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antic: msg#00029culture.language.word-of-the-day
**************************************************************** Is there a "scare" in the word "scarify?" Scare up the answer to this and other disputes in our Concise Usage Dictionary. http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/book.pl?conusg.htm&6 **************************************************************** The Word of the Day for October 30 is: antic \AN-tik\ adjective *1 : characterized by clownish extravagance or absurdity 2 : whimsically gay : frolicsome Example sentence: As the movie progresses, the characters become involved in a series of antic misadventures, each one funnier and more absurd than the last. Did you know? When Renaissance Italians began exploring the ancient Roman ruins around them, they discovered fantastic mural paintings that they called "pitture grottesche" (which means "cave paintings," from the fact that they were found in caves, or "grotte"). Because they were so old, the murals were also called "antichi," or "ancient things." English speakers began to use "antics," both for depictions that are incongruous, caricatured, and ludicrous (such as gargoyles, which we now might refer to as "grotesques") and for ludicrous or outlandish behavior. Within 20 years of its earliest recorded uses as a noun, "antic" appeared as an English adjective. Originally, it meant "grotesque" or "bizarre" (a sense now considered archaic), but today it means "playful, funny, or absurd" and the noun means "a wildly playful or funny act." *Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence. |
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