Aug 29, 2011
This week's theme
Miscellaneous words
This week's words
recondite
A.Word.A.Day with Anu Garg
Usually the words in AWAD form a theme, but once in a while we
simply feature words that are engaging by themselves. Consider this
a cross-country drive through the dictionary, with no itinerary in
hand.
We'll make several stops along the way, but who knows where we
might stop, and why. Let's see what kind of words we come across.
We'll meet words that are long or short and unusual or familiar,
but all of them, just like people, are interesting if we care
enough to learn about them.
recondite
PRONUNCIATION:
(REK-uhn-dyt, ri-KON-dyt)
MEANING:
adjective:
1. Concerned with a profound, esoteric, or difficult subject.
2. Little known; obscure.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin recondere (to hide), re- (back) + condere (to put
together), from con- (with) + -dere (to put). Earliest documented
use: 1619.
USAGE:
"With its fragmented words, multilingual puns and recondite
allusions, the verse of Paul Celan hovers on the edge of
untranslatability."
Mark M. Anderson; A Poet at War With His Language; The New York
Times; Dec 31, 2000.
"The sight of beautiful people making beautiful babies is a huge
turn-on; but a recondite TV actress dying in a state of dementia, as
Marty would say, 'not so much'."
Lynn Crosbie; Brangelina Babies; The Globe and Mail (Toronto,
Canada); Aug 5, 2008.
Explore "
recondite" in
the Visual Thesaurus.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The willow which bends to the tempest, often escapes better than the
oak which resists it; and so in great calamities, it sometimes
happens that light and frivolous spirits recover their elasticity
and presence of mind sooner than those of a loftier character. -
Walter Scott, novelist and poet (1771-1832)
Books by Anu Garg
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