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Dec 5, 2025
This week’s themeWords for people This week’s words quidam rudesby galoot jobsworth roturier
The Stone Breakers, 1849
Gustave Courbet This week’s comments AWADmail 1223 Next week’s theme Illustrated words A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargroturier
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A person of low rank; a commoner.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Old French roture (newly cultivated land), from Latin rumpere (to
break). Earliest documented use: 1586.
NOTES:
Old money has been looking down on new money, old land on new land,
and old titles on new ones, since forever. Before the French Revolution
rearranged the social furniture, a roturier was someone who held land by
paying rent rather than by bloodline. It was considered a few rungs below
the nobility who held feudal estates. The aristocrats broke bread; the
roturiers broke soil.
See also, plebeian.
USAGE:
“Propose to her, marry her. Her parents aren’t here any more to say
you can’t because you’re a roturier.” Peter De Polnay; The Loser; W.H. Allen; 1973. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Once a man has tasted freedom he will never be content to be a slave. That
is why I believe that this frightfulness we see everywhere today is only
temporary. Tomorrow will be better for as long as America keeps alive the
ideals of freedom and a better life. -Walt Disney, entrepreneur and
animator (5 Dec 1901-1966)
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