STUPENDOUS

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STUPENDOUS

Postby Dr. Goodword » Tue Jun 30, 2009 11:40 pm

• stupendous

Pronunciation: stu-pen-dês • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: 1. Enormous, huge, humongous. 2. Outstanding, marvelous, stunningly wonderful.

Notes: The great 20th century linguist Noam Chomsky often emphasized the importance of allowing oneself to be surprised. Curiosity is critical to everything and today's word is a surprising curiosity, coming from a root that produced words meaning both "idiotic" and "wonderful" (See History for details). Allow it to surprise you, how this came about. The adverb, of course, is stupendously and the noun, stupendousness, though it is passing rare in use.

In Play: The basic meaning of this word is "huge", though "stunning" lurks beneath the surface of both senses, "The Sears building in Chicago remains a stupendous architectural achievement." This doesn't imply anything wonderful, just surprisingly large. And, of course, size is relative: "Esther's southern cousin, Maybelle, has a stupendous beehive hairdo that threatens every ceiling fan she walks under."

Word History: Today's Good Word comes from Late Latin stupendus "stunning", the gerundive of Latin stupere "to be stunned". Stun is a semantically ambivalent creature in English, so it should come as no surprise that the Latin correlate was, too. Both words refer to a state of senselessness, as to stun fish, but both also allow the cause of the stunning to be something marvelous rather than insidious. Latin stupidus comes from the literal meaning, the mental condition resulting from a blow to the head. Today's Good Word is a result of the figurative meaning.
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Slava
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Postby Slava » Sun Jun 20, 2010 9:43 pm

Stupendous is also the name of Calvin's alter ego in the brilliant comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes." Stupendous Man.

And the stupidus tie-in makes me think Calvin may have been dropped on his head a few times in early childhood. Good thing it never affected his imagination.
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