Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 05/25/2022
Lucubration: Laborious, late work or study. “He wondered whether the PhD was worth the lucubration of the last two years.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 05/18/2022
Mithraic: Relation to secret and mystical rites. “The group aroused suspicions because of rumors about their adherence to Mithraic proceedings.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 05/11/2022
Perdure: To endure indefinitely. “The smog in the city perdured through all seasons, all weather, all administrations.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 05/04/2022
Strabismus: The condition of having a radical squint or being “cross-eyed.” “The strabismus she experienced from birth had incredibly neither altered her view of the world nor caused a negative disposition."
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 04/27/2022
Traduce: To speak poorly of someone. "He wouldn’t merely speak poorly of his opponent, he would traduce his record, family and reputation all at one time.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 04/20/2022
Votary: A person bound by an oath. “The votaries had no choice but to support the person who nominated them to their positions.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 04/13/2022
Emollient: A medicine with a soothing effect. "Ice cream is a well-respected emollient for a sore throat.”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 04/06/2022
Cynosure: A center of attention. “For four years the World’s Fair was the cynosure of New York."
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 03/30/2022
Anlage: Rudimentary basis for subsequent development. “Was Sears and Roebuck the anlage for Amazon?”
Alan Weiss’s Word of the Week™ — 03/23/2022
Vatic: Prophetic. “The discussion of a possible microbe that could paralyze society turned out to be a vatic conclusion.”