• omphaloskepsis •
Pronunciation: ahm-fê-lê-skep-sis • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Noun, mass.
Meaning: 1. The contemplation of the navel as part of meditation. 2. Self-absorption, egocentrism. 3. Inertia, lack of activity or motivation.
Notes: A person who contemplates his or her navel is an omphaloskeptic who behaves omphaloskeptically. There is hardly a funnier part of the body than the navel, which in Greek is omphalos, and it has played a large role in humorous word formation over the centuries. Omphalomancy [ahm-fê-lah-mên-see] is the art of foretelling the future by reading the navel while an omphalopsychic is someone who induces a hypnotic state by gazing at the navel. Let's not even get into omphalic oranges.
In Play: Since few of us engage in omphaloskepsis in the literal sense of the word, let's focus on the two figurative senses, beginning with self-absorption: "General Payne lives in such a fog of omphaloskepsis he hardly knows anyone else exists." Navel contemplation also implies inactivity: "Saturdays are my days of complete omphaloskepsis; don't ask me to do anything."
Word History: The oldest form of a word for "navel" that we can reconstruct for Indo-European languages is *nobh-. With the suffix -l it would become in English exactly what we find: navel. However, with metathesis, a switching of the positions of the [n] and [o], we would get *ombh-, which would turn into the first three letters of Greek omphalos "navel". In Latin the root changed slightly, giving umbilicus "navel", a word English borrowed and modified slightly for its phrase, umbilical cord, the cord attached to the navel. (Today's Good Word resulted from a suggestion by Luciano Eduardo de Oliveira in the Alpha Agora.)
OMPHALOSKEPSIS
- Dr. Goodword
- Site Admin
- Posts: 7465
- Joined: Wed Feb 02, 2005 9:28 am
- Location: Lewisburg, PA
- Contact:
OMPHALOSKEPSIS
Last edited by Dr. Goodword on Wed Mar 03, 2010 11:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
• The Good Dr. Goodword
-
- Grand Panjandrum
- Posts: 1464
- Joined: Tue Feb 15, 2005 3:31 pm
- Location: Botucatu - SP Brazil
I think that omphaloskepsis is in the eye of the onlooker. It is true that I think alot of speculation and "contemplation" is a bunch of nonsense, but then we all have our own lists of important things for someone else to think about, and our own lists of things that we think are a total waste of time and thought.
Apo
Apo
'Experiments are the only means of knowledge at our disposal. The rest is poetry, imagination.' -Max Planck
Return to “Good Word Discussion”
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 4 guests