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Prob / Prov : from Latin : for 'prove or proof' or 'honesty and integrity'



Approbation: a formal or official act of approving; praise, usually given with pleasure or enthusiasm.

The 2011 film "Unknown" didn't get, nor does it deserve, much approbation from the critics.  Unknown is like a cheap imitation of one, if not all, of series of recent action movies (some decent, some really good) that have explored the fallibility of  perception through an unreliable protagonist: Salt, Bourne Identity, Shutter Island, and Inception.

Disprove: to show that something is not what it has been claimed to be; refute.

In the movie "Unknown" Liam Neeson plays a botanist named "Dr. Martin Harris" who after being knocked unconscious in an accident while proceeding to conference in Berlin, discovers that he has been replaced by someone else, and everyone, including his wife, denies that the is the real "Dr. Martin Harris". Still a little foggy from his accident "Dr. Harris" tries to disprove the other gentleman is himself, the local police, the audience, and maybe even himself.

Probity: absolute honesty and uprightness.

For a time "Dr. Martin Harris" believes with Probity that he is "Dr. Martin Harris", a botanist.  It is only later in the movie that he discovers that actually he is a spy who was sent to Berlin in a nefarious plot to assassinate someone, however he had forgotten this as a result of the head trama.

Reprobate: a person of thoroughly bad character.  Re = 'back' or 'backwards'. Thus Reprobate = the opposite of absolute honesty and uprightness.

It turns out that whoever this "Dr. Martin Harris" spy impostor is he is not a total reprobate.  "Dr Martin Harris" uses his well honed spy skills to thwart the assassination and to help a pretty young lady that got wrapped up in his confusing plot.  I guess after getting hit in the knocker, and discovering that the person he believed to be his wife denied he was who he thought he was, he somehow decides whoever the hell he is he rather be on the side of  right than the side of wrong.

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Roots: Crim : Latin : for "fault or crime" or "accusation"

 

Criminology: the study of crime, criminals, law enforcement, and punishment.
Criminologist: one who studies crime, criminals, law enforcement, and punishment.

The Movie "The Town" (2010, Directed by Ben Affleck) is about Charlestown, a neighborhood of Boston. Charlestown would make a good criminology study.  As depicted in the movie, Charlestown is notable mainly for its ability to churn out armed robbers, generation after generation.  Upon further research, there may be some real life truth to these allegations. Throughout the 1960s, all the way until the middle 1990s, Charlestown was infamous for its Irish Mob presence.  Most notorious of these gangsters were the McLaughlin Brothers.

Decriminalize: to remove or reduce the criminal status of.

In the late 1980s, many upper-middle class professionals moved to Charlestown, drawn to its proximity to downtown and its stylish colonial, red-brick, row-house housing. This gentrification process; some would say, marked the beginning of end of Charlestown as it was and its eventual decriminalization. Today the neighborhood is a mixture of classes- yet a working class Irish-American demographic and culture is said to still be predominant.  Given this setting, the central theme of the movie The Town is plausible, however the movie could also be depicted as a symbolic tribute to the decriminalization of the actual town.  Ben Affleck, the tainted protagonist Doug MacRay, plays a lower class Irish bank robber that falls in love with an upper class bank teller (Claire), portending his hidden desire to leave a life of crime (decriminalize), and thus his family, friends, and the town he has known since childhood.  In this battle between the old and the new, the bad and the good, the ugly and the beautiful, all the boundaries are unclear, except one: the code of silence.   

Incriminate: to show evidence of involvement in a crime or a fault.

While the center of the movie is about Doug MacRay's inner struggle, the exterior is wrapped in a typical action robbery caper, in which the annoying FBI, bound by duty to law,  attempt to capture and incriminate a group of bad, yet well constructed, clever, and lovable criminals.

Recrimination: An accusation in retaliation for an accusation made against oneself; the make of such an accusation.

As the story goes, in Charlestown criminals depend on a code of silence- those caught serve their time rather than turn in their friends, family, and neighbors- thus avoiding a slippery slope of recrimination in which one would turn another in, and in turn another would turn one in, in the end destroying all.  Immune from recrimination Doug MacRay (Affleck), James Coughlin, Albert 'Gloansy' Magloan and Desmond Elden, the four life long friends and criminals, are able to do many robberies without getting caught. However, everything changes when during a dicy bank job the four take an attractive bank teller (Claire) hostage to escape, only later to learn that she is a new resident of their very own town.  Thus as a new resident she is not a part of the towns history, therefore is not a criminal, knows not the code of silence, and thus owes no loyalty to them.  For fear that she might have seen or heard something that might reveal their identities and incriminate them, Doug (being the least thuggish, most attractive and clever) contrives to meet her to ensure she doesn't know who they are.  Doug follows her to try to find out what she knows.  But Doug falls for her, as she does for him. As the story proceeds to tangle, Doug needs to try and keep his true identity from her, keep the fact that he is seeing her from his friends, keep his friends happy, keep the mobsters who pull the strings happy, all the while remain true to his love for Claire and his desire to leave "The Town" with her.

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Roots: Plic : Latin : meaning "to fold"


Complicated: (many folds) 1. composed of elaborately interconnected parts. 2. difficult to analyze, understand, explain, untangle..

The movie Salt, a spy mystery thriller, is intentionally complicated; the plot has many folds to disguise whether or not the main character  Evelyn Salt (played by Angelina Jolie) is the protagonist or antagonist until the end of the movie.

Implicated: (wrapped up) 1. to show to be also involved, usually in an incriminating manner: to be implicated in a crime. 2. to fold or twist together; intertwine; interlace.

After shooting the Russian President, Salt is implicated with a plot by a Russian defector/spy Orlov to start a nuclear war between the U.S. and the Russia, putting into question  her allegiance to the CIA or to some other power.

Supplication: a humble and earnest request or prayer.  This word is usually used in the context of Religion; in a religious context all supplications are a declaration of allegiance to God.  

In the movie Salt, there is a flashback that shows us a group of Russian children being raised with the intention of manufacturing super spies with total allegiance to Orlov and his "Day X" plan. There are several scenes where the children, and then later adults, are shown kissing the ring of Orlov, apparently to demonstrate complete submission. Kissing a ring is a symbolic ritual of supplication.  Historically this kind of act was reserved for believed emissaries of God; Kings and Popes.

Explicit: (unwrapped, revealed) Fully and clearly expressed or demonstrated; leaving nothing merely implied; unequivocal: explicit instructions; an explicit act of violence; explicit language.

Salt is Rated: PG13, because of explicit violence.

The movie begins with Salt captured by some Middle East government stretched out in her underwear and tortured to reveal her real identity and mission.  While this scene reveals nearly everything about her physically, it reveals nothing about who she is and what she has done or intends to do, foreshadowing the audiences journey with Salt through this movie and the primary mystery.

Implicit: (wrapped up in) 1. understood though not clearly put into words. 2. Being without doubt, absolute.

In shooting the Russian President Salt implicitly declares her allegiance to Orlov's plan to destroy the United States.

Explicate: (unfold) 1. to explain in detail. 2. to analyze logically and clearly.

Following the scene when Salt shoots the Russian President she has the opportunity to shoot a CIA agent to escape being captured and she doesn't. By explicating this situation in his mind over and over again, the CIA agent forms a hypothesis that by not taking the opportunity to shoot Salt was implicitly declaring allegiance to the CIA.

Replicate: to copy or reproduce.

I couldn't help but notice that by using the theme of an unknown, unpredictable spy the movie Salt replicated elements of another spy thriller; Bourne Identity.  The similarity implies to me the film company may want to replicate the prior success with the Bourne movies, as opposed to create, while disguising this mission with a female lead.  Whether or not the apparent repetition implicates the film company in a plot to extract easy money from audiences may be the more difficult and interesting mystery of this spy thriller.  It is said that Tom Cruise originally secured the lead role, but the script was re-written for Angelina Jolie. Very mysterious...

Budget$110 million
Gross revenue$293,500,614


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This or That: Explicit or Implicit


Explicit: clearly defined or stated. Clearly, fully, and emphatically expressed.

In the movie,A Christmas Story, Nine-year-old Ralph "Ralphie" Parker explicitly states that the only thing he wants for Christmas is a Red Ryder BB gun.

Explicit Synonyms: clear, clear-cut, decisive, emphatic, straightforward, strongly worded, unambiguous, unequivocal.

Implicit: 1. implied or understood but not expressed.  Conveyed indirectly without words or speech.  "it goes without saying"

When Ralphie expresses his desire for a Red Ryder BB gun nearly everyone (his mom, his teacher, and even Santa) tells Ralphie that "you will shoot your eye out," which implicitly means No.  However, the one person Ralphie does not ask, his father, implicitly knows what Ralphie wants and buys it for him for Christmas.

Implicit Synonyms: 1. hinted, implied, inferred, insinuated, suggested, tacit, unarticulated, understood, unexpressed, unsaid, unspoken, unstated, wordless.

Explicit and Implicit are from the Latin Root Plic.

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Roots: Rect : Latin: from "rectus" which meant "straight" or "right"



Rectangle: four sided figure whose parallel, straight sides meet at right angles.
In between fighting the young men set down their guns and dug a ditch and rocks and dirt into a rectangle enclosure that would become their makeshift home for more than a year.

Correct: to make it right.
The young men named a hard won strategic position Restrepo after one of the boys in their platoon who died on their deployment- the first- hoping that naming the outpost with his name could somehow correct, make right, or make the death of their beloved friend more meaningful.

Rectitude: 1. moral integrity. 2. correctness of procedure.
Despite facing difficult and cruel circumstances, including seeing their friends die, American soldiers are asked to act with rectitude to win the hearts and minds of the locals, which is believed to help them ultimately in their war against "bad guys".  The men of Restrepo soon learned the difficulty of identifying good guys and bad guys, and the right things to do in a situation as messy as war.

Rectify: 1. to set right. 2. to correct by removing errors; revise.
After the American soldiers killed a local cow, the locals asked the men of Restrepo to set the situation right by providing them with $500. Being unable to bring the cow back, or provide the locals with money, the soldiers offered the locals food the weight of the cow.

Rectilinear: 1. moving in or forming a straight line.  2. having many straight lines.
When in a gun fight, usually you don't want to travel in a predictable rectilinear way- usually it is advisable to zig zag.


Rectus: from Latin rectus musculus, may refer to any of several straight muscles, such as those of the abdomen. In one scene in Restrepo a soldier retells the story of how he was shot below his bullet proof vest (presumably through the Rectus muscles of his abdomen) and a moment later had a rocket fired at him, yet still managed to escape with his life.  Even when sometimes it seems nothing is going right, sometimes things just unpredictably do.  Sometimes the average (or lucky) soldier lives and the best soldiers die. The details of war are not linear or predictable- war is erratic.


Rector: 1. a clergyman in charge of a church or parish.
No one uses the word rector, however the role of a  rector (clergyman in charge) is  to help other people understand situations, actions, decisions, and consequences to either put their minds at ease, and in some cases help them do right more often than wrong in future situations.

While I have a great deal of admiration for the men and women who fight for the interests of their country, sometimes I question rectitude of fighting in Afghanistan or anywhere near the middle East.  I am not sure there is anything we can accomplish there that will rectify former atrocities or prevent future atrocities.  I hope I am wrong.  Respectfully, Restrepo does not attempt to answer this question but may put this question front and center in your mind.

Roots: AM / IM : Latin : from amare, "to love"


The easiest way to remember the root AM is to think of your best friend, because most of us know that Amigo is spanish for friend. When every you see AM there is something friendly there.  -- Hold on I will come back to this--  But for now, for example, Amiable means "friendly or good natured."

Amicable: friendly, peaceful.  The best people I have known are those that behave amicably in all company regardless of variance in lifestyle, viewpoint, or language even if at odds with their personal preference or opinion.

Inimical: hostile, unfriendly, or harmful.  The "in-" prefex negates the meaning of the root "-im-".  Hence, Inimical means "not friendly".  Eminem?  Em (not) em =  them ems nobody, he's slim shady.  Regardless, Eminem, Marshal Mathers, impact has been to grow larger audience for the music genre Rap by telling stories through lyrics at a cadence that can be understood - also by drawing a white audience, regardless of social stratus, into a domain that was previously the exclusive domain of minorities.  While he is held inimically by many for being just another rap bad boy; I argue he is just misconstrued; you just don't understand him

Speaking of of misconstrued.  Emma, Em ma (ma; am in reverse) by Jane Austen, is a novel about the perils of misconstrued romance. As in her other novels, Austen explores the concerns and difficulties of genteel women while creating a lively 'comedy of manners' among her characters.  However, before she began writing Emma, Austen wrote, "I am going to take a heroine whom no-one but myself will much like." In the very first sentence she introduces the title character as "Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever, and rich." As the novel proceeds we learn Emma is spoiled; vows to never marry (because she doesn't need to); she greatly overestimates her own matchmaking abilities; she is as blind to the dangers of meddling in other people's lives as she is to the men in her life and the impact of her actions on others.  Yet, as the story proceeds Austen successfully demonstrates how or views of anyone can change as she transforms Emma into someone lovable. Does Emma find love?  You will have to read the story to find out.

Enamored: charmed or fascinated; inflamed with love.  At this point you are probably wondering if I am more enamored with Jane Austen or Eminem. I assure you the relationships are merely Platonic.

Paramour:  a lover.  The "Par-" prefix means "by or through."  So it means an attachment by or through love, as opposed to by social custom or ceremony.  Ironically it has come to mean a lover in secret.  Personally, I believe there are too many marriages driven by what is presumed to be the universally correct sequence of events of life, without enough thought about one's place in this world, objectives, or the consequences of one's actions- which reminds me of Eminem and Emma?  Is there hope for us yet- can we find true love? That's all we want, isn't it?

In one of the most famous quotes in the Torah/Bible, when asked who is, God said, "Ehyeh asher ehyeh" (Hebrew), which is interpreted in English to mean I am that or who I am. Which if I may intrude, using my new found Latin root, this could mean "I love that I love" or "I am love because I love", or just "I am love". Or maybe he was just trying to illusive. Real Torah scholars say that this divine name is mysterious just as God is mystery. It is at once a name revealed and something like the refusal of a name, and hence it better expresses God as what he is - infinitely above everything that we can understand or say: he is the "hidden God", his name is ineffable (not understandable), and yet by producing this name he is the God who makes himself close to men. And we get all that from 3 letters: I AM.

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Roots: Hosp / Host : Latin : from hospes, hospit- meaning "host" and "guest"



Hospital: if you study the history of this word it was once a house for religious pilgrims and travelers, then a home for old people, and finally now a place where sick people go.  We all know this word.

Hospitality: what a good host or hostess offers a guest. We don't all know this word.

Hospice: a place or program to help care for the terminally ill.  Actually, you would be surprised how few people know this word. Some families of people who are told to transfer their elderly grandmother or grandfather to a "Hospice" don't realize the doctor is telling them that they have given up and their beloved is going to die.  I love the people who work at Hospices- these are real heros. A doctor, fireman, or police officer don't expect to go into work every day to find death and carnage- you expect to find it occasionally and mostly to prevent it.  People who work in hospice go into work knowing what they must face- the mortality of human life.

Hostel: an inexpensive, supervised place for young travelers to stay overnight.  This is like the closest thing to a dollar bill found in an old jacket that you are going to get.  Suppose you are barely graduated from high school or college (maybe not yet) and you have a few hundred dollars to live on for a couple of months. You want to see Europe. On one side of the street you see a, I don't know, Hilton. On the other, a place where you can stay for $20 where they have bunk beds and vintage 1960 sofas where you can hang out with people who are well traveled, aspiring writers, hippies, and/or occasional ax murders. Still, I would opt for the Hostel.

Inhospitable: 1. not welcoming or generous.  2. Providing no shelter or food - i.e. think desert or life raft in the middle of the ocean.  While if one has a life threatoning condition for which there is no current explanation one might want to go see Dr. Gregory House the brilliant, unconventional, yet misanthropic doctor in the T.V. series "House", his character is about as inhospitable to patients as he could be.  As the story goes, they keep him around because he is effective, not polite.

Hostage: a person given or held to ensure that an agreement, demand, or treaty is kept or fulfilled.  As recently as Oct. 2010 a $750,000 ransom was paid to release a British couple taken hostage by pirates. Not a lot is know about the person who paid the ransom; the British government previously released this statement: "The government will not make substantive concessions for hostage takers, including the payments of ransom." British officials said negotiating with hostage takers would only encourage more kidnappings. Meanwhile, for a year this poor British couple were forced to sit around with bearded men drinking rum, playing cards, while occasionally being forced to cook or clean the deck for them. What a terribly inhospitable life.  Thank god they were rescued.  Hargh.


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Roots: Crypt / Cryph : Greek : meaning "hidden"

Crypt: a tomb or underground room where dead bodies are, particularly under a church.

The Cask of Amontillado is a poem by Edgar Allen Poe. If you read it you will never forget the root Crypt.  Just a taste: "My heart grew sick; it was the dampness of the catacombs that made it so. I hastened to make an end of my labour. I forced the last stone into its position; I plastered it up. Against the new masonry I re-erected the old rampart of bones. For the half of a century no mortal has disturbed them."

Medical words with "Crypto-" in them always means there is something hidden about the condition. Example: Cryptosporidiosis, a parasitic disease of the mammalian intestinal tract. Symptoms may include anorexia, nausea/vomiting, abdominal pain, or diarrhea. The parasite C. parvum is considered to be the most important waterborne pathogen in developed countries. It is resistant to all practical levels of chlorination.


Cryptic: 1.) Mysterious; puzzlingly short.  2.) Acting to hide or conceal.  Use example: "I can't imagine why that would be frustrating at all, just because someone refuses to tell you what they're thinking, even all the while there making cryptic little remarks specifically designed to keep you up at night wondering what they could possibly mean...now why would that be frustrating?" Bella (from the Twighlight saga).  I find this quote frustrating because in the Twighlight movies I find Bella to be frustratingly cryptic about her various boy interests.  I grew up socially awkward; I have always found women cryptic and a little scary. Looking back through the years I have often found they were doing everything but hitting me over the head with a message and I never got it.  


Encrypt - to encode a message.  Cryptography: 1.Secret writing. 2.) The encoding and decoding of messages. 



The movie War Games is about a young man (played by Matthew Broderick) who who unwittingly accesses a U.S. Military supercomputer and starts a game of Global Thermonuclear War, playing as the Soviet Union. As the story goes, with his brand new modem, he dialed every number in Sunnyvale, CA to find computer games. A computer that does not identify itself intrigues him. On this computer, Lightman finds a list of games but cannot proceed further. Two older hackers explain the concept of a backdoor password and suggest tracking down the "Falken" referenced in Falken's Maze, the first game listed. Lightman discovers that Stephen Falken is an early artificial intelligence researcher, and guesses correctly that his dead son's name "Joshua" is the backdoor password he was seeking.




Some scholars believe that the Book of Revelation in the bible was not actually a prediction of the future of the world but actually an encrypted messages between Christians at a time when Christians were being killed for being Christians.


Apocryphal: of doubtful genuineness or authenticity.  Usually this applied to Christian writings the Catholic councils either excluded from the Bible or included with a sort of question mark or asterisk.  Here are some apocryphal subjects that I think are interesting.
  • Devotion to Mary, esp. the Assumption of Mary’s perpetual virginity.
  • Veneration of relics: Acts of Thomas; esp. Veronica’s handkerchief.
  • The so-called “harrowing of hell” per 1 Peter 3:19: see the Gospel of Nicodemus, medieval mystery plays.
  • Apocryphal ideas displayed in Art: Peter crucified upside down, Thecla, the female apostle, thrown to the lions (Acts of Paul); Veronica; the Arabic Infancy Gospel (a palm tree bending low); John and the poisoned chalice (Acts of John); the ox and the donkey at the Nativity (Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew; already on sarcophagus lid two centuries earlier); the Mary Cycle in Chartres Cathedral (Protevangelium of James); Dante’s Inferno (Apocalypse of Paul); Milton’s Paradise Lost (scenes in hell); Herder’s poem “St. John” (Acts of John).
Gates of Hell, by Auguste Rodin
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Subject: Words about Women: Understanding Women



(If you have not read the last post Words about Women: Tossing and Turning: Women, Sex, and Power you should read it first)


Alluring: from French,  a "to" and lure "bait." ; "to bait". Falconers (people who hunted with hawks) used  a device called a lure to call back their hawks. It was a long cord with feathers attached.  The lure is what they used to feed their birds, so the birds were conditioned to respond to it. So when you say a women allures a man, or is alluring, what you are really saying she is attracting men through somewhat deceptive means.

Charm: Having to do with witchcraft. If a girl were called charming in the 14th century you could be pretty sure she was going to the bottom of a lake or burned at the stake.  This is an unusual twist- a word that began as something to be abhorred is now something any women would be pleased to be called.  Charm came from the French charme, which came from the Latin carmen, "song," which didn't really mean song but wicked chant or incantation.  Later women wore "charm bracelets" to ward off evil spirits. By the time I was in grade school, 100s of years later, I remember the prettiest and most popular girls had the most "friendship  bracelets" on their wrists.  Today, to be called "Charming" is equally desirable but perhaps there is just a tinge of attractive evil in it.


Enchanting: from Enchant, originally "to chant", or as we already learned witchcraft.  An enchantress was  a women believed to practice magic, but now the term has softened to, "a bewitching and fascinating woman", and enchant means to "win over".  How one gets "won over" in some situations is still a mystery, but it is likely a credit to the woman as opposed to a mark against her.  Off the subject, churches do a lot of singing, which may be a form of incantare, Latin for in "over" and cantare "sing", that is "sing someone over to your side." Singing can apparently go either way: Swing Low Sweet Chariot.


Glamour: to cast a spell over men.  Again before applied to women, this word was quite boring. Actually it is a totally mistake. Glamour is from Latin grammar, "words".  Because through history most people couldn't read and write, written words were regarded with suspicion and were believed to have special powers, or magic.  You see magic spells were long and it was kind of important to get them right so they had to be written down on paper, particularly with such a complicated language as Latin. Apparently one day someone wrote grammar down wrong and it became "glamour" and the rest is history.  If it had anything to do with witchcraft, evil, fear, or something to be regarded with suspiciousness it would eventually be applied to women.


Caprice (my favorite): like a goat.  You can thank Thomas De Quincey for its application to women. I won't even try to paraphrase; lets go to the source;  "Everywhere I observe in the feminine mind something of a beautiful caprice, a floral exuberance of that charming willfulness which characterizes or dear human sisters, I fear through all of the world." When a woman is capricious she is imitating the frisky, playful antics of the male cousin of a sheep.   Yummy but uncatchable?   This reminds me of my friend Carry. I hope she is not reading this.


Bevy: drinking company.  From Latin, bibere meaning "to drink", which became beivre in French, and came into English as beverage, "that which is drunk."  By this path bevy meant a group of drinkers but then changed to signify a small group of birds, or animals. With such cute company, of course it had to be applied to women too, so a bevy became a company of "roes, larks, quails, or ladies."  Ironically we put a "bib" on our babies to catch the moisture that the baby spills.  How cute: little birds, ladies, and the n babies. Bevy = Be VERY careful when drinking with a company of women.

Coquette: from the French coq or literally " barnyard cock".  Think of the amorous strutting rooster all alone in a hen house.  Appropriately, this word originally applied exclusively to men. But men preferred to share this word with women, and coquette became, "a frisking and fliperous minx".  But I guess men can still be called "cocky"- since men are less complicated you can get the point across with less letters.


Bluestocking: a literary woman.  I will spare you the story.  There is absolutely nothing interesting about it. But picture a librarian with long brown hair, black glasses, and long blue stockings on whatever it is she is wearing. Hey, not so bad after all.


Bridal: it is actually the "toast that was drunk".  Bridal is from English bryd, "bride" and ealu "ale" so the bridal means "Brides Ale", which is why people went to weddings in the Middle Ages, and ironically the ale served at the weddings is probably responsible for at least 50% of marriages so the term is proportionally not far off.  However, the brides get the last laugh because groom actually means, "man who takes care of horses".  Why else would a woman marry in the Middle Ages?


Wed: "to marry" but once meant "to wager."  You could weddian a woman or racehorse for an outcome that was "for fairer, or fouler".


Honeymoon: sweet moon?,moon is referring to a time period of roughly a month, so honeymoon means, "the first month after marriage, when there is nothing but tenderness and pleasure."  However, it is believed that there also was a cynical tone to the word because it is well know that as soon as the moon is full it begins to wane.


Buxom: today, "heavy" but originally it was buhsum, deriving from bugan, meaning "bend" or "pliant, pleasant, kindly, obedient," then somehow it transformed to "blithe and gay", then it took a turn towards "full of health and vigor", then at last it mysterious landed on the curves of a woman's figure, so now buxom means, "pleasingly plump".  Again, why do words about women always seem to start out with good intentions and then end up this way?


Avoirdupois or Adipose: are descriptive words usually applied to women as a polite ways to say "overweight or with a little excessive fat".  Avoirdupois is from the French Aveir de peis meaning "goods sold by weight". Adipose is from Latin, adeps and/or adipis, which means "grease or fat"

Harem: actually meant forbidden or sacred and now, well you guessed it, now it is a brothel.  The least sacred place.


Boudoir: a pouting room. Originally it was an elegantly furnished room to which a lady can retire to alone or to receive intimate friends.  Later however, in France a woman was sent to her boudoir to bouder, or "pout". If this is true I figure it had something to do with all of these words men used to describe women.


Amazons: from Greek a "without" and mazos "breast"; "without breast". The Amazons were a mythical group of fighting women said to have cut off their right breasts so they could draw their bows more easily.  The Amazon river was named the Amazon because when an explore named Orellana descended from the Andes to the sea down the river that is now known as the Amazon, he said he engaged in battle by a "savage" tribe in which the women fought beside the men.


Alimony: from Latin alo "nourish" and money "money which  etymologically  is pretty clear; "eating money." Tiger Woods' divorce from Elin Nordegren is estimated at $100 million. If she lived 80 more years and ate 3 meals per day that would give her $87,600 to spend per meal.  That's a whole lot of eating money.

None of these words are terribly complicated. I guess the point I am trying to make is that words change over time, and the reasons are somewhat mysterious but quite interesting when studied in detail.  So I hope this sample* of words relating to women is alluring enough for you to explore the meaning behind words in a little more depth. It can be a lot of fun.

*By the way- it used to be appropriate for a young girl to work up a sampler, or piece of needlework, as a specimen of her skill in embroidery, as an index of her worth in marriage.  A sampler was an example of the work a girl could do.  From Latin exemplum, "example".

For this list of words and history I have to thank Word Origins: and Their Romantic Stories by Funk and everything I know about women to my sister and cousins (for which there are many). Less so girlfriends (for which there were few).


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Subject: Words about Women: Tossing and Turning; Women, Sex, and Power.



Words about Women: Double Standards
What is interesting about words relating to women- or rather, sad, shocking, or telling is to notice how over the course of history most words about women begin as positive but degrade over time to become negative.


"Housewife" means "mistress of a household", but the Old English word "huswif" gradually changed to "hussy" which is now a term of contemptuous reproach.  Along these lines, because of its association with women, even "house" is no longer safe from the invasion of infidelity.  In certain sentences, house means "a house of prostitution," and "bordello" at first mean "a little house" but now is used to designate a "brothel".


"Dame", originally from the Latin "domina", meant "mistress" and was once used to indicate a position of high station. Only one example is necessary to prove this, "Notre Dame."  However, today you will rarely hear the word "dame" used in a positive context.  Same with "madam"- if you say someone is a madam you are more likely to believe she is is the "madam of a house of ill-repute" as you are to think she is the "women of the respectable home".


A "courtesan", at first, was a very decent feminine member of court circles.  A "wench" was a word for child and "tart" was a word of endearment, but all of these have now degenerated into sexual terms that would clearly be offensive if used in public.


"Woman" itself is not even safe.  If you were to say, "she is his woman" that will evoke a very different reaction than saying "she is his wife".  Wilford Funk warns that when using any foreign language "you will find it safer to totally avoid using a word that means girl or woman unless you are sure of all its connotations." So which would you rather be thought of, a seductress vamp or not noticed at all? Really, it is that bad?!  Wow. 


Words about Women: Sex and Power
There are two likely reasons for the corruption of words relating to women and they are not mutually exclusive or simple:  1.) It is thought this is either directly or remotely connected with sex and of course almost all words on the subject of sex lose caste and become taboo in polite society. 2. Until recently, in most societies men have held the position of power and men have seen to it that despite actions either instigated or participated in by themselves, women are seen as the "temptress"; ensuring that the shame of Eve would be fixed upon all of her children in our very vocabulary.


Vocabulary or Language, may very well be either be a creator or creation of power, or if not, at the very least a tool of power- you will find an in depth philosophy on subject backed by numerous examples in the works of Michael Foucault.  


Foucault's works analyze the link between power and knowledge. He outlines a form of covert power that works through people rather than only on them. Foucault claims belief systems gain momentum (and hence power) as more people come to accept the particular views associated with that belief system as common knowledge. Such belief systems are defined by their figures of authority, such as nobility, medical doctors, or priests in a church. Within such a belief system—ideas crystallize as to what is right and what is wrong, what is normal and what is deviant. Within a particular belief system certain views, thoughts or actions become unthinkable. These ideas, being considered undeniable "truths", come to define a particular way of seeing the world, and the particular way of life associated with such "truths" becomes normalized. This subtle form of power lacks rigidity and other discourses can contest it. Indeed, power itself lacks any concrete form, occurring as a locus of struggle In essence, he sought to show how meaning and knowledge is constructed, not absolute, and examined “how we know what we know.” His two major works from the 1960s, Order of Things, address the historico-ontological status of language and, especially in The Archaeology of Knowledge, provide a methodology for approaching the history of thought. His major works in the 1970s, Discipline & Punish: The Birth of the Prisonand  The History of Sexuality, explore the genealogy of power relations.


Words about Women: Tossing and Turning
There is no better example of how struggle changes the meaning of words is how much the meaning of relating to women took place in England when Charles II came to the throne in 1660.  This was the heyday of the double entendre and wholesale immorality by the upper-class and reflected in the theater of that time, while the middle class held stubbornly to the Puritan tenets of Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth that had gone before. There were double standards relating to the functionally powerful and the powerless, not the least of which is the double standard applied between men and women.  Without positions of actual government authority, sexuality may very well have been a tactic of power that could be perceived as an opportunity or a threat to the powers of some.  Regardless, the tossing and turning of the meaning of words related to women is evidence of Foucault's viewpoint, which is that words have no absolute meaning, only one that is negotiated through struggle.  Not withholding the bedroom.


While there are many movies that convey what I am trying to say with less words and more clarity, the best I have seen in recent memory is the move, The Duchess.



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This or That? : Incipient or Insipient


InCipient.  Incipient means emerging, developing, or initial.  Usage: “Don’t be a hater; this blog is still only in an incipient state.”

Not to be confused with:

InSipient.  Insipient means stupid or foolish.  Usage: “Mike, quit playing around with your insipient blogs and get down here” (My wife Lisa says this nearly every day)



Insipient is based on Insipid, with means “dull or without flavor”.  Usage: "My 1 year old rambunctious Labrador, Frieda, refuses to eat her dog food, which she considers to be insipid; she prefers instead whatever it is that I am eating"   

Which reminds me, Cip and Cep, which take the same meaning as cap and capt are English word roots based on the Latin word Capio, which means "hold," "take," "seize."  When writing you want to capture, or "seize", your audiences imagination or thought process. This may be perfectly legitimate, whereas deception is a similar word that indicates you have "taken" them by fraud.  Good con artists know how to captivate their mark (unsuspecting victim), that is they "hold" them with charm. 

The movie Inception, with Leonardo DeCaprio, is based on the premise that the protagonist has a method to travel into his target's mind through a shared dream, where he is free from the normal restraints of time and space, to plant an idea, to manipulate an action in the "real" world, to capture a prize.  In this movie the use of "Inception" is the ultimate form of deception, however we learn this space poses as great a risk to the deceiver as to the deceived, for the very reason that it is effective in the first place- it is shared. 

Are you as confused as I?  We must "take hold" of some fixed object to remind us where we are so so we can return to "reality." For me that object is my handy dictionary, which brings me back.

According to Webster's Dictionary, Inception means, "an act, process, or instance of beginning (alpha, birth, dawn, genesis)," and this will blow your mind: objective means, "relating to or existing as an object of thought without consideration of independent existence" or "relating to, or being an object or phenomenon in the realm of sensible experience independent of individual thought and perceptible by all observers : having reality independent of the mind." 

I guess all I need to do is find a way to convince my puppy that her dog food is objectively tasty.

The movie is long, however it is worth it- it is definitely not insipid.