Sunday, November 08, 2009

TEN LATIN PHRASES YOU PRETEND TO UNDERSTAND

The MENTAL FLOSS MAGAZINE is running a list this week -- ten Latin phrases you pretend to understand. I'll share a photo and two phrases daily for the next five days.

This photo was taken yesterday as I was wrapping up a walk at Tyler State Park. It was getting dark quickly. The clouds were pink and the sky was so blue. The silhouette against the color was quite striking.

Here are the first two Latin phrases:
1. Caveat Emptor(KAV-ee-OT emp-TOR): “Let the buyer beware”
Before money-back guarantees and 20-year warranties, caveat emptor was indispensable advice for the consumer. These days, it’d be more fitting to have it tattooed on the foreheads of used-car salesmen, infomercial actors, and prostitutes. For extra credit points, remember that caveat often makes solo appearances at cocktail parties as a fancy term for a warning or caution. Oh, and just so you know, caveat lector means “let the reader beware.”

2. Persona Non Grata(puhr-SOH-nah non GRAH-tah): “An unacceptable person”
Remember your old college buddy, the one everybody called Chugger? Now picture him at a debutante ball, and you’ll start to get a sense of someone with persona non grata status. The term is most commonly used in diplomatic circles to indicate that a person is unwelcome due to ideological differences or a breach of trust. Sometimes, the tag refers to a pariah, a ne’er-do-well, a killjoy, or an interloper, but it’s always subjective. Back in 2004, Michael Moore was treated as a persona non grata at the Republican National Convention. Bill O’Reilly would experience the same at Burning Man.

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