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Dec 5, 2025
This week’s theme
Words for people

This week’s words
quidam
rudesby
galoot
jobsworth
roturier

roturier
The Stone Breakers, 1849
Gustave Courbet

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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

roturier

PRONUNCIATION:
(ro-TOOR-ee-ay, -uhr)

MEANING:
noun: A person of low rank; a commoner.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Old French roture (newly cultivated land), from Latin rumpere (to break). Earliest documented use: 1586.

NOTES:
Old money has been looking down on new money, old land on new land, and old titles on new ones, since forever. Before the French Revolution rearranged the social furniture, a roturier was someone who held land by paying rent rather than by bloodline. It was considered a few rungs below the nobility who held feudal estates. The aristocrats broke bread; the roturiers broke soil. See also, plebeian.

USAGE:
“Propose to her, marry her. Her parents aren’t here any more to say you can’t because you’re a roturier.”
Peter De Polnay; The Loser; W.H. Allen; 1973.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Once a man has tasted freedom he will never be content to be a slave. That is why I believe that this frightfulness we see everywhere today is only temporary. Tomorrow will be better for as long as America keeps alive the ideals of freedom and a better life. -Walt Disney, entrepreneur and animator (5 Dec 1901-1966)

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