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Bon mot - 名言警句
Bon mot (Noun) 名言警句===============
A clever saying; a witticism.
妙語聰明的說法;智慧之言
Pronunciation: [b?n)-'mo]
Definition 1: A witticism, a clever or witty turn of phrase.
Usage 1: The plural of today's word is "bon mots," pronounced the same as the singular. A bon mot is a particularly well-turned phrase, distinguished more by wittiness than by profundity, such as Adlai Stevenson's famous line, "A politician is a man who approaches every question with an open mouth." An epithet is an adjectival characterization of someone, as Lyndon Johnson's characterization of a senatorial colleague as someone who could not chew gum and walk at the same time. Apothegms and maxims are more purposeful philosophical opinions, e.g. Lord Acton's famous apothegm, "Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely" or Charlemagne's profound maxim, "To know another language is to have a second soul."
Suggested usage: People who craft bon mots are always a pleasure: "Sam Westgate fights the anfractuosities of the federal bureaucracy with a quiver of finely crafted bon mots," implies that Dr. Westgate loves the cleverly turned phrase. He might even use this one, again by the past master, Adlai Stevenson: "In America any boy may become president; I suppose that's the risk he takes."
Etymology: Today's word is a French expression meaning "good word" or "good saying," based on "bon" from Latin bonus梕ven in English something quite "good," plus mot "word, saying, motto" (or, as the Italians say, "motto"), from late Latin *mottum from muttire "to murmur, utter." Latin bonus "good" derives from an original root *d[e]w- with a variable [e] plus the suffix -en, also the source of bene "well," found in "benefit," "bened
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