Wednesday, November 2, 2016

Wordplay Wednesday™ November 2, 2016 – Verism



Beautiful! Warts and All 

Ah, I found the perfect word for you this week, to follow the amusement and mystery of Halloween. Being the Scorpio I am, I identify most with the Halloween witch. Her familiar/muse is the sinuous black cat, and her striking, discreet beauty mark is a small, comely wart that lies aside her nose.

Beautiful, or hag? You decide …

VERISM  (virʹiz’ɘm) n. – realism or naturalism in the arts. [WW #84]

First found in Roman art during the latter part of the Roman Republic, verism goes beyond beautiful to form a more expressive realism in art; one might say, as “beauty in the eye of the beholder.”

There is no denying the considerable artistic talents of the Romans—and their realism period of verism waxed and waned over the centuries. By the late 1800s, it began to infiltrate Italy’s operatic productions that created a genre with such masters as Pietro Mascagni and Giacomo Puccini (Madame Butterfly).

I often go to Wiki for further explanation of a word or phrase; not as the definitive expert, but as an enhancement to my definitions. This time, the Wiki editor(s) made a notable observation: Verism, often described as "warts and all", shows the imperfections of the subject, such as warts, wrinkles and furrows. It should be absolutely noted that the term veristic in no way implies that these portraits are more "real". Rather, they too can be highly exaggerated or idealised, but within a different visual idiom, one which favours wrinkles, furrows, signs of age as indicators of gravity and authority.

So—applied to the 2016 presidential election, the “art of politics” today is a particular form of verism at its best … um, or worst.

Word Challenge: VERISM. More broadly applied—when our friends and family have warts, and we love them anyway. Can you fit verism into your week of beautiful writings?


               
        

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Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Wordplay Wednesday™ October 26, 2016 – Numen



High Spirited for Halloween! 

How many ways can you define “spirit”? So many that its definition takes up three inches in teeny-tiny type in the dictionary!

Of course, this time of year, thoughts go to Halloween and thinning of the veil between the spirit world and the living.

And I’m floating over them with the perfect word to impress your friends at your Halloween party! When you think “spirit” is overused, whip out …  

NUMEN (nōō'mɘn) – n. an indwelling, guiding force or spirit. [WW #83

For added spookiness, Words With Friends’ definition: “divine power or spirit; a deity, esp. one presiding locally or believed to inhabit a particular object.

Crystal balls and Ouija boards, witches’ cauldrons and magic wands, party hearty or nostalgia night, prayer for the dearly departed or feast of fall (bountiful with chocolate!)—however you celebrate Halloween, be sure to put lots of numen into it!

Word Challenge: NUMEN. Make friends with your inner numen and keep it close to you this Halloween! Can you fit more numen into your week of otherworld writings?
 

                       


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Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Wordplay Wednesday™ October 19, 2016 – Tyro



Forecast: High Pressure System with Chance of Clouds!  

By the end of October we begin to move from the unpredictable weather of fall into the even more erratic meteorological elements that dog us through winter.
 
Are you a novice meteorologist, or like most of us, don’t know (or often care) about the difference between cumulus and nimbostratus clouds? (Although the latter sounds kinda kinky.)
 
In view of the extreme weather conditions that may or may not be attributed to climate change or climate control—take your extreme choice—it’s good to know how and when your cumulus clouds could turn into a mind-twisting tornado. To begin …

TYRO (tīʹrō) n. – a beginner in learning something; novice; syn., amateur. [WW #82]

Put on your tyro hat—no, not the pointy one—and explore the world of clouds at Encyclopædia Britannica. Besides peaceful to observe, and great for spotting divine, heavenly animals, cumulus clouds can turn wicked in the right (or way wrong) conditions.
 
And before you say the pretty, puffy cumulus clouds couldn’t possibly be evil, read on dear tyro. According to Wiki: “A tornado is a violently rotating column of air that revolves while in contact with both the surface of the Earth and a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, the base of a cumulus cloud.”

Short-and-sweet is my mantra today (or rather tonight, by the time this is posted!) … so that’s our weatherized version of Wordplay Wednesday for this week! After another week or so of “Indian Summer,” we tyros will have an intelligent comment to make in casual conversation!  (Please, no racial complaints—it’s just a term that has been in use for more than two hundred years.)

Word Challenge: TYRO. Remember, there is a difference between stupid and ignorant. The latter means you’re simply uninformed—don’t be the former—learn something new every day! Can you fit tyro into your week of cloudy writings?



                       


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