Awkward

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Dr. Goodword
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Awkward

Postby Dr. Goodword » Thu Feb 12, 2015 9:21 pm

• awkward •

Pronunciation: awk-wêrd • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: Clumsy, ungainly, ungraceful, inconvenient.

Notes: Other dictionaries list 4-10 different meanings, all of which can be captured by the literal or figurative meanings of the words I have chosen in the definition above. I think they can all be conceived as one sense. The adverb for this adjective is awkwardly and the noun, awkwardness.

In Play: It is easy to find awkward moments in all our lives: "Henry found it awkward introducing his wife to a woman she knew to be his former girl friend." Awkwardness is possible even when nothing is said: "An awkward silence followed when Mervyn asked his sister how her husband was and she replied that he had died a year ago."

Word History: In the 14th century today's word meant only "in the wrong direction", comprising awk "wrong" + adverbial suffix -weard "in the direction of". Awk was borrowed from Old Norse öfugr "backward". This word came to the Vikings via their immediate Germanic origins from Proto-Indo-European apo "off, away", which also provided English with its native words, of, off and aft. -Ward, on the other hand, goes back to PIE wert- "to turn, wind", which also went into the making of wreath and writhe. The same PIE root produced in Latin a host of words based on the verb vertere "to turn" borrowed by English: invert, pervert, convert, etc. (It would be very awkward, indeed, to forget to thank Doug Coppock for suggesting today's Good Word.)
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misterdoe
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Re: Awkward

Postby misterdoe » Thu Feb 12, 2015 10:53 pm

I remember wondering if it had anything to do with the now-extinct great auk, generally described as a rather awkward animal, though it was hard to see where the -ward would fit in grammatically.


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