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Nov 25, 2011
This week's themeWords borrowed from languages that are now extinct This week's words cacique wampum pharaoh mantissa dragoman This week's comments AWADmail 491 Next week's theme Illustrated words Discuss Feedback RSS/XML A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargdragoman
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: An interpreter or guide.
ETYMOLOGY:
The word took a scenic route to its present form via French, Italian,
Latin/Greek, Arabic, and Aramaic, from Akkadian targumanu (interpreter).
Earliest documented use: 1300s. Akkadian is a now-extinct Semitic language
once spoken in ancient Mesopotamia and written in cuneiform.
USAGE:
"Soon, Art Buchwald set himself up as the laughing dragoman to American
celebrities. The foster home boy became Our Man in Paris. He took Elvis
Presley to the Lido." Lance Morrow; Franglais Spoken Here; Time (New York); Sep 30, 1996. "Born in Jerusalem, Wadie Said went from being a dragoman to a salesman in the United States and thence to a hugely successful businessman in Egypt." Penelope Lively; Books: Out of Place: State of Confusion; The Guardian (London, UK); Oct 9, 1999. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Teaching a child not to step on a caterpillar is as valuable to the child as it is to the caterpillar. -Bradley Miller, activist (b. 1956)
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