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Anu Garg Mar 5, 2021
This week’s themeWords coined after Gulliver’s Travels This week’s words lilliput Laputan struldbrug yahoo Brobdingnag
The King of Brobdingnag and Gulliver, 1803 (detail)
Art: James Gillray in Swift’s Gulliver: Voyage to Brobdingnag This week’s comments AWADmail 975 Next week’s theme Euryvocalic words A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargBrobdingnag
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: Something very large. adjective: Huge. ETYMOLOGY:
After Brobdingnag, a region where everything is enormous, in Jonathan
Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels. Earliest documented use: 1731.
NOTES:
For scale, people in Brobdingnag are about 60 feet tall. In the
English language the form Brobdingnagian is also used.
According to Gulliver, the place should have been spelled as Brobdingrag.
Also, as per the map included in the book, Brobdingnag/Brobdingrag is
located off the coast of British Columbia, Canada. Not sure why large
mythical creatures are placed in this part of the world. Also see, Bigfoot.
USAGE:
“[Ford] has already got small, medium, large, and Brobdingnag covered
with Escape, Flex, Edge, Explorer, and Expedition.” Jim Kenzie; Roomy Compact SUV Has Split Personality; Toronto Star (Canada); Jun 2, 2018. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
For 50 million years our biggest problems were too few calories, too little
information. For about 50 years our biggest problem has been too many
calories, too much information. We have to adjust, and I believe we will
really fast. I also believe it will be wicked ugly while we're adjusting.
-Penn Jillette, magician, actor, musician, inventor, television presenter,
and author (b. 5 Mar 1955)
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