| A.Word.A.Day | About | Media | Search | Contact | 
| Home 
 | Jun 11, 2021This week’s theme Words from nursery rhymes This week’s words Humpty Dumpty tuffet Mother Hubbard sukey Simple Simon     
Simple Simon asking the pieman for a tasting
 Illustration: E. Boyd Smith The Boyd Smith Mother Goose, 1920 This week’s comments AWADmail 989 Next week’s theme Contractions             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg Simple Simon
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: A simpleton.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
After Simple Simon, a foolish boy in a nursery rhyme. Earliest
documented use: 1673.
 NOTES: 
The first stanza of the nursery rhyme goes:
 
 Simple Simon met a piemanIn the rest of the poem, he fishes for a whale in a bucket, tries to
roast a snowball, looks for plums on a thistle plant, and has other
adventures. Going to the fair; Said Simple Simon to the pieman, “Let me taste your ware.” USAGE: 
“The bespectacled, plump, Roshu came across as earnest and tentative,
a Simple Simon.” Shefalee Vasudev; The Powder Room; Random House; 2012. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:When it comes to having a central nervous system, and the ability to feel
pain, hunger, and thirst, a rat is a pig is a dog is a boy. -Ingrid
Newkirk, animal rights activist (b. 11 Jun 1949) | 
 | 
© 1994-2025 Wordsmith