perdure \ per-DUR
\ verb
: to continue to
exist
: last
EXAMPLES:
The artist's
influence perdures in the themes and stylistic choices of his students.
"Wells brings
the reader into the drama of multi-generational families, of friendships that
perdure ... of relationships that grow as hardships and challenges color
life."
— Fran Salone-Pelletier, The Brunswick Beacon (Shallotte,
North Carolina), August 1, 2012
DID YOU KNOW?
"Perdure" may be an unfamiliar word
for many of our readers, but those who suspect they see hints of its ancestry
in the more familiar synonym "endure" are correct.
"Perdure" was borrowed into Middle English from Anglo-French and
traces back to the Latin verb "perdurare," meaning "to continue."
"Perdurare," in turn, was formed by combining the intensifying prefix
"per-" with the verb "durare," meaning "to last."
"Durare" is also an ancestor of the English words "endure,"
"durable," "indurate," and "during," among
others.
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