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persiflage

persiflage

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

March 28, 20152m 30s

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 28, 2015 is: persiflage • \PER-suh-flahzh\  • noun : frivolous bantering talk : light raillery Examples: Since the final round ended sooner than expected, the quiz show host engaged in persiflage with the contestants until it was time to sign off. "The pleasant research I did for this story-in which coffee is equated with romance-led me to discover the famous cafés of Turin…. As in Prague, Paris, or Vienna, they have for generations been arenas for aristocratic persiflage, intellectual gossip, even revolutionary ideas." - Andrea Lee, Gourmet, May 2004 Did you know? Unwanted persiflage on television might provoke an impatient audience to hiss or boo, but from an etymological standpoint, no other reaction could be more appropriate. English speakers picked up persiflage from French in the 18th century. Its ancestor is the French verb persifler, which means "to banter" and was formed from the prefix per-, meaning "thoroughly," plus siffler, meaning "to whistle, hiss, or boo." Siffler in turn derived from the Latin verb sibilare, meaning "to whistle or hiss." By the way, sibilare is also the source of sibilant, a word linguists use to describe sounds like those made by "s" and "sh" in sash. That Latin root also underlies the verb sibilate, meaning "to hiss" or "to pronounce with or utter an initial sibilant." See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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