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Equanimity

Posted: Sat Jun 03, 2023 6:48 pm
by Dr. Goodword

• equanimity •


Pronunciation: e-kwê-nim-i-tee or ee-kwê- • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Noun, mass (No plural)

Meaning: Steadiness and composure under pressure; unruffledness in a stressful situation.

Notes: The adjective that accompanies today's Good Word is the rather odd-sounding equanimous [ee-kwæ-nê-mês] "even-tempered, balanced, composed", as an equanimous response to a provocative insult.

In Play: Stressful or embarrassing situations call for equanimity: "May Tripp rose from her pratfall with uncommon equanimity and continued down the hall as though nothing had happened." Whatever raises stress levels, equanimity lowers them: "Duane Pipes received the news of his wife's leaving him with an equanimity that might have saved the marriage had he applied it more while they were together."

Word History: English borrowed this word from French in the 17th century. French inherited it from Latin æquanimitas "calmness, patience, equanimity", a noun based on æquus "even, equal" + animus "mind, spirit" or anima "soul". Æquus is apparently related to Sanskrit eka "one". Animus underlies animal, a thing of spirit; it comes from the same source as Greek anemos "wind", often thought of as a spirit in bygone years. The Greek word is the root of anemone "daughter of the wind", which is now the English word for the wind-flower, Anemone nemorosa. (Today we thank Rob N. Hood for having the spirit to suggest today's Good Word.)

Re: Equanimity

Posted: Sat Jun 03, 2023 7:49 pm
by Slava
Ah, the importance of that Æ! Æquus is far from Equus, though they did overlap in at least one word: inequitable.

While we know it as meaning un-equal, thereby unfair, it did at one time have the meaning of being impassable on horseback.

Re: Equanimity

Posted: Sun Jun 04, 2023 10:47 am
by Debbymoge
Rob N. Hood??

oh, please, do tell
person in the flesh or...