Word of the Day
Solecism \ SAH-luh-sih-zum \ noun
1a: an ungrammatical combination of words in a sentence
1b: a minor blunder in speech
1b: a minor blunder in speech
2: something deviating from the proper, normal, or accepted
order
3: a breach of etiquette or decorum
EXAMPLES
As a copyeditor, Jane has the eyes of a hawk; rarely, if
ever, does she let a writer's solecism slip past her.
"What [Leonard Lyons] presented in his columns was the
essence of the person being reported on, and so even when one comes upon the occasional
solecism or inaccuracy, it matters less because the portraits as a whole ring
true."
— Martin Rubin, The Washington Times, September 5, 2011
— Martin Rubin, The Washington Times, September 5, 2011
DID YOU KNOW?
The city of Soloi had a reputation for bad grammar. Located
in Cilicia, an ancient coastal nation in Asia Minor, it was populated by
Athenian colonists called soloikos (literally "inhabitant of Soloi").
According to historians, the colonists of Soloi allowed their native Athenian
Greek to be corrupted and they fell to using words incorrectly. As a result,
soloikos gained a new meaning: "speaking incorrectly." The Greeks
used that sense as the basis of soloikismos, meaning "an ungrammatical combination
of words." That root in turn gave rise to the Latin soloecismus, the
direct ancestor of the English word solecism. Nowadays, solecism can refer to
social blunders as well as sloppy syntax.
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