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Dec 20, 2016
This week’s themeWords that keep glowing even with a burnt-out letter This week’s words platitudinarian orotund suberous parable dubiety Illustration: Joe Brown
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargorotund
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective:
1. Strong, clear, rich (as in voice or speech).
2. Pompous, bombastic.
ETYMOLOGY:
Contraction of Latin ore rotundo (with a round mouth), from ore, from os
(mouth) + rotundo, from rotundus (round), from the Indo-European root ret-
(to run or roll). Other words derived from the same root are rodeo, roll,
rotary, rotate, rotund, roulette, and round. Earliest documented use: 1799. Remove the initial letter and you get rotund. USAGE:
“Christopher Lee plants himself centre-stage and unfurls a rich and orotund
thespian’s voice.” Ludovic Hunter-Tilney; Singles and Albums for Christmas; Financial Times (London, UK); Dec 22, 2014. “The first pages listed fifteen high government officials with orotund titles.” Herman Wouk; War and Remembrance; Little Brown & Co; 1978. See more usage examples of orotund in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
If we would have new knowledge, we must get us a whole world of new
questions. -Susanne Langer, philosopher (20 Dec 1895-1985)
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