WRANGLE

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Dr. Goodword
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WRANGLE

Postby Dr. Goodword » Mon May 28, 2012 9:40 pm

• wrangle •

Pronunciation: ræng-gêl • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Verbs

Meaning: 1. To quarrel persistently, to bicker contentiously without end. 2. (Western US) To herd (cattle or horses).

Notes: Today we are having another sale at alphaDictionary: two words for the price of one (see Word History). Both of today's words share the same spelling pitfall: don't forget they both begin with a W. Both words share an identical family. A wrangler is someone who bickers a lot or whose profession is herding cows or horses. Wrangling is the avocation of one such wrangler, the vocation of the other.

In Play: We shouldn't confuse wrangling with debating, a genuine form of argument: "While congress wrangles about the small issues, the larger ones go unattended." The critical feature of wrangling that distinguishes it from debating is that it must go on for a long time with no end in sight: "They've been wrangling over the prenuptial agreement for five years now." The other type of wrangling is simple: "Getting the Bickertons to attend marriage counseling is like wrangling cats."

Word History: Today's Good Word is one that came with a Fickle N. It goes back to a Proto-Indo-European root that meant "to turn, to twist". So with the N, we get wring, wrong (not straight but twisted) and wrangle. Without it, this word emerged in English as writhe, wrist, wrestle and wrath. English hit the mother load when it plundered this PIE root throughout its long journey to Modern English. (We never have to wrangle with Jeremy Busch over submission of such fascinating expressions as today's Good Word.)
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Perry Lassiter
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Postby Perry Lassiter » Mon May 28, 2012 11:43 pm

I always had the impression that the second sense involved physically wrestling the cows, like throwing them down for branding. Then by extension the word might apply to to vocation in general. You western folks, do you hear it used that way, or am I coming from the fickle n, wrestling?
pl


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