Monday, June 4, 2012

Word of the Day for Monday, June 4, 2012

histrionics \his-tree-ON-iks\,
noun:
1. Behavior or speech for effect, as insincere or exaggerated expression of an emotion.
2. Dramatic representation; theatricals; acting.

You are constantly talking about Beate's histrionics, her showing off. -- Alberto Moravia, "1934"

Of course it is not only southern writers, of lyrical bent, who engage in such histrionics and shout, "Look at me!" Perhaps it is a parable of all artists. -- Tennessee Williams, "New Selected Essays"

Though it sounds like the word history, histrionics has a different root. It comes from the Etruscan root histriōn- which meant "actor".

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