• censorious •
Pronunciation: sen-sor-ri-ês • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Adjective
Meaning: 1. Given to censure, faultfinding, hypercritical. 2. (Archaic) Befitting a censor.
Notes: English speakers have had a hard time trying to keep separate the adjectives for these nouns: censor, censure, and census. The are currently the following:
- censor - censorial
- censure - censorious
- census - censual
In Play: Remember, this adjective now is attached to censure: "In a censorious world, a woman as chaste as the driven snow will be unable to escape calumny." This adjective now defines people who are uptight: "Preston Starch was so censorious that he deplored women wearing shorts."
Word History: The three nouns that have troubled English speakers share the same source. So, let's choose censor since it underlies censorious. English just extended by one vowel Latin censorius "pertaining to a censor", hence "rigid, severe". Latin built its word on PIE k'ens-/k'ons- "to proclaim solemnly, announce", source also of Sanskrit samsayati "recites" and Old Bulgarian sęt" "say", where [ę] is a nasalized vowel that replaced [en]. No other evidence can be found in the Indo-European languages. (Now a note of gratitude to wordmaster George Kovac, a prolific habitué of the Agora, for noticing the problem with today's Good Word and bringing it to our attention.)