verb (used with object)
to argue about; debate; discuss.
A controvert is not some kind of hybrid of an introvert and extrovert. It is actually a verb that means to argue about; debate; discuss” and “argue against; deny; oppose.” Controvert does share a root, however, with introvert and extrovert: Latin vertere to turn. Controvert is based on Latin 釵棗紳喧娶措梗娶莽喝莽 debatable, disputedthat is, controversial, another derivative of 釵棗紳喧娶措梗娶莽喝莽. 唬棗紳喧娶措梗娶莽喝莽 is composed of a variant of 釵棗紳喧娶櫻 against and versus, past participle of vertere to turn, turn around, spin. (An introvert is literally someone turned within and an extrovert, someone turned outside.) Controvert entered English by the early 1600s.
It seemed as if his first instinct on hearing a proposition was to controvert it, so impatient was he of the limitations of our daily thought.
It seems natural to supposethough many scholars controvert itthat Book I of the Republic was originally written as a separate book …
adjective
extravagantly enthusiastic; ecstatic.
Not everyone may get extravagantly enthusiastic or ecstatic about word origins, but they are key to understanding the development of the word rhapsodic. Rhapsodic is an adjective form of rhapsody, which historically refers to an epic poem, or part of such a poem, such as a book of Homers Iliad, that can be recited at one time. Rhapsody ultimately derives from Greek 娶堯硃梯莽勳餃穩硃 recital of epic poetry. Such recitals tended to be done with intense expression and feeling, leading to the English sense of rhapsodic. In music, a rhapsody is an instrumental composition irregular in form and suggestive of improvisation, such as George Gershwins truly rhapsodic 1924 opus, Rhapsody in Blue. Rhapsodic entered English in the mid-1700s.
When I mentioned the Betty Crocker book to David Kamp … it didnt seem to inspire the rhapsodic response I was hoping for.
… he can now tell you about the rhapsodic joy of a perfect day out at his home break with his boys as well as the spiritual fulfillment he felt from chasing waves around the planet as a surf bohemian inspired by Jack Kerouac.
Oppidan derives from Latin 棗梯梯勳餃櫻紳喝莽 of a town, from the noun oppidum t棗滄紳. 倏梯梯勳餃櫻紳喝莽 didnt just describe any town, though: it was used of towns other than Rome, which was referred to as urbs city, specifically the capital city of Rome. Due to this distinction from Rome, Latin 棗梯梯勳餃櫻紳喝莽 could have the pejorative connotation of provincial, rustic. The adjective form of urbs was 喝娶莉櫻紳喝莽 of the city, source of English urban. Another city-based adjective English gets from Latin is municipal, from 鳥贖紳勳釵勳梯勳喝鳥, a town whose residents had the rights of Roman citizens but which otherwise governed itself. Oppidan entered English by the mid-1500s.
A lot of people were confused when Kaplan … took a job at Cond矇 Nast Traveler, a magazine not widely known as a bastion of oppidan irreverence.
Forsake your oppidan haunts and play manorial backgammon in the ballroom at Old Westbury Gardens, John S. Phipps’s former Long Island estate.