kpaintin commented on the word resipiscent
Having returned to a saner mind.
From Latin resipiscere (to recover one's senses), from re- (again)
+ sapere (to taste, to know). Ultimately from Indo-European root sep-
(to taste or perceive) that is also the source of sage, savant, savvy, savor, sapid, sapient, and insipid.
"I am a recidivist, frequently guilty of overwriting and overciting.
But I am at least a resipiscent recidivist. I have come around to the
view that, though it may take discipline to cut more quickly to the
chase and to doff the security blanket that writers weave from string
citations, we, as judges, must dedicate ourselves to the task."
Excerpt from Hon. Bruce M. Selya; In Search of Less; Texas Law Review;
Volume 74, 1996.
Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.ram
Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.html
July 20, 2007
kpaintin's Comments
Comments by kpaintin
kpaintin commented on the word resipiscent
Having returned to a saner mind.
From Latin resipiscere (to recover one's senses), from re- (again)
+ sapere (to taste, to know). Ultimately from Indo-European root sep-
(to taste or perceive) that is also the source of sage, savant, savvy, savor, sapid, sapient, and insipid.
"I am a recidivist, frequently guilty of overwriting and overciting.
But I am at least a resipiscent recidivist. I have come around to the
view that, though it may take discipline to cut more quickly to the
chase and to doff the security blanket that writers weave from string
citations, we, as judges, must dedicate ourselves to the task."
Excerpt from Hon. Bruce M. Selya; In Search of Less; Texas Law Review;
Volume 74, 1996.
Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.ram
Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/resipiscent.html
July 20, 2007