Friday, April 21, 2017

Bucolic

WORD OF THE DAY
bucolic \ byoo-KAH-lik \ adjective
 
1a : of or relating to shepherds or herdsmen
1b: pastoral

2a : relating to or typical of rural life
2b : pleasing or picturesque in natural simplicity
2c: idyllic



Examples
"My husband, Toby, and I … live on a remote sheep farm in the Cotswold Hills.… Our house perches on the edge of a bucolic valley, its pastures divided by ancient dry-stone walls and hawthorn hedges."
— Plum Sykes, Vogue, November 2016



"With acres of tree-shaded paths, outdoor cafés, a lake with rowboats, and several exhibition spaces, the city's grandest park offers a bucolic escape."
— Andrew Ferren, Traveler, November 2016



Did You Know?
We get bucolic from the Latin word bucolicus, which is ultimately from the Greek word boukolos, meaning "cowherd."
When bucolic was first used in English as an adjective in the early 17th century, it meant "pastoral" in a narrow sense—that is, it referred to things related to shepherds or herdsmen and in particular to pastoral poetry.
Later in the 19th century, it was applied more broadly to things rural or rustic. Bucolic has also been occasionally used as a noun meaning "a pastoral poem" or "a bucolic person."a

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