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Jan 16, 2024
This week’s themeWords that have changed This week’s words peccant prestigious dapper peterman prudish Illustration: Anu Garg + AI
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargprestigious
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: Honored, esteemed, or having high status.
ETYMOLOGY:
From French prestige (current meaning: prestige, earlier: illusion,
deceit), from Latin praestigiosis (full of tricks), from praestringere
(to dazzle, to blindfold), from pre- (before) + stringere (to tie or
bind). Earliest documented use: 1534.
NOTES:
How times change! Earlier, to be prestigious was to be deceitful.
Prestige was another word for deceit. If you were really good with tricks,
you got a certain respect or admiration. Eventually the word turned its
life around and arrived on the right side of the law.
Despite similarities, the word prestidigitation
has a different origin. It’s from French preste (nimble) + Latin digitus
(finger).
USAGE:
“The announcement of the winner of the Nobel prize in literature usually
prompts one of three reactions. The first is ‘Who?’; the second is
‘Why?’; the third -- by far the rarest -- is ‘Hurrah!’ This year,
reactions were firmly in the first two camps. On Oct 5, Jon Fosse,
a Norwegian, was awarded the world’s most prestigious writing prize.” Prestigious, Lucrative, and Bonkers; The Economist (London, UK); Oct 14, 2023. See more usage examples of prestigious in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
One father is more than a hundred schoolmasters. -English Proverb
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