Logy

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Dr. Goodword
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Logy

Postby Dr. Goodword » Mon May 16, 2016 10:47 pm

• logy •

Pronunciation: lo-geeHear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: Sluggish, lethargic.

Notes: The spelling of this word has vacillated between logy and loggy for 150 years but seems to have settled on logy. We are free to convert it into an adverb or noun if we remember to change the Y to an I: logily, loginess.

In Play: You don't have to be a logger to feel logy: "Fosdick couldn't understand why he felt so logy after winning the hotdog-eating contest." He probably felt a bit crapulent, too. Loginess can be induced by pharmaceuticals: "The Mickey Finn that Horace slipped into Leticia's drink to stop her constant chattering made her a little logy but only slowed the tempo of her prattle."

Word History: Etymologists hesitantly suggest that today's word was borrowed from Dutch log "heavy, cumbersome"; however, there may be an origin for this word closer to home. The spelling logy and loggy with the same meaning appeared at about the same time: mid 19th century. A log is considered something heavy and ponderous, as we see in the simile "sleep like a log". It is also related to lug, also implying heaviness. Now, loggy can also mean "abounding in logs". Adjectives with this meaning like dusty, filmy, and sandy often have a second meaning of "like X". So logy could be a misspelling of loggy, meaning "ponderous like a log", which people began pronouncing the way it is spelled. (We are happy that Halcyon Kramer was not too logy to contact us when this interesting word turned up.)
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Slava
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Re: Logy

Postby Slava » Fri May 10, 2024 6:13 am

I confess to going back and forth on the pronunciation of this one, probably because I don't come across it often and don't think I've ever actually used it, I'll use the pronunciation as given, or go for making the 'g' a ''dj'. Any thunks?
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bbeeton
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Re: Logy

Postby bbeeton » Fri May 10, 2024 11:09 am

In the part of the country where I grew up (Baltimore, Maryland), this word was in fairly common use, and always with a hard "g".


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