Word | colloquy |
---|---|
Date | April 21, 2020 |
Type | noun |
Syllables | KAH-luh-kwee |
Etymology | Colloquy may make you think of colloquial, and there is indeed a connection between the two words. As a matter of fact, colloquy is the parent word from which colloquial was coined in the mid-18th century. Colloquy itself, though now the less common of the two words, has been a part of the English language since the 15th century. It is a descendant of Latin loquī, meaning "to speak." Other descendants of loquī in English include eloquent, loquacious, ventriloquism, and soliloquy, as well as elocution and interlocutor. |
Examples | The company's employees worried and speculated as the executive team remained closeted in an intense colloquy for the entire morning. "He has a pitch-perfect ear for the cutesy euphemisms parents devise for their little kids ('Don't be a pane of glass') and for their snarky colloquies with precocious teenagers ('That's not the tone you take with your grandmother.' 'I'm not taking a tone, I'm making an argument.' 'Your argument has a tone')." — Rand Richards Cooper, The New York Times, 14 Nov. 2019 |
Definition | 1 : conversation, dialogue 2 : a high-level serious discussion : conference |
Tags: wordoftheday::noun
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