07Sep September 7, 2006 – Pervicacious
Pervicacious \puhr-vih-KAY-shuhs\, adjective:
Refusing to change one’s ideas, behavior, etc.; stubborn; obstinate.
In fact, I’m a word nerd. I get a kick out of tossing a few odd ones intomy column, just to see if the pervicacious editors will weed them out.
— Michael Hawley, “Things That Matter: Waiting for Linguistic Viagra”, Technology Review, June, 2001
One of the most pervicacious young creatures that ever was heard of.
— Samuel Richardson, Clarissa
The language of the bureaucrats and administrators must needs be recognized as an outgrowth of legal parlance. There is no other way to explain itspervading, pervicacious and pernicious meanderings.
— New York Law Journal, May 27, 1909
Pervicacious is from Latin pervicax, pervicac-, “stubborn, headstrong,” from root pervic- of pervincere, “to carry ones point, maintain ones opinion,” from per-, “through, thoroughly” + vincere, “to conquer, prevail against” + the suffix -ious, “characterized by, full of.”
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for pervicacious
No Matches. I am going to use “stubborn” because the phrase is too long.
Yay for Stubborn Clay
I WON’T GIVE YOU THIS LINK!
I want it NOW! Seen it before, but that doesn’t make it unfunny!
YOU CAN’T MAKE ME GIVE IT TO YOU