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Oct 7, 2019
This week’s themePessimists and optimists from fiction who became words This week’s words Gummidge Tigger Debbie Downer Tapleyism Eeyore
Mrs Gummidge
Art: Kyd (Clarke Joseph Clayton), 1887 Previous week’s theme There’s a word for it A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargIs the glass half-empty or half-full? This is supposed to be a test to tell optimists from pessimists, but life doesn’t always fit in nice little boxes (or glasses). Also, it depends on whom you ask. The glass is bigger than it needs to be, one might say. It’s not necessarily half-empty -- the other half is filled with air. And so on. But let’s not make things too complicated. Let’s not destroy a metaphor that serves well, in general. So in this week’s A.Word.A.Day the glass is either half-empty or half-full, depending on whom you ask. We’ll meet five characters, pessimists and optimists, who rose up from the world of fiction and have become words in the English language. Gummidge
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A peevish, pessimistic person.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Mrs Gummidge, a grumpy old widow in Charles Dickens’s novel
David Copperfield (1850). She likes to say, “I am a lone lorn creetur’ ...
and everythink goes contrairy with me.” Earliest documented use: 1873.
USAGE:
“His sister and I, inveterate Mrs Gummidges, glumly point out when he
tries to cheer us up with this conceit that when things are going well,
the nature of the wheel makes it equally certain that disaster is only
a spin away.” Jane Shilling; Don’t Worry -- You Can Look Back Fondly on a Midlife Crisis; The Daily Telegraph (London, UK); Nov 23, 2015. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
If you are neutral in situations of injustice, you have chosen the side of
the oppressor. If an elephant has its foot on the tail of a mouse and you
say that you are neutral, the mouse will not appreciate your neutrality.
-Desmond Tutu, clergyman (b. 7 Oct 1931)
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