ILLUDE

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Dr. Goodword
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ILLUDE

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sat Oct 31, 2009 10:05 pm

• illude •

Pronunciation: i-ludHear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: To deceive with false hope, to trick with a false impression.

Notes: Most of us use illusion as though it exists in a vacuum. This word, however, is the noun from the very legitimate verb illude. Aside from the noun, this verb sports an adjective, illusive "ghostly, deceptive in appearance, appearing to exist but vanishing as you approach". Several cousins of illude share very similar meanings. Elude is a homophone, pronounced the same as illude, but implying escape from capture, as to elude police arrest. Delude sounds different but is a near synonym, with a meaning very similar to that of illude. The noun from this word, of course, is illusion, as in that trick on the eyes, the optical illusion.

In Play: Hopes, dreams, and goals can be both illusive and elusive, so it is important that we keep these two words separate when we write: "Thom Dunderhead was illuded into thinking he could become a professional football player by his success in college sports." Remember that today's Good Word refers to deception, like an optical illusion: "The glitz and glamour of Las Vegas illuded Phyllis Limmer into thinking she would be happy as a showgirl."

Word History: Today's Good Word was taken from Latin illudere "to mock or ridicule". This verb is made up of the prefix in "in, at" + ludere "to play". The N in the prefix in- is a consonantal chameleon, which is to say it assimilates with the initial consonant of any word it attaches to. So, it becomes il- before L as in illuminate, ir- before R as in irradiate, im- before sounds made by the lips, as we see in import and imbue—all borrowed from Latin or its daughter, French. The same root appears in ludicrous "utterly ridiculous", the English adaptation of Latin ludicrus "sportive, playful". (I would only be illuding you were I to say that Miriam Webster suggested today's Good Word.)
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Slava
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Postby Slava » Sun Nov 01, 2009 4:31 pm

Illude - bad drug. As in, "Hey, dude, that was some funky ludes there."

Illusory - "appearing to exist but vanishing as you approach." New definition for the hope for universal health care?
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Postby Perry » Tue Nov 03, 2009 10:17 am

Showing your age there. The only good lude is the one that eludes ingestion!
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Postby Stargzer » Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:49 pm

Wouldn't an ill ud be an out-of-tune Middle-Eastern musical instrument?
Regards//Larry

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