KatyFROM ABOUT THAT 'FULSOME' PRAISE By James J. Kilpatrick
Nicholas Kristof, a columnist for The New York Times, was in Iran a year ago. He found the people "exceptionally friendly and fulsome in their praise for the United States." After Ronald Reagan died last summer, The Washington Post reported that "fulsome tributes continue to engulf TV." At about the same time, a BBC reporter told us that "the Sharon plan has the fulsome endorsement of George W. Bush."
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It is a good guess that the writers used "fulsome" to mean "abundant," or "copious" or "unstinting." Merriam-Webster's 11th Collegiate (2003) confirms that popular usage. Its editors say the primary definition of "fulsome" today is "generous in amount," or "full and well developed."
Aaargh! Until quite recently, "fulsome" had a very different primary meaning, e.g.:
American Heritage, 1993: "offensively flattering or insincere; offensive to the taste or sensibilities."
Oxford American (1999): "disgusting by excess of flattery, servility, excessive, cloying."
Random House Collegiate (1997): "excessive, overdone, sickening."
Encarta (1999): "fawning to the point of being offensive."
We may be witnessing in "fulsome" an unusual process of linguistic reversion. When "fulsome" appeared early in the 13th century, it meant exactly what Merriam-Webster says its primary meaning is today -- abundant, generous, lavish. There were no offensive implications of insincerity. A fulsome banquet began with soup and ended 12 courses later with six desserts and indigestion.
In his "Modern American Usage," Bryan Garner has a note on words that undergo metamorphosis in reverse: They change from butterflies to caterpillars. The process may take 10 years or a hundred, but it is constantly going on -- and it provokes constant disagreement among writers, editors and lexicographers.
Garner identifies two contentious schools. The first comprises language aficionados and hard-core purists who insist upon traditional use. The other comprises linguistic liberals and those who don't concern themselves much with language. Garner adds morosely, "As time goes by, Group One dwindles; meanwhile, Group Two swells."
FULSOME
FULSOME
Last edited by KatyBr on Fri May 20, 2005 6:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Grand Panjandrum
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- Grand Panjandrum
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then perhapsIt has merely become fulsome !...
Henri
see deleted Asain language translations here
noisome
Dictionary
noi·some (noi'səm)
adj.
Offensive to the point of arousing disgust; foul: a noisome odor.
Harmful or dangerous: noisome fumes.
[Middle English noiesom : noie, harm (short for anoi, annoyance, from Old French, from anoier, to annoy; see annoy) + -som, adj. suff.; see –some1.]
noi'some·ly adv.
noi'some·ness n.
Thesaurus
noisome
adjective
Having an unpleasant odor: fetid, foul, foul-smelling, malodorous, mephitic, reeky, stinking. Informal smelly. See smells/good smells/bad smells/smell.
Obscure
noisome
noxious, unwholesome; offensive to the senses, esp: smell
wordnet:
The adjective noisome has 2 meanings:
Meaning #1: causing or able to cause nausea
Synonyms: nauseating, nauseous, loathsome, offensive, sickening, vile
Meaning #2: offensively malodorous
Synonyms: fetid, foetid, foul, foul-smelling, funky, smelly, putrid, stinking
Translations
Translations for: Noisome
Nederlands (Dutch)
schadelijk, ongezond, stinkend, walgelijk
Français (French)
immonde
Deutsch (German)
adj. - schädlich, stinkend, widerlich
Ελληνική (Greek)
adj. ανθυγιεινός, βλαβερός, δύσοσμος, κάκοσμος
Italiano (Italian)
nocivo
Português (Portuguese)
adj. - nocivo, deletério
Русский (Russian)
вредный, зловонный
Español (Spanish)
adj. - fétido, dañino, nocivo
Svenska (Swedish)
adj. - motbjudande, stinkande, osund, ohälsosam
العربيه (Arabic)
(صفه) مؤذ, مثير للاشمئزاز
עברית (Hebrew)
adj. - מזיק, מעורר-התנגדות, מצחין, דוחה
Katy
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