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Feb 4, 2021
This week’s themeEponyms This week’s words faustian turveydropian gallionic dunce vandalize
Dunce cap in a boys’ school, 1905
Image: LOC
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargdunce
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A person regarded as dim-witted or foolish.
ETYMOLOGY:
After theologian John Duns Scotus (c. 1265/66-1308). Earliest documented
use: 1530.
NOTES:
John Duns Scotus was a Catholic priest and Franciscan friar
(literally, brother, from French frère: brother) in the 13th century.
In his time he was known as a sophisticated thinker and philosopher and
given the name “the Subtle Doctor”. Protestantism came along in 1517.
As these things go, they now considered his followers, known as Dunses
or Dunsmen, as hair-splitting and resistant to new learning. The word
was later respelled as dunce, and took on the meaning as someone
incapable of learning. The word also gave rise to a dunce cap, the
conical hat, formerly used to punish schoolchildren.
USAGE:
“It feels surprising that the big beasts of the US gambling scene, Las
Vegas casino companies, are such digital dunces that they require
UK-listed companies to tell them how to run an online betting business.” Nils Pratley; No Need for Entain to Rush into Accepting MGM Resorts Offer; The Guardian (London, UK); Jan 4, 2021. See more usage examples of dunce in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Poor is the power of the lead that becomes bullets compared to the power of
the hot metal that becomes types. -Georg Brandes, critic and scholar (4 Feb
1842-1927)
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