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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 23, 2012 is:
forsooth \fer-SOOTH\ adverb
: in truth : indeed - often used to imply contempt or doubt
Examples:
"Yes, forsooth, I will hold my tongue; so your face bids me, though you say nothing." - From Shakespeare's King Lear, Act I, Scene iv
"Forsooth, your kids aren't into Shakespeare? They will be once they see the Rebel Shakespeare Company." - From an article by Elizabeth Gehrman in The Boston Globe, April 22, 2012
Did you know?
Although it is still a part of the English language, "forsooth" is now primarily used in humorous or ironic contexts, or in a manner intended to play off the word's archaic vibe. "Forsooth" is formed from the combination of the preposition "for" and the noun "sooth." "Sooth" survives as both a noun (meaning "truth" or "reality") and an adjective (meaning "true," "sweet," or "soft"), though it is rarely used by contemporary speakers. It primarily lives on in English in the verb "soothe" (which originally meant "to show, assert, or confirm the truth of") and in the noun "soothsayer" (that is, "truthsayer"), a name for someone who can predict the future.
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