A.Word.A.Day |
About | Media | Search | Contact |
|
Home
|
Jun 4, 2026
This week’s themeBook titles that became words This week’s words deipnosophist Lord of the Flies Hudibrastic
Title page of the 1674 collected edition of parts I & II of Hudibras
Image: Wikimedia Wordsmith Games
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargHudibrastic
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: Mock-heroic; playfully burlesque or satirical. noun: A piece of verse or writing in this style. ETYMOLOGY:
After Hudibras (published in three parts in 1663, 1664, and 1678), a
mock-heroic satirical poem by Samuel Butler. Earliest documented use: 1712.
NOTES:
Butler’s Hudibras follows a pompous knight and his squire through
comic misadventures, satirizing the religious and political quarrels of his
time. Its rollicking style gave us the word Hudibrastic to describe a
mock-heroic verse, often in rhyming eight-syllable couplets.
USAGE:
“But so far from writing a panegyric, he would scourge the Province
with the lash of a Hudibrastic as a harlot is scourged at the public post.” John Barth; Sot-Weed Factor; Doubleday; 1960. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Live a balanced life. Learn some and think some, and draw and paint and
sing and dance and play and work every day some. -Robert Fulghum, author
(b. 4 Jun 1937)
|
|
© 1994-2026 Wordsmith