Migraine

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Dr. Goodword
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Migraine

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sun Oct 09, 2016 11:39 pm

• migraine •

Pronunciation: mai-grayn (US), mee-grayn (UK) • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun

Meaning: A severe, potentially debilitating headache.

Notes: Today's Good Word, a noun that may be used as an adjective, belongs to a somewhat unusual family. A person suffering from migraines is a migraineur. The adjective meaning "like a migraine" is magrainous, though in medicine migrainoid is used in this sense. Because it comes from French, it contains some extra letters: don't forget the AI in the middle and the silent E on the end.

In Play: A migraine, of course, is an almost debilitating headache: "Will you kids please calm down! You've given your mom a migraine". Opportunities for the figurative use of migraine abound. Wherever we can use headache in a figurative sense, migraine will work, too: "I expected raising kids would be a headache, but it has turned out to be a chronic migraine."

Word History: Today's Good Word is another borrowed from Old French, where it was part of the phrase fièvre migraine "pique, vexation". The word migraine itself is a French reduction of Latin hemicrania "pain on one side of the head", made up of hemi "half" and kranion "skull". The reason the Latin word semi is not used for "half" is that Latin borrowed the word from Greek, where "half" was hemi (as in hemisphere) not semi (as in semiannual). The word for "head" in Greek was kara but the upper part of the head was the kranion. The root of this word was derived from Proto-Indo-European kor- "skull, horn", which came directly (unborrowed) to English as horn. It entered Latin directly as cornu "horn", as in cornucopia "horn of plenty". (Forgetting to thank Jackie Strauss for suggesting today's Good Word might well bring on a migraine so, thank you, Jackie.)
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Perry Lassiter
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Re: Migraine

Postby Perry Lassiter » Sun Oct 09, 2016 11:54 pm

My wife had migraines often during the first half of her life. Diagnostically, a migraine is specifically on one side of the head and is often subject to auras as they come on. They also are inherited, as my wife remembers her grandmother wearing a "headache band," a tight cloth around the head to help relieve the pain. One grandson may have inherited this also.
pl

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Re: Migraine

Postby Philip Hudson » Sun Oct 16, 2016 5:45 pm

Migraines can mimic a stroke, or vice versa. The first stroke I had was while I was driving my father through rough south Texas brush country, miles from anything. Dad had several strokes. Suddenly, I saw a flying saucer in the roadway and threw on the brakes. Since my dad didn't see anything, I accepted that it was in my head and drove thirty miles back to civilization with it looming in front of me. The local doctor said it was a migraine that didn't hurt. MRIs proved that incorrect. Soon a plethora of strokes put me out of condition and caused me to retire at the early age of 50.
It is dark at night, but the Sun will come up and then we can see.

Perry Lassiter
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Re: Migraine

Postby Perry Lassiter » Sun Oct 16, 2016 11:05 pm

You showed no signs of a stroke when I met you.
Plethora mirght be a good word to study.
pl

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Re: Migraine

Postby Slava » Mon Jan 09, 2017 2:31 pm

Here be Plethora.
Life is like playing chess with chessmen who each have thoughts and feelings and motives of their own.


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