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wit

(n): a message whose ingenuity or verbal skill or incongruity has the power to evoke laughter
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7 days ago bilby said:

See citation on citation.

7 days ago qroqqa said:

The very last trace of an infinitive verb in English. The expression 'to wit' is no longer analysable in Present-Day English, but the 'wit' part was once the infinitive of a verb meaning "know" whose gerund-participle survives in the adjectives 'witting' and 'unwitting', and whose first and third person singular present 'wot' survives in the archaic exclamations 'I wot not' and 'God wot'.

The reason present tense 'wot' lacks an -s in the third person is that it is, if you go far enough back up the Indo-European family tree, a perfect tense. The present tense meant see (cf. Latin video) and the perfect "I have seen" was used for the meaning "I know".

5 months ago frindley said:

John Donne: in whom wit is truth.

8 months ago brtom said:

For my part, I own, madam, wit loses its respect with me, when I see it in company with malice.
Sheridan, School for Scandal

10 months ago kewpid said:

“…nothing more than an incisive observation, humorously phrased and delivered with impeccable timing.”

I think its a pretty valuable attribute.

10 months ago maesepedro said: Also like the phrase "to wit" without being clear exactly what it means...

11 months ago SonofGroucho said:

Sarcasm is said to be the lowest form, but I quite like it!

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heather (192 words)
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