Tuesday, June 21, 2016

Inchoate

WORD OF THE DAY
inchoate \ in-KOH-ut \ adjective
 

Definition
1: being only partly in existence or operation
2: incipient; especially : imperfectly formed or formulated : formless, incoherent



Examples
Five years ago, the restaurant was merely an inchoate notion in Nathan's head; today it is one of the most popular eateries in the city.



"The nexus point in any populist upwelling is whether or not it evolves from an inchoate outrage into a legitimate movement."
— Gene Altshuler, The Mountain Democrat (Placerville, California), 2 Mar. 2016



Did You Know?
Inchoate derives from inchoare, which means "to start work on" in Latin but translates literally as "to hitch up." Inchoare was formed from the prefix in- and the noun cohum, which refers to the part of a yoke to which the beam of a plow is fitted.
The concept of implementing this initial step toward the larger task of plowing a field can help provide a clearer understanding of inchoate, an adjective used to describe the imperfect form of something (such as a plan or idea) in its early stages of development. Perhaps because it looks a little like the word chaos (although the two aren't closely related), inchoate now not only implies the formlessness that often marks beginnings but also the confusion caused by chaos.

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