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Discuss A.Word.A.Day--archonHow would you describe someone who has risen up and become a manager? Embossed! The word boss has its origins in Dutch (from baas: master, foreman), but there are several homonyms of the word. Is your boss a timid manager, or a bungler, or ... ? Depending on how your boss runs the show, you apply one of these alternative meanings: 1. boss: a calf or a cow. That's where Bossy, a familiar name for a cow, comes from. (From English dialect borse/boss/buss: a six-month-old calf) 2. boss: a protuberance or swelling on the body of an animal or plant This is where the word emboss comes from. (From Old French boce) 3. boss-eyed, adjective: cross-eyed or squint-eyed. (origin uncertain) 4. boss, verb: to bungle. (origin uncertain) Why refer to your supervisor just as a plain old boss? On National Boss Day (Oct 16), why not use a more colorful word from this week's selection?
archon (AHR-kon) noun A high official or ruler. [From Latin archon, from Greek arkhon (magistrate), from arkhein (to be first, to rule). An archon was one of the nine principal magistrates in ancient Athens.] -Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org) "Nick Sylvester, editor of The Harvard Lampoon calls James Murphy 'The supreme eminent archon of dance.'" Tammy la Gorce; From Sulking Teenager to the King of Disco-Punk; The New York Times; May 22, 2005.
X-BonusIt is said that a rogue does not look you in the face, neither does an honest man look at you as if he had his reputation to establish. I have seen some who did not know when to turn aside their eyes in meeting yours. A truly confident and magnanimous spirit is wiser than to contend for the mastery in such encounters. -Henry David Thoreau, naturalist and author (1817-1862) |
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