But that doesn't mean a particularly highfalutin word can't stop me in my tracks now and then. As if I needed more reasons to love Emma Thompson, she had to go out and break out a $1.10-word in her Proust Questionnaire answers for Vanity Fair this month.
Things were going along jovially, with a bit of Emma's trademark wit and good-natured self deprecation. (She called her “dimply thighs” the thing she liked least about her appearance and “cleanliness” the most overrated virtue.). And then, holy Shakespeare, out came the big one.
What is the quality you most like in a man?Time to break out the Merriam-Webster again:
Uxoriousness.
Uxoriousness: adj.
“excessively fond of or submissive to a wife”
How could you not swoon? How could you not absolutely swoon?
thanx for another great article and the most beautiful picture of emma!
ReplyDelete;) babs
Well damn...
ReplyDeleteAmanda
She was also in the interview section of Parade Magazine this weekend!
ReplyDeleteAfter being married to, and divorced from, KB I can well imagine her leanings toward this particular trait.
ReplyDeletePlus, I like the showy words, when they fit. In this case it's like putting a bonnet and a bow on pussy-whipped.
uxorious eh? I'll be adopting that one! I think that I am on the receiving end, which is not something to complain about! Thanks.
ReplyDeletewow, what a great word!
ReplyDeleteI love theater and when I heard there was going to be a "darker" remake of the My Fair Lady musical, I just about vomited. And then I heard Ms. Emma will be writing it...now I'm intrigued. hmm..
I picked up the magazine, flipped through it (because I like VF, I do, but wasn't sure Angie's cover had me convinced) and when I was about to put it down, I checked the back page (where there is always fun in every magazine), saw Emma, squealed like a little girl grabbing "Teen Beat" with the Jonas Brothers on the cover, and told the cashier "Vanity Fair just sold me a magazine because of one page. They used Emma Thompson to get me. And they won."
ReplyDeleteOh clever, clever Vanity Fair. Clever, evil, Vanity Fair ;)
ET was always high on my list of "Girls I Liked Before I Knew I Liked Girls."
ReplyDeleteThanks, doll.
Oh, of course. From the Latin uxor, meaning wife.
ReplyDeleteHaha! I know exactly what you mean. I had to start dumbing down my speaking when I started working at a gym. The other personal trainers look at my funny when I use such high-falutin' gems as "vitality." No joke. I actually had one of the other trainers ask me what "vitality" means.
I did not go into the Latin roots of that word, however. I save that only for you, Ms. Snarker.
i thank you very much for the word of the day. as always, i learn best when the lesson is reinforced with visual supplements.
ReplyDeletei deeply appreciate the visual supplement for the lesson here.
Well... Hellooooow.
ReplyDeleteThat sexy pic of Emma got me, uh, uxo-somethin.
:D
i second that, bisquiat...
ReplyDeleteET = yummy
i love your place, ms. snarker!
okay, i actually knew what uxoriousness meant before this. Or at least recognized the root word uxor. I blame the fact I know Latin and am a lapsed medievalist here.
ReplyDeleteBut I do love her. (In a straight gal way) And that pic. is very hawt.
uxorious... I like that. I'd say I'll try and remember it but I have forgotten how it is spelt in 10 mins and give myself an hour before I've forgotten it altogether. Lol.
ReplyDeleteLove learning new English words - and this one rolls off the tongue deliciously.
ReplyDeleteBut am I right in correcting you that uxoriousness is not an adjective?
Thank you, a first time reader, directed here through the linster's blog post at AE.
ROLF! I did the exact same thing as you did. I Webstered the word right away.
ReplyDeleteAnd indeed...eloquent ladies are sexy.
ooh! Super duper! I LIKE a well versed woman. And Emma has so much more.
ReplyDeleteDid I ever tell you about my dream where she was my best friend...sort of...? Never mind.y