Tuesday, June 30, 2009

Word for the Day - June 30, 2009

lurid - LOO-rid - horrifying, gruesome, revolting, appalling

Example: "Boris Karloff's horror films were once considered quite lurid; but they're tame by comparison to, say, the contemporary 'Saw' series, which are truly lurid."

Monday, June 29, 2009

Word for Today - June 29, 2009

symptomatic - SIM-toe-MAT-ik - characteristic, indicative, suggestive

Example: "A film critic recently stated that the current success of badly written movie scripts is symptomatic of our dumbed-down society, which now accepts mediocrity as the norm."

Sunday, June 28, 2009

Word for Today - June 28, 2009

gratutous - grat-TOO-ih-TUS - uncalled for, unjustified, unwarranted or freely given without charge

Example: "Though rarely in life, gratutous praise is frequently heaped upon the recently dead."

Saturday, June 27, 2009

Word for Today - June 27, 2007

aphrodisiac - AFF-row-DIZ-ee-AKK - something exciting sexual desire

Example: "The latest sex scandal involving conservative politicians caused a news analyst to remark, 'It seems that becoming part of the political scene is, for many, an aphrodisiac.'"

Friday, June 26, 2009

Word for Today - June 26, 2009

plethora - more than enough, excess, over abundance

Example: "After a lengthy un-newsworthy period, we suddenly have a plethora of deaths among the rich & famous - Jackson & Faucett included."

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Word for Today - June 24, 2009

enmity - EHN-mih-TEE - mutual hatred, hostility, antipathy

Example: "A serious problem in the Mid Eastern countries is the tradition of enmity among their various religions."

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Word for Today - June 23, 2009

comment ca va (or just "ca va" for short) - koh-MAH say VAH - "How's it going?"

Example: "'Comment ca va' is a Frenchman's way of greeting someone informally, much as the German would say, 'Wie geht's' (vee-gates),' or the Spaniard, 'Que tal?' (kay-tahl)."

Monday, June 22, 2009

Word for Today - June 22, 2009

protean - PRO-tee-an - versatile, able to change

Example: "It appears unlikely so far that protean activity might occur during the stalemate in Iran."

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Word for Today - June 20, 2009

vicissitude - vih-SIS-ih-TOOD - expected or unexpected changes (especially in one's life)

Example: "We make careful plans for our future, but there are vicissitudes that can change them overnight."

Friday, June 19, 2009

Word for Today - June 19, 2009

obsequious - ub-SEE-kwee-US - overly eager to please, fawning, "brown-nosing"

Example: "The nurse was attendant in helping her patients - not obsequiously, but with sincere care to heal."

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Word for Today - June 18, 2009

nascent -NAY-sent - starting to develop, beginning to emerge

Example heard over NPR: "Rules for taxing cell phone use are outdated, having been developed 20 years ago, when cell phones were nascent technology."

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Word for Today - June 17, 2009

Draconian - drak-KOHN-yan - overly harsh, too severe

Example: "In the news today the Republican members of Congress rejected Obama's suggested new health plan as Draconian."

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Word for Today - June 16, 2009

conflate - kon-flate - to mix or fuse things

Example: "Alan Ayckbourn's plays often conflate the action in several rooms in onstage space."

Monday, June 15, 2009

Word for Today - June 15, 2009

schlep - shlep: This from a Jewish friend who ought to know what she's talking bout:

Joe - do not know where your definition came from, but it is not how I have heard (or used) the word. I googled it and got 2 other definitions.

By the way, Perhaps my family has been using it wrong - but the Yiddish dictionary agrees with us. In our family schlepp meant "to carry". For instance "I schlepped the groceries all the way from the village to home."

From American Yiddish Dictionary 101: To "schlepp" something is to carry it along with difficulty. A classic example is a Chassidic Jew "schlepping" tuna fish on an airplane from Crown Heights, Brooklyn, to somewhere else in the world.

And another: "Schlepp" derives from the German word "schleppen," meaning to drag.
diously, awkwardly, or carelessly

Another: To move slowly or laboriously: schlepped around with the twins in a stroller. (as in Sally is signing off this email because she is taking her kayak out and schlepping across the Lake Nebagamon to meet a friend .)

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Word for Today - June 13, 2009

profligate - PROF-lih-GATE - having low moral standards

Example: "Time Magazine referred to the 'profligate Berlusconi and his many peccadilloes (sins) as being once again in scandal.'"

Friday, June 12, 2009

Word for Today - June 12, 2009

predilection - PRED-ih-LEK-shun - a natural liking, a partiality, a penchant

Example: "For whatever reason, Americans have had a century old predilection for anything that is fast, expensive, noisy & polluting."

Thursday, June 11, 2009

Word for Today - June 11, 2009

homiletic - HOM-eh-LET-ik - the art of preaching or writing sermons

Example: "One can only hope that the clergyman is homile tic - most don't size up to those like 19th century Phillips Brooks, who, for example, proclaimed in one of his homilies, 'Do not pray for a lighter load, but for a stronger back.'"

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Word for Today - June 10, 2009

paralegal - PAIR-uh-LEE-gull - qualified to work as a full lawyer's assistant

Example: "Before she went into politics, Bonnie Sweeten worked as a paralegal."

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Word for Today - June 9, 2009

hirsute - hair-suit - abundant hair, with plants bristling with hairy surface

Example: "The hirsute lady in the circus could easily match any gentleman with a full beard."

Monday, June 8, 2009

Word for Today - June 8, 2009

inchoate - in KHO-ATE - just beginning to form, not yet completed

Example: "The jury had inchoate feelings about the woman on trial."

Sunday, June 7, 2009

Word for Today - June 7, 2009

vilify - VIL-ih-FIE - slander, defame, blacken character with abusive language, traduce, malign

Example: "Naomi Tutu decried (found fault) the fact that her father was often vilified as an activist against apartheid in South Africa."

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Word for Today - June 6, 2009

odyssey - ODD-eh-SEE - a lengthy series of travels or adventures

Example: "After discovering the undeniable horrors of Buchenwald with survivor Ellie Wiesel, the president on his political odyssey next visited the Normandy war site with octogenarian veterans."

Friday, June 5, 2009

Word for Today - June 5, 2009

stanchion - stan-CHEE-YON - an upholding or supporting pole

Example: "Many Palestinians announced hope that Obama would become the stanchion for what they called 'a fair & equal treatment' in the Gaza Strip."

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Word for Today - June 4, 2009

sere - seer - arrid, dry, withered

Example: "While the Midwest complains about heavy flooding, the lower West Coast complains its weather has become dangerously sere."

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Word for Today - June 3, 2009

trepidation - trep-ih-DAY-shun - fear, horror, dread, repulsion

Example: "French families await the news of the disappeared plane with grave trepidation."

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Word for Today - June 2, 2009

mollify - MOLL-ih-FYE - soothe, appease, tone down, calm

Example: "Too often mothers mollify their crying babies with something to eat."

joek

Word for Today - June 1, 2009

sine qua non - seenee-kwah-nohn - prerequisite, essential condition (literally, "without which not")

Example: "Comment in this month's SIERRA MAGAZINE: 'There are long lists of things people can do to mitigate climate change, but the sine qua non for solving the problem is to stop burning coal.'"