Re: [invidious] Fittingly, "invidious" is a relative & synonym of "envy." Both are descendants of "invidia,"

Liste des GroupesRevenir à s lang 
Sujet : Re: [invidious] Fittingly, "invidious" is a relative & synonym of "envy." Both are descendants of "invidia,"
De : HenHanna (at) *nospam* dev.null (HenHanna)
Groupes : alt.usage.english sci.lang
Date : 25. Sep 2024, 21:15:47
Autres entêtes
Organisation : novaBBS
Message-ID : <b408b90d5779749aef1015395b4304f6@www.novabbs.com>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Rocksolid Light
On Wed, 25 Sep 2024 9:59:21 +0000, Ross Clark wrote:

On 25/09/2024 3:45 p.m., Ken Blake wrote:
Such a reference to Germany is invidious and a distortion of the reality
of
the contribution made by German democracy to the Western community since
the end of the war.
https://www.nato.int/acad/conf/future95/rodman.htm
>
It's interesting the meaning has flip flopped recently.
>
invidious
adjective
1a: of an unpleasant or objectionable nature : OBNOXIOUS
invidious remarks
1b: of a kind to cause harm or resentment
an invidious comparison
2: tending to cause discontent, animosity, or envy
the invidious task of arbitration
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/invidious
>
Etymological flip flop:
>
Fittingly, "invidious" is a relative of "envy." Both are descendants of
"invidia," the Latin word for "envy," which in turn comes from invidere,
meaning "to look askance at or "to envy." ("Invidious" descends from
"invidia" by way of the Latin adjective invidiosus, meaning "envious,
whereas "envy" comes to English via the Anglo-French noun envie.) These
days, however, "invidious" is rarely used as a synonym for "envious."
The
preferred uses are primarily pejorative, describing things that are
unpleasant (such as "invidious choices" and "invidious tasks") or worthy
of
scorn ("invidious remarks" or "invidious comparisons").
>
>
I see interesting changes here, but I don't know about flip-flop.
where do you see the Flip-Flop ???
           i wonder...    is the company name  Nvidia .........
The 1990s: Founding years to IPO
            The name NVIDIA is an amalgamation of two terms: invidia,
the Latin word for “envy,” and the acronym NV (short for “next vision”),
which the company used early on to label its files.

Date Sujet#  Auteur
25 Sep 24 * Re: [invidious] Fittingly, "invidious" is a relative & synonym of "envy." Both are descendants of "invidia,"2HenHanna
2 Oct 24 `- Re: [invidious] Fittingly, "invidious" is a relative & synonym of "envy." Both are descendants of "invidia,"1Ken Blake

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal