Sunday, March 10, 2013

Redundant

re·dun·dant  

/riˈdəndənt/
Adjective
  1. No longer needed or useful; superfluous.
  2. (of words or data) Able to be omitted without loss of meaning or function.
Wow, what an awful word!  In Australia, when you are laid off your job, you are made "redundant".
Awhile back, the govt here made about 14,000 people "redundant"!  It seems to be a trend here lately....

ASSIDUOUS

"If you call someone assiduous, it's a compliment. It means they're careful, methodical and very persistent. Good detectives are classically assiduous types.

Assiduous comes from two Latin words: assiduus, meaning "busy incessant, continual or constant," and assidere, meaning "to sit down to" something. (Funnily enough, we also get the word sedentary, meaning someone who doesn't move around much, a lazy couch potato, from this same last word.) Although we tend to think of sedentary types as being the very opposite of assiduous ones, many assiduous activities (like writing, thinking, or detective work) are best done sitting in a chair."

I quite like this word, assiduous!