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Pamphlet Pamphleteer De Louis October Verb Pam Fluh Teer Pamphlets—Unbound

Word pamphleteer
Date October 27, 2018
Type verb
Syllables pam-fluh-TEER
Etymology Pamphlets—unbound printed publications with no covers or with paper covers—are published about all kinds of subjects, but our word pamphlet traces back to one particular document. It derives from the title of a short Latin love poem of the 12th century: Pamphilus, seu De Amore, which can be translated as "Pamphilus, or On Love." The name Pamphilus referred to a Greek god whose name means "loved by all." Following from this, the original pamphlets were handwritten poems, tracts, or treatises, often consisting of several pages bound together. Pamphleteer, which can be both a noun and a verb, combines pamphlet with the -eer suffix found in such words as engineer and puppeteer.
Examples Though he is remembered today for his novels and essays, George Orwell was also known to pamphleteer for causes important to him.

"After the pamphlet wars between supporters of Louis XIII and Marie de Medicis, in 1618-19, several pamphleteers were sentenced to death, and the attempt to arrest unlicensed booksellers led many to flee the country. More broadly, the political chaos brought about by pamphleteering in France contributed to the absolutism of Louis XIV, who used the printing press as a tool of state control." — Stephen Marche, The New Yorker, 23 Apr. 2018
Definition 1 : to write and publish pamphlets
2 : to engage in partisan arguments indirectly in writings

Tags: wordoftheday::verb

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