PERUSE
Posted: Wed Aug 13, 2008 11:44 pm
• peruse •
Pronunciation: pê-ruz • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Verb, transitive
Meaning: To read and consider thoroughly.
Notes: Today's Good Word may already be an oxymoron, a word with two antonymous meanings, for many people in the US use it to mean "glance over quickly without thinking". 66% of the experts on the American Heritage Dictionary committee think the meaning "glance over quickly" is inappropriate. Dr. Goodword tends to agree that it is best to keep this a monosemantic (one-meaning) word. Oxymora too often lead to perverse misunderstandings. The noun is perusal.
In Play: Remember, we are trying to avoid the new meaning for this word creeping into US usage: "Honey, I've glanced over these insurance documents but haven't had time to peruse them. Could I sign them later?" Remember, peruse means to read thoroughly: "No, officer, I must admit I haven't perused all the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; I have only skimmed over a few."
Word History: Peruse comes from the Latin prefix per- "thoroughly, through and through" (from the preposition per "through") + usus "used", the past participle of the irregular verb uti "to use". We don't find a complete parent, such as *peruti, in Classical Latin; it only begins showing up in post-Classical Latin in Britain in the 14th century. Norman French by that time had developed peruser "to examine, interrogate", the direct origin of today's Good Word. The meaning of the French word apparently developed into "examine a book carefully" in English. (Now that you have perused today's Good Word, let's all thank Carol Ann Kopp for suggesting it.)
Pronunciation: pê-ruz • Hear it!
Part of Speech: Verb, transitive
Meaning: To read and consider thoroughly.
Notes: Today's Good Word may already be an oxymoron, a word with two antonymous meanings, for many people in the US use it to mean "glance over quickly without thinking". 66% of the experts on the American Heritage Dictionary committee think the meaning "glance over quickly" is inappropriate. Dr. Goodword tends to agree that it is best to keep this a monosemantic (one-meaning) word. Oxymora too often lead to perverse misunderstandings. The noun is perusal.
In Play: Remember, we are trying to avoid the new meaning for this word creeping into US usage: "Honey, I've glanced over these insurance documents but haven't had time to peruse them. Could I sign them later?" Remember, peruse means to read thoroughly: "No, officer, I must admit I haven't perused all the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; I have only skimmed over a few."
Word History: Peruse comes from the Latin prefix per- "thoroughly, through and through" (from the preposition per "through") + usus "used", the past participle of the irregular verb uti "to use". We don't find a complete parent, such as *peruti, in Classical Latin; it only begins showing up in post-Classical Latin in Britain in the 14th century. Norman French by that time had developed peruser "to examine, interrogate", the direct origin of today's Good Word. The meaning of the French word apparently developed into "examine a book carefully" in English. (Now that you have perused today's Good Word, let's all thank Carol Ann Kopp for suggesting it.)