December 06, 2014 Word of the Day bouleversement ... - TopicsExpress



          

December 06, 2014 Word of the Day bouleversement ... \bool-vair-suh-MAHNG\ DEFINITION noun 1: reversal 2: a violent disturbance : disorder EXAMPLES The darkening sky prompted a bouleversement of the captains order to prepare to set sail. In fact, [Susan Sontag] had written two novels at the beginning of her career, in the sixties. She didnt like them much, so she became a critic, indeed, the most famous and influential young critic of the sixties and seventies, a central figure in the aesthetic bouleversement of that period.… — Joan Acocella, The New Yorker, January 10, 2005 DID YOU KNOW? English picked up bouleversement from French in the latter part of the 18th century (it ultimately traces to Middle French boule, meaning ball, and verser, meaning to overturn), and while not very common, it has steadily remained in use since that time. F. Scott Fitzgerald, for one, used it in his 1920 novel This Side of Paradise: For the second time in his life Amory had had a complete bouleversement and was hurrying into line with his generation. Both Fitzgeralds use and our first example sentence suggest the idea of turning something around, but as shown in our second example, some usage of bouleversement dispenses with this notion and instead implies a general kind of upheaval or dramatic change, as in a revolution. Merriam-Webster Online
Posted on: Sat, 06 Dec 2014 09:23:30 +0000

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