:: Philadelphia Events, Arts, Restaurants, Music, Movies, Jobs, Classifieds, Blogs :: Philadelphia City Paper
Bookmark and Share
ARCHIVES . Articles

December 22-28, 2005

art


Playing Favorites

Words To Live By

Ask a lawyer-lexicologist what his favorite word is and you'll get an answer as long as your average tort-reform proposal. Here it is.

I must confess that, having a rather "perverse" fondness for all of the entries—having "created" them in the sense of finding the word, setting up the entry and finding the example—I feel vaguely disloyal in favoring some over others. Having said that, I tend to like the entries that have a "backstory" either in terms of discussing the derivation of the word or its usage, since I felt like I was able to insert a little of myself into those entries.

Several examples that fall into the first category (derivation) are set forth below.

  1. closed-door: star-chamber
  2. clue: Rosetta stone
  3. definition (third sense: Pickwickian)
  4. departure: French leave
  5. dilatory: Fabian

Several examples which fall into the second category (usage) are as follows:

  1. laughable (second sense: risible)
  2. outgrowth: excrescence
  3. overambitious: Icarian
  4. panic: torschlusspanik
  5. two-faced: Janus-faced

While not focusing on the synonyms themselves, I also like the base words that offer many different synonyms, such as argument, conversation, criticize, desire, discussion, dull, evil, expression, fat, government, woman and so on. It is these kinds of entries that really separate this book from conventional thesauri.

In shorter answer to your question, I particularly like the word "misoneist" [miseonism: conservatism (as in hatred or fear of anything new or different) (person holding this view: misoneist)].

-- Respond to this article in our Forums -- click to jump there
 
 
ADVERTISEMENT