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pettifogger: msg#00022

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Subject: pettifogger

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The Word of the Day for January 23 is:

pettifogger \PET-ee-fog-ur\ noun
*1 : a lawyer whose methods are petty, underhanded, or disreputable :
shyster
2 : one given to quibbling over trifles

Example sentence:
Charles Dickens's Uriah Heep was a complete pettifogger, an unctuous
villain whose name became a byword for a falsely humble hypocrite.

Did you know?
In its earliest English uses, "pettifogger" was two separate words:
"pettie fogger." "Pettie" was a variant spelling of "petty," a reasonable
inclusion in a word for someone who is disreputable and small-minded. But why
"fogger"? It may come from "Fugger," the name of a successful family of 15th-
and 16th-century German merchants and financiers. Germanic variations of
"fugger" were used for the wealthy and avaricious, as well as for hucksters. In
English, a "pettie fogger" was originally a small-time operator of a shady
business. We're not sure why the word came to be applied specifically to
lawyers, but it appears to have initially referred to lower-status attorneys
who argued the smaller, less important cases.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.





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