November 2007


November 30, 2007

nuance

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for December 01, 2007 is:

nuance • \NOO-ahnss\  • noun
*1 : a subtle distinction or variation 2 : a subtle quality : nicety 3 : sensibility to, awareness of, or ability to express delicate shadings (as of meaning, feeling, or value)

Example sentence:
Because she wanted to set her novel in New England, the author spent three months in New Hampshire learning the nuances of the local dialect.

Did you know?
The history of "nuance" starts in Latin with the noun "nubes," meaning "cloud." "Nubes" floated into Middle French as "nue," also meaning "cloud," and "nue" gave rise to "nuer," meaning "to make shades of color." "Nuer" in turn produced "nuance," which in Middle French meant "shade of color." English borrowed "nuance" from French, with the meaning "a subtle distinction or variation," in the late 18th century. That use persists today. Additionally, "nuance" is sometimes used in a specific musical sense, designating a subtle, expressive variation in a musical performance (such as in tempo, dynamic intensity, or timbre) that is not indicated in the score.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Joan Crawford

"I, Joan Crawford, I believe in the dollar. Everything I earn, I spend."

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malapropos: Dictionary.com Word of the Day

malapropos: unseasonable or unseasonably; inappropriate or inappropriately.

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Word of the Day: restzucker

[REHST-tsoo-kehr] German for "residual sugar." Restsu"sse means "residual sweetness" and is also used to refer to residual sugar (© Barron's Educational Series, Inc)

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Spotlight of the Day: Marie Tussaud

One man's loss is another's gain. As rulers and subjects lost their heads to the guillotine in France, the severed noggins were brought to Marie Tussaud — imprisoned during the Reign of Terror — who made death masks of them. A few of her unlucky and unwitting subjects were King Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette. Tussaud, born on this date in 1761, also made models of famous contemporaries like Benjamin Franklin and Voltaire, and when she moved to England in the early 19th century, she set up an exhibit of her work, which had grown to include wax effigies of murderers and other infamous London personalities.

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Quote of the Day: Crane Wilbur

"To you they are wax, but to me, their creator, they live and breathe."

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