Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Word of the Day


dyslogistic \dis-luh-JIS-tik\,
adjective:
conveying disapproval or censure; not complimentary or eulogistic.

She had forgotten for the moment the Captain's invidious and dyslogistic employment of the Greek alphabet.
-- Michael Innes," Appleby's Answer"

One answer lies in a less well-known but equally important countertradition, the dyslogistic school of memoir written by former officials who present themselves as disillusioned innocents.
-- Jacob Heilbrunn, "Not My Fault," The New York Times Sunday Book Review, June 22, 2008

Dyslogistic grew to prominence in the early 1800s, by applying the negative prefix dys- to a (eu)logistic expression of praise in speech or writing.

Dictionary.com Word of the Day