Thursday, September 25, 2014

Palaver

Word of the Day


palaver \ puh-LAV-er \ noun

I remember this word mostly thanks to Stephen King, as it is used quite a bit in "The Dark Tower" books....

1: a long discussion or meeting usually between persons of different cultures or levels of sophistication
2a : idle talk
2b : misleading or beguiling speech

EXAMPLES
"I don't know how you can stand to listen to that palaver," said Rachel, as she switched off the talk show her brother had been listening to on the radio.

"The violinist Geoff Nuttall now directs the series, with a more contemporary sensibility in both programming and in the often corny introductory palaver carried over from the Wadsworth era."
— James R. Oestreich, The New York Times, June 4, 2014

DID YOU KNOW?
During the 18th century, Portuguese and English sailors often met during trading trips along the West African coast. This contact prompted the English to borrow the Portuguese palavra, which usually means "speech" or "word" but was used by Portuguese traders with the specific meaning "discussions with natives." The Portuguese word traces back to the Late Latin parabola, a noun meaning "speech" or "parable," which in turn comes from the Greek parabolē, meaning "juxtaposition" or "comparison."

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