• scintillate •
Pronunciation: sin-tê-layt • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Verb, intransitive
Meaning: 1. To sparkle, to flash, to glitter; to emit sparks. 2. To be lively, witty, and very brilliant.
Notes: This is a beautiful word with a beautiful family. Of course, we find the usual adjective, scintillating, and noun, scintillation. However, alongside these, we have an adjective and noun even more exquisite: scintillescent and scintellescence. Don't forget to write the silent C after the initial S and to double up on the Ls.
In Play: Today's Good Word is the substitute you need when sparkle simply does not say it all: "Their house was high on a hill below which the city scintillated all night long." Remember, too, that wit at its best can also scintillate: "It was a perfect evening of scintillating conversation in a room overlooking a scintillescent city below." Lord Robert Bulwer-Lytton (better known for his Last Days of Pompeii) deftly used this word in his description of the moon and a star in his narrative poem, Lucile (1860): "one pale, /Minute, scintillescent, and tremulous star /Swinging under her globe like a wizard-lit car. . . ."
Word History: This very Good Word comes from Latin scintillare "to spark, sparkle". As usual, we use the past participle, scintillatus, for our verb. The verb is based on another Latin word that we swallowed whole: scintilla "spark". We often use this word as a synonym for iota, "There isn't a scintilla of truth in what she says." However, remember it really refers to a spark, "Cyril didn't bring a scintilla of wit that might have brightened the conversation." (We are not surprised that this word was suggested by a scintillating conversationalist in the Agora, Katy Brezger, somewhere out there in Michigan.)
SCINTILLATE
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SCINTILLATE
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- Grand Panjandrum
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Re: SCINTILLATE
Even better known for "It was a dark and stormy night." He is not among the most scintillating of writers, however...Lord Robert Bulwer-Lytton (better known for his Last Days of Pompeii)
-gailr
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- Great Grand Panjandrum
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Sorry, but I just had to post this one;
Mother Goose, Ph.D.
Copyright 1987 Dave Arns
Source:Scintillate, scintillate, globule vivific!
In vain do I ponder thy nature specific--
Precariously poised in the ether capacious,
Closely resembling a gem carbonaceous;
Scintillate, scintillate, globule vivific,
In vain do I ponder thy nature specific!
Mother Goose, Ph.D.
Copyright 1987 Dave Arns
Regards//Larry
"To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them."
-- Attributed to Richard Henry Lee
"To preserve liberty, it is essential that the whole body of the people always possess arms, and be taught alike, especially when young, how to use them."
-- Attributed to Richard Henry Lee
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