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Jun 3, 2026
This week’s themeBook titles that became words This week’s words deipnosophist Lord of the Flies
The original UK book cover
Cover art: Anthony Gross Wordsmith Games
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargLord of the Flies
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: Marked by a breakdown of order into cruelty, chaos, and savagery.
ETYMOLOGY:
After Lord of the Flies (1954), a novel by William Golding. Earliest
documented use: 1969.
NOTES:
In the novel, a group of English schoolboys are
stranded on an uninhabited island after a plane crash. At first, they try
to establish rules and live together peacefully, but their makeshift
society descends into cruelty and savagery. The title refers to Beelzebub, from Hebrew ba’al-zebub (lord of flies), the name of a Philistine god of the city of Ekron. In later Christian tradition, Beelzebub became identified with the prince of demons, or Satan. USAGE:
“[HackForums] members were a shade more advanced in their skills and a
shade murkier in their ethics: a Lord of the Flies collection of young
hackers seeking to impress one another with nihilistic feats of
exploitation.” Andy Greenberg; The Confessions Of Marcus Hutchins; Wired (San Francisco, California); Jun 2020. “[David Cameron, Boris Johnson, et al, were] all members of a secret society, a Lord of the Flies rich-boy club known for spectacular drunkenness and casual destructiveness.” Michael Wolff; Cameron Obscura; Vanity Fair (New York); Apr 2010. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
There are many forms of patriotism and telling the truth is one of them.
-Anderson Cooper, journalist and commentator (b. 3 Jun 1967)
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