A.Word.A.Day with Anu Garg
pneumatic
PRONUNCIATION:
(noo-MAT-ik, nyoo-)
MEANING:
adjective:
1. Of or relating to air, wind, or gases.
2. Spiritual.
3. Buxom,
zaftig.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Greek pneuma (breath, wind, spirit). Ultimately from the
Indo-European
root pneu- (to breathe), which is also the source of pneumatic,
pneumonia,
apnea, sneer, sneeze, snort, snore, and
pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis.
Earliest documented use: 1624.
USAGE:
"The Greyhound from Toronto pulled up and with a sucking pneumatic
hiss."
James Bartleman; As Long as the Rivers Flow; Knopf; 2011.
"This in itself set up a kind of suspicion about pneumatic claims
that is,
if someone said, 'The Spirit told me.'"
Ben Witherington; Is There a Doctor in the House?; Zondervan;
2011.
"Uncorseted, her friendly bust
Gives promise of pneumatic bliss."
T.S. Eliot; Whispers of Immortality; 1920.
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A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
There is no exception to the rule that every rule has an exception.
-James Thurber, writer and cartoonist (1894-1961)
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