Thursday, May 19, 2011

Revisit

http://circusnospin.blogspot.com/2011/05/hot-shots-cattle-prods-electrical.html

pachydermatous

Adjective:

1. Of, like or related to thick-skinned animals like elephants, rhinoceroses, and hippopotamuses

2. Thick skinned, insensitive.

Notes:

Well, we all have known that a pachyderm is an elephant since childhood; it should come as no surprise that this word has an adjective. That suffix -at before the -ous is redundant, so you may omit it if you wish: pachydermous is just as good as today's word—and shorter, if you're in a hurry. The state of having (abnormally) thick skin? Pachydermia

In Play:

Sometimes thick skin is a good defense mechanism: "I don't think your referring to him as a burnt-out has-been will offend that pachydermatous old goat!" However, it can also be an indicator of insensitivity: "Donny Brooke is too pachydermatous to enjoy the subtleties of poetry; he wouldn't enjoy the reading."

Word History:

Today's Good Word comes to us, via Latin and French, from Greek pakhydermos "thick-skinned", a compound made up of pakhys "thick" + derma "skin". Pachys does not show up in many Greek borrowings in English; pachysandra was named for its thick stamens while pachycephalosaurs were named for their thick skulls. Derma, however, appears in many borrowings, including dermal "pertaining to skin", epidermis "outer layer of skin", and the study of skin, dermatology.

Today's word courtesy of Mark Rosenthal

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