noun
the body of persons entitled to vote in an election.
Electorate is composed of two elements derived from Latin. The first is elector voter, from Late Latin 襲梭襲釵喧棗娶 chooser, formed from 襲梭勳眶梗娶梗 to pluck out, pick out, choose and –tor, a suffix forming agent nouns. The second is –ate, a suffix denoting office (or person performing it), function, institution, collective body, etc., as in professorate (the office of professor, group of professors); –ate is ultimately from Latin –櫻喧喝莽, as seen in augur櫻喧喝莽 the office of augur or sen櫻喧喝莽 senate (of Rome). Electorate is first attested in English the late 17th century.
At that time, the elector in electorate referred to a very different voter than the word evokes today: an Elector (German 鬼喝娶款羹娶莽喧) was a German prince of the Holy Roman Empire who could cast a vote in the election of the German king (Emperor). Elector was a powerful office until the dissolution of the Holy Roman Empire in 1806; the territory the electors oversaw was their electorate, e.g., Elector of Cologne. It wasnt the late 19th century that electorate was recorded as body of persons entitled to vote in an electiona group that was dramatically, and finally, expanded to include women in the U.S. with the certification on August 26, 1920, of the Nineteenth Amendment, which enshrined womens suffrage in the Constitution.
The passage of the Nineteenth Amendment nearly doubled the size of the electorate in the United States.
… the views of Democrats on social media often bear little resemblance to those of the wider Democratic electorate.
noun
Grammar.
a compound word neither element of which is subordinate to the other, as bittersweet.
Dvandva, literally meaning a pair, is a Sanskrit technical term used exclusively in grammar and linguistics. (By the end of the second millennium b.c., Hindu Brahmans had invented and developed the science of descriptive linguistics, including phonology, phonetics, metrics, grammar, and etymology, in order to preserve the correct pronunciation and oral transmission of the Vedas). Dvandva is a reduplication of dva two, closely related to Latin duo, Greek 餃羸棗 (also 餃羸 and 餃羸滄梗), Slavic (Czech) dva, Germanic (Gothic) twa, and Old Irish da, all derived from Proto-Indo-European duwo. Dvandva entered English in the 19th century.
These days, it’s hard to tell leftists and liberals apart without an agenda. Hence the increasing popularity of ”liberal-leftist,” which merges categories on the model of compounds like ”toaster-oven” and ”owner-occupier.” (Linguists call those ”dvandvas,” a term invented by the Sanskrit grammarians.)
Dvandva compounds can be doubly pluralized, but only when the first noun is irregular: men-children, menfish, menservants, gentlemen-farmers, women writers, and women-doctors, but not boys-kinds, girlsfriends, or players-coaches.
noun
Slang.
a relationship or association between people who text each other frequently, but rarely if ever interact with each other in person: I thought he was interested in me, but we never even went outit was just a textlationship.
In English, the consonant cluster –xtl– in textlationship is awkward and rare.Textlationship is a neologism composed of text (message) and (re)lationship. The electronic medium is new, but a relationship, especially a romantic one, carried on at a distance through letters, has a long history. The word喧梗單喧梭硃喧勳棗紳莽堯勳梯泭entered English in the early 21st century.
Harrys cottoning onto a textlationship might add meaning to one of his other recent stuntsdashing across the finish line of a Brazilian charity run … wearing a paper mask of his brothers face. Let the soap opera begin!
Friendships can dwindle to textlationships, but its especially frustrating when a former or potential lover keeps you at arms length.