OBDURATE

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Dr. Goodword
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OBDURATE

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sat Jul 05, 2008 11:29 pm

• obdurate •

Pronunciation: ahb-dyê-rêt • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: 1. Emotionally hardened, hard-hearted, unsympathetic. 2. Intractable, unrepentant, adamantly and unshakably stubborn.

Notes: Writers have done a lot of experimentation with the noun from this adjective. Obduracy, obdurateness, and obduration have all been tried but obduracy seems to have emerged the favorite with obdurateness running a close second. You may also use this word as a verb if you pronounce it slightly differently: [ahb-dyê-rayt], that is, pronouncing the last syllable fully: "The treatment Cinderella received from her mom and stepsisters obdurated her against them forever."

In Play: Today's Good Word tends to turn up in certain phrases, like obdurate heart and obdurate sinner: "Basil, you obdurate sinner, I just saw you dealing from the bottom of the deck!" However, obduracy does not have to refer to stubborn sinfulness: "Mildred, why do you so obdurately oppose my taking the checkbook when I go out with the guys?"

Word History: Today's word comes from Late Latin obduratus, the past participle of obdurare "to harden," a verb based on the adjective durus "hard." Yes, the root of that word, dur- is also visible in the English borrowings endure and durable. Durus was originally Proto-Indo-European *deru-/*doru- "solid, tree" which emerged as daru "wood" in Sanskrit, a word that devolved into Modern Hindi daru and Farsi (Modern Persian) dâr. Elsewhere the stem underwent liquid metathesis (the [r] and the vowel switched places) so that in Serbian it emerges as drevo "tree, wood" while in English it evolved into both tree and true. Druid, by the way, is probably a reduction of a Celtic compound *dru-wid- "strong seer," where wid is a relative of the root in video and vision.
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sluggo
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Postby sluggo » Mon Jul 07, 2008 3:50 pm

Not to be obdurate, but this is a rerun. What about indurate?
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Postby Stargzer » Mon Jul 07, 2008 8:25 pm

You can't keep a Good Word down. Obdurate is its own adjective (in Sense 2).
Regards//Larry

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INDURATE

Postby Dr. Goodword » Tue Jul 08, 2008 12:04 am

Sluggo,

I started with indurate but decided its meaning didn't diverge enough from obdurate to do both and, since obdurate was the more common, I would go with it. After working half an afternoon on obdurate, I discovered not only had I already done that word, but the first version was head and shoulders above the one I had just finished so, in frustration (running out of time), I resent the original.

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sluggo
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Postby sluggo » Tue Jul 08, 2008 12:34 pm

:( -well we've all been there Doc! It's the price of perfection.
Not worthy of resentment :lol:
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Postby gailr » Wed Jul 09, 2008 12:15 am

:( -well we've all been there Doc! It's the price of perfection.
Not worthy of resentment :lol:
Yet worthy of resendment.

sluggo
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Postby sluggo » Wed Jul 09, 2008 3:00 pm

Mehopes it was noticed I was riffing on Doc's
"in frustration (running out of time) I resent the original" 8)

Tun or pypo? :?:

is there a word for a typo that works as an unintentional pun?
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