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Nov 10, 2023
This week’s theme
Creative usage examples

This week’s words
gleek
gowpen
fractal
glabella
diachrony

diachrony
The sentence explained by AI

This week’s comments
AWADmail 1115

Next week’s theme
Well-traveled words
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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

diachrony

PRONUNCIATION:
(dy-AK-ruh-nee)

MEANING:
noun: Change occurring over a period of time.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek dia- (through) + chronos (time). Earliest documented use: 1939. Contrasted with synchrony.

USAGE:
“It was a violence, a terrible intrusion in the succession of moments, a clot in diachrony.”
China Mièville; Iron Council; Del Rey; 2004.

“I also like to stand in the philosophy aisle, a thicket of the world’s most impenetrable prose. I don’t know why, but reading a few lines of Bakhtin, Bataille, Heidegger, or Derrida makes me hungry. I love to pull out a book and read a sentence that, try as I might, I simply cannot understand. For example:
‘[Heidegger] has initiated a vocabulary which deconstruction can appropriate and revise for the sake of disarticulating a notion of eventhood whose temporality has been eschatologically hypostasized and thereby fixed in an Aristotelian diachrony of self-contained moments.’”*
Michelle Huneven; Food for Starving Artists, Writers; Los Angeles Times; Aug 2, 1991.

*Please do not email us for the meaning of that sentence. Few are worthy of such esoteric knowledge. OK, we said that because we don’t understand it ourselves. But in good conscience we can’t leave you stranded and uninformed. So we recruited AI to explain it (see the image on the right). Enjoy.

See more usage examples of diachrony in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
It is criminal to steal a purse, daring to steal a fortune, a mark of greatness to steal a crown. The blame diminishes as the guilt increases. -Johan Christoph Friedrich von Schiller, poet and dramatist (10 Nov 1759-1805)

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