Word of the
Day for Wednesday 28th May 2014
Leviathan \ li-VAHY-uh-thuhn \,
noun;
1. Anything of immense size and power, as a huge, ocean going ship.
2.
(often initial capital letter ) Bible . A sea monster.
3.
Any huge marine animal, as the whale.
4 (initial capital letter, italics ) A philosophical work (1651) by Thomas
Hobbes dealing with the political organisation of society.
Quotes:
But curiously, for all the series’s influence in shaping and reflecting the
leviathan of "theory" on American campuses, Benjamin is a conspicuous
absence among the wealth of titles.
-- Eric Banks, "Walter Benjamin's Afterlife," The Chronicle of Higher
Education, 2014
This 2000 strong bureaucratic leviathan allocates its budgets through the
various ministries.
-- Misha Glenny, "Science waxes and wanes in Gorbachov's age of reform,"
New Scientist , 1988
Origin:
Leviathan entered English in the late 1300’s as a word for a giant sea
monster. It finds its roots in the Hebrew liwyāthān.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
No comments:
Post a Comment