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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

popinjay

[ pop-in-jey ]

noun

a person given to vain, pretentious displays and empty chatter.

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More about popinjay

The many spellings of popinjay, e.g., papejay, popingay, papinjai in Middle English, in medieval Romance languages, and in medieval Germanic languages, demonstrate the foreign, exotic origin of the term, let alone the bird. The English change of the final syllable from –gay to –jay may be by folk etymology, through association with the jay, the name of several kinds of raucous, lively birds of the crow family. Medieval Latin has papagallus, whose first half, papa-, may be imitative of the birds cry; the second half, gallus, is the ordinary Latin noun for rooster, cock. Papagallus comes from medieval Greek 梯硃梯硃眶獺梭梭棗莽, itself a derivative of 梯硃梯硃眶獺莽, from Arabic 莉硃莉眶堯櫻, 莉硃莉莉硃眶堯櫻, which is imitative of the birds cry. Popinjay entered English in the 13th century in the now obsolete sense of a picture or representation of a parrot (as on a tapestry).

how is popinjay used?

… Matt Damon brings preening fun to a popinjay in spurs and suede fringe; his throwaway lines and sidelong glances finally realize the comic promise the character always possessed.

Ann Hornaday, "Cohen brothers' 'True Grit' is polished and entertaining," Washington Post, December 22, 2010

The Prince of Wales (Rupert Everett) is a nasty popinjay, and George’s prime minister, Pitt the Younger … a manipulative cold fish.

David Denby, "It's a Mad Mad Mad George," New York, January 2, 1995
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

perspicacity

[ pur-spi-kas-i-tee ]

noun

keenness of mental perception and understanding; discernment; penetration.

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More about perspicacity

Perspicacity ultimately comes from the Late Latin noun 梯梗娶莽梯勳釵櫻釵勳喧櫻莽 (inflectional stem 梯梗娶莽梯勳釵櫻釵勳喧櫻喧-) sharp-sightedness, discernment, a derivative of the Latin adjective 梯梗娶莽梯勳釵櫻單 (inflectional stem 梯梗娶莽梯勳釵櫻釵-) sharp-sighted, penetrating, acute. 捩梗娶莽梯勳釵櫻單 is a derivative of the verb perspicere to inspect thoroughly, examine, look through, see through. The prefix per– here is both literal (to see or look through) and intensive (to examine thoroughly). The combining form –spicere comes from specere to see, observe, keep an eye on, a Latin derivative of the Proto-Indo-European root spek-, spok– look at closely, examine. Greek metathesizes the root to skep– and skop– (as in the English derivatives skeptic and horoscope). The Germanic form of the root, speh-, is the source of English spy and espionage. Perspicacity entered English in the 16th century.

how is perspicacity used?

How well she deceived her father we shall have occasion to learn; but her innocent arts were of little avail before a person of the rare perspicacity of Mrs. Penniman.

Henry James, Washington Square, 1880

This early work shows that Saramago had yet to achieve his radical style, but his perspicacity and wit were already fully formed.

Carmela Ciuraru, "Newly Released Books; Skylight," New York Times, December 24, 2014
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

blossom

[ blos-uhm ]

verb

to flourish; develop: a writer of commercial jingles who blossomed out into an important composer.

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More about blossom

Blossom in both the noun and the verb senses dates back to Old English. The Old English verb 莉梭莽喧鳥勳硃紳 to bloom, blossom, effloresce is a derivative of the noun 莉梭莽喧鳥, 莉梭莽喧鳥a, 莉梭莽鳥硃 blossom, flower. The English words blossom, bloom, and blow (a yield or display of blossoms) are all Germanic derivatives of the Proto-Indo-European root bhel-, 莉堯梭襲-, 莉堯梭– (and other variants) to thrive, bloom. In Latin the root appears in 款梭莽 (inflectional stem 款梭娶-) flower (which via Old French yields English flower, flour, and flourish). English florescent comes straight from Latin 款梭娶escent-, the inflectional stem of 款梭娶escns, the present participle of 款梭娶escere to come into bloom. Other English derivatives from Latin include floral and folium leaf, which becomes, again through Old French, English foil. Greek has the noun 梯堯羸梭梭棗紳 leaf, whose most common English derivative is probably chlorophyll.

how is blossom used?

… the beauty of their island only blossomed the further through time they moved away from it.

Roxane Gay, An Untamed State, 2014

This bit of utilitarian Web ephemera [the hashtag], invented with functionality squarely in mind, hasblossomedintoa marvelous and underappreciated literary device.

Julia Turner, "#InPriaseOfTheHashtag,"New York Times Magazine, November 2, 2012
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar