A.Word.A.Day |
About | Media | Search | Contact |
|
Home
|
Feb 3, 2026
This week’s themeWords formed in error This week’s words marquee
Paramount Theater, Seattle
Marquee, senses 1 & 2 Photo: Cindy Shebley
Field of the Cloth of Gold (detail)
c. 1545 Marquee, sense 3 Artist unknown
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargmarquee
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
From French marquise (wife of a marquis), taken as a plural in English
and made singular as marquee. Earliest documented use: 1690.
NOTES:
A marquise is the wife of a marquis, a nobleman who ranks below
a duke and above an earl.* English speakers assumed marquise (pronounced
mar-KEEZ) was a plural and created a singular: marquee. In the process,
a noblewoman lost her “s” and was promoted to a tent. This kind of misunderstanding made sense in an era when most people were illiterate and language was mainly an oral thing. It’s not clear why marquise came to mean a canopy, though the association with aristocratic splendor likely helped. The word still carries that whiff of luxury: marquise is also the name of a gemstone cut, and marquee now signals star power. *Why didn’t they make the order of those titles alphabetical? Think of the British schoolkids who may have to memorize (or memorise) them! Duke Earl Frince Grand duke Hiking [i, j, k, l, m left as an exercise for the reader] Marquis and so on. USAGE:
“[Tom] Trbojevic could earn a healthy pay packet as a marquee player.” Michael Carayannis and Brent Read; Turbo’s UK Shock for Manly; The Daily Telegraph (Surry Hills, Australia); Sep 12, 2025. See more usage examples of marquee in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Writers, like teeth, are divided into incisors and grinders. -Walter
Bagehot, journalist and businessman (3 Feb 1826-1877)
|
|
© 1994-2026 Wordsmith