Word of the Day
: January 23, 2014pratfall
playWhat It Means
1 : a fall on the buttocks
2 : a humiliating mishap or blunder
pratfall in Context
"I didn't really fall! I was doing a silly pratfall, and the press said I actually fell over, but I didn't. Just one of my clowning things." - From an interview with Emma Thompson in Newsday, December 11, 2013
"For the last two months, our healthcare.gov guinea pig Alice has had one frustrating moment after another. She visited the site repeatedly since its series of rolling pratfalls started Oct. 1. It never worked." - From an op-ed by John Dickerson in the Columbia Daily Tribune (Columbia, Missouri), December 8, 2013
Did You Know?
The human posterior has been given a number of designations over the centuries, some not acceptable in polite company. "Prat," a slang term with only slightly indecorous overtones, has been used in reference to the backside since the 16th century. It wasn't until the 1930s, however, that falling on one's prat gave rise to the term "pratfall." The word first cropped up in the lingo of comedy theater, where a pratfall is often part of a slapstick routine. It wasn't long before we gave the word its extended sense of "blunder." Now, with "prat" rarely used as a synonym of "derriere" anymore, "pratfall" is as apt to suggest getting a pie in the face as landing on one's behind.
Test Your Memory
What is the meaning of "palpate," our Word of the Day from December 22? The answer is …
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