July 24, 2007

kakistocracy

6This is a post-in-process.6

K is for . . . . kakistocracy
www.arnhill.com

Definition and Image from
EvolveFish.com


The American Kakistocracy
Picture & Caption from
Main St. USA.com


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DEFINITION

kakistocracy n. [kak-is-toc'-ra-see]

Government by the least qualified or most undesirable citizens.
The Hutchinson Encyclopedia

The government of a state by the worst citizens.
Online Oxford English Dictionary

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The Word In Use, at the "DAILY KOS":

On June 4, 2007
a blogger using the nom de blog "philinmaine" at the Daily Kos, a lefty weblog if there ever was one, posted a piece titled

"Welcome to the kakistocracy: Any way you spell it, we're living in it"

The title's reference to spelling derives from
something [that] happened [to philinmaine"] during
the recent National Spelling Bee. A word that's lingered in obscurity for a century — a word we all really need today — wiggled back into the public discourse, thanks to Isabel Jacobson, a 14 year old spelling champion from Madison, Wisconsin. She mentioned that her favorite difficult word was kakistocracy.

Someone noticed, sent an email that made the rounds, and a friend of mine had an idea. We all agreed: this needs to be a bumper sticker!
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W
e hope
as people start to see it on bumpers, a few will look it up, and heads will start to nod in agreement. It should incite some lively parking lot conversations, too! Around 70% of the people will agree: we live in a kakistocracy.

By philinmaine on Mon Jun 04, 2007 at 04:38:06 AM PDT
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2007/6/4/73433/64392

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ETYMOLOGY
From the Greek kakistos [worst] + -cracy [-rule], on the model of the word aristocracy.
The Online Oxford English Dictionary

From what English grammarians call the superlative form of "worst" (kakistos), let's shift our attention, now, to the basic, or what they call the positive form, namely, the word "bad," which in Greek is kakos, sometimes spelled cakos or cak.

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Spreading the "bad" word

From kak'osbad—come caco-, kako-, and cac-, combining forms that have generated many words—because, obviously, so many aspects of life can go bad!

A Note on the Pronunciation of "caco-":
Speaking generally, the a in "kako," "caco," and "cak" rhymes with the a in "cat" or, fittingly enough, the a in "bad."


Here are a just a few of what I call "caco-combinations" that you are likely to encounter, especially in medical, academic, or fine arts settings:
cachexia [ka-keks’-see-a]mmn.mmFrom kakos ‘bad’ + hexis ‘habit.’
mmMedicine. Weakness and wasting of the body due to mmsevere chronic illness.

cacodemon n. [kak-uh-dee’-mon]mmn.
mmChemistry. A malevolent spirit or person.
mmmm[kakos ‘bad’ + daimon ‘spirit.’]

cacoethes [kak-o-wee’-thez ]mmn. [in sing. ] rare From kakos ‘bad’ + thos ‘disposition.’mm
mmAn irresistible urge to do something inadvisable.
N.B. See the references later in the blog to cacoethes loquendi and cacoethes seribendi as described in Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable.

cacography [ka-kägra-fy]mmn. archaic From kakos bad,’ on the pattern of orthography [the conventional spelling system of a language].mm
mmBad handwriting or spelling.
cacographer [ka-kägra-fer] n.

cacology [ka-col’-uh-gy]mmn. archaicmFrom kakos ‘bad.’
mmBad choice of words or
mmPoor pronunciation.

cacophony [ka-kä’f-uh-nee]mmn.mFrom kakos ‘bad’ + phony ‘sound.’m
mmHarsh, discordant mixture of sounds.
cacophonous, adjective
Oxford English Dictionaries v1.0 © Apple Computers

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Kakkammn.

We should note also that the Online Etymology Dictionary reports that the baby-talk word "ka-ka"— a.k.a. "doo-doo," "poo-poo," or the variant "hu-ka" (used in my family of origin) — goes way back in the history of English:
Kako- was a common prefix in Greek, and has often crossed over into English., e.g. cacography, the opposite of calligraphy [ ]. Etymologists connect it with PIE* kakka- "to defecate."
*English is an Indo-European "daughter" language to the parent Proto-Indo-European Language (PIE), which was spoke by people who lived in Southwest Russia around 4,000 to 5,000 BCE.

A History of English by Barbara A. Fennell
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CACOMANIA: Two definitions

1] — AlphaDictionary.com, on its
"Corrected List of Manias - Fears, Loves, Obsessions," aptly defines cacomania as an obsession with ugliness.

2] Bloggin' John offers cacomania as a nonce word designed precisely for the occasion of this posting. To wit, cacomania is a strong interest in but not quite an obsession with words formed with the caco- combining form.

Three word mavins who have done the requisite searching and researching of caco- terms to deserve the honorific "Caco-Form-Competent" are Paul Dickson,
Charles Harrinton Elster, and Robert H. Hill.

Presenting himself as perhaps the most inventive and adventuresome of the three, Dickson, in his Word Treasury: A Connoisseur's Collection of Old and New, Weird and Wonderful, Useful and Outlandish Words (1992) shows us a rarely seen word and offers cogent reasons for its need:

Cacophenism [cac-o-feen'-ism] Using a harsh or cruel expression where a milder one would be proper; the opposite of euphemism. Some would argue that dysphemism is another opposite—albeit in the other direction—of euphemism. Using a disparaging or belittling term to describe something that deserves more is a dysphemism. It is, for instance, dysphemism to speak of a mansion as a shack or a BMW as a jalopy. (38) —Dickson's Word Treasury. New York: Wiley.

For Dickson denigration admits of degrees. If sweet is euphemistic, cloying would be dysphemistic, and

Perhaps
the three phrases derived from the caco- form that you will likely encounter are well described in Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase & Fable:

cacode'mon [kak-o-de'-mon] An evil spirit. Astrologers gave this name to The Twelfth House of Heaven, from which only evil prognostics [advance indications or portents of a future event] proceed.
"Hie thee to hell for shame, and leave the world, / Thou cacodemon." — Shakespeare: Richard III., i,3.

cacoe'thes. [ka-ko-ee'•theez] A "bad habit"
mmcaco
e'thes loquen'di. [lo-kwen'-di] A passion for making speech or for talking.

mmcacoe'thes scriben'di. [scri-ben'-di] The love of rushing into print; a mania for authorship.
Brewer The Dictionary of Phrase & Fable.
Ware, Hertfordshire: Wordsworth Edition Ltd., 1993, 196.

Finally, in the domain of classical rhetoric—notoriously replete with terminology derived from Greek and Roman roots—we have this foursome of caco- categories, as recounted by Richard Lanham in his redoubtable Handlist of Rhetorical Terms:

Cacemphaton (cac EM pha ton; Greek. "ill sounding")
mm1. Scurrilous jest; lewd allusion or double entendre, as when the blues singer Big Bill Broonzy sings, "I'm gonna squeeze your lemon, baby, 'till the good juice comes."
mm2. Sounds combined for harsh effect. So [Henry] Peacham [author of The Garden of Eloquence]: "when there come many syllables of one sound together in one sentence, like a continual jarring upon one string, thus, neither honour nor nobility, could move a naughty, niggardly* noddy."

*niggardly: adv. archaic often offensive in a stingy or meager manner.
USAGE NOTE: "Niggard n. a stingy or ungenerous person (often offensive) . . . along with its adverbial form niggardly, should be used with caution. Owing to the sound similarity to the highly inflammatory racial epithet nigger, these words can cause unnecessary confusion and unintentional offense.

Cacosistation (ca co SIS ta ton; Greek. "badly constructed").
mmAn argument that can serve as well on either side of a question.

Cacosyntheton (ca co SYN the ton) Greek. "ill-composed").
mmAwkward transposition of the parts of a sentence. Puttenham's example: "In my years lusty, many a deed doughty did I." Or Churchill's famous "This is the kind of nonsense up with which I shall not put." Or, as in this only partially successful syntactical gymnastic from Kingsley Amis's I Want it Now: "Now and again it felt rather like that. It was now, or again, now."

Cacozelia (ca co ZE li a; Greek. "unhappy imitation; affectation")
mmStudied affectation of style; affected diction made up of adaptation of Latin words or inkhorn terms, as when Hamlet paroies Osric: . . .




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3 comments:

  1. Thank you for calling this word to our attention during these policically unsettling times. I have just added kakistrocracy to my vocabulary. Annenonymous

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hello, Annenonymous,

    Glad to be of verbal service at a time when current words lack sufficient edge to describe the cacatopic state of the nation.

    I think bum cusses like Chaney, Bush, Gonzales, and Rove deserve to be hooted at and roundly cussed at — but with a fresh word, one powered with some fire! From the oldest known dictionary of English slang — a true classic — Francis Grose’s "The Vulgar Tongue: Buckish Slang and Pickpocket Eloquence" (1785), I have plucked one of the choicest of cuss-words —“cacafuego"— which Gross defines as “a sh-te - fire [read “shit-fire”], a furious braggadocio or bully huff.” The word derives from the “Latin cacare, “to void as excrement” + the Spanish fuego, “fire.”—Online OED.

    Gross offers no examples of the word in use, but the OED's references present additional definitions: "Cacafuego, a Spanish word signifying "Shitefire; and it is used for a bragging vapouring fellow" (1696); and "Cacafuego, an insect in Spain said to dart fire from its tail" (1775).

    How about a bumper sticker?

    "Chaney, Bush, Gonzales, Rove: Our Nation's Disgraceful Cacafuegos."

    Thanks for the note!—B.J.

    ReplyDelete