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Sep 19, 2002
This week's themeWords that have changed This week's words demagogue decimate feisty egregious officious A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargegregious(i-GREE-juhs, -jee-uhs)
adjective: [From Latin egregius (outstanding), from ex- (out of) + greg-, stem of grex (flock). Earlier something egregious was one that stood out because it was remarkably good. Over the centuries the word took a 180-degree turn and today it refers to something grossly offensive.]
"The most egregious example of this sort of scapegoating came last week,
when Italy's Giovanni Trapattoni blamed Ecuadorean ref Byron Moreno for
the Azzuri's inglorious defeat by South Korea." X-BonusWe allow our ignorance to prevail upon us and make us think we can survive alone, alone in patches, alone in groups, alone in races, even alone in genders. -Maya Angelou, poet (1928- ) |
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