BUCOLIC

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Dr. Goodword
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BUCOLIC

Postby Dr. Goodword » Tue Oct 17, 2006 10:33 pm

• bucolic •

Pronunciation: byu-kaw-lik or byu-kah-lik • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: 1. Rural, simple, countrified, uncomplicated as life once was in the country. 2. Romantically rustic, pastoral; peaceful and surrounded by natural beauty.

Notes: Picture a shepherd dozing with his flock in a green pasture surrounded by green, rolling hills on a warm, sunny day and you will mentally capture the original meaning of today's Good and beautiful Word. The adverb is bucolically and the noun, bucolicism, refers to an artistic (poetry, music, art) style that emphasizes a romanticized rustic country life.

In Play: Rural is the adjective for the country as it is today; bucolic implies a romanticized view of rural living: "Have you heard? Farnsworth sold his business and his mansion and has moved into a cozy little bungalow out in the boonies to enjoy the bucolic pleasures of the country." City folk might enjoy a bucolic frolic on the weekend. You may use it to refer to country life today, though: "The bucolic high school Gwendolyn attended didn't prepare her for the rigors of college." The implication here is that it may have been peaceful and enjoyable but at a price.

Word History: Today's Good Word is another snitched, via French, from Latin bucolicus "pastoral". Don't feel bad about our snitching it from the Romans; they took it from Greek boukolikos "of or like a cowherd", the adjective of boukolos "cowherd". This word is made up of bous "cow" + -kolos "herdsman". Bous goes back to Proto-Indo-European gwou-, the same word that produced English cow. In Greek, though, words beginning on [gw] tended to lose the [g] after which the [w] became . The then reduplicated itself to produce boubalos "bufflo", which worked its way down to English as buffalo. In Sanskrit the same word for cow is gauh (We thank Shelby Battle for the moment of tranquility brought to use by the Good Word she suggested for today.)
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Bailey
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Postby Bailey » Tue Oct 17, 2006 11:44 pm

I love this word it is so evocative, so nostalgia generating. I think of huge meadws filled with Happy Cows [from anywhere BUT California, advertising not-with-standing] and large white farmhouses with verandas that stretch nearly all 'round the house. People who really work hard for a living, yet are often seen playing, people who are upstanding citizens, no matter how maligned they are by the media and bucoliphobic city-types.

Mark so-ther-now-you-know-I'm-a-farmer Bailey

Today is the first day of the rest of your life, Make the most of it...
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gailr
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Re: BUCOLIC

Postby gailr » Wed Oct 18, 2006 4:29 am

The implication here is that it may have been peaceful and enjoyable but at a price.
Some pay higher prices than others. Consider unhappy Marie Antoinette's bucolic games at her petit hameau...

-gailr


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