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grandiloquence: msg#00005

culture.language.word-of-the-day

Subject: grandiloquence


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The Word of the Day for September 6 is:

grandiloquence \gran-DIH-luh-kwunss\ noun
: a lofty, extravagantly colorful, pompous, or bombastic style,
manner, or quality especially in language

Example sentence:
I prefer a more informal style, so I was a bit put off by
grandiloquence of the author's writing.

Did you know?
“Grandiloquence,” which first appeared in English in the late 16th
century, is one of several English words pertaining to speech that derive from
the Latin “loqui,” meaning “to speak.” Other offspring of “loqui” include
“eloquent” (“marked by fluent expression”), “loquacious” (“full of excessive
talk”), and “soliloquy” (“a long dramatic monologue”). “Grandiloquence” comes
(probably via Middle French) from the Latin adjective “grandiloquus,” which
combines “loqui” and the adjective “grandis” (“grand or great”). A word that is
very similar in meaning to “grandiloquence” is “magniloquence” -- and the
similarity is not surprising. “Magniloquence” combines “loqui” with “magnus,”
another Latin word meaning “great.”





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