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ALIQUANT

Posted: Wed Sep 26, 2007 10:20 pm
by Dr. Goodword
• aliquant •

Pronunciation: æ-li-kwahnt • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: A number that does not divide into another number evenly, without leaving a remainder, as 3 is an aliquant of 7; the antonym of aliquot.

Notes: Today we are actually offering two Good Words: aliquant and its antonym aliquot, a number that does evenly divide into another, as 2 is the aliquot 4, 6, 8, and so on. Obviously this word comes to us from the world of mathematics but, as we shall see below, has its purposes outside that world. It may be used adjectivally, as an aliquant number, though it is a lexical orphan with no distinct family members.

In Play: Even though today's Good Word (and its antonym) are historically prisoners of mathematics, their senses of "oddity" and "evenness" hold the keys to their escape: "Ali is the only aliquant of our group that keeps it from functioning smoothly." Someone who fits in evenly, without any 'remainder' would be just the opposite: "Our new hire turned out to be just the aliquot we need; she seems to fit the office staff perfectly'. Why leave this rare gem to the sciences when we all could be enjoying it?

Word History: Medieval Latin aliquotus, from Latin aliquantus "somewhat more, somewhat less" from alius "other (of more than two)" + quantus "how great?" The root of alius turns up in several words borrowed from Latin, such as alias, another name, alien, someone from another country or world, and alibi which means "elsewhere" in Latin. Quantus is very obvious in the English borrowing quantity. As mentioned before, its root is kwo-, which also produced the English interrogative pronouns who, what, when and where (written WH but pronounced [hw]). Latin qui "who", quo "where", and qualis "what kind of" are all based on the same root.

Posted: Thu Sep 27, 2007 9:19 am
by Perry
We can always quant on you for an interesting Good Word! :wink:

Posted: Thu Sep 27, 2007 2:00 pm
by gailr
Eight! Four! Two! Ought!
Numbers which can aliquot!

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2007 9:49 am
by Perry
Plenty of gray matter under that headdress.

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2007 12:10 pm
by skinem
Eight! Four! Two! Ought!
Numbers which can aliquot!
OK, now that's funny...

Thread Drift Alert!

That reminds me of a cheer that's been credited to M.I.T., Cal Poly, Stanford--homes of often unsuccessful athletic teams...

That's all right, that's ok,
You'll be working for us one day!

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2007 4:10 pm
by gailr
I liked that, skinny.

I looked up other cheeri populi; my favorite here is
"Defense!" ... "Social spending!"

After a quick consult with Henry Beard, I can leave off sporadically supporting the Baiuli Sinus Viridis in favor of sporadically supporting the Equi Feri Denverae.

-gailr