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Notes and Asides.


Dear Mr. Buckley: I respectfully note that you misused the word "uxorious ux·o·ri·ous  
adj.
Excessively submissive or devoted to one's wife.



[From Latin uxrius, from uxor, wife.
" in your column entitled "Pardon Clinton !#*!," which appeared in the Feb. 5 issue. "Uxorious" applies to a man who is excessively fond of his wife, but in your column you erroneously apply it to a woman's fondness for her husband-specifically to Mrs. Clinton's supposed fondness for Mr. Clinton.

But I sympathize entirely with the impulse informing your use of the word. There should be a word that means "excessively fond of one's husband."

(Make no mistake: This observation is prompted simply by my sense of justice, and in no way reflects on my own husband, who is a prince among men!)

Indeed, I have long marveled that Gloria Steinem, Patricia Ireland & Co. have not exploited the fact that English provides a word for a man who is excessively fond of his wife, but no comparable word for a wife whose affection for her husband exceeds his deserts, the gentlemen who codified cod·i·fy  
tr.v. cod·i·fied, cod·i·fy·ing, cod·i·fies
1. To reduce to a code: codify laws.

2. To arrange or systematize.
 our language apparently having deemed such a situation to be beyond the realm of possibility.

But then, of course, they never met Bill Clinton.

Cordially,

Dr. Brenda Megerle

Thousand Oaks, Calif.

Dear Mr. Buckley: In your column "Pardon Clinton !#*!," you discuss Mrs. Clinton's characterization of the impeachment impeachment, formal accusation issued by a legislature against a public official charged with crime or other serious misconduct. In a looser sense the term is sometimes applied also to the trial by the legislature that may follow.  proceedings as "a vast right-wing conspiracy "Vast right-wing conspiracy" was a phrase used by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton in 1998 in defense of her husband President Bill Clinton and his administration during the Lewinsky scandal, characterizing the Lewinsky charges as the latest in a long, organized, collaborative ." You go on to state, "We could smile at that kind of thing as nothing more than uxorious docility . . ."

The word "uxorious," from the Latin uxor (wife), means an excessive fondness for one's wife, with the negative connotation of "henpecked hen·peck  
tr.v. hen·pecked, hen·peck·ing, hen·pecks Informal
To dominate or harass (one's husband) with persistent nagging.
."

Surely you cannot apply this word to Mrs. Clinton! Or were you implying that the junior senator from New York's deference to her husband was a form of psychological self- mutilation Mutilation
See also Brutality, Cruelty.

Mutiny (See REBELLION.)

Absyrtus

hacked to death; body pieces strewn about. [Gk. Myth.: Walsh Classical, 3]

Agatha, St.

had breasts cut off. [Christian Hagiog.
?

Sincerely,

Raymond J. Heisler

Chicago, Ill.

Dear Mr. Heisler: Actually, I misused it, and there was mens rea in doing so. I mean, I knew that uxor is the wife, but I use(d) "uxorious" to suggest excessive docility in either direction, i.e., husband to wife, wife to husband. It is a liberty, but something less than a neologism A new word or new meaning for an existing word. The high-tech field routinely creates neologisms, especially new meanings. Years ago, there was no doubt that a "mouse" referred only to a furry, little rodent. .

Remember my rule, that for every word there was a felt need. And I felt (feel) the need to suggest the word as here used, and can find no other existing word that does it.

Cordially, WFB WFB Warhammer: Fantasy Battle (game)
WFB World Fellowship of Buddhists
WFB Wells Fargo Bank
WFB William Frank Buckley (founder and editor of National Review Magazine)
WFB WorkFlow Builder
 

Dear Mr. Buckley: In a recent column, "Pardon Clinton !#*!," you implied that President Clinton's wife (and I use the term loosely) was perhaps guilty of no more than "uxorious docility" when she classified Clinton's impeachment and the related uproar "all as the workings of a vast right-wing conspiracy." You then go on to further excoriate ex·co·ri·ate
v.
To scratch or otherwise abrade the skin by physical means.



ex·cori·a
 the Clintons for their continued obfuscations.

While I agreed with your mild castigation, I nonetheless had to pause. According to the American Heritage College Dictionary, the word "uxorious" means "excessively submissive or devoted to one's wife."

Allow me to suggest that the proper word in that phrase would be "uxorial ux·o·ri·al  
adj.
Of a wife; regarded as befitting a wife.



[From Latin uxrius, from uxor, wife.
," meaning "of a wife; regarded as befitting a wife."

When writing of the Clinton paterfamilias, one would indeed be hard pressed to find a word less appropriate than "uxorious."

Sorry for being so pedantic pe·dan·tic  
adj.
Characterized by a narrow, often ostentatious concern for book learning and formal rules: a pedantic attention to details.
, but I am bringing this up only because you are a member of the aforementioned dictionary's Usage Panel, and I would hate to see Florence King, also a member of the panel, reprimand you without fair warning (if she hasn't done so already!).

Humbly,

Mark G. Brennan

New York, N.Y.

Dear Mr. Brennan: Ah! You came up with it! Though "uxorial" is not quite the counterpart, is it? It doesn't carry the sense of excessive, going no further than dutiful.

Cordially,

-WFB
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2001, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:National Review
Article Type:Letter to the Editor
Date:Apr 16, 2001
Words:606
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