A popular joke describes the danger of dihydrogen monoxide. It's claimed
that this colorless, odorless, and tasteless substance results in
thousands of deaths every year. Assorted other perils are cited, and
finally the reader is warned to stay away from it as far as possible.

The joke is that dihydrogen monoxide (H2O) is the chemical name of water
(for more fun, see http://www.dhmo.org ).

With their long, exotic-sounding names, chemicals often frighten us. Yet,
all of us (like everything else in the universe) are made up of thousands
of chemicals. No wonder, when we meet a person, the first thing we look
for is chemistry.

A number of words derived from chemical names have colored the English
language, as we shall see this week.


bromide (BRO-myd) noun

   1. A tired or meaningless remark.

   2. A tiresome or boring person.

[From bromine, from Greek bromos (stench).]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=bromide

In earlier times, potassium bromide used to be taken as a sedative. So any
statement that was intended to be soothing ("Don't worry, everything will
be OK.") acquired the name bromide. Eventually any commonplace or tired
remark and anyone uttering such remarks came to be known as a bromide.

The term was popularized in the title of Gelett Burgess's 1906 book
"How to be a Bromide". It was to promote this book that Burgess coined the
term "blurb".

-Anu Garg (garg wordsmith.org)

  "His daddy occasionally pops back in to dispense nonsensical bits of
   advice -- 'If you're not first, you're last' -- a bromide that the
   young Ricky Bobby adopts as his motto."
   Teresa Wiltz; Where There's Will; Washington Post; Aug 4, 2006.

Sponsors' messages:
Get down to brass tacks, put in your two cents.  Try Derivation, a fascinating
game about word and phrase origins. A great gift! http://entspire.com

Monthly French, German, Italian and Spanish cultural audio magazines for
intermediate-to-advanced learners. http://web.champs-elysees.com/wsmith1

............................................................................
I think the next best thing to solving a problem is finding some humor in
it. -Frank A. Clark, writer (1911- )

Discuss this week's words on our bulletin board: http://wordsmith.org/board

Remove, change address, gift subs: http://wordsmith.org/awad/subscriber.html

Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/bromide.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/bromide.ram

Permalink: http://wordsmith.org/words/bromide.html

This message was sent to "[email protected]".

Reply via email to