Word of the Day
for Wednesday,
March 6, 2013
Rialto \ree-AL-toh\, noun:
an exchange or mart.
We always did so in
the same place, by a particular house, beyond the rialto in
a steep-sloping backstreet of tenements, where advertisements turned in colours
under the ivy.
-- China MiƩville, Embassytown, 2011
-- China MiƩville, Embassytown, 2011
I learn from Michael
Lynch that courage of even the most spectacular nature isn't after all a
spectacle, an arena with fixed sightlines, but instead a kind of floating
permeable rialto
of common lending, borrowing, extravagant indebtedness, and exchange.
-- Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Epistemology of the Closet, 1990
-- Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Epistemology of the Closet, 1990
The following morning
dawned clear and cool, and the chef decided to send me to the Rialto
to buy pears and Gorgonzola.
-- Elle Newmark, The Chef's Apprentice, 2011
-- Elle Newmark, The Chef's Apprentice, 2011
Rialto comes from the name for the mercantile quarter of Venice during
the middle ages. Shakespeare is thought to have brought the term into
widespread usage from his play the
Merchant of Venice, first performed at the turn of the seventeenth
century. While it initially referred only to the specific marketplace in
Venice, rialto
soon took on a broader sense and could be applied marketplaces elsewhere.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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