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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for May 26, 2008 is:
decorous \DECK-er-us\ adjective
: marked by propriety and good taste : correct
Examples:
Nina and Mark had hoped to have a casual beach wedding, but her parents insisted on a formal, highly decorous ceremony in their church.
Did you know?
The current meaning of "decorous" dates from the mid-17th century. One of the word's earliest recorded uses appeared in a book titled The Rules of Civility (1673): "It is not decorous to look in the Glass, to comb, brush, or do any thing of that nature to ourselves, whilst the said person be in the Room." (There is also a slightly older sense of "decorous" that means "fitting, appropriate," but that sense is now obsolete.) "Decorous" derives from the Latin word "decorus," an adjective created from the noun "decor," meaning "beauty" or "grace." "Decor" is akin to the Latin verb "decēre" ("to be fitting"), which is the source of our adjective "decent." It is only fitting, then, that "decent" can be a synonym of "decorous."
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Topics
languagewordsword of the daywebsterenglishmerriamdictionarywordvocabularyword a daymerriam-webster