Ese Bot
Mar 18, 2010, 02:20 PM
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 18, 2010 is:
magniloquent \mag-NIL-uh-kwunt\ adjective
: speaking in or characterized by a high-flown often bombastic style or manner
Example sentence:
The actor delivered a magniloquent monologue, peppered with metaphors and obscure words.
Did you know?
"Magnus" means "great" in Latin; "loqui" is a Latin verb meaning "to speak." Combine the two and you get "magniloquus," the Latin predecessor of "magniloquent." English speakers started using "magniloquent" in the 1600s -- even though wed had its synonym "grandiloquent" since the 1500s. ("Grandiloquent" comes from Latin "grandiloquus," which combines "loqui" and "grandis," another word for "great" in Latin.) Today, these synonyms continue to exist side by side and to be used interchangeably, though "grandiloquent" is the more common of the two.
Source (http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwwodarch.pl?Mar.18.2010)
magniloquent \mag-NIL-uh-kwunt\ adjective
: speaking in or characterized by a high-flown often bombastic style or manner
Example sentence:
The actor delivered a magniloquent monologue, peppered with metaphors and obscure words.
Did you know?
"Magnus" means "great" in Latin; "loqui" is a Latin verb meaning "to speak." Combine the two and you get "magniloquus," the Latin predecessor of "magniloquent." English speakers started using "magniloquent" in the 1600s -- even though wed had its synonym "grandiloquent" since the 1500s. ("Grandiloquent" comes from Latin "grandiloquus," which combines "loqui" and "grandis," another word for "great" in Latin.) Today, these synonyms continue to exist side by side and to be used interchangeably, though "grandiloquent" is the more common of the two.
Source (http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/mwwodarch.pl?Mar.18.2010)