| A.Word.A.Day | About | Media | Search | Contact | 
| Home 
 | Aug 27, 2025This week’s theme Toponyms This week’s words Smithfield bargain kryptonite Punic byzantinize serendipitous     
Battle of Zama in the Second Punic War
 Art: Cornelis Cort (1533-1578)             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg Punic
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
adjective: 1. Relating to Carthage. 2. Treacherous, faithless. ETYMOLOGY: 
  From Latin Punicus (Carthaginian), from Greek Phoinix (Phoenician).
Carthage was founded as a Phoenician colony, in present-day Tunisia.
Earliest documented use: 1590.
 NOTES: 
The Romans and Carthaginians clashed in three Punic Wars (264-146
BCE). Rome eventually won, but not without plenty of drama: elephants
crossing the Alps, double-crosses, and more salt than a Caesar salad
(according to some historians the Romans salted Carthage’s fields after).
 USAGE: 
“They have cancelled Brexit this Friday because they want to bully and
browbeat Parliament into agreeing the Punic terms on which the EU insists.” Boris Johnson; The People’s Day of Jubilation Hijacked by Spineless Pirates; The Daily Telegraph (London, UK); Mar 27, 2019. See more usage examples of punic in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:When you're traveling, you are what you are right there and then. People
don't have your past to hold against you. No yesterdays on the road.
-William Least Heat-Moon, travel writer (b. 27 Aug 1939) | 
 | 
© 1994-2025 Wordsmith