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ACME

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2012 10:10 pm
by Dr. Goodword
• acme •

Pronunciation: æk-mee • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: The highest point, the peak or culmination of development.

Notes: Today's word is a lexical orphan without adjective, adverb, or verb forms. However, Greek acme was miscopied by Latin scribes as acne, and this variant became the word for those little points of infection on the faces of adolescents. We might consider acne a step-brother of today's Good Word.

In Play: This word has been used as the commercial name of so many companies and products that today it carries with it a sense of the plain and ordinary despite its original meaning. It is now the John Doe of commercial names: "Let's say you want to sell some product, let's say Acme widgets, in this market; where would we begin?" This does not mean that it has not lost its original meaning: "When Barry Moore was at the acme of his career, he made a million dollars a picture."

Word History: Today's Good Word is, as pointed out above, a simple mistransliteration of Greek akme "point, peak". The Greek word is based on an ancient Proto-Indo-European root ak- "sharp, pointed", a root also found in Greek akis and Latin acus "needle". The Latin root is visible in words like acupuncture, acuity, and acute, all borrowed from Latin. In Old English the same root showed up as ecg "sharp side", which today is edge. In Old Norse, it was eggja "to incite, goad", something you would do with a pointed object. This word was borrowed by English from its cousin language as (to) egg (on). (Today we offer thanks to the sharp mind of Perry Dror, now at the acme of his career in the Alpha Agora.)

Posted: Wed Mar 28, 2012 10:46 pm
by Slava
As to relative words, what about acmeism in Russian poetry?

Posted: Thu Mar 29, 2012 12:29 pm
by LukeJavan8
"acmeism in Russian poetry"?????

Posted: Thu Mar 29, 2012 2:29 pm
by Slava
"acmeism in Russian poetry"?????
Yep.
a school of early 20th-century Russian poetry whose practitioners were strongly opposed to the vagueness of symbolism and strove for absolute clarity of expression through precise, concrete imagery.

Posted: Thu Mar 29, 2012 6:17 pm
by Philip Hudson
Why not? The ascendant Russian ego might very well have led them to think any of their achievements to have been at the acme following their revolution.