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Posted: Wed Jan 14, 2009 8:05 am
audacious • aw-DAY-shus • adjective
1 : daring, bold
2 : insolent
*3 : marked by originality and verve
Example Sentence: The band has been making original and creative music for well over ten years, but their latest album is by far their most audacious to date.
Did you know? Shakespeare used "audacious" seven times in his plays. That in itself wasn't exactly an act of bold originality. The word, which comes from the Latin root "audac-" ("bold"), had been around for decades. But the Bard was the first to use "audacious" in its "insolent" sense ("Obey, audacious traitor; kneel for grace," Henry VI Part 2), and he may have been the first to use the adverb "audaciously." "Audacious" itself was something of an innovation in the 16th century: it was one of the earliest "-acious" words in English. Subsequently, we've added lots of "-acious" adjectives to our lexicon, including "pugnacious," "loquacious," "voracious," and even, in the 19th century, "bodacious" (which is most likely a combination of "bold" and "audacious").
*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
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Posted: Thu Jan 15, 2009 6:31 am
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Posted: Thu Jan 15, 2009 9:12 pm
the noble bard was himself audaciously innovative with language.
he singlehandedly invented more new usage at one time than any other writer, i would say.
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