(probably not what
you will expect it to be!)
toxophilitev\vtahk-SAH-fuh-lytev\ noun
Greek origins
: a person fond of
or expert at archery
EXAMPLES
"With this
weekend's smashing debut of the movie Hunger Games, Katniss Everdeen's power
with a bow and arrow has made toxophilites (archery-lovers) of us all." —
Rebecca J. Rosen, Atlantic Online, March 26, 2012 ...
"Behold, the
archer! Perhaps there is no more heroic pose known to man ... [a]nd perhaps
there is no other weapon as romantic, as toxophilites will tell you." —
Mark Holmberg, WTVR CBS 6, November 27, 2013
DID YOU KNOW?
"Toxophilite" became established in
the language as the name for a late 18th-century English archery society. The
word derives from Greek "TOXON," which referred to both a bow and arrow,
and "PHILOS," meaning "loving." Today,
"toxophilite" is a rarely used word but often occurs in vocabulary
games and puzzles and in spelling bees. A more ubiquitous descendant of
"toxon" is "toxic." "Toxic" is an anglicization
of Latin's word for "poison," "toxicum," which originally
meant "poison for arrows" and is a borrowing from Greek
"toxikon," meaning "arrow."
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