Complicit

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Complicit

Postby Dr. Goodword » Sun Aug 23, 2020 9:06 pm

• complicit •


Pronunciation: kêm-pli-sit • Hear it!

Part of Speech: Adjective

Meaning: Collusive, willingly involved in wrongdoing, in some way consciously assisting in wrongdoing.

Notes: This adjective is related to the verb comply, because the verb means "to accommodate, to act in accordance with" and complier is even more specific, meaning "accomplice". The adverb is complicitly and the noun, complicity .

In Play: Complicity may be used when we are not sure of the degree of collusion: "The media corporations are always as complicit in whatever results from political elections as the electorate." It may be used when we are sure: "Landowners who allow illegal dumping on their properties are considered complicit in the crime."

Word History: Today's Good Word is historically a back-formation from complicity, an anglicization of French complicité, a word based on Old French complice "accomplice, companion". French inherited this word from Late Latin complicem, the accusative of complex "closely associated, confederate". Complex is an adjective accompanying the verb complicare "to fold together", comprising com- "(together) with" + plicare "to fold, weave", inherited from PIE plek- "to braid, plait". We see the Greek renditions in plekein "to braid" and plektos "twisted". Plek- came to English through its Germanic ancestors as flax. But English didn't stop there; it borrowed from French, or directly from Latin, a host of words based on this PIE word: all words containing -plex, -plicate, or -plicit come from the same source.
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damoge
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Re: Complicit

Postby damoge » Mon Aug 24, 2020 12:17 pm

"Plek- came to English through its Germanic ancestors as flax."

This begs the question, does it not mean that along with "...all words containing -plex, -plicate, or -plicit..." we find words like
flex and flexible as well?
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Slava
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Re: Complicit

Postby Slava » Thu Dec 14, 2023 8:18 am

Rather a delayed response here, but yes, those words do fit in the pattern. It appears the root 'flectere' is considered of uncertain origin, but it makes perfect sense, given the relation of 'f' and 'p', and the closeness of the meanings, 'twist' and 'bend'.
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