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The Word

These are words that have caught my attention — usually because someone with a more extensive (or esoteric) vocabulary used it, and did so with such flair that it gave me cause to actually look it up in the dictionary.

  avocation   callipygian   schumpeterian   vocation
  bien pensant   causistry   seriatim    


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The Words

WordDateInspired
by
Definition
avocation Feb 3, 2009 FDR
Jean Edward Smith
avocation |ˌavəˈkā sh ən|
noun
a hobby or minor occupation.
\ Derivatives-
avocational |- sh ənl| adjective
ORIGIN mid 17th cent.: from Latin avocatio(n-), from avocare ‘call away,’ from ab- ‘from’ + vocare ‘to call.’
See also:
bien pensant Dec 9, 2009 The Register4-Dec-2009
Who owns science? Manchester Manifesto can't answer
bien pensant |ˌbye n pä n ˈsä n |
adjective
right-thinking; orthodox.
noun ( bien-pensant)
a right-thinking or orthodox person.
ORIGIN French, from bien ‘well’ + pensant, present participle of penser ‘think.’
callipygian Dec 1, 2008 Girl Genius Online callipygian |ˌkaləˈpijēən| (also callipygean)
adjective
having well-shaped buttocks.
DERIVATIVES
callipygous |-ˈpīgəs| |ˈˈkøləˈˈpɪdʒiəs| |ˈkalɪˈpɪdʒəs| |ˈkalɪˈpʌɪdʒəs| adjective
ORIGIN late 18th cent.: from Greek kallipūgos (used to describe a famous statue of Venus), from kallos ‘beauty’ + pūgē ‘buttocks,’ + -ian .
causistry Aug 31, 2009 LAW and REVOLUTION
The Formation of the Western Legal tradition
Harold J. Berman
casuistry |ˈka zh (ə)wəstrē|
noun
the use of clever but unsound reasoning, esp. in relation to moral questions; sophistry.
the resolving of moral problems by the application of theoretical rules to particular instances.
schumpeterian Dec 9, 2009 The Register4-Dec-2009
Who owns science? Manchester Manifesto can't answer
Creative destruction? Various
See also:
seriatim Feb 3, 2009 FDR
Jean Edward Smith
seriatim |ˌsi(ə)rēˈātəm; -ˈatəm|
adverb formal
taking one subject after another in regular order; point by point : it is proposed to deal with these matters seriatim.
ORIGIN late 15th cent.: from medieval Latin, from Latin series, on the pattern of Latin gradatim and literatim.
vocation Feb 3, 2009 FDR
Jean Edward Smith
vocation |vōˈkā sh ən|
noun
a strong feeling of suitability for a particular career or occupation : not all of us have a vocation to be nurses or doctors.
  • a person's employment or main occupation, esp. regarded as particularly worthy and requiring great dedication : her vocation as a poet.
  • a trade or profession.

ORIGIN late Middle English : from Old French, or from Latin vocatio(n-), from vocare ‘to call.’
See also:
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