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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 11, 2010 is:
comity \KAH-muh-tee\ noun
: friendly civility : courtesy
Examples:
In the interests of neighborhood comity, everyone agreed to a block-wide tag sale.
"Two years after an election that seemed to portend a new era of comity, American politics has resumed what now appears to be its permanent condition of polarization, quite possibly worsened by widening rifts within the two major parties." -- From an essay by Sam Tanenhaus in The New York Times, October 24, 2010
Did you know?
"Our country soweth also in the field of our breasts many precious seeds, as … honest behavior, affability, comity," wrote English clergyman Thomas Becon in 1543. Becon's use is the earliest documented appearance of "comity" -- a word derived from Latin "comitas," meaning "courteousness" (and probably related to the Sanskrit word for "he smiles"). "Comity" is largely used in political and judicial contexts. Since 1862 "comity of nations" has referred to countries bound by a courteous relationship based on mutual recognition of executive, legislative, and judicial acts. And, in legal contexts, "comity" refers to the recognition by courts of one jurisdiction of the laws and judicial decisions of another.
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merriamwebsterwordenglishdictionaryvocabularymerriam-websterword a dayword of the daylanguagewords