Tuesday, September 30, 2014

word of the day: obsequy

The word of the day is obsequy:
 
noun, plural obsequies. Usually, obsequies
1. a funeral rite or ceremony.
< Late Latin obsequiae, alteration (by confusion with exsequiae funeral rites) of obsequia, plural of Latin obsequium (dictionary.com)


"The implicit comparisons recur in Italy, where the men visit the towns in which the sexual outlaws Byron and Shelley lived, shortly before their deaths.  The comics perform funerary obsequies for the poets and again recite in their own and others' voices.  'The Trip to Italy', for all its japes, is haunted by mortality, as was its namesake, 'Viaggio in Italia' (1954), the Rosselini masterpiece starring George Sanders and Ingrid Bergman as a warring couple dismally on tour.  Like them, Coogan and Brydon visit the museum at Pompeii, with its plaster casts of the bodies of the dead.  Rosselini showed us a couple who died locked in embrace when Vesuvius exploded, a harsh reflection on the modern couple's marital anguish.  Here, in a blasphemous reduction, Brydon summons his man-in-a-box voice to play a Pompeian lying in a glass case; the two carry on a discreet gay flirtation.  It's not that the end is nigh for these men, but death, for them and for Winterbottom, is always present in life."

 - David Denby, "Lasting impressions: 'The Trip to Italy'", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker

Monday, September 29, 2014

word of the day: maunder

The word of the day is maunder:



verb (used without object)

1. to talk in a rambling, foolish, or meaningless way.
2. to move, go, or act in an aimless, confused manner (dictionary.com)
"As a portrait of male friendship, the 'Trip' films are a triumph of the lean British comic style over the maunder and the mush of American bromance - Jason Segel and Seth Rogen pinching each other's blubber."
 - David Denby, "Lasting impressions: 'The Trip to Italy'", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker 

Sunday, September 28, 2014

word of the day: dyspeptic

The word of the day is dyspeptic:


adjective
1. pertaining to, subject to, or suffering from dyspepsia.
2. gloomy, pessimistic, and irritable.
peptikós pertaining to digestion (dictionary.com)
"In the 'Trip' films, playing a version of himself, he's intelligent and dyspeptic, a man too clever to live by illusions but too ambitious to give them up.  He's dissatisfied with everything - his career, his relationship with his children, his waning sexual attractiveness - and he takes it out on his friend."
 - David Denby, "Lasting impressions: 'The Trip to Italy'", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker 

Saturday, September 27, 2014

word of the day: sally

The word of the day is sally:


noun
1. a sortie of troops from a besieged place upon an enemy.
2. a sudden rushing forth or activity.
3. an excursion or trip, usually off the main course.
4. an outburst or flight of passion, fancy, etc.:
5. a clever, witty, or fanciful remark.
6. Carpentry. a projection, as of the end of a rafter beyond the notch by which the rafter is fitted over the wall plate.
< Middle French saillie attack, noun use of feminine past participle of saillir to rush forward < Latin salīre to leap (dictionary.com)
"The pace almost equals that of Robin Williams doing standup, but Coogan and Brydon reprise their best sallies for rhythm and for emphasis, so you won't miss anything that matters."
 - David Denby, "Lasting impressions: 'The Trip to Italy'", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker 

Friday, September 26, 2014

word of the day: querulous

The word of the day is querulous:

adjective
1. full of complaints; complaining.
2. characterized by or uttered in complaint; peevish: a querulous tone; constant querulous reminders of things to be done.
< Latin querulus, equivalent to quer(ī) to complain (dictionary.com)


"People are made for walking, but we are not very good at it; our backs and arches, like querulous cabinet ministers, at first complain and then resign."

 - Adam Gopnik, "Heaven's gaits: what we do when we walk", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker

Thursday, September 25, 2014

word of the day: louche

The word of the day is louche:


adjective
1. dubious; shady; disreputable.
< French: literally, cross-eyed < Latin luscus blind in one eye (dictionary.com)
"When an impoverished student at Stanford, the first in his family to go to college, opts for a six-figure salary in finance after graduation, a very different but equally compelling kind of 'moral imagination' may be at play.  (Imagine being able to pay off your loans and never again having to worry about keeping a roof over your family's heads.)  William S. Burroughs, a corporate scion of elite genealogy, began reinventing himself at Harvard as a louche explorer of the underworld.  Why shouldn't someone who grew up in a crack-blighted neighborhood be equally free to imagine himself as a suit?"
 - Nathan Heller, "Poison ivy: Are elite colleges bad for the soul?", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker 

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

word of the day: badinage

The word of the day is badinage:


noun
1. light, playful banter or raillery.
< French, equivalent to badin (er) to joke, trifle (verbal derivative of badin joker, banterer < Old Provençal: fool; bad (ar) to gape (< Vulgar Latin batāre) (dictionary.com)
"The old back-and-forth is still there, the old badinage, the old rapport; and with pleasure we finish our hamburgers and catch up on each other's news."
 - Joseph O'Neill, "The Referees", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker 

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

word of the day: phragmites

The word of the day is phragmites:

noun
1. any of several tall grasses of the genus Phragmites, having plumed heads, growing in marshy areas, especially the common reed P. australis (or P. communis).
< Greek phragmī́tēs growing in hedges, equivalent to phrágm (a) fence, breastwork, screen (noun derivative of phrássein (Attic phráttein) to fence in, hedge around) (dictionary.com)
 
 
"At the Fire Safety booth, the firefighters Lois Mungay and Stephen Comer were remembering some notable urban brush fires.  'By Howard Beach, one time, the dry phragmites reeds were burning like crazy out beyond Cross Bay Boulevard, and we were hauling the hoses around back there in the brush,' Comer said.  'We couldn't even see where the fire was!'"

 - Ian Frazier, "Only you", 1 September 2014 The New Yorker

Monday, September 22, 2014

word of the day: andesite

 The word of the day is andesite:

A gray, fine-grained volcanic rock. Andesite consists mainly of sodium-rich plagioclase and one or more mafic minerals such as biotite, hornblende, or pyroxene. It often contains small, visible crystals (phenocrysts) of plagioclase. It is the fine-grained equivalent of diorite. 
1840-50; named after Andes (dictionary.com)


"McInerney showed him pictures of andesite.
"'Local rock?' Ban wanted to know.
"McInerney and Maltz had a long conversation about wood, rocks, glass, sun, and snow, during which they excitedly presented Ban with images on cameras, phones, and an iPad, and in the project book for McInerney's site."

 - Dana Goodyear, "Paper palaces: the architect of the dispossessed meets the one per cent", 11 & 18 The New Yorker

Sunday, September 21, 2014

word of the day: tatami

The word of the day is tatami:


noun
1. (in Japanese houses) any of a number of thick, woven straw mats of uniform dimensions, about three feet by six feet (91 cm by 183 cm), the placing of which determines the dimensions of an interior.
1895-1900; < Japanese, noun use of v.: to fold up (dictionary.com)
"Maltz, who was also living in Japan that year, in the only tatami room in the Bans' Western-style house, started to view him as 'the Pied Piper of architecture.'"

Saturday, September 20, 2014

word of the day: plexus

The word of the day is plexus:

noun
1. a network, as of nerves or blood vessels.
2. any complex structure containing an intricate network of parts

1675-85; < Neo-Latin: an interweaving, twining = Latin plect(ere) to plait, twine + -tus suffix of v. action (dictionary.com)
 
 
"On August 9th, Ban will mark the public opening of the Aspen Art Museum, his first permanent museum in the United States.  The building, a glass box nested in a lattice screen made from resin-infused paper and topped with a timber truss roof, is an astonishing plexus of materials pushed to their limits."
 
 - Dana Goodyear, "Paper palaces: the architect of the dispossessed meets the one per cent", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker 

Friday, September 19, 2014

word of the day: futhark

The word of the day is futhark:

n.
1851, historians' name for the Germanic runic alphabet; so called from its first six letters, on the model of alphabet. (dictionary.com)

"But I remember a seed,
a dandelion sphere, which I blew on once, and its
silvery runes poured forward.  It's as if -
until now - I thought that I would never
fade, or fail, or fall silent, or die.
I trusted that I had it coming to me,
without cease, the firework of language.
Futhorc!  Let me cry out, again!"
 
 - Sharon Olds, "Bop after hip op", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Thursday, September 18, 2014

word of the day: panegyric

The word of the day is panegyric:


noun
1. a lofty oration or writing in praise of a person or thing; eulogy.
2. formal or elaborate praise.
< Latin, noun use of panēgyricus of, belonging to a public assembly
< Greek panēgyrikós, equivalent to panḗgyr (is) solemn assembly (pan- + -ēgyris, combining form of ágyris gathering) (dictionary.com)


"One evening, I went to see Aleksandr Prokhanov, a far-right newspaper editor and novelist, whom I've known since the late eighties.  In the Soviet period, he was known as the Nightingale of the General Staff, a writer commissioned to ride and chronicle the glories of nuclear subs and strategic bombers and to visit the Cold War battlefields of Kampuchea and Angola.  He was a panegyrist of Stalin's military-industrial state and the achievements of Sovietism.  'No one,' he told me, 'could describe a nuclear reactor like I could.'"

 - David Remnick, "Watching the eclipse: Ambassador Michael McFaul was there when the promise of democracy came to Russia - and when it began to fade", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

word of the day: ressentiment

The word of the day is ressentiment:

noun
1. any cautious, defeatist, or cynical attitude based on the belief that the individual and human institutions exist in a hostile or indifferent universe or society.
2. an oppressive awareness of the futility of trying to improve one's status in life or in society.
 
1943, a word from Nietzsche, from German ressentiment, from French ressentiment. The French word also was borrowed as obsolete English resentiment (16c.) "feeling or sense (of something); state of being deeply affected by (something); resentment." (dictionary.com) 
 
 
"Nearly a quarter century after the fall of the empire, Putin has unleashed an ideology of ressentiment.  It has been chorussed by those who, in 1991, despaired of the loss not of Communist ideology but of imperial greatness, and who, ever since, have lived with what Russians so often refer to as 'phantom-limb syndrome': the pain of missing Central Asia, the Caucasus, the Baltic states; the pain of diminishment.  They want revenge for their humiliation."

 - David Remnick, "Watching the eclipse: Ambassador Michael McFaul was there when the promise of democracy came to Russia - and when it began to fade", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

word of the day: Cheka

The word of the day is Cheka:

early Soviet secret police, 1921, from Russian initials of Chrezvychainaya Komissiya "Extraordinary Commission (for Combating Counter-Revolution);" set up 1917, superseded 1922 by G.P.U. (dictionary.com)


"By the late Soviet period, though, K.G.B. officers like Putin were nearly as dismissive of Communist ideology as the dissidents were.  'The Chekists in his time laughed at official Soviet ideology,' Gleb Pavlovksy, a former adviser to Putin, told me.  'They thought it was a joke.'"

 - David Remnick, "Watching the eclipse: Ambassador Michael McFaul was there when the promise of democracy came to Russia - and when it began to fade", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Monday, September 15, 2014

word of the day: retrench

The word of the day is retrench:

verb (used without object)
to economize; reduce expenses (dictionary.com)

"For Barack Obama, it is essential to end those two wars [Iraq and Afghanistan] and this retrenchment is in the national interest."

 - Michael McFaul, as quoted by David Remnick, "Watching the eclipse: Ambassador Michael McFaul was there when the promise of democracy came to Russia - and when it began to fade", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Sunday, September 14, 2014

word of the day: knout

The word of the day is knout:

noun
a stout whip used formerly in Russia as an instrument of punishment
from Russian knut, of Scandinavian origin; compare Old Norse knūtr knot (dictionary.com)
 
 
"He was determined to help establish liberal values and institutions - civil society, free speech, democratic norms - in a land that, for a thousand years, had known only absolutism, empire, and the knout.  'That's me,' he says even now.  'Mr. Anti-Cynicism.  Mr. It Will All Work Out.'"
 

Saturday, September 13, 2014

word of the day: capo

The word of the day is capo:

noun
1. the presumed title of a Mafia leader
Italian: head (dictionary.com)


"Apparently, no one in Washington during that period found anything unusual about a Mafia capo openly discussing 'the needs of the family where government is concerned' and suggesting 'favorable business investments' for the politicians and regulators whom he was lobbying."

 - Malcolm Gladwell, "The crooked ladder: the criminal's guide to upward mobility", 11 & 18 August 2014 The New Yorker

Monday, September 08, 2014

word of the day: spavin

The word of the day is spavin:

noun
1. a disease of the hock joint of horses in which enlargement occurs because of collected fluids (bog spavin) bony growth (bone spavin) or distention of the veins (blood spavin)
2. an excrescence or enlargement so formed.
 
Origin
Old French (e) spavain, esparvain swelling (dictionary.com)


"And that was when
the blighted times we live in first began,
the dying rivers and
the blackened vine,
the rain that rots the seed in its furrow,
the spavin, the sheep scab,
the empty hive."

 - Linda Gregerson, "Ceres lamenting", 4 August 2014 The New Yorker

Saturday, September 06, 2014

word of the day: panoply

The word of the day is panoply:


noun, plural panoplies.
1. a wide-ranging and impressive array or display
2. a complete suit of armor.
3. a protective covering.
4. full ceremonial attire or paraphernalia; special dress and equipment. 
 
Origin
< Greek panoplía full complement of arms and armor, equivalent to pan- pan- + ( h) ópl (a) arms, armor (cf. hoplite ) (dictionary.com)

 
"A burly man with a red beard and a regal manner—Henry VIII without the wives and the panoply—Cutler has a knack for eliciting his subjects’ candor."

 - Tad Friend, "Cry, Baby", 4 August 2014 The New Yorker

Friday, September 05, 2014

word of the day: monopsony

The word of the day is monopsony:


noun
1. the market condition that exists when there is one buyer.

Origin
Greek mon- + Greek opsōnía shopping, purchase of provisions (dictionary.com)


"Right now, the U.F.C.’s chief competitor is Bellator, owned by Viacom. But Bellator remains a minor league, and it hasn’t done much to change the perception that the U.F.C. is something of a monopsony; for an ambitious fighter, a U.F.C. contract is the only one that really matters."

 - Kelefa Sanneh, "Mean girl: Why the world's best female fighter loves to be hated", 28 July 2014 The New Yorker

Thursday, September 04, 2014

word of the day: chakra

The word of the day is chakra:

any of several points of physical or spiritual energy in the human body according to yoga philosophy (merriam-webster.com)


"In the minutes before Junoon's set, Raubeson was in the passenger seat of the S.U.V., softly chanting the sounds of the chakras with Ahmad."

 - Ian Parker, "The Band Played On", 28 July 2014 The New Yorker


Is it possible he meant "mantra"?

Wednesday, September 03, 2014

word of the day: ormolu

The word of the day is ormolu:

noun
1. Also called mosaic gold. an alloy of copper and zinc used to imitate gold.
2. Also called bronze doré, gilt bronze. gilded metal, especially cast brass or bronze gilded over fire with an amalgam of gold and mercury, used for furniture mounts and ornamental objects.
3. gold or gold powder prepared for use in gilding.
 
Origin
< French or moulu ground gold, equivalent to or (< Latin aurum) + moulu, past participle of moudre to grind < Latin molere (dictionary.com)


"The previous week, another great Strad had gone unsold, at Christie's, despite considerable hype: the Kreutzer violin, part of the estate of Huguette Clark.  Sealed bids had also been invited for the Kreutzer, with an estimate of seven and a half million dollars.  The Carpenters had attended that auction, and had come away not with the Strad - it was overpriced, in their opinion, especially with the Christie's commission - but with an ormolu occasional table that had belonged to Clark, her rubber thimbles still in its inner compartments."

 - Rebecca Mead, "Musical gold: Can three ambitious siblings turn old violins into a new investment strategy?", 28 July 2014 The New Yorker

Tuesday, September 02, 2014

word of the day: Taylorism

The word of the day is Taylorism:

"System of scientific management advocated by Fred W. Taylor. In Taylor’s view, the task of factory management was to determine the best way for the worker to do the job, to provide the proper tools and training, and to provide incentives for good performance. He broke each job down into its individual motions, analyzed these to determine which were essential, and timed the workers with a stopwatch. With unnecessary motion eliminated, the worker, following a machinelike routine, became far more productive." (Encyclopaedia Britannica)


"Gardner said that a wearable computer terminal (Motorola, 2013) had made her and her colleagues think about Taylorism and scientific management."

 - Lauren Collins, "Very important objects", 28 July 2014 The New Yorker


And here I thought Frank Gilbreth invented that.

Monday, September 01, 2014

word of the day: concertina

The word of the day is concertina:

noun
1. a musical instrument resembling an accordion but having buttonlike keys, hexagonal bellows and ends, and a more limited range.
 
verb (used without object)
3. to fold, crush together, or collapse in the manner of a concertina:

verb (used with object)
4. to cause to fold or collapse in the manner of a concertina.
 
adjective
5. of, pertaining to, or resembling a concertina (dictionary.com)

"She is one of the four curators in the museum's Contemporary Architecture, Design, and Digital Department, which this month launched a project called Rapid Response Collecting.  Its stated goal is to demonstrate 'how design reflects and defines how we live together today.'  In practical terms, this means that the curators have been given carte blanche to scour the streets - in a global sense - for items of interest and get them into the museum as quickly as possible.  'It concertinas the amount of time that it takes to make an acquisition,' Gardner said, leading a visitor up the marble stairs of the 20th Century wing, where a gallery had been set up to display the Rapid Response unit's finds."

 - Lauren Collins, "Very important objects", 28 July 2014 The New Yorker