Word of the Day
: March 10, 2015panjandrum
playWhat It Means
: a powerful personage or pretentious official
panjandrum in Context
Little gets done in this town without the approval of the local panjandrums on the board of selectmen.
"Unexpectedly, this private sector panjandrum launched into a paean of praise for the public service ethos." - David Walker, The Guardian, January 30, 2015
Did You Know?
Panjandrum looks like it might be a combination of Latin and Greek roots, but in fact it is a nonsense word coined by British actor and playwright Samuel Foote around 1755. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Foote made up a line of gibberish to "test the memory of his fellow actor Charles Macklin, who had asserted that he could repeat anything after hearing it once." Foote's made-up line was, "And there were present the Picninnies, and the Joblillies, and the Garyulies and the Grand Panjandrum himself, with the little round button at the top." Some 75 years after this, Foote's passage appeared in a book of stories for children by the Anglo-Irish writer Maria Edgeworth. It took another quarter century before English speakers actually incorporated panjandrum into their general vocabulary.
Test Your Vocabulary
Fill in the blanks to create an alliterative hyphenated name for an important and often arrogant person: _ u _ ke _ y - _ u _ k. The answer is …
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