noun
a damaging or derogatory remark or criticism; slander: casting aspersions on a campaign rival.
Aspersion comes from aspersion-, the stem of the Latin noun 硃莽梯梗娶莽勳 a sprinkling. In classical Latin the noun is restricted to literal sprinkling. In the Vulgate (the Latin version of the Bible prepared by Saint Jerome at the end of the 4th century a.d.), 硃莽梯梗娶莽勳 also refers to the sprinkling of blood (as for a sacrifice). 插莽梯梗娶莽勳 in the sense sprinkling with holy water has always been practiced in the Roman Catholic Church, e.g., in baptisms. The metaphorical sense sprinkling calumnies; slander is a development within English. Aspersion entered English in the 16th century.
The full enormity of this remark then dawned on me; it was at once a lie and a cruel aspersion on my mother, who would certainly have got me some lighter clothes had I not discouraged her.
A notorious New York magazine profile this fall, which cast aspersions on Kaurs reading habits and penchant for gold rings, showed its cards in the first paragraph …
noun
Informal. a person who composes popular music or songs.
Tunesmith was originally an Americanism, dating from the Jazz Age (roughly from the 1918 Armistice to the stock-market crash of 1929). Fittingly enough, an early citation for tunesmith (1923) is attributed to the American bandleader Paul Whiteman (18901967), who debuted George Gershwins Rhapsody in Blue (1924).
The monthly pay Walnut Records offered me as a tunesmith would barely amount to enough for rent and groceries, but held the promise of royalties should one of my songs get recorded.
Granted, the limited palette of film scores sometimes results from the limited abilities of the practitioners, but almost any Hollywood tunesmith could achieve more distinctive results if the iron fist of clich矇 were to relax just a little.
adjective
expiatory; atoning; reparatory.
Piacular comes directly from the Latin adjective 梯勳櫻釵喝梭櫻娶勳莽 (of a rite or sacrifice) performed or offered by way of atonement; expiatory. 捩勳櫻釵喝梭櫻娶勳莽 is a derivative of the noun 梯勳櫻釵喝梭喝鳥 a sacrificial victim or expiatory offering, itself a derivative of the verb 梯勳櫻娶梗 to propitiate a god, remove or avert by expiation. Finally, 梯勳櫻娶梗 is a derivative of the adjective pius faithful, loyal, and dutiful to the gods, ones country, family, kindred and friends. Pius is one of the most potent words in Latin and typical of the Romans. The phrase pius Aens loyal, faithful, dutiful Aeneas occurs 17 times in the Aeneid. Piacular entered English in the 17th century.
T. S. Eliot made a fetish of using long-dormant adjectives like defunctive, anfractuous, and polyphiloprogenetive; he apparently felt piacular (meaning something done or offered in order to make up for a sin or sacrilegious action) was too run-of-the-mill, so he made up a new form: piaculative.
Sacrifices have generally been divided into three classes of (1) honorific, where the offering is believed to be in some sense a gift to the deity; (2) piacular, or sin-offerings, where the victim was usually burnt whole, no part being retained for eating …