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May 26, 2003
This week's themeMetallic words used as metaphors This week's words goldbrick silver bullet brassy leaden tin ear “All words are pegs to hang ideas on.” ~Beecher Send some to friends & family A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargOh, how we're fascinated with metals, particularly the yellow variety, and especially in the business world! We flock to a gold rush (headlong pursuit of wealth in a new, potentially lucrative field), we retain executives with golden handcuffs (rewards given at specific intervals) or when the gold rush is over, we bid them adieu with a golden handshake (generous severance pay for early retirement). Unless, of course, they had already negotiated a golden parachute (a contract that guarantees generous severance pay). Let's just hope they didn't turn out to be goldbricks. While the yellow metal symbolizes wealth, the gray kind is often used as a metaphor for strength, toughness, or impenetrability, from nerves of steel to iron curtain. Often we use them to describe people, from the Iron Chancellor (Bismarck), or the Iron Lady (Margaret Thatcher, also Bosnia's Biljana Plavsic). goldbrick(GOLD-brik)
noun: 1. Something that appears valuable but is worthless. verb intr.: To shirk duty. verb tr.: To cheat or swindle. [Sense 1 from the con artists' old trick of selling a gold-polished piece of less valuable metal as solid gold. Sense 2 was originally military slang for an officer appointed from civilian life.]
"Governor Yevgeny Nazdratenko was rushed to the hospital after suffering
a heart attack, and we all felt guilty to learn that we were at fault. ...
Still, it is lucky that the heart attack was real, because the medical
establishment takes a dim view of goldbricks."
"Underminers, half-steppers, gossips and goldbricks were not tolerated on
his (Jack Kent Cooke) watch."
X-BonusA teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence stops. -Henry Adams, historian and teacher (1838-1918) |
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