coterie

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

语言学习

2024-07-14

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 14, 2024 is: coterie KOH-tuh-ree noun What It Means Coterie refers to an intimate and often exclusive group of people with a unifying common interest or purpose. // The mayor arrived at the meeting with a coterie of advisors. cynosure in Context "By day I was exposed to third-wave-feminist texts—lots of talk about claiming my power and rejecting gender roles. But on evenings and weekends, the small coterie of Latino students enrolled in my predominantly white college would gather and dance. The chasm between the bodily autonomy I was being empowered to have intellectually and the physical pliability to a partner’s will that salsa required was simply too wide for my teenage brain to bridge." — Xochitl Gonzalez, The Atlantic, 15 Jan. 2024 Did You Know? A coterie today is, in essence, a clique—that is, a tight-knit group sharing interests in common. Historically, however, coteries hung around agricultural fields, not garden parties. In medieval France, coterie referred to a group of feudal peasants who together held a parcel of land (that coterie comes from the Old French word for a single peasant, cotier). Such associations of country people inspired later French speakers to use coterie more broadly and apply it to other kinds of clubs and societies. By the time the word began appearing in English texts in the early 1700s, its meaning had been extended to refer to any circle of people who spent a great deal of time together, who shared the same basic attitudes, and who held a passion for some particular topic. Coterie mostly appears now in formal speech and writing, and tends also to imply a bit of exclusivity—if you’re thinking of joining your local coterie, you may need to learn the secret handshake, or perhaps bone up on the latest techniques for harvesting barley.
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  • It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 14th.

  • Today's word is Coterie, spelled C-O-T-E-R-I-E.

  • Coterie is a noun.

  • It refers to an intimate and often exclusive group of people with a unifying common interest or purpose.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from The Atlantic.

  • By day I was exposed to third wave feminist texts.

  • Lots of talk about claiming my power and rejecting gender roles.

  • But on evenings and weekends,

  • the small coterie of Latino students enrolled in my predominantly white college would gather and dance.

  • The chasm between the bodily autonomy I was being empowered to have intellectually and the physical pliability to a partner's will that salsa required was simply too wide for my teenage brain to bridge.

  • A coterie today is in essence a clique, that is, a tight-knit group sharing interests in common.

  • Historically, however, coteries hung around agricultural fields, not garden parties.

  • In Medieval France,

  • coterie referred to a group of feudal peasants who together held a parcel of land.

  • That coterie comes from the old French word for a singular peasant coutier.

  • Such associations of country people inspired later French speakers to use coterie more broadly and apply it to other kinds of clubs and societies.

  • By the time the word began appearing in English texts in the early 1700s,

  • its meaning had been extended to refer to any circle of people who spent a great deal of time together,

  • who shared the same basic attitudes, and who held a passion for some particular topic.

  • Coterie mostly appears now in formal speech and writing,