M. K. Bradby Psycho-anal. 165Those striking characteristics are on the surface. We do not explore for others less obvious, because these that we see satisfy systems of repressed or under-expressed emotion.
 c. To make an excursion; to go on an exploration (to).
1816 J. Austen Emma II. xiv. 263While they are with us, we shall explore a great deal.
1816 J. Austen Emma II. xiv. 264We explored to King's-Weston twice last summer.
1924 R. Macaulay Orphan Island ii. 29Wouldn't the Royal Geographical Society finance the expedition? It ought to, as it's to explore to an undiscovered island.
Derivatives
 
 exˈplored adj.
1823 C. Lamb Oxf. in Vacation in Elia 21Some rotten archive, rummaged out of some seldom-*explored press.


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[Increase My Vocabulary]

Blackwood:
any of several hardwood trees yielding very dark-colored wood

Monday, December 13, 2010

Today's Word: agoraphobia

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This week's theme is: Irrational Fears.
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(noun)
[ag'-ahr-ah-FOE-bee-ah] Play Word

1. an irrational fear of open or public spaces: "We knew our neighborhood could be rough, but we had no idea our son was being affected until he began exhibiting signs of agoraphobia."

additional noun form: agoraphobiac
adjective and noun form: agoraphobic


Origin:
Approximately 1873; coined by German psychiatrist Carl Westphal as German, 'Agoraphobie'; formed from Greek, 'agora': marketplace, which is related to the root 'ger-': to gather + 'phobia': fear.

In action:
"I went to therapy. I went to the doctor. I had an abortion. Twenty minutes before my appointment, the phone rang. A faraway sister. She wanted me to reconsider. How did she know? He had tracked her down. He, who had never met my family, who spoke to my sister just once before, had contacted her. He knew that everyone in my family is adamantly pro-life. This was a low blow. I took it as a message that he would do what he could to maintain a presence in my life.

I found a new neighborhood, a new apartment, a new school. More therapy. I was diagnosed as clinically depressed and suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder. I hardly left the house -- borderline agoraphobia induced by fear. Anti-depressants only fed my insomnia."

Spike Gillespie. "Life of restraint: I have a restraining order on my ex. But he has a grip on my life." Salon.com (October 25, 1999).

"Every day for the past 63 years, those four words have paid her a haunting visit. They lie down with her every evening. They wake with her each morning: 'Ten minutes -- one suitcase!'

'That's what the Nazis yelled when they knocked on our door in Poland,' Helena E. said. 'That's how much time they gave us to leave our home, and that one suitcase, that's how much of our lives we were allowed to take with us.'

'I was one of 10 cousins from a wealthy family back in Poland,' said Helena, who after a life of persecution and pain did not want her full name to appear in print. 'And after the Nazis declared open season on us, I was the only one who made it out alive. It was just unfair.'

...Living in a small Manhattan apartment with her cat, Pickles, Helena is battling depression and agoraphobia, a fear of open or public places. Since January, she said, she has left her home just four times. Her only links to the outside world are an old computer, which she uses mostly to pay bills and keep up with current affairs, and a telephone, which she uses mostly to chat with her psychiatrist.

...Life was not always this bleak for Helena, an educated woman who never married. She had long careers in advertising and market research, taught for eight years at the college level, got involved in community politics, and earned a master's degree in sociology. 'I was even pretty once,' she said, flashing a smile that vanished before she blinked.

Four years ago, when a business that Helena had started began to fail, so too did her mental, physical and financial health. Unable to pay the rent and other bills, she filed for bankruptcy, and soon became depressed. She could not afford necessary cataract operations or medical treatment for swollen legs, and when she suffered a massive pulmonary embolism in 1999, she was so tired of a life gone wrong, she did not even bother dialing 911. She was discovered only after a social worker, unable to reach her by phone, finally visited her home a few hours later.

'I think a great many Holocaust people just fall apart,' Helena said. 'We were young once and strong, but at some point, it all empties out.'"

Vincent M. Mallozzi. "At 72, Still Seeking Refuge From a World of Pain," The New York Times (November 12, 2002).

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AWADmail Issue 441

 Wordsmith.orgThe Magic of Words 

Dec 12, 2010
This week's theme
What to avoid when using words

This week's words
pleonasm
apophasis
sesquipedality
periphrasis
paralipsis

Next week's theme
Words made with combining forms

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AWADmail Issue 441

A Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day and Other Tidbits about Words and Language


From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
Subject: The pleonasm contest
Def: The use of more words than those necessary to express an idea; redundancy. For example: free gift.

More than 900 readers sent pleonasms in response to this week's contest. Here are some that were sent by a lot of readers:

Misc: preplan, advance planning, past history, past experience, very unique, future plan, forward planning, tuna fish, at this point in time, déjà vu all over again, 9am in the morning, new innovation.

RAS Syndrome (Redundant Acronym Syndrome Syndrome): ATM machine, VAT tax, PCV valve, PIN number, VIN number, START treaty, SSN number, HIV virus, NIC Card, RPMs per minute, ER room, ISBN number, ATV vehicle, SQL language, CRT tube, LPG gas.

Trouble across the languages: chai tea, shrimp scampi, please RSVP, the La Brea Tar Pits.

Raid kills bugs dead Winner of the contest is Tracy Blues of Cape Town, South Africa (blues.tracy gmail.com) for this entry:

One of my favourite pleonasms is the Raid insecticide tagline: "Raid kills bugs dead." In 2002 there was some outdoor advertising of this in Johannesburg with a VW "bug" on its roof next to the advert -- so a pleonasm and a pun!

She wins a copy of the game WildWords (courtesy WildWords Game Company).

The runner up is Manoj Saranathan of San Francisco (anagrammarian gmail.com) who sent this entry:

My favourite by far is chai tea latte. Chai, as you know, already has tea and milk (which is latte in Italian). So much so that I went to Starbucks recently and asked for an Indian spiced chai tea latte (which is quadruple redundancy) and my friend burst out laughing much to the bewilderment of the barista.

He wins a copy of the word game One Up! (courtesy Uppityshirts).

After reading hundreds of examples my head is swirling in pleonasms, but thanks to every one for participating by taking part in the contest.

Visit our website for a selection of pleonasms and pictures shared by readers from around the world.


From: Vince Marier (vince marier.us)
Subject: pleonasm story

My favorite campfire boy scout pleonasm story:

A vendor at a fair had a sign that read: Fresh Fish For Sale Here. A scout walks by and says, "That sign is too long. Where else would you be selling the fish if not here?", so he rips off the 'Here'. Another scout walks by and says, "That sign is too long. What else would you be doing with fish if not selling it?", so he rips off the 'For Sale'. Another scout walks by and says, "That sign is too long, You couldn't sell any fish unless they were fresh?", so he rips off the 'Fresh'. Another scout walks by and says, "You don't need that sign 'Fish', you can smell them blocks away."


From: Xiè Wéi (davor.danach gmail.com)
Subject: apophasis
Def: Allusion to something by denying it will be said.

The definition of the word "apophasis" always brings a smile to my face, as it reminds me of those very entertaining interviews with football managers, shown in the BBC programme MOTD right after premier league matches are over. It's not very uncommon for those on the losing sides to start answering routine questions in this fashion: "I really would not talk about the refereeing decisions, but..."


From: Christopher Joubert (chris_joubert hotmail.com)
Subject: Apophasis

I was in Ecuador in 1973 when the military, who in the previous year had deposed Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra from the presidency for the umpteenth time, announced that there would be elections. According to the newspapers, Velasco Ibarra said that he would definitely not be standing that time. When I mentioned that to an Ecuadorean colleague he said: "No, no. What he means is that he really will be standing."


From: Lynn Mancini (mancini dtcc.edu)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--apophasis

I won't even mention preterition/praeteritio.


From: Christopher Shea (crshea rcn.com)
Subject: Apophasis

Very similar to apophasis is preterition, from the Latin "praetereo": "I pass by, I omit to mention that ..." Preterition was one of Cicero's favorite rhetorical devices, as used in his First Oration against Cataline: "Nam illa nimis antiqua praetereo, quod C. Servilius Ahala Sp. Maelium novis rebus studentem manu sua occidit (For I omit, as too antiquated to mention, the case of Gaius Servilius, who killed Spurius Maelius with his own hands for fomenting revolution)."

Preterition also has a quite different meaning in Calvinist theology: the doctrine that God passed over or left unpredestined those not elected to final salvation.


From: Ellen Amy Cohen (ellencohen louisglick.com)
Subject: apophasis

When I read the definition, my mind was immediately brought back to the classic Bugs Bunny line: "I won't say it hasn't been a pleasure, because it hasn't."


From: Mary-Clare Adam (maryclareadam yahoo.com)
Subject: apophasis

I really enjoy Wordsmith and, first of all, trying to guess the meaning of the words you have chosen. When I saw "apophasis", I thought "finally, here is a word whose meaning I really do know". Well, in Modern Greek, "apophasis" means 'decision' or, rather, 'apophasisa' = 'I decided.'


From: Neal Horan (cdhoran hotmail.com)
Subject: Sesquipedality
Def: The practice of using long words.

Sesquipedality: n. A fondness for using words such as "sesquipedality".


From: Rudy Rosenberg Sr (RRosenbergSr accuratechemical.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--sesquipedality

While stationed in West Germany in 1953, our 627th QM Refrigeration Company had to secure German driver licenses for our newly arrived tractor trailer drivers.

We took all the drivers to the German motor vehicle bureau so they could all pass the necessary test. Tony Testa, from Belleville, NJ found himself standing across a German road sign that read NICHTDURCHFAHREN. Having no idea what he was looking at, he labored mightily to pronounce that atrocious German sesquipedality.

"Nicktduektfahhren," he stammered out loud, having no idea what he was looking at.
"Ach," exulted the German clerk. "You read German!. That is correct!"

Testa and all our 36 drivers got their licenses that morning.


From: Erna Buber-de Villiers (zakerna cyberserv.co.za)
Subject: sesquipedality

German speakers? Zulu must be the most sesquipedalian language on earth. Here's a sample sentence, taken from a book for Zulu-speaking toddlers:

Phela sengizigugela mina angisakwazi ukukhahlelana namathini emgwaqeni.

29 syllables for seven words - that's an average of 4.5 syllables per word. You won't find that in a simple German sentence!


From: Candy (via Wordsmith Talk bulletin board)
Subject: sesquipedality

Titin is the longest 'word' in the English language, being 189,819 letters long. But as it's a chemical formula some consider it not a word but a collection of words strung together.

This is a video of someone saying the word (I got tired of it after two minutes.)


From: Subha D. (arasi14 hotmail.com)
Subject: sesquipedality

In the Tamil language, a long-winded sentence is usually cut short by the listener, saying "ondrai muzhathukku peysathey" -- don't talk for one and a half feet. I wonder which came first, the Tamil or the English version?


From: Lynn Mancini (mancini dtcc.edu)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--periphrasis
Def: A roundabout way of saying something, using more words than necessary.

One of my favourite television series is Yes, Minister (and its follow-on "Yes, Prime Minister"). One of the characters on the show, Sir Humphrey, was a master of periphrasis. (He was also a sesquipedalian.) An example:

Sir Humphrey: "I wonder if I might crave your momentary indulgence in order to discharge a by-no-means disagreeable obligation which has, over the years, become more or less established practice within government circles as we approach the terminal period of the calendar year, of course, not financial. In fact, not to put too fine a point on it, Week Fifty-One and submit to you, with all appropriate deference, for your consideration at a convenient juncture, a sincere and sanguine expectation -- indeed confidence, indeed one might go so far as to say hope -- that the aforementioned period may be, at the end of the day, when all relevant factors have been taken into consideration, susceptible to being deemed to be such as to merit a final verdict of having been by no means unsatisfactory in its overall outcome and, in the final analysis, to give grounds for being judged, on mature reflection, to have been conducive to generating a degree of gratification which will be seen in retrospect to have been significantly higher than the general average." (snip)

Jim Hacker: "Are you trying to say 'Happy Christmas,' Humphrey?"

Sir Humphrey: "Yes, Minister."


From: Delores Orcutt (adagio4him gmail.com)
Subject: paralipsis
Def: Drawing attention to something while claiming to be passing over it.

This brought to mind a character from Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets. Gilderoy Lockhart uses a paralipsis when he often says that he's the "five-time winner of Witch Weekly's Most-Charming-Smile Award -- but I don't talk about that." How apropos since one needs a "pair of lips" to win the most charming smile award.


From: Cheryl Hughes (ch206ch yahoo.com)
Subject: Paralipsis

My mother immediately comes to mind. One of her favorite phrases when we talk on the phone is "Not to change the subject, but ..." whereupon she immediately changes the subject.


From: Barbara Gatti (barbsharon aol.com)
Subject: Paralipsis

For those of us from Brooklyn, NY, the best example of paralipsis goes something like this: "I'm not sayin'; I'm just sayin'."


From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
Subject: Interesting stories from the net

Saved by the (Lack of) Preposition
The Washington Post

Across and Down, the Wizard Who is Fastest of All
The New York Times

Budget-Cutting Colleges Bid Some Languages Adieu
The New York Times


Erratum: In "A THOUGHT FOR TODAY" for Dec 8, 2010, we incorrectly attributed the following quotation to the son of its author. Below is the correct attribution:

In a free country there is much clamor, with little suffering: in a despotic state there is little complaint but much suffering.
-Lazare Nicolas Marguerite Carnot, statesman and engineer (1753-1823)


A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Language is an anonymous, collective, and unconscious art; the result of the creativity of thousands of generations. -Edward Sapir, anthropologist, linguist (1884-1939)

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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...)