Posted on 02/02/2007 6:21:08 AM PST by VRWCmember
In order that we might all raise the level of discourse and expand our language abilities, here is the daily post of "Word for the Day".
glasnost \GLAHZ-nohst\ noun
a Soviet policy permitting open discussion of political and social issues and freer dissemination of news and information
Example sentence:
Yuri welcomed glasnost because he could finally publish the article he had written about poverty in Moscow.
Did you know?
"Glasnost'" wasn't coined by former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev, but he was responsible for catapulting the word into the international media and the English vocabulary. The term derives from the Russian adjective "glasnyi," which means "public" and which itself traces to "glas," a root meaning "voice." In Russian, "glasnost" was originally used (as long ago as the 18th century) in the general sense of "publicity," and the Oxford English Dictionary reports that V.I. Lenin used it in the context of freedom of information in the Soviet state. However, it wasn't until Gorbachev declared it a public policy in the mid-1980s that "glasnost" became widely known and used in English.
Bonus Friday Words:
lothario \loh-THAIR-ee-oh\ noun
a man whose chief interest is seducing women
The Story Behind the Word
"Lothario" comes from The Fair Penitent (1703), a tragedy by Nicholas Rowe (1674-1718). In the play, Lothario is a notorious seducer, extremely attractive but beneath his charming exterior a haughty and unfeeling scoundrel. He seduces Calista, an unfaithful wife and later the fair penitent of the title. After the play was published, the character of Lothario became a stock figure in English literature. For example, Samuel Richardson (1689-1761) specifically modeled the character of Lovelace on Lothario in his 1748 novel Clarissa. As the character became well-known, his name became progressively more generic, and since the 18th century the word "lothario" has been used for a foppish, unscrupulous rake.
osculate \AHSS-kyuh-layt\ verb
kiss
The Story Behind the Word
"Osculate" comes from the Latin noun "osculum," meaning "kiss" or "little mouth." It was included in a dictionary of "hard" words in 1656, but we have no evidence that anyone actually used it until the 19th century (except for scientists who used it differently as a word for "contact"). Would any modern writer use "osculate"? Ben Macintyre did. In a May 2003 (London) Times piece entitled "Yes, It's True, I Kissed the Prime Minister's Wife," Macintyre wrote, "Assuming this must be someone I knew really quite well, I screeched 'How are you,' . . . and leant forward preparatory to giving her a chummy double-smacker . . . Perhaps being osculated by lunatics you have never seen before is one of the trials of being a Prime Minister's wife. She took it very well."
roué \roo-AY\ noun
a man devoted to a life of sensual pleasure; RAKE
The Story Behind the Word
The word roué can be traced back to the Latin noun rota, meaning 'wheel.' From the noun the verb rotare, 'to rotate,' was derived, which in Medieval Latin took on the sense 'to break on the wheel.' The wheel in question was the instrument of torture designed to extract a confession of guilt by stretching, disjointing, or otherwise mutilating the victim. Rotare became rouer in French, and roué is the past participle of that verb, meaning 'broken on the wheel.' About the year 1720 Philippe II, the Duke of Orleans and Regent of France, who was himself a profligate, called his wantonly licentious companions "roués," by which he meant that they deserved to be broken on the wheel. It has also been suggested that the duke may have called his friends roués because their debauches so exhausted them that they felt as though they had been broken on the wheel. In any case, roué then came to be applied to other such rakes and profligates, and its first appearance in English was around the year 1800.
Rules: Everyone must leave a post using the Word for the Day in a sentence.
The sentence must, in some way, relate to the news of the day.
The Review threads are linked for your edification. ;-)
Practice makes perfect.....post on....
Review Threads:
Review Thread One: Word For The Day, Thursday 11/14/02: Raffish (Be SURE to check out posts #92 and #111 on this thread!)
Review Thread Two: Word For The Day, Tuesday 1/14/03: Roister
Review Thread Three: Word For The Day, Tuesday 1/28/03: Obdurate
Review Thread Four: Word For the Day, Friday 7/25/03: Potation
Review Thread Five: Word For the Day, Monday 8/19/03: Stolid
Review Thread Six: Word for the Day, Tuesday 11/09/2004: Peripatetic (Post #125 may be my best anagram post ever)
well we visited Steubenville and you are right, she wanted no part of winter and the campus is just kind of depressing. UDallas is no showplace by any stretch, but she didn't think it was all that bad. Franciscan just has no curb appeal whatsoever and she couldn't see herself there for 4 years, which is essential.
She will probably want to have a car there. The campus is not close to much (other than Texas Stadium - home of God's Team the Dallas Cowboys) so to go out and do things will require transportation.
I love the one of them both running as Robbie is chasing Gable. Great action shot.
yes i think they are permitted to have a car on campus as freshman also. we will have to look into that. i don't think the JAG is going to be making the trip down there!
do they get really loud when they play and rampage around in the house? bc Chanel can't bark yet and even her growl is very soft and you can barely hear it, but when she and loosh are rough-housing,it is LOUD!
Thanks for posting that xs. He was a true patriot and a very nice man.
Thank you, it was very sweet for you to remember. Joe was a real-life buddy of mine. I got to say goodbye to him on Wednesday.
i feel so for his family and his young children. i am glad that he is at peace and not suffering. and you have my condolences, too.
At times they get loud, mainly when one wants to play and the other won't. The one that wants to play will bark at the other one. Last night we had Gable tethered because he was getting a bit too wild and needed to chill for a while. He had the rope toy and was lying down on it, and he also wanted to play. Robbie went over just beyond the reach of the leash so Gable couldn't quite reach him and taunted him and barked at him demanding the rope toy. Then he darted in, grabbed the rope and retreated back just beyond the reach of Gable's leash. It was so funny to watch the attitude and the bratty way Robbie was acting.
oh i laugh my head off at my two. loosh will take something from chanel and she will sit there just inches away from him and stare at it and him in the most wistful way, and if someone diverts loosh's attention she will pounce and run with it.
REMEMBER thy servant, O Lord, according to the favour which thou bearest unto thy people, and grant that, increasing in knowledge and love of thee, he may go from strength to strength, in the life of perfect service, in thy heavenly kingdom; through Jesus Christ our Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Ghost, ever, one God, world without end. Amen.BCP 1928
Isn't it Friday?
DOH! I didn't even notice that.
I made a mistake in my thread title. Could you change "Wednesday" to "Friday" in the title of this thread?
Thanks.
WoW!!! That was Quick!! Thanks!
Hey if I have my way, I'll have that girl hosting parties and bunco and she'll be asking for a deviled egg tray for Christmas....
You can buy her some boots.
Not to mention that she will fully understand the importance of always saving the bacon grease for future use.
Bacon grease. Ha - I remember my grandmother and mother doing that. I guess I lose a few southern cook points 'cause I don't save bacon grease. ;^)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.