avatarJohn Pearce

Summarize

The Word Collector

A Moment In the Sun

Photo by Timo C. Dinger on Unsplash

“Reasonably intelligent”. It was the word reasonably that stung then, and still does now. Ever done one of those “360-degree appraisals” at work? You know, when people at all levels in your organisation give anonymous feedback about what they think of you? I can’t remember the rest of the comments but that one still lingers.

To be fair, I know I can lower the average IQ in a room by 50 just by walking through the door. I was doing a crossword over lunch the other day, with my brother and a knowledgeable and well-travelled friend of his, and as usual I was simultaneously stumped and astounded by their intellect, when suddenly my moment in the sun arrived“The centrepiece on a timepiece”. They were momentarily stunned by my knowledge of the word gnomon I had stumbled across and noted a few days previously. I then resumed my monastic silence for the rest of the puzzle.

I have always loved words, so determined to get more than one clue right next time we meet, I have set myself a challenge. To write a meaningful piece of less than 150 words, containing 20 neologisms I have encountered recently (at least new words to me) . You may know them already, but to save you the pain I had of looking them up, the definitions are underneath. Enjoy:

“Sitting in the café I tucked into a vegan salmagundi, a brindle mix of tofu and seitan, listening to a carpet bagger at the next table finagle his way to a free lunch, while entering into a rodomontade on his personal eschatology which struck me rather as scatology, and wondering about the gaping lacuna in my own epistemology. I paid the moiety of the bill in fungible cash as my personal rebellion against the digitisation of our lives, and filled with post-prandial ubuntu and eudaimonia, left the café’s ziggurat with its lakeside view complete with catafalque-like artwork. Using the handgel as we left, to remove any lingering fomites, a solipsistic gesture towards virtue, as we walked up the valley by the lake I pondered on the important difference between entomology and etymology, especially if you are a flower.”

gnomon — centrepiece on a sundial that casts the shadow

brindle — brownish or tawny colour of animal fur with streaks of other colour

salmagundi — a dish of chopped meat, anchovies, eggs, onions and seasoning

seitan — a high-protein vegetarian food made from cooked wheat gluten (not to be confused with Satan or you will get into trouble)

carpet bagger — a political candidate who seeks election in an area where they have no local connections

finagle — obtain something by devious or dishonest means

rodomontade — boastful or inflated talk or behaviour

eschatology — the part of theology concerned with death, judgement and the final destiny of the soul and humankind

scatology — an interest in or preoccupation with excrement and excretion

lacuna — an unfilled space or interval/gap

epistemology — the theory of knowledge

moiety — each of two parts into which a thing is or can be divided

fungible — exchangeable

ubuntu — a quality that includes the essential human virtues; compassion and humanity

eudaimonia — A Greek word — of good spirit

ziggurat — a rectangular tower in ancient Mesopotamia

catafalque — a decorated wooden framework supporting the coffin of a distinguished person during a funeral

fomite — a particle contaminated with infection agent

solipsistic — selfish

entomology — the branch of zoology concerned with the study of insects

etymology — the study of the origin of words

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