Word of the Day: thrasonical

lundi 23 février 2015

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 24, 2015 is:

thrasonical • \thray-SAH-nih-kul\ • adjective

: of, relating to, resembling, or characteristic of Thraso : bragging, boastful



Examples:

"There was never any thing so sudden but the fight of two rams and Caesar's thrasonical brag of 'I came, saw, and overcame'…." — William Shakespeare, As You Like It, 1623



"After pages of thrasonical twaddle sprinkled with fawning photos, charts and esoteric columns of numbers I learned only of the flawless perfection of the university...." — Peter B. Fletcher, Ann Arbor (Michigan) News, December 16, 2003



Did you know?

Thraso was a blustering old soldier in the comedy Eunuchus, a play written by the great Roman dramatist Terence more than 2,000 years ago. Terence is generally remembered for his realistic characterizations, and in Thraso he created a swaggerer whose vainglorious boastfulness was not soon to be forgotten. Thraso's reputation as a braggart lives on in thrasonical, a word that boasts a 450-year history as an English adjective.









Word of the Day: thrasonical

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