Sunday, January 31, 2010

incorrigible - in-KORR-ridj-ih-bull - not able to be corrected, improved or reformed; incurable; recidivous

Example: "J.D.Salinger, the author of 'Catcher in the Rye,' lived in in New England as an incorrigible hermit, in seclusion to his death on the 27th."

Saturday, January 30, 2010

surfeit - SIR-FIT - excess, overload, superfluity, too much of a good thing

Example: "The Week magazine recently pointed out a surfeit of surveys of questionable importance, many funded by fed money, including the following: There's a large increase in demand for double-D bra cups, largely due to obesity, breast implants, and the idea that a snug bra with wider cups is more appealing."

Friday, January 29, 2010

excoriate - eks-KOHree-ATE - denounce, attack, censure, criticise

Example: "In a narrow vote the Senate gave Ben S. Bernanke a second four-year term as the head of the Federal Reserve on Thursday, after critics excoriated the central bank's conduct in the years leading up to the financial crisis."

Thursday, January 28, 2010

ruminate - ROOM-ih-NATE - to think about something very deeply

Example: "USA Today ruminates on the fact that when federal income tax was first established in 1913 the tax code was 400 pages; now, it stated, it is 70,320 pages."

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

exorbitant - eks-OR-bih-tent - unreasonably high, excessive, unwarranted, disproportionate

Example: "The NY Times suggests that one of the possible reasons for a delay in the Nashville Tea Party next month is the exorbitant cost of Sarah Palin's reported speaking fee of $100,000 - yet to be confirmed, but if true it places her not that far off Tony Blair in the world list of unbelievably-overpaid-speakers."

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

acerbic - ah-SIR-bik - bitter, sharp (tongued), harsh

Example: "Simon Cowell, whose acerbic putdowns of American Idol contestants , is leaving after nine seasons to produce & judge an American version of The X Factor, a talent competition he developed for Brit TV."

Monday, January 25, 2010

narcissism - NAHR-sis-ISM - excessive or erotic interest in oneself & one's physical appearance

Example: "Commenting in the New Yorker magazine on modern autobiographies, Daniel Mendelsohn claims that 'it's the ostensible (obvious) narcissism that has irritated critics the most'."

Sunday, January 24, 2010

impolitic - im-POL-ih-TIK - ill advised, stupid, injudicious, unwise

Example: "The U of California Wellness Letter states that while plain air-popped popcorn is a healthy snack with few calories, buying movie theatre popcorn, loaded with harmful ingredients, is totally impolitic in any amount."

Saturday, January 23, 2010

exponential - EKS-poh-NEN-shul - becoming more & more rapid

Example: "Rough calculations based on a government's survey suggest that, while most foreign languages are vanishing from US classrooms, perhaps 1,600 American public and private schools are teaching Chinese, up from 300 or so a decade ago. And the numbers are growing exponentially, with China covering most of the expenses."

Friday, January 22, 2010

hubris - HEW-BRIS - arrogance, insolence, excessive pride

Example: "According to Lisa Miller, when Rabbi Kushner heard about TV evangelist Pat Robertson's comment about the Haitian earthquake, he exclaimed, 'I think that it's supreme hubris to think you can read God's mind.'"

Thursday, January 21, 2010

indolent - IN-doh-LENT - idle, shiftless, slothful, loafing, inert, unindustrious

Example: "A new study on indolence, noted in The Week magazine, found that each additional hour spent plopped motionless in front of the TV every day increases the risk of dying by 11%."

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

excoriate - eks-KOH-ree-ATE - criticize severely, denounce, vilify

Example: "NPR sports commentator Frank Deford this morning excoriated universities for excesses in placing sports over education, calling education often just an adjunct (supplementary) to sports."

Monday, January 18, 2010

trope - TROPE - a figurative or metaphorical use of a word or expression

Example: "In commenting on 'The Book of Eli,' New Yorker's David Denby wondered if 'Filmmakers aren't using the world's end as a trope to license a neo-primitivist' manifestation."

Sunday, January 17, 2010

orthogonal - or-THO-gon-ul - University of Michigan law professor Richard D. Friedman discovered when he answered a question from Justice Anthony M. Kennedy, then added that it was "entirely orthogonal" to the argument he was making. Friedman attempted to move on, but Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. stopped him.

"I'm sorry," Roberts said. "Entirely what?" "Orthogonal," Friedman repeated, and then defined the word: "Right angle. Unrelated. Irrelevant."
"Oh," Roberts replied.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

feckless - FEK-LESS - worthless, weak, ineffective, a waste of time

Example: "According to the Wall Street Journal, if you decide to watch the three hour football game on TV this weekend, you will see about 67 minutes of players standing around between plays, about 100 minutes of replays with the crowd shots and commercials, 3 seconds of the cheerleaders, 6 seconds of injured players and 11 minutes of actual playing time - a feckless way to spend an afternoon."

Friday, January 15, 2010

apocalypse - uh-POCK-uh-LIPS - an event involving destruction on a catastrophic or awesome scale

Example: "The earthquake in Haiti aptly has been described by the media as apocalyptic."

Thursday, January 14, 2010

cacophony - kah-KOFF-oh-NEE - a harsh, unharmonious mixture of sounds

Example: "With people of Port-au-Prince living in the streets for fear that after shocks would bury them inside buildings, a cacophony of human sounds - babies crying, women screaming, and an accumulated rumble akin to crowds at a soccer match - fills the air, rising & falling in volume, endlessly.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

raze - RAYZ - destroy to the ground

Example: "Yesterday's cataclysmic earthquake in Haiti's capitol city, Port-au-Prince, has razed half the buildings and left thousands homeless or buried under rubble."

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

perfidious - purr-FID-ee-YUSS - treacherous, two-faced, disloyal

Example:  "After initiating prominent campaigns against smoking, foods with harmful trans fats and other commercial products considered perfidious to human beings, New York City has a new target: the food industry's excessive use of salt."

Monday, January 11, 2010

boffo - BOFF-oh - highly successful

Example: "The vampire movie 'Daybreakers' has not pleased many critics, but thanks to teens it is guaranteed to be boffo at the box office."

Sunday, January 10, 2010

divisive - dih-VIH-siv - causing disagreement or hostility within or between groups that is likely to create a split

Example: Columnist Gail Collins, writing about the issue in the locker room of the Washington Wizards (formerly called the Bullets), stated, 'Gun control may be seen as a divisive issue, but most can agree that the Wizards players should not have brandished, during an argument, five handguns in their locker room.'"

Saturday, January 9, 2010

acrimonious - AK-rim-OHN-ynus - fiercely angry, bitter, caustic, vitriolic

Example: "The celebrated Nigerian 'panty-bomber' has brought condemnation to his entire country, resulting in immediate, acrimonious response from the people in that country who resent being painted with the same brush as a nation of potential terrorists."

Friday, January 8, 2010

ad nauseam - ODD-NAH-zee-AHM - a reference to something that has been repeated so often it has become tiresome

Example: "With the Tiger Woods news fading, the press now tackles endless details on the "underwear bomber" ad nauseam; it was only a matter of time before even the comics picked it up, with Jay Leno's description of the Nigerian as wearing "Fruit of the Lunatic" and Stephen Colbert calling the event the "crapification of the pants-scape."

Thursday, January 7, 2010

comity - KOM-ih-TEE - courtesy & considerate behavior toward others

Example: "Senator Christopher Dodd followed another Democratic senator, Byron Dorgan, to decide not to run for re-election this year - voicing, among other reasons, the depressing fact that partisanship has created rigid political competition between the two parties and less honest cooperation, with comity no longer existing between them."

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

elegiac - EL-eh-JAI-ik - usually a writing or work of art having mournful qualities

Example: "In a film called "The Soloist," the character of the street musician with a serious mental problem was presented in an elegiac fashion, developed to touch immediately the viewer's sympathies for the hapless genius."

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

lieu - LEW - instead

Example: "A Napa Valley report states that, in lieu of stealing expensive wines from wineries, "panel thieves" now are running off with solar panels from the vineyards by the thousands."

Monday, January 4, 2010

teratoid - TAIR-uh-TOYD - the alteration or development of an abnormality

Example: "Among the adjectives describing the new 1/2-mile high building in Dubai are these synonyms: hideous, abnormal, freakish, colossal, stupendous, teratoid, other-wordly."

Sunday, January 3, 2010

profusion - proh-FEW-zhun - an abundance or large quantity

Example: "The Week magazine added Frederick Mitterand to its list of public men caught in sex scandals, when the French culture minister was quoted as saying, 'The profusion of young, very attractive and immediately available Asian boys put me in a state of desire that I no longer needed to restrain or hide.'"

Saturday, January 2, 2010

nirvana - NEAR-vah-nah - in Buddhism, the final goal, a transendent state in which a state of perfection is produced - resulting in a completely enjoyable experience.

Example: "Encouraging us not to delay pleasure, a Times science article says it can become a self-perpetuating process if one fixates on some imagined nirvana; the longer you wait to open that prize bottle of wine, for example, the more special the occasion has to be, and it may be delayed forever."

Friday, January 1, 2010

etymology - et-im-OL-oh-JEE - the study of words & the historical development of their meanings

Example: "A woman from San Diego, curious about some words listed here in a previous posting, checked on three similar words to come up with the following:

'Well, although I couldn't discover an exactly shared etymology, neither hoarfrost nor rime is from Latin. Hoar (or hoarfrost) is from Old High German via Middle English (ME), "hor" or "her" (pronounced "hair," I imagine); rime is from OHN (old high Norse?) hrim via ME . My little Collins Gem weather book describes three types of ice which are called frost:

hoarfrost: White, feathery deposits of interlocking crystals
rime: Opaque, granular ice on the windward side of objects
glaze: A transparent layer of ice

but I betcha, way back in the mists of time, the "hor" and "hrim" derive from a single Indo-European root.'"