Monday, November 12, 2007

WORD A DAY

PURPORT: to convey or profess outwardly as the meaning or intention: claim

The verb "purport" may be more familiar nowadays, but the noun "purport" (a synonym of "gist," as in "gave the purport of her speech in a few words") is a bit older. The noun passed into English from Anglo-French in the mid 1400s. Anglo-French also had the verb purporter (meaning both "to carry" and "to mean"), which itself combined the prefix pur- ("throroughly") and the verb porter ("to carry"). But English-speakers apparently waited another six decades to employ the verb. The first recorded use of "purport" as a verb doen'st appear until 1528.

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