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Dec 8, 2010
This week's themeWhat to avoid when using words This week's words pleonasm apophasis sesquipedality periphrasis paralipsis
Sesquipedalian beans
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with Anu Gargsesquipedality
PRONUNCIATION:
(ses-kwi-pi-DAL-i-tee)
MEANING:
noun: The practice of using long words.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin sesqui- (one and a half) + ped- (foot). First recorded use: 1759.
NOTES:
Literally speaking, sesquipedality is using words that are
one and a half feet long. A related word is sesquicentennial (150th
anniversary). Nothing wrong with using a sesquipedalian word once in
a while, if it fits, but it's best to avoid too many long, polysyllabic
words. This dictum doesn't apply to German speakers though, as Mark Twain
once observed, "Some German words are so long that they have a perspective."
There's a bean subspecies commonly known as a yardlong bean. It's really
misnamed as it's "only" half a yard long. Its scientific name, Vigna
unguiculata subsp. sesquipedalis, is more precise.
USAGE:
"The stories in Oblivion comprise relatively straightforward prose,
with textual play and sesquipedality trimmed to the bone."Tim Feeney; Oblivion; Review of Contemporary Fiction; Jul 2004. See more usage examples of sesquipedality in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
In a free country there is much clamor, with little suffering: in a despotic state there is little complaint but much suffering. -Lazare Nicolas Marguerite Carnot, statesman and engineer (1753-1823)
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