Diaphanous

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Dr. Goodword
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Diaphanous

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sat Oct 01, 2022 10:17 pm

• diaphanous •


Pronunciation: dai-æ-fê-nês • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: 1. Soft, thin, filmy and translucent or transparent. 2. Fragile, flimsy, easily broken or likely to dissipate.

Notes: Remember that this most beautiful Good Word comes from Greek, so the [f] sound is spelled PH. The adverb is diaphanously. The noun, diaphanousness, sounds a bit ponderous to me, so I prefer the lighter sound of diaphaneity [dai-æf-ê-nee-ê-tee].

In Play: Gowns and veils are most likely to be diaphanous; however, you might go out into a diaphanous drizzle or fog. The meaning "flimsiness" lends itself to many other situations, "The lie was so diaphanous, a blind man could see through it." Fragility is another sense that has crept into this word: "That diaphanous idea of his evaporated before anyone could comment on it." This is one of those words you want to use simply to share its beauty.

Word History: This Good Word was reworked from Greek diaphanes "transparent", based on dia- "through" + phainein "to show". Phainein contains the same root as photo-, found in many English words. It also underlies phantasia "appearance, imagination", from phantos "visible". Latin borrowed the Greek word and passed it down to French as fantaisie "fantasy", which was, almost by rote, Anglicized to fantasy. The original Proto-Indo-European root, bha- "shine, flow" percolated directly through the Germanic languages to end up in English buoy, beckon, beacon and, believe it or not, berry, which apparently started out its life meaning "shiny fruit".
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David Myer
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Re: Diaphanous

Postby David Myer » Wed Oct 05, 2022 12:30 am

And was there not something vaguely diaphanous about the late Princess Diana. Rather frail and vulnerable. Diaphanous Diana. There has to be a poem in there somewhere.

Philip Hudson
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Re: Diaphanous

Postby Philip Hudson » Fri Oct 07, 2022 2:04 am

Diaphanous is too lovely a word to waste on the more mundane definitions. I want to dwell on diaphanous gowns clothing lovely ladies. On the other hand, maybe I ought not comment at all.
It is dark at night, but the Sun will come up and then we can see.


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