Friday Vocabulary

1. prosopopeia — personification (Rhetoric) The walls spoke silently of years of decaying neglect, the persistent prosopopeia of drywall and dust sounding its forlorn dirge for love’s opportunities lost. 2. apodictic — incontestable because demonstrable In spite of her constant allusions to the spiritual basis of life, she seemed always to search for apodictic rules …

Friday Vocabulary

1. sotadic — of erotic or pornographic material (after Sotades, the first known Greek erotic poet) The Victorian Age saw an avid interest in sotadic literature, in spite of (or perhaps because of) the supposedly repressed nature of the period.   2. tribadism — lesbianism The tropes of pornography have little changed since the erotic …

Friday Vocabulary

1. bailiwick — area of expertise or skill “I’m afraid I won’t be able to help you with your cuticular problem,” said the podiatrist. “Not my bailiwick, I’m afraid.”   2. cadge — to obtain through imposition upon one’s generosity or friendship He tried to cadge another drink from his hostess in spite of his …

Friday Vocabulary

1. impervious — not capable of being affected or influenced Like all comic book heroes of the Golden Age, Jack Hardaway was impervious to doubt. 2. impermeable — not allowing fluids to pass through His impermeable cape also protected him from prying eyes and suspicious minds. 3. gangly — awkwardly tall or thin The gangly …

Friday Vocabulary

1. interest — a cause or business in which a person has a share The conflicting interests between the king and the nobles initiated the events which culminated in the French Revolution.   2. purview — area of expertise Standard & Poor’s insistence that the United States must immediately reduce its debt seems beyond its …

Friday Vocabulary

Note: Today’s vocabulary comes from my high school days, an actual English assignment I turned in one week, lo, oh-so-many years ago. My apologies 1. intrepid — dauntless The intrepid explorer carefully circuited around the yellow patch of snow as he neared the pole’s barber shop on his maggot-driven sled.   2. labyrinth — maze …

Friday Vocabulary

1. stramineous — straw-like It is hardly worth responding to the stramineous arguments of my opponents, who apparently have never read the story of the the Three Little Pigs.   2. maudlin — foolishly tearful or sentimental Among the travellers of the Mormon Trail were several women poets, who composed fierce though maudlin elegies to …