December 16, 2009

sanguine



"Sanguine"
By Brdwaybebe
www.bluetights.net
/sang-gwin/

sanguine adj.

Oxford English Dictionary:
Of persons and expectations, etc.: Hopeful or confident with reference to some particular issue. Earliest citation: 1673.
New Oxford American Dictionary:
1. Cheerfully optimistic
2. (in medieval medicine) having a predominance of blood among the bodily humours, supposedly marked by a ruddy complexion and an optimistic disposition.
ORIGIN: Old French, ‘blood red’, from Latin sanguis ‘blood’.

Oxford American Writer's Thesaurus:
Synonyms for sanguine:
1. he is sanguine about the advance of technology. Optimistic, bullish, hopeful, buoyant, positive, confident, cheerful, cheery; informal upbeat. ANTONYM: gloomy.
2. archaic: a sanguine complexion. ANTONYM: pale.
ANTONYMS: pessimistic, morose, gloomy, somber, pale, pallid, wan.
SANGUINE IN RECENT USE:
Headline, New York Times, November 24, 2009:

Fed Sanguine About U.S. Recovery, Worried on Jobs

Federal Reserve officials are increasingly confident in a durable recovery for the US economy, even though they do Business...
USAGE NOTE:

Distinguish carefully between sanguine and sanguinary.

Although sanguine and sanguinary sprang from the same Latin root —sanguis, "blood" — the words then moved on, each following its own compass. Sanguine, towards good health and ruddy complexions. Sanguinary, towards bloodshed and butchery.

Take care not to interchange the words in your discourse, or, as Brian A. Garner puts it in his Dictionary of Modern American Usage, 1998), do not "confound" the terms:
[S]anguine, in the sense "optimistic, confident," is sometimes confounded with sanguinary (= [1] involving bloodshed; or [2] bloodthirsty—e.g): "Unfortunately, not all the members of the administration's environmental team appear to share thesanguinary [read sanguine] views of Hunt and Howes on the future of clean water." "Water Quality Advancing to the Rear." Herald-Sun (Durham, N.C.) 3 Jan. 1996.

FROM HISTORY & LITERATURE — SANGUINE PERSONALITIES, BOTH MODERATE & EXCESSIVE:


Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von: German philosopher, polymath, and mathematician. (1646 -1716)

Gottfried Leibniz

From "Best of All Possible Worlds," Wikipedia:

The phrase "the best of all possible worlds" was coined by the German philosopher Gottfried Leibniz in his 1710 work Essays on Theodicy, concerning the Goodness of God, the Freedom of Man, and the Origin of Evil. It is the central argument in Leibniz's theodicy, or his attempt to solve the problem of evil.

Critics of Leibniz's postulate argue that the world contains an amount of suffering too great to justify optimism. While Leibniz argued that suffering is good because it incites human will, critics argue that the degree of suffering is too severe to justify belief that God has created the "best of all possible worlds."

Voltaire satirized optimism in his novel Candide [see below], in which the eternally optimistic character Dr. Pangloss remains optimistic, even when his situation is excessively dire, to a point where his optimism appears irrational.


Dr. Pangloss: Voltaire's caricature of Leibniz in the satiric novel Candide (1759).

Jean Francois Marie Aroute a.k.a. Voltaire
Dr. Pangloss is identified in Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature as "the pedandic and unfailingly optimistic tutor of Candide, the protagonist of Voltaire's novel Candide, a satire on [Leibniz's] philosophical optimism." The Encyclopediaaptly adds that "[t]he name Pangloss — from the Greek elements pan-, "all," andglossa, "tongue" — suggests glibness and garrulousness."

Pangloss's glibness is evident already in the book's opening chapter, as Voltaire's ironic narrator tells us that Pangloss
proved admirably that there is no effect without a cause and that in this best of all possible worlds, My Lord the Baron's castle was the best of castles and his wife the best of all Baronesses. "Tis demonstrated," said he, "that things cannot be otherwise; for since everything is made for an end, everything is necessarily for the best end. Observe that noses were made to wear spectacles; and so we have spectacles. Legs were visibly instituted to be breeched, and we have breeches. . . . [A]nd as pigs were meant to be eaten, we eat pork all the year round; consequently, those who have asserted that all is well talk nonsense; they ought to have said that all is for the best." (1)

Illustration by Rockwell Kent.
The novel concludes with Candide — now wisely divested of his naivete after a relentless series of physical, mental, and emotional traumas — realistically asserts "we must cultivate our gardens," as he listens respectfully — but without spiritual assent — to Pangloss's optimistic disquisition on the pain, death, and upheaval that have rent lives of the central characters.
[A]nd Pangloss sometimes said to Candide: "All events are linked up to this best of all possible worlds; for if you hand not been expelled from the noble castle, by hard kicks in your back side for love of Mademoiselle Cunegonde, if you had not been clapped into the Inquisition, if you had not wandered about America on foot, if you had not stuck your sword in the Baron, if you had not lost all your sheep from the land of Eldorado, you would not be eating citrons and pistachios here." • "'Tis well said," replied Candide, "but we must cultivate our gardens." (103)
Candide, Jean Francois Marie Aroute de Voltaire, Barron's Educational Series, New York: Random House, 1963.


Wilkins McCawber: The kindhearted, incurable optimist in Charles Dickens' novel David Copperfield.

Mr. Micawber & David Copperfield
Drawing by Kate Beaton


No matter how daunting an impending difficulty may be, Mr. Micawber keeps reassuring David that "something will turn up."


SANGUINE: ONE OF THE FOUR HUMORS, OR TEMPERAMENTS

...........Phlegmatic ..... Choleric................



.........Sanguine ..... Melancholic.........

The Humors, a time-honored method of classifying human personalities, identified four types of personalities (then called the humors or the temperaments): sanguine, phlegmatic, choleric, and melancholic.

Although the imaginatively speculative and intellectually inconsistent theory that founded the four temperaments has been long since surpassed by modern theories that focus, instead, on the traits of introversion and extroversion and on Type One and Type Two Personalities, the original temperaments of choleric, sanguine, phlegmatic, and melancholic are still in our dictionaries, still part of our public discourse. The following paragraphs from the essay titled "From Character Analysis: The Four Temperaments" by the History Hoydens of Hoyden Books provides lively explanations of these ever-useful descriptors of human traits, quirks, and foibles.
Around the year 450 B.C. Hippocrates determined that four temperaments, derived from humours dominant in the human body, were responsible for a person’s behavior and the way they looked at the world; and therefore, there were four basic types of people:
The Choleric (liver)
The Sanguine (blood)
The Phlegmatic (phlegm)
The Melancholy (bile [kidneys])

A stable person would have all four temperaments or humours in balance.

Someone who was sanguine was the sparkling blithe spirit of the bunch, thrived in company, and enjoyed the spotlight. Their home lives tended to be happy and they were faithful in their relationships. Yet one of sanguine temperament also had the tendency to be shallow, enjoy peripheral relationships, go along with majority decisions regardless of his own convictions, and therefore his ideas could be changeable. These days we might call him a flip-flopper. In fact, many politicians these days might indeed be ruled by this humour.

A Phlegmatic was a stable sort who lacked the vibrancy of the sanguine personality to the point of appearing passionless, although he did form warm relationships (as opposed to antagonistic ones) with others. He was contemplative and tended to take his time to consider a situation, which lent him the appearance of seeming detached because he did not allow his own judgment or preferences to cloud a situation. Like the sanguine temperament, a Phlegmatic will go with the flow, but for the sake of tradition, rather than expedience. This was the temperament capable of detailed analysis: the writer, forensics specialist, or judge.

The Choleric was a zealous type, quick to anger, and impatient and disgusted with those who don’t see things his way or who he sees as less intelligent than himself. With him it’s all or nothing, his way or the highway. They are leaders and achievers. But the Choleric can also be tender toward someone who has been maligned or injured—as long as that person is on the Choleric’s side. The Choleric is as intimidating a personality as he is an inspiring one, a leader who still manages to divide; the type who champions a cause he thinks will benefit all, yet who often ends up alone because of it. We’re back to politicians again; I’m sure you can think of a few snarling pit-bull types. Being a New Yorker, a native son who used to have a really bad comb-over comes to mind. So does a certain lame duck and his duck-hunting Vice.

The Melancholic is both an idealist and a doubter with little use for rules. Nothing he sees on earth meets with his approval; consequently he seems permanently disappointed, and in fact, a Melancholic’s downfall is despair and depression. His awareness of what the real world is like pains him because he knows it will never live up to his ideals for what it should be. He is slow to form relationships, but when he does, they are lasting ones (as long as they don’t end in disappointment). Injustice or personal harm to himself or one he loves can set him off like a cannon. Nearly every character John Wayne played, and hard-boiled noir detectives like Dashiell Hammett’s Sam Spade fit this description.

Character Analysis: The Four Temperaments, historyhoydens@blogspot.com, 30 Jan. 2008.

OTHER WORDS FROM THE ROOT SANGUIS:

For your consideration, here are three words that also stem from the root sanguis, "blood." The Common Base Form (CBF) for each of these words is sang:
Consanguineous refers to kinship, to being related by blood and ancestry.
[kon'sang-gwin'i-us]

A person exhibiting sang-froid (in French, literally, "cold blood") is composed and imperturbable. (The robbers carried off he heist with complete and incrediblesangfroid.) Antonyms — disconfiture, uneasiness, agitation, nervousness.
[san-frwa']

Sangria, a cold drink make of red wine, fruit juice, sugar, soda water, and fruit slices, is so called because of its bloodlike color. [san-gree'-uh]


—Bob and Maxine Moore. From the Roots: Growing a Vocabulary. New York: New Chapter Press, 1993, 149.
BEST WISHES, DEAR READERS:
May your lives during the New Year of 2010 be enriched with sanguine expectations and correspondingly rewarding fulfillments. —Bloggin' John.
:)

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1737 words

November 21, 2009

aardvark to zythum


[ard- vark] noun

[zeye-thum] noun


* .

AARDVARK TO ZYTHUM

*

*New Century Dictionary *

Like from a to z, its progenitorial synonym, from aardvark to zythum signifies

thoroughness in action, long suffering, or successful completion of a task or process.
From a to z, based on the analogy of the English alphabet, is a generic, uninventive phrase available for identifying any kind of continuum. From aardvark to zythum, on the other hand, with its intentional verbal (rather than alphabetic) content, gives it a particular aptitude for identifying continua that are of their essence verbal, including stories, essays and speeches in paper publications and hypertext displays — as in this example sentence from the OED:
You want to know the last time the Guardian..mentioned anything from aardvarks to zythum..then just a couple of seconds there it is: up on your screen. (1985 Guardian (Nexis 18 July).
As to the meanings of these two nouns — this is, after all, I remind myself, a blog about the meanings of words — the Century Dictionary identifies
aardvark as "the groundhog or earthpig of South Africa" &
zythum as "a kind of malt beer in ancient Egypt." [Hence this pronunciation suggestion for zythum:"Try some!"]
Most of us know that an aardvark is some sort of animal, many of us, even, that the word opens with a stutter of a's.

But ask anyone — except lexicographers and accomplished word mavens — what zythum means, and you get nary a word.

This is so, because, surprisingly, the definition of zythum is for most of us of less significance than is its location in many dictionaries, at the end. Preeminent among these lexicons is theOxford English Dictionary, where first we read its definition,

zythum — a kind of malt beer in ancient Egypt,
followed immediately by the reason most of us remember the word:

"Much of the word's continuing use is due to its status as the last word listed in several dictionaries."
For the record, here is the OED's sample sentence for the word zythum:

Synonyms: a to zed (British), top to bottom, top to toe, cap-a-pie, stem to stern, fore to aft.
For the thousands of years that the Egyptians were building pyramids they were brewing zythum to quench their thirsts, to satisfy their gods, nourish their appetites and to help them relax. (2001 Jrnl. (Newcastle) (Nexis) 8 June 28
WHEN TO USE AARDVARK TO ZYTHUM:



"From aardvark to zythum" gives us a literary alliterative to the cliche "from a to z" or, as the Brits put it, "from a to zed.





It's a phrase that's available when we are looking for an arch effect in a sentence, without causing any undue confusion for the reader. Were you to yawn through a blind date with a person lexically oblivious to the meaning and causes of, say, the the word "vapid," you could report the next day to your best friend:
I brought up topics (as I put it) from aardvark to zythum, but all [Mort or Mona]
could say is "Don't know much 'bout that" or "No kidding" or "Say wha?
If you have an a to z situation at hand in which your topic relates in some way to language,ideas, or publications, try saying
"I investigated every word in Willard Wordsworth's notebooks, from aardvark to zythum," rather than reverting to the bromidic from a to z, as in "I know of a guy who read the entire Oxford English Dictionary, from a to z." Zzzz.

This is not to say I dismiss the opinion that deployment of aardvark to zythum might strike a grandiloquent chime in some auditor's ears. Use aardvark to zythum only in situations where you sense that your reader or listener is savvy to your word play.

AARDVARK TO ZYTHUM in the subtitle of Bennet Cerf's Good for a Laugh:

Bennet Cerf, television and book-world wit of the early 1950's, published a book titled Good for a Laugh, to which he added, for added kick (from animal or brew), this subtitle:

A New Collection of Humorous Tidbits and Anecdotes from Aardvark to Zythum.

I told you it was a literary word.


The elegant renditions of the letters A and Z at the beginning of this posting come from the Century Dictionary (1891), a historical lexicon that any logophle worth his or her bookmarks — paper or digital — visits regularly online, for its historical scholarship, comprehensive scope, and refined, sumptuous wood-engraved illustrations.

Wikipedia reports:


The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia was one of the largest and most highly regarded dictionaries of the English language. The first edition was published from 1889 to 1891 by the Century Company of New York, in six, eight, or ten volume versions (originally issued in 24 fascicles) in 7,046 pages with some 10,000 wood-engraved illustrations.



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