Word of the Day
: September 19, 2009fatuous
playWhat It Means
: complacently or inanely foolish : silly
fatuous in Context
"Fatuous and condescending" is how one reviewer described two of the best-selling self-help books.
Did You Know?
"I am two fools, I know, / For loving, and for saying so / In whining Poetry," wrote John Donne, simultaneously confessing to both infatuation and fatuousness. As any love-struck fool can attest, infatuation can make buffoons of the best of us. So it should come as no surprise that the words "fatuous" and "infatuation" derive from the same Latin root, "fatuus," which means "foolish." Both terms have been part of English since the 17th century. "Infatuation" followed the earlier verb "infatuate," a "fatuus" descendant that once meant "to make foolish" but that now usually means "to inspire with a foolish love or admiration." "Fatuous" came directly from "fatuus." It's been used in English to describe the foolish and inane since at least 1633.
More Words of the Day
-
Apr 28
alacrity
-
Apr 27
decimate
-
Apr 26
nonchalant
-
Apr 25
travail
-
Apr 24
ostensible
-
Apr 23
slough