Word of the Day
: July 25, 2010poetaster
playWhat It Means
: an inferior poet
poetaster in Context
"Germaine Greer, Chair Of Judges For The National Poetry Competition 2000, Invites Entries From Readers, But Be Warned: Poetasters Need Not Apply" (Headline, The [London] Independent, May 7, 2000)
Did You Know?
In Latin, the suffix "-aster" indicates partial resemblance. In both Latin and English, that often translates to "second-rate," or maybe even "third-rate." Not surprisingly, "poetaster" often goes hand in hand with "doggerel," meaning "verse marked by triviality or inferiority." "Most of the people who send me thick sheaves of handwritten or word-processed doggerel," Ms. Greer tells us in the Independent article we quote above, "appear never to have read any poetry, good or bad.... Every week poetasters, like literary flashers seeking to amaze and appal hapless passers-by with the sight of their grey flaccidities, send their effusions to people like me." Are there any other kinds of "-asters" out there? Yes indeed -- we have criticasters, philosophasters, and politicasters, among others.
More Words of the Day
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May 03
sleuth
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May 02
ziggurat
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May 01
convoluted
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Apr 30
insouciance
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Apr 29
furtive
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Apr 28
alacrity