Abbey’s words

I finished reading “Desert Solitaire” by Edward Abbey yesterday. Wow. I wrote a brief review of the book, but what I want to focus on here are five words I learned from the book.

  • diapason: an organ stop sounding a main register of flue pipes; poetic/literary: the entire compass, range, or scope of something
  • panegyric: a public speech or published text in praise of someone or something (this word ably describes the book and its relationship to the desert)
  • pellucid: translucently clear (from Latin ‘pellucidus’, from ‘perlucere’ = “shine through”)
  • usufructuary: a person who has the right to enjoy the products of property he does not own (in Abbey’s usage, he was a usufructuary in Arches National Park, able to explore and enjoy the park although he did not own it)
  • vermiculate: full of worms (this one I could guess from the “vermi” prefix) (he used it figuratively, to describe the appearance of some blobby, twisted sandstone forms — I know exactly what he means)

These might be tricky to work into an everyday usage, but I’ll see what I can do!

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I knew this already. I learned something new!