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Words From Proper Names

The document provides definitions for 14 words derived from proper names, including their origins. It then provides exercises to test understanding of the words, including circling the word that comes to mind in different scenarios, indicating whether statements about the words are true or false, filling in blanks with the proper words, and identifying antonyms. The exercises are designed to reinforce learning and proper usage of the words.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
141 views4 pages

Words From Proper Names

The document provides definitions for 14 words derived from proper names, including their origins. It then provides exercises to test understanding of the words, including circling the word that comes to mind in different scenarios, indicating whether statements about the words are true or false, filling in blanks with the proper words, and identifying antonyms. The exercises are designed to reinforce learning and proper usage of the words.

Uploaded by

kaleemcomsian
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unit 1

Lesson 1

Words from Proper Names

1. Jingoist: One who boasts about his patriotism and favors a warlike foreign policy.
In 1877, British Prime Minister Disraeli sent the fleet to Gallipoli to slow up the
Russians. A singer wrote a ditty called “By Jingo” in honor of that action.

2. Lothario: rake; seducer; lover. Lothario was an amorous character in an


eighteenth-century play. The Fair Penitent.

3. Maverick: one who acts independently. Samuel Maverick was a Texas rancher
who refused to brand his cattle as others were doing.

4. Nemesis: Agent of retribution; just punishment. In Greek mythology, the goddess


Nemesis punished pretentiousness with her swords and avenging wings.

5. Philanderer: one who makes love insincerely; one who engages in passing love
affairs. The word comes from the Greek philandros (“man loving”) but gained its
current usage because many English playwrights gave the name to their romantic
leads.

6. Philippic: Bitter verbal attack. Philip II of Macedon wanted to make Greece into
a monarchy. He was opposed by the great orator, Demosthenes, who denounced
Philip in devastating speeches that came to be known as philippics.

7. Procrustean: designed to secure conformity; drastic. An ancient Greek robber


named Procrustes tied his victims to a bed and then, to make them fit the bed,
stretched the short ones and hacked off the limbs of the taller ones.

8. Protean: changeable; taking on different forms. In Greek mythology, Proteus was


a sea god who could change his appearance at will.

9. Pyrrhic victory: a victory that is exceptionally costly. Pyrrhus defeated the


Romans in 279 B.C. but his losses were terribly heavy.

10. Quixotic: romantically idealistic; impractical. The Spanish novelist, Cervantes,


brought this word into our language when he wrote Don Quixote. His hero went
forth foolishly to tilt against windmills and help the downtrodden.

11. Saturnine: sluggish; gloomy; grave. The planet Saturn is so far form the sun that
it was thought to be cold and dismal.
12. Solecism: substandard use of words; violation of good manners. This word
derives form the Greek inhabitants of the colony of Soloi who used a slangy
dialect.

13. Spoonerism: an unintentional exchange of sounds. Reverend Spooner of New


College, Oxford occasionally twisted his words around when he got excited so
that “conquering kings: came out as “kinkering congs”

14. Sybarite: one who is fond of luxury and soft living. Sybaris was a fabulously
wealthy Italian city, symbolic of the good life.

15. Tawdry: cheap; gaudy; showy. This word can be terraced to St. Audrey. Scarves
called “St. Audrey’s laces” were sold in England where the local people changed
the pronunciation to tawdry. The quality of the scarves, which at first was good,
deteriorated, when they were mass produced for the peasant trade.

Exercises:

I. Which Word Comes to Mind?

In each of the following, read the statement, then circle the word that comes to mind.

1. You want to rip into your neighbor for his bigoted remarks.

(philanderer, philippic, protean)

2. A newspaper editorial calls for us to send the fleet to intimidate a Caribbean country.

(jingoism, spoonerism, solecism)

3. All the girls wear pantsuits except Betsy who prefers dresses

(maverick, saturnine, nemesis)

4. I heard of a scheme that would provide $10,000 for each American family.

(lothario, Pyrrhic victory, quixotic)

5. Everyone at the meeting was forced to change his or her mind in order to afree with the

chairman’s philosophy.

(tawdry, sybarite, procrustean)

6. It’s unusual for a fashion editor to have such a gawdy taste in jewelry.
(tawdry, saturnine, protean)

7. Mark boasted of having been engaged seven times.

(philippic, lothario, jingoist)

8. The singer was fond of saying he always did it his way.

(maverick, solecism, spoonerism)

9. Rudy likes caviar and imported champagne.

(sybarite, nemesis, philanderer)

10. The senator blasted his opponent in a fiery speech.

(quixotic, procrustean, philippic)

II. True or False?

In the space provided, indicate whether each statement is true or false.

____ 1. No one welcomes a Pyrrhic victory.

____ 2. A jingoist is a hawk rather than a dove.

____ 3. “I don’t know nothing” is a spoonerism.

____ 4. A nemesis is something like a jinx.

____ 5. Going along with the majority is a maverick’s way.

____ 6. A tawdry garment is tasteful.

____ 7. By Ed’s saturnine expression, we knew that the news was bad.

____ 8. The prison diet of bread and water was in keeping with the sybarite’s lifestyle.

____ 9. The class was shocked at the professor’s use of a solecism.

____ 10. Placing a man on the moon was once considered a quixotic idea.
III. Fill in Blank.
Insert one of the new words in the proper space in each sentence below.
1. My cousin tried to diet, but desserts proved to be his _____________.
2. Charley, a born ______________, always votes against the majority.
3. The usually level-headed Kyra came up with a ___________ suggestion that was
totally out of character.
4. Andrea thought she looked elegant, but we found her appearance to be
_____________.
5. At the end of a one-hour _______________ against taxes, the candidate received
thunderous applause.
6. The ______________ had contempt for anyone he thought lacked patriotic spirit.
7. After my tongue-tied ______________, I apologized to our hostess and left.
8. With fifty servants to wait on him, the Roman emperor was a true ____________.
9. Considering himself a ____________, Uncle Don proposed to every widow in
town.
10. Myrtle’s _____________ expression was the result of a chronic stomach
condition.

IV. What’s the Antonym?

Which of the new words is most nearly opposite in meaning to the one provided?

1. Conformist _____________

2. Eulogy _____________

3. Tasteful _____________

4. Lively _____________

5. Practical _____________

6. Constant _____________

7. Faithful husband _____________

8. Conservative _____________

9. Political Dove _____________

10. Democratic _____________

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