Word of the Day for Tuesday 4th March 2014
Epitome \ih-PIT-uh-mee\, noun:
1. a person or thing that is typical of or possesses to a high degree
the features of a whole class: He is the epitome of goodness.
2. a condensed account, especially of a literary work; abstract.
2. a condensed account, especially of a literary work; abstract.
He used to
say, the school itself initiated him a great way (I remember that was his very
expression); for great schools are little societies, where a boy of any
observation may see in epitome what he will afterwards find in
the world at large.
-- Henry Fielding, The Adventures of Joseph Andrews, 1742
-- Henry Fielding, The Adventures of Joseph Andrews, 1742
But far
beyond all other creatures of the herd is the goat, the epitome of
all that in an animal is worth living for; full of frolic when a baby, and
knowing nothing but to jump off small eminences, and to cry mamma; conceited
and pugnacious in youth; and in maturity solemn to a degree that is at times
exasperating.
-- Oswald Parry, Six Months in a Syrian Monastery, 1895
-- Oswald Parry, Six Months in a Syrian Monastery, 1895
Epitome came to English in the 1500's from the Greek meaning
"abridgment" or "surface incision."
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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