Well, it's official!
Brian and Dana, sitting in a tree...headed to matrimony.
In keeping with the theme, use these synonyms for "engaged" when you congratulate the happy couple.
Affiance
Betroth
Espouse
All have the same meaning: "intent to marry".
Monday, November 29, 2010
Monday, November 22, 2010
NPR is expanding my vocabulary!
I was listening to Fresh Air on National Public Radio last week, and heard a story on Jane Austen. During the course of the discourse (haha), several words were used that I had to jot down, with the sole purpose of bringing them to you:
Querulous: habitually complaining
Juvenilia: compositions produced in the artist's or author's youth
Anachronism: an error in chronology; especially : a chronological misplacing
of persons, events, objects, or customs in regard to each other
Pedantry: narrowly, stodgily, and often ostentatiously learned
Strew: to spread by scattering
Obtuse: lacking sharpness or quickness of sensibility or intellect
The piece, in particular, deals with the allegations that Jane Austen was a "sloppy writer", not able to spell or use punctuation correctly. I loved this sentence, as the narrator (linguist Geoff Nunberg) summed up his notion of anyone clucking their tongues as they apply what is a modern-day-notion of correctness:
"It's nice to know where a semi-colon's supposed to go, but it's nothing to swell your chest over. The artistry is in being able to write sentences that require one."
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Kerfuffle
Recentley NPR announced that it was firing news analyst Juan Williams because of his remarks about airplane passengers dressed in traditional Muslim clothing.
Kerfuffle was often used to describe this affair. For example:
"Liberals and conservatives alike were quick to elevate this kerfuffle into a larger battle of good-versus-evil over issues such as public financing of NPR or First Amendment guarantees, but it doesn't need to go there." – Armstrong Williams, The Hill's Pundits Blog, October 22, 2010
A fancy word for "disturbance" or "fuss," kerfuffle is often used to describe an exchange or encounter of exaggerated importance.
It's a popular word in British English, currently gaining popularity in the U.S.
Kerfuffle comes from Scottish Gaelic words meaning "awkward" and "disheveled."
Kerfuffle was often used to describe this affair. For example:
"Liberals and conservatives alike were quick to elevate this kerfuffle into a larger battle of good-versus-evil over issues such as public financing of NPR or First Amendment guarantees, but it doesn't need to go there." – Armstrong Williams, The Hill's Pundits Blog, October 22, 2010
A fancy word for "disturbance" or "fuss," kerfuffle is often used to describe an exchange or encounter of exaggerated importance.
It's a popular word in British English, currently gaining popularity in the U.S.
Kerfuffle comes from Scottish Gaelic words meaning "awkward" and "disheveled."
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Wise statement
Winston Churchill was a man of great quotes. I ran across this very excellent statement today in a search for something unrelated:
The short words are best, and the old words are the best of all.
Winston Churchill
The short words are best, and the old words are the best of all.
Winston Churchill
Terms from Academia
I have run across two words from the world of academia lately.
Matriculate
v. muh-trik-yuh-leyt
Ped·a·go·gy /ˈpɛdəˌgoʊdʒi, -ˌgɒdʒi/ 1. the function or work of a teacher; teaching.
2. the art or science of teaching; education; instructional methods.
Origin:
1575–85; < Gk paidagōgía office of a child's tutor.
These are words that I would probably very rarely use, since they are so ... uncommon.
How would you use them?
Matriculate
v. muh-trik-yuh-leyt
1. to enroll in a college or university as a candidate for a degree.
Ped·a·go·gy /ˈpɛdəˌgoʊdʒi, -ˌgɒdʒi/ 1. the function or work of a teacher; teaching.
2. the art or science of teaching; education; instructional methods.
Origin:
1575–85; < Gk paidagōgía office of a child's tutor.
These are words that I would probably very rarely use, since they are so ... uncommon.
How would you use them?
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
I am lethargic today
lethargic
\luh-THAHR-jik\
adjective
1: of, relating to, or characterized by lethargy : sluggish
2: indifferent, apathetic
EXAMPLE
After eating a large plate of spaghetti and meatballs I often feel lethargic and sleepy.
DID YOU KNOW?

\luh-THAHR-jik\
adjective
1: of, relating to, or characterized by lethargy : sluggish
2: indifferent, apathetic
EXAMPLE
After eating a large plate of spaghetti and meatballs I often feel lethargic and sleepy.
DID YOU KNOW?
In Greek mythology, Lethe was the name of a river in the underworld that was also called "the River of Unmindfulness" or "the River of Forgetfulness." Legend held that when someone died, he or she was given a drink of water from the river Lethe to forget all about his or her past life. Eventually this act of forgetting came to be associated with feelings of sluggishness, inactivity, or indifference. The name of the river and the word "lethargic," as well as the related noun "lethargy," all derive from "lethe," Greek for "forgetfulness."
It all makes me want to lie down... :)
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
Ubiquitous
One of the most searched words on the Merriam-Webster website.
ubiq•ui•tous adj \yü-ˈbi-kwə-təs\
Definition of UBIQUITOUS
: existing or being everywhere at the same time : constantly encountered : widespread (a ubiquitous fashion); omnipresent: (ubiquitous fog; ubiquitous little ants).
The ubiquitous message:
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