A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg
Recently we featured the word
scaramouch, coined after Scaramouche,
a stock character in Italian comic theater during 16th-18th centuries.
But Scaramouche isn’t the only one. This week we have assembled a cast of
five such stock characters.
They have stepped off the stage and walked into the pages of the dictionary
where they lie for posterity. Wake them up; hire them for your prose or
poetry, office memo or college paper; and let them help you convey your
message in a livelier manner.
zany
PRONUNCIATION:
(ZAY-nee)
MEANING:
adjective: Amusingly strange, comical, or clownish.
ETYMOLOGY:
>From French zani, from Italian zanni, a nickname for Giovanni. The term
has its origin in the comedy theater commedia dell’arte popular in 16-18th
century Italy. Giovanni, Italian form of the name John, was originally the
generic name of the servant, a stock character who tried to mimic his
master, himself a clown. Earliest documented use: 1596.
USAGE:
“This is one of the zaniest and most delightfully wacky plays to ever
grace any stage at Bard on the Beach.”
Lysistrata;
The Vancouver Sun (Canada); Aug 30, 2018.
See more usage examples of
zany in Vocabulary.com’s
dictionary.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Our memories are card indexes consulted and then returned in disorder by
authorities whom we do not control. -Cyril Connolly, critic and editor (10
Sep 1903-1974)
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