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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 19, 2011 is:
convoluted \KAHN-vuh-loo-tud\ adjective
1 : having many twists and curves
2 : involved, intricate
Examples:
According to my sister’s convoluted reasoning, I still owed her $20.
"Given a plot so convoluted as to be almost nonsensical -- one of Shakespeare's few originals -- Carpenter's majestic if wrongheadedly noble Titus and Ross' sinister Tamora keep us fixed on the central action." -- From a review by Robert Hurwitt in The San Francisco Chronicle, June 6, 2011
Did you know?
"Convoluted" and "convolution" (a noun referring to a folded, winding shape, such as one of the ridges of the brain) are from Latin "volvere," meaning "to roll." "Volvere" has given English many words, but one of the following is NOT from "volvere." Can you pick it out?
vaultvoluminousvolleyvolubledevolve
The path from "vault" to "volvere" leads (rather convolutedly) through Middle English, Anglo-French, and Vulgar Latin to Latin "volutus," past participle of "volvere." "Voluble" meant "rolling easily" before it meant "speaking readily," and "voluminous" first meant "consisting of many folds." "Devolve" ("to pass down," as in "the stewardship devolved upon the son") once meant literally "to roll down." The word that doesn’t belong is "volley." It’s from Latin "volare," meaning "to fly."
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