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orgulous
Episode 4311

orgulous

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day · Merriam-Webster

August 13, 20181m 39s

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Show Notes

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 13, 2018 is:


orgulous \OR-gyuh-lus\ adjective

: proud


Examples:

The hotel manager tended to adopt an orgulous air with those guests who were not regular visitors and who might be unaware of the building's rich and storied history.

"He astutely recognized that intimate relations with the orgulous Kennedys could only heighten his influence. Indeed, apart from Robert Kennedy and Douglas Dillon, McNamara was the only member of Kennedy's Cabinet to enter the president's social life." — Jacob Heilbrunn, The New Republic, 22 Mar. 1993


Did you know?

"In Troy, there lies the scene. From Isles of Greece / The princes orgulous, their high blood chaf'd, / Have to the port of Athens sent their ships." Thus William Shakespeare begins the Trojan War tale Troilus and Cressida, employing orgulous, a colorful word first adopted in the 13th century from Anglo-French orguillus. After the Bard's day, orgulous dropped from sight for 200 years; there is no record of its use until it was rejuvenated by the pens of Robert Southey and Sir Walter Scott in the early 1800s. 20th-century authors (including James Joyce and W. H. Auden) continued its renaissance, and it remains an elegant (if infrequent) choice for today's writers.

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Topics

DICTIONARYVOCABULARYMERRIAMLANGUAGEENGLISHWEBSTERWORD A DAYWORDWORD OF THE DAYWORDS