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HYGGE noun (hoog-uh)
noun
1. *the feeling of coziness and contentment evoked by simple comforts, as being wrapped in a blanket, having conversations with friends or family, enjoying food, etc.:*The holidays are a time of hygge for me and my family.
adjective
1. cozy and comforting:*This room is very hygge with its soft cushions and warm fireplace.
Quotes
Hygge is about an atmosphere and an experience, rather than about things. It is about being with the people we love.
--*Meik Wiking,*The Little Book of Hygge, 2016
... “The Red Address Book” is just the sort of easy-reading tale that will inspire readers to pull up a comfy chair to the fire, grab a mug of cocoa and a box of tissues and get hygge with it.
--*Helen Simonson,*"Hygge and Kisses," New York Times, January 11, 2019
Origin
Hygge is still an unnaturalized word in English. It is a Danish noun meaning “coziness, comfort, conviviality.” Danish hygge comes from Norwegian hygge (also hyggje in Nynorsk), but the Norwegian word doesn’t have the same emotive force as the Danish. The further derivation of the Norwegian forms is uncertain, but they may derive from Old Norse (and Old Icelandic) hyggja “thought, mind, opinion, thoughtfulness, care.” Hygge entered English in the 20th century.
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RIGMAROLE noun (rig-muh-rohl)
noun
1. an elaborate or complicated procedure:*to go through the rigmarole of a formal dinner.
2. confused, incoherent, foolish, or meaningless talk.
Quotes
He said he had a shack in Mill City and I would have all the time in the world to write there while we went through the rigmarole of getting the ship.
--*Jack Kerouac,*On the Road, 1957
At the station, I went through the rigmarole of implied consent and told Father Grady I wanted him to take a Breathalyzer test.
--*Jodi Picoult,*Handle with Care, 2009
Origin
Rigmarole, with many variant spellings in the 18th century, is probably a reduction of ragman roll, a long catalog or list, a sense dating from the early 16th century. In Middle English ragmane rolle was a roll or scroll of writing used in a game of chance in which players draw out an item hidden in the roll. This game of chance possibly arose from Ragemon le bon (Rageman the Good), an Anglo-French poem. The sense “confused, incoherent, foolish, or meaningless talk” dates from the 18th century; the sense “elaborate or complicated procedure” dates from the 19th.
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HOGGERY noun (haw-guh-ree)
noun
1. slovenly or greedy behavior.
2. piggery.
Quotes
The culprits behind such acts of beach hoggery are said to range from unscrupulous umbrella operators hoping to bilk tourists, to eager sun seekers reserving space for friends and relatives.
--*Barry Neild,*"Italy fines tourists who hog beach spots," CNN, August 9, 2016
Harry, this is game-hoggery of the worst kind. It has got to stop. I'm going to write my congressman.
--*Durward L. Allen,*"Fifty Million Bunnies," Boys' Life, October 1960
Origin
Hoggery in its original (and still current) sense means “a place where hogs are kept.” The sense “swinish behavior, piggishness, greediness” dates from the 19th century. The latter sense is close to the Yiddish chazerei “piggery, filth, junk food, junk,” ultimately derived from Hebrew ḥazīr “pig.” Hoggery entered English in the 17th century.
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TEMERITY noun (tuh-mer-i-tee)
noun
1. reckless boldness; rashness.
Quotes
... he was taken aback by skeptical reviews that had the temerity to question his research methods or his conclusions.
--*Jennifer Szalai,*"Steven Pinker Wants You to Know Humanity Is Doing Fine. Just Don't Ask About Individual Humans." New York Times, February 28, 2018
The guys off the docks at the port who came in looking for engagement rings and wedding rings for their girlfriends would sometimes have the temerity to take the salesgirl's hand in order to examine the stone up close.
--*Philip Roth,*Everyman, 2006
Origin
Temerity ultimately comes from the Latin noun temeritās (inflectional stem temeritāt-) “rashness, recklessness, thoughtlessness.” The Latin noun is a derivative of the adverb temerē (with the same meanings), and temerē in form is a fossil form of an assumed noun temus (stem temer-) “darkness” and meant “in the dark, blindly.” The Latin forms come from a Proto-Indo-European root teme- “dark,” with a suffixed noun form temesra “darkness.” Temesra in Latin becomes tenebrae (plural noun) “darkness” (source of tenebrous). The Latin name for the River Thames is Tamesis (Tamesa), adapted from a local Celtic language in which Tamesas means “dark river.” Temerity entered English in the 15th century.
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DULLSVILLE noun (duhlz-vil)
noun
1. Slang. something boring or dull.
Quotes
Just that it was another system that didn't look particularly noteworthy. A star and some planets. No record of human presence. Dullsville, really.
--*Alastair Reynolds,*Absolution Gap, 2003
I work in a big insurance office now, working in the customer enquiries department. No doubt this will sound a bit dullsville to you ...
--*David Nicholls,*One Day, 2009
Origin
Dullsville, originally an Americanism, is an obvious, self-explanatory compound. The suffix -ville comes from the French noun and suffix ville, -ville “city, town,” a straightforward development of Latin villa “farmhouse, farm, estate.” Both French and English use the suffix -ville to form placenames (nearly 20 percent of the toponyms, or placenames, in northern France end in -ville); American toponyms include Gainesville, Charlottesville, and Chancellorsville. French and English also use -ville to form derogatory or disparaging quasi-toponyms: French has bidonville “shantytown,” formed from bidon “metal can, metal drum (used in constructing shanties)." American English has Hooverville, dating from the Great Depression of the 1930s, and named “in honor of” president Herbert Hoover; Squaresville, associated with the Beat Generation, dates from the mid-1950s; Hicksville dates from the early 1920s; dragsville dates from the mid-1960s; and dullsville (also Dullsville) from 1960.
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ROBORANT adjective (rob-er-uhnt)
adjective
1. strengthening.
noun
1. a tonic.
Quotes
... they put him to bed in the rest room, where the doctor gave him a roborant injection.
--*Thomas Glavinic,*Carl Haffner's Love of the Draw, translated by John Brownjohn, 1999
The label, designed for the English speaking market, gives this description of its virtues: "Nutritious and roborant: promoting the brain and recovering the memory: strengthening the organs and systems of generations."
--*Jack Anderson,*"Fat Cats Show They Care," Daytona Beach Morning Journal, Saturday October 7, 1972
Origin
Roborant comes from Latin rōborant- (the stem of rōborāns), present participle of rōborāre “to strengthen, invigorate,” a derivative of the noun rōbor (stem rōbur-) “oak, oak tree.” From rōborāre Latin forms corrōborāre “to strengthen, harden” (English corroborate). Latin also has an archaic form rōbus for rōbur, and the archaic form clearly shows the source of Latin rōbustus “strong, powerful” (English robust). The Latin noun rōbus is akin to the adjective rōbus “red” and dialectal rūfus “light red, fox red” (English rufous), the noun rōbīgō (also rūbīgō), stem rōbīgin- (rūbīgin-) “rust,” and its derivative adjective rōbīginōsus “rusty” (English rubiginous). Roborant entered English in the 17th century.
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INCULPATE verb (in-kuhl-peyt)
verb
1. to involve in a charge;*incriminate.
2. to charge with fault;*blame;*accuse.
Quotes
Then someone came into your room and placed the pistol there in order to inculpate you.
--*Arthur Conan Doyle,*"The Problem of Thor Bridge," The Strand Magazine, Volume 63, 1922
Their job was simply to get as much information as possible, which, along with corroborating evidence, would either inculpate the suspect or set him free.
--*Douglas Starr,*"The Interview," The New Yorker, December 9, 2013
Origin
Inculpate, like inflammable, is capable of two opposite meanings depending on whether you take in- to be a negative prefix (from the same Proto-Indo-European source as English un-) or an intensive prefix. If in- is the negative prefix, then inculpate means “unblamed, blameless,” the only meaning of the Latin inculpātus and a meaning that inculpate had in (and only in) 17th-century English. Likewise inflammable would mean “not flammable,” a very common mistake in modern English. The in- in inculpate and inflammable is in fact the intensive in-; Late Latin inculpāre means “to blame”; inflammāre means “to set on fire.” The Romans, too, were confused by the two different prefixes: inaudīre (in- here the intensive prefix) means “to catch the sound of, get wind of, hear”; its past participle inaudītus (in- here the negative prefix) means “unheard, unheard of, not listened to.” Inculpate in the sense “to blame” entered English in the late 18th century.
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PREBUTTAL noun (pri-buht-l)
noun
1. an argument constructed in anticipation of a criticism:*The alderman began his speech with a question-answer style prebuttal.
Quotes
President Clinton's White House and campaign team have been drawing favorable reviews for their rapid response operation and penchant for picking off issues before Senate Majority Leader Robert J. Dole (R-Kan.) even gets his TelePrompTer warmed up. Vice President Gore calls it "prebuttal."
--*Dan Balz,*Washington Post, May 26, 1996
Both in the short term and for posterity, Sotomayor's work will serve as a prebuttal to what Chief Justice John Roberts and company are poised to do.
--*Andrew Cohen,*"Sonia Sotomayor and the Real Lessons of Affirmative Action," Atlantic, January 11, 2013
Origin
Prebuttal is a clever combination of the prefix pre- “before” and (re)buttal. It is equivalent to the Latin rhetorical term prolēpsis “anticipation in the form of a brief summary” or Late Latin procatalēpsis “anticipation and rebuttal of an opponent’s arguments,” a borrowing from Greek prolēpsis “(in rhetoric) anticipation” and prokatálēpsis “anticipation and rebuttal of an opponent’s arguments.” Former Vice President Al Gore seems to be the first person to use prebuttal in 1996.
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AMPHISCIANS plural noun (am-fish-ee-uhnz)
plural noun
1. Archaic. inhabitants of the tropics.
Quotes
The amphiscians, whose noon shadows fall on both sides, are the people who live between the two tropics, in the region which the ancients call the middle zone.
--*Nicholas Copernicus (1473–1543),*On the Revolutions, translated by Edward Rosen, 1978
Are we not similar to those amphiscians / whose shadows fall at one season to the north, / but at another to the south?
--*Evan S. Connell,*Notes from a Bottle Found on the Beach at Carmel, 1962
Origin
Amphiscians is an altogether strange word, at least in its meaning. The English word, a plural noun, comes from Medieval Latin Amphisciī “those who cast a shadow on both sides,” i.e., in the tropics a person’s shadow will fall towards the north or towards the south depending on whether the sun is above or below the equator. Amphisciī is a straightforward borrowing of Greek amphÃ*skioi (a plural adjective used as a noun) “casting a shadow or shadowy on both sides,” formed from the preposition and prefix amphÃ*, amphi- “around, about” (akin to Latin ambi- with the same meaning) and the noun skiá “shadow, shade, specter” (from the same Proto-Indo-European root from which English has shine). (Heteroscians is, of course, the opposite of amphiscians.) Amphiscians entered English in the 17th century.
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MARVY adjective (mahr-vee)
adjective
1. Slang. marvelous; delightful.
Quotes
You havent heard of privatizing? That's this fantastically with-it idea the Reagan circle has for getting the government out of government. Isn't that too marvy?
--*Russell Baker,*"Such a Marvy Idea," New York Times, January 8, 1986
The 22-way adjustable driver seat was marvy.
--*Dan Neil,*"Bentley Bentayga: The Ultimate Luxury SUV," Wall Street Journal, March 12, 2016
Origin
Marvy is in origin an American slang term, a shortening of marvelous and the very common adjective suffix -y. Marvy first entered English in the 1930s.