Excoriate

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Dr. Goodword
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Excoriate

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sat Jun 07, 2014 10:33 pm

• excoriate •

Pronunciation: ek-sko-ri-yayt • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Verb, transitive

Meaning: 1. To tear off or flay the skin or hide. 2. To chastise or castigate scathingly, to chew out vehemently.

Notes: You wouldn't want to confuse today's word with excorticate "to remove the bark from trees". The activity our Good Word refers to is called excoriation, the removal of hide or fur, literally or figuratively. Those who carry out excoriation (the action noun) are excoriators (the personal noun).

In Play: What common cliché says this more directly: "More than one method exists for excoriating a feline"? (Aren't you glad linguists don't write our adages?) Now, for the next meaning, when "chewing out" simply doesn't convey the intensity of the chewing out: "The boss excoriated Aiken Hart for stepping on the hem of her gown while she was dancing with her husband." (I haven't the heart to describe what happened to the gown.)

Word History: Today's Good Word comes from the past participle, excoriat(us), of the Latin verb, excoriare "to strip the hide or skin off", based on ex- "off, from" + corium "skin, hide; leather". The same root is found in Latin cortex "bark", used in neuroscience to refer to the outer layer of the brain. Greek kormos "a stripped tree trunk" and koris "bedbug", a parasite that bites you until you think you are being excoriated, are kinwords. (The source of today's word was M. Henri Day, a hyperactive word trader at the Alpha Agora.)
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HarbourDog
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Re: Excoriate

Postby HarbourDog » Mon Jun 09, 2014 10:46 am

In Newfoundland we speak a dialect (well, several dialects) of English that features significantly words and expressions from 19th century sailor's English, and speech patterns.

Here, when one excoriates someone or give them a dressing down, we use the expression "go aboard", as sailors in the age of sail would have done attacking an enemy vessel. For example, "Buddy in front of me in the express checkout had 15 items not 10, and some missus went aboard 'im." (Buddy is a generic term for any male whose name you don't know, missus for a female).

Also, we don't "load" something onto a truck, we "put it aboard".


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