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16 May 2008

joseph bottum

On words that sound true:

Grammarians may have a technical term for these words that sound true, though I've never come across quite what I'm looking for. Homological, maybe? Autological? Ipsoverific? In a logical sense, of course, some words are literally true or false when applied to themselves. Words about words, typically: Noun is a noun, though verb is not a verb. Poly- syllabic is self-true, and monosyllabic is not. And this logical notion of autology can be extended. If short seems a short word, true of itself, then the shorter long must be false of itself.

But what about jab or fluffy or sneer, each of them true in a way that goes beyond logic? Verbose has always struck me as a strangely verbose word. Peppy has that perky, energetic, spry sound it needs. And was there ever a more supercilious word than supercilious? Or one more lethargic than lethargic?

Let's coin a term for this kind of poetic, extralogical accuracy. Let's call it agenbite. That's a word Michael of Northgate cobbled up for his 1340 Remorse of Conscience--or Agenbite of Inwit, as he actually titled the book. English would later settle on the French-born word "remorse" to carry the sense of the Latin re-mordere, "to bite again." But Michael didn't know that at the time, and so he simply translated the word's parts: again-bite or (in the muddle of early English spelling) agenbite.

Mucilaginous. Piffle.  Ponnnnnnnnntificate.  Drone.  Bumptious.

What words sound true to you?

Posted by saint at 07:05 AM in amusing myself | Permalink

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Comments

After being called bumptious I had to look it up, so I guess that means while it was true it did not sound it.

Posted by: pedro at 16/05/2008 11:33:08 AM

Luscious.

Posted by: Ian at 16/05/2008 12:50:50 PM

LOL Pedro.

Luscious, Ian? Hmmm, unctious...sumptuous...juicy!

I'm think peripatetic only sounds true of me after a night at the pub.

Posted by: saint at 16/05/2008 4:42:20 PM

Great thread! Couldn't agree more on verbose and supercilious! What about words that do not exist but should. For example efferclossity. As in "he pursued his objective with great gusto and efferclossity."

Posted by: John Greenfield at 17/05/2008 8:10:17 AM

...as opposed to his partner who was somewhat fluctilious.

Posted by: saint at 17/05/2008 9:09:47 AM

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