circumlocution

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day

语言学习

2024-04-17

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 17, 2024 is: circumlocution ser-kum-loh-KYOO-shun noun What It Means Circumlocution refers to the use of many words to say something that could be said more clearly and directly with fewer words. Usually encountered in formal speech and writing, circumlocution can also refer to speech that is intentionally evasive. // The judge coughed and pointed to her watch, clearly impatient with the attorney's tiresome circumlocutions in defense of his client. cynosure in Context “The slight stiltedness of her … English merges with the circumlocution of business-school lingo to produce phrases like ‘the most important aspect is to embrace a learning mind-set’ and ‘I believe we’re going to move forward in a positive way.’” — Noam Scheiber, The New York Times, 1 Oct. 2023 Did You Know? In The King’s English (1906), lexicographers H. W. Fowler and F. G. Fowler advised, “Prefer the single word to the circumlocution.” It’s good advice: using more words than necessary to convey a point can confuse and annoy one’s audience. Circumlocution itself combines two Latin elements: the prefix circum-, meaning “around,” and locutio, meaning “speech.” In essence, circumlocution may be thought of as “roundabout speech.” Since at least the early 16th century, English writers have used circumlocution with disdain, naming a thing to stop, or better yet, to avoid altogether. Charles Dickens used the word to satirize political runarounds in the 1857 novel Little Dorrit with the creation of the fictional Circumlocution Office, a government department that delayed the dissemination of information and just about everything else.
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  • It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for April 17th.

  • Today's word is circumlocution, spelled C-I-R-C-U-M-L-O-C-U-T-I-O-N.

  • Circumlocution is a noun.

  • It refers to the use of many words to say something that could be said more clearly and directly with fewer words.

  • Usually encountered in formal speech and writing,

  • circumlocution can also refer to speech that is intentionally evasive.

  • Here's the word used in a sentence from The New York Times by Noam Scheiber.

  • The slight stiltedness of her English merges with the circumlocution of business school lingo to produce phrases like,

  • the most important aspect is to embrace a learning mindset, and,

  • I believe, we're going to move forward in a positive way.

  • In The King's English, published in 1906, lexicographers H.W.

  • Fowler and F.G.

  • Fowler advised, prefer the single word to the circumlocution.

  • It's good advice.

  • Using more words than necessary to convey a point can confuse and annoy one's audience.

  • Circumlocution itself combines two Latin elements,

  • the prefix kircum meaning around and locutio meaning speech.

  • In essence, circumlocution may be thought of as roundabout speech.

  • Since at least the early 16th century, English writers have used circumlocution with disdain,

  • naming a thing to stop or better yet to avoid altogether.