Word of the Day
for Saturday,
March 23, 2013
Preterition \pret-uh-RISH-uhn\, noun:
1. the act of passing by or over; omission; disregard.
2. Law. the passing over by a testator of an heir otherwise entitled to a portion.
3. Calvinistic Theology. the passing over by God of those not elected to salvation or eternal life.
4. Rhetoric. paralipsis.
2. Law. the passing over by a testator of an heir otherwise entitled to a portion.
3. Calvinistic Theology. the passing over by God of those not elected to salvation or eternal life.
4. Rhetoric. paralipsis.
He had no innate sense
of tragedy or preterition
or complex binds or any of the things that made human beings' misfortunes
significant to one another.
-- David Foster Wallace, Oblivion, 2004
-- David Foster Wallace, Oblivion, 2004
I am a liar (by preterition),
not an actor.
-- Roland Barthes, A Lover's Discourse, 1977
-- Roland Barthes, A Lover's Discourse, 1977
From the Latin stem praeterit-
meaning "to go past," preterition
first entered English at the turn of the sixteenth century. While the
rhetorical and theological senses were present from the beginning, it took
another 100 years for the legal sense to arise in the English language.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
No comments:
Post a Comment