impugn

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

语言学习

2024-08-18

2 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 18, 2024 is: impugn im-PYOON verb What It Means To impugn something, such as a person's integrity, judgment, etc., is to attack or oppose it as false or lacking integrity. // The defense attorneys did their best to impugn the motives of the prosecution’s key witnesses. cynosure in Context “[Singer, Grace] Cummings is not shy about courting legendary company. After all, the protagonist of ‘Ramona,’ a smoldering pseudo-goth number that ultimately flames into a full torch song, is borrowed from Bob Dylan.... There’s a bit of Johnny Cash’s ‘Cry, Cry, Cry,’ toward the end of ‘Everybody’s Somebody,’ which borrows the sound of Memphis’ Stax rather than its Sun to impugn a wayward partner.” — Grayson Haver Currin, Pitchfork, 12 Apr. 2024 Did You Know? Impugn, pugnacious, pugilist: them’s fightin’ words, literally. All three words trace back to the Latin noun pugnus, meaning “fist.” Though they floated like butterflies down different paths into English from that shared source, each stings like a bee (so to speak) in its own way. The noun pugilist refers to a fighter or boxer, while the adjective pugnacious describes someone showing a readiness or desire to fight or argue. The verb impugn today has belligerent implications, albeit of the verbal jousting kind, but in its earliest known English uses in the 1300s, impugn could refer to a physical attack (as in, “the troops impugned the city”) as well as to assaults involving verbal contradiction or dispute. Over time, though, the sense of literal battling has become obsolete while the “assailing by words or arguments” sense has endured.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 18th.

  • Today's word is impune, spelled I-M-P-U-G-N.

  • Impune is a verb.

  • To impune something, such as a person's integrity or judgment,

  • is to attack or oppose it as false or lacking integrity.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from Pitchfork by Grayson Haver Curran.

  • Singer Grace Cummings is not shy about courting legendary company.

  • After all, the protagonist of Ramona,

  • a smoldering pseudo-goth number that ultimately flames into a full torch song,

  • is borrowed from Bob Dylan.

  • There's a bit of Johnny Cash's cry, cry, cry toward the end of everybody's somebody,

  • which borrows the sound of Memphis' stacks rather than its son to impugn a wayward partner.

  • The words impugn, pugnacious, and pugilist are all fighting words, literally.

  • All three trace back to the Latin noun pugnus, meaning fist.

  • Though they floated like butterflies down different paths into English from that shared source,

  • each stings like a bee, so to speak, in its own way.

  • The noun pugilist refers to a fighter or boxer,

  • while the adjective pugnacious describes someone showing a readiness or desire to fight or argue.

  • The verb impune today has belligerent implications, albeit of the verbal jousting kind.

  • But in its earliest known English uses in the 1300s, impune could refer to a physical attack,