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Feb 10, 2017
This week’s themeEponyms This week’s words gnathonic bovarism Mrs. Grundy struwwelpeter gargantua
Baby gargantua (detail)
Illustration: Gustave Doré, 1873 This week’s comments AWADmail 763 Next week’s theme American eponyms A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garggargantua
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A giant in size, feats, stature, or (physical or intellectual) appetites.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Gargantua, a voracious giant, the father of Pantagruel, in a series
of novels by François Rabelais (c. 1490-1553). The son also has given a word
to the English language: pantagruelian.
Earliest documented use: 1571.
USAGE:
“In Io’s sky, Jupiter crawls like a gargantua, a bright, vast, streaked
disk eating the blackness of space, so huge it seems intent on crushing
everything under it.” Dana Wilde; Io Roars and Shakes Its Fires in Empty Space; Bangor Daily News (Maine); Apr 23, 2007. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
What for centuries raised man above the beast is not the cudgel but the
irresistible power of unarmed truth. -Boris Pasternak, poet, novelist, Nobel laureate (10 Feb 1890-1960)
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