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sangfroid

sangfroid

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

February 5, 20132m 10s

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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 5, 2013 is: sangfroid • \SAHNG-FRWAH\  • noun : self-possession or imperturbability especially under strain Examples: The lecturer's sangfroid never faltered, even in the face of some tough questions from the audience. "Daniel Craig portrays a vulnerability far removed from the glib sangfroid of his celluloid predecessors and has retired to an exotic bolt-hole after he is assumed to have died during a botched operation." - From a movie review by Des O' Neill in the Irish Times, January 2, 2013 Did you know? If you're a lizard, "cold-blooded" means your body temperature is strongly influenced by your environment. If you're an English-speaking human, it means you are callous and unfeeling. If you're a French speaker, it means that you're calm, cool, and collected in stressful situations. By the mid-1700s, English speakers had already been using "cold-blooded" for more than a century, but they must have liked the more positive spin the French put on having "cold blood" because they borrowed the French "sang-froid" (literally, "cold blood") for someone who is imperturbable under strain. The French term, by the way, developed from the Latin words "sanguis" ("blood") and "frigidus" ("cold"). 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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merriam-websterword a daywordswebstervocabularymerriamdictionarylanguageenglishwordword of the day