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Banausic Adjective Life Greek Living October Buh Naw Sik Ancient

Banausic relates to earning a living, often used pejoratively to mean utilitarian or practical, and was seen negatively by ancient Greeks.

Banausic relates to earning a living, often used pejoratively to mean utilitarian or practical, and was seen negatively by ancient Greeks.

Word banausic
Date October 4, 2016
Type adjective
Syllables buh-NAW-sik
Etymology The ancient Greeks held intellectual pursuits in the highest esteem, and they considered ideal a leisurely life of contemplation. A large population of slaves enabled many Greek citizens to adopt that preferred lifestyle. Those who had others to do the heavy lifting for them tended to regard professional labor with contempt. Their prejudice against the need to toil to earn a living is reflected in the Greek adjective banausikos (the root of banausic), which not only means "of an artisan" (from the word for "artisan," banausos) but "nonintellectual" as well.
Examples "At the far end was a wooden board on which were hung saws, chisels, knives and other banausic instruments of the trade." — Sebastian Faulk, Human Traces, 2005

"That story is followed by a brilliant allegory of reality TV and the cult of personality, Rumours About Me, in which a simple company man sees his banausic daily life … broadcast by the media until he is transformed into 'a nobody who was known by everybody.'" — Christine Thomas, The Miami Herald, 2 Nov. 2008
Definition : relating to or concerned with earning a living — used pejoratively; also : utilitarian, practical

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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