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🗓️ 24 November 2023
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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 24, 2023 is:
nebbish • \NEB-ish\ • noun
Nebbish refers to a timid, meek, or ineffectual person.
// Considered a bit of a nebbish by her colleagues, she surprised everyone by speaking up boldly against the proposed changes at the meeting.
Examples:
“[Actor, Paul] Rudd is outstanding, as he toys with his own likability in his performance. Initially, he uses his Paul Rudd charm to persuade Marty [Markowitz, character] and us, that ‘Dr. Ike’ is a good man whose goal is to help this poor nebbish. We all get swept up in his promise not to let people use Marty, and he lets his wife and his friends think he’s performing a mitzvah by bringing the introverted Marty out of his shell.” — Matthew Gilbert, The Boston Globe, 17 Jan. 2023
Did you know?
“It looks like Pa isn't anything like the nebbish Ma is always making him out to be.” Sounds like poor Pa got a bum rap, at least according to a 1951 book review that appeared in The New York Times. The unfortunate Pa unwittingly demonstrates much about the etymology of nebbish, which comes from the Yiddish word nebekh, meaning “poor” or “unfortunate.” In keeping with the term’s semantic timidity, its journey from Yiddish to English wasn’t accomplished in a single bold leap. In the earliest known English example of the word, it’s an adjective meaning “harmless or ineffectual.” That mid-19th century use was joined in the early 20th century by the noun we’re familiar with today. Along the way, nebbish has also been used in English as an interjection expressing dismay, pity, sympathy, or regret. The English adjective and interjection are too rare to be included in most general-use English dictionaries, but the noun has made a place for itself in the common lexicon, proving that it’s less of a nebbish than the timid and meek types it refers to.
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0:00.0 | It's Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 24th. |
0:11.0 | Today's word is nebish, spelled N-E I S H. Nebish is a noun. It refers to a timid, meek or ineffectual person. |
0:21.0 | Here's the word used in a |
0:23.7 | sentence from the Boston Globe by Matthew Gilbert. |
0:27.2 | Actor Paul Rudd is outstanding as he toys with his own |
0:30.9 | likeability in his performance. |
0:33.4 | Initially he uses his Paul Rudd charm |
0:36.1 | to persuade Mardi and us that Dr. Ike is a good man whose goal |
0:41.0 | is to help this poor nebish. We all get swept up in his promise not to let |
0:46.8 | people use Marty, and he lets his wife and his friends think he's performing a mitzvah |
0:52.2 | by bringing the introverted Mardi out of his shell. |
0:55.8 | A book review that appeared in 1951 in the New York Times included this sentence. |
1:01.8 | It looks like Pa isn't anything like the Nebish Ma is always making him out to be. |
1:07.0 | The unfortunate Pa unwittingly demonstrates much about the etymology of the word nebish, which comes from the Yiddish word |
1:16.2 | Nebec, meaning poor or unfortunate. In keeping with the terms semantic timidity, its journey from Yiddish to English wasn't accomplished |
1:26.0 | in a single bold leap. |
1:28.5 | In the earliest known English example of the word, it's an adjective meaning harmless and ineffectual. That mid-19th |
1:36.7 | century use was joined in the early 20th century by the noun we're familiar with today. |
1:42.1 | Along the way, Nebbish has also been by the noun we're familiar with today. |
1:43.0 | Along the way, Nebish has also been used in English as an interjection expressing dismay, pity, |
1:49.1 | sympathy, or regret. |
1:50.9 | The English adjective and interjection are too rare to be included in most general use English dictionaries, |
... |
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