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Oct 16, 2020
This week’s themeWords about words and language This week’s words endonym basilect metonymy homeoteleuton heterophemy This week’s comments AWADmail 955 Next week’s theme Words that appear to be coined after presidential candidates A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargheterophemy
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: The use of a word different from the one intended.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek hetero- (different) + pheme (speaking). Ultimately from the
Indo-European root bha- (to speak), which also gave us fable, fairy, fate,
fame, blame, confess, and infant (literally, one unable to speak),
apophasis (allusion to something by denying it will be said),
confabulate, and
ineffable.
Earliest documented use: 1875.
USAGE:
“In effect, Hyacinth’s nervousness results in a classic case of
heterophemy: his disrupted mental condition leads him ‘to speak without
thinking’.” Gavin Jones; Strange Talk; University of California Press; 1999. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Truth, in matters of religion, is simply the opinion that has survived.
-Oscar Wilde, writer (16 Oct 1854-1900)
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