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EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2012 12:47 am
by Dr. Goodword

• exsanguine •

Pronunciation: ek-sæng-gwin • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: 1. Without or lacking blood, having lost considerable blood. 2. Anemic, appearing to lack blood.

Notes: Today's Good Word belongs to a large extended family, including three fraternal twins, exsanguineous, exsanguinous, and exsanguious, with the same meaning. To drain blood out of something is to exsanguinate it, while the state of being without blood is exsanguinity. Without the prefix ex- we get sanguine, which means, in addition to "bloody" and "blood-red", "hopeful, confident", a meaning going back to the days when blood was considered the humor that controlled good spirits.

In Play: Today's word provides the reason for faces turning white: "Buster's face became exsanguine at the sound of his pants ripping." However, exsanguine is more often applied to a sense of exhaustion in the sense of the phrase 'I feel drained', as in: "After six straight hours of shopping, Louise was so exsanguine that, when she returned home, she plopped immediately in her easy chair and was asleep in less than a minute."

Word History: Today's Good Word was among the hordes of words shanghaied from Latin via Old French. Latin exsanguis "bloodless" was based on ex "out (of)" + sanguis "blood". No one knows where sanguis came from; of all the Indo-European languages, it appears only in Latin. It devolved into French sang "blood", which English uses in phrases it also borrowed from French, sang-froid "coolness, detachment", literally "cold blood", and the deep red color, sang-de-boeuf. literally "blood of beef". The root appears in other words, too, such as consanguine "related by blood" and sangria. (Yuck! It will never taste the same again.) (We thank the very sanguine Sara Goldman, a woman with words in her blood, for her suggestion of today's very Good Word.)

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2012 9:02 am
by MTC
EXANGUINE

Bloodless exsanguine,
Cold as a mortician's table,
White as a marbled sepulchre,
Icy like the fingers of Death,
Drains the rose
Of its red,
The life
From our veins.

by MTC

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2012 1:13 pm
by LukeJavan8
It is so amazing how modern TV and movies
go to extremes to show blood, but old time westerns,e.g.,
just had the 'bad guy' grab his chest and fall over.

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2012 1:23 pm
by Perry Lassiter
From MTC's way with words and location, I would swear he's a film or tv writer, except for the quality of writing not matching his!

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sat Nov 17, 2012 5:00 pm
by Philip Hudson
Perry: I think we all recognize and appreciate what MTC brings to this forum. Thank you, MTC, for this exsanguine, but definitely not anemic, poetic contribution.

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sun Nov 18, 2012 9:58 am
by MTC
I very much appreciate you morale-boosting, manuscript-inducing remarks. Thank you all again.

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Sun Nov 18, 2012 6:53 pm
by Slava
I'm happy to learn that Ms. Goldman is sanguine, not sanguinary. Otherwise she might exsanguinate us all.

Re: EXSANGUINE

Posted: Mon Nov 19, 2012 12:12 pm
by LukeJavan8
When I was in the equivalent of middle school there was an
after school TV show for kids. It featured a spook movie
of some sort, somewhat Hallowe'en-y-ish or late
Friday night. It was hosted by a creepy character who
called himself Doctor Sanguinary.