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Jul 29, 2010
This week's themeWords that aren't what they appear to be This week's words artificer noisome psychopomp fulsome meretricious Discuss words and language on our bulletin board: Wordsmith Talk Discuss Feedback RSS/XML A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargfulsome
PRONUNCIATION:
(FUL-suhm)
MEANING:
adjective:1. Effusive; lavish. 2. Excessive to the point of being offensive. ETYMOLOGY:
A combination of the words full and -some (having a particular quality).
NOTES:
Does the word fulsome have a positive connotation or negative?
Depends on whom you ask. The word started out in mid 13th century as
a straightforward, unambiguous word to describe abundance. By the 17th
century, it had acquired a deprecatory sense, as in the second sense
listed above. Then, again, it went around the bend and in the 20th
century the positive sense of the word became more common.
Language purists continue to stick with the second sense, while others
use the word in its first sense. What to do? Avoid it, unless context is
clear, as in the two usage examples below.
USAGE:
"Dacres offered Hull fulsome compliments on the courage and performance
of his men."Ian W. Toll; Blood Brothers; The Economist (London, UK); Nov 4, 2006. "One tires of the fulsome endorsement, the blizzard of exclamation points, the arch locutions." Daniel Aaron; Belle du Jour; The New Republic (Washington, DC); Feb 2, 1998. See more usage examples of fulsome in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
I hate with a murderous hatred those men who, having lived their youth, would send into war other youth, not lived, unfulfilled, to fight and die for them; the pride and cowardice of those old men, making their wars that boys must die. -Mary Roberts Rinehart, novelist (1876-1958)
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