Today's new word is DOYENNE
This word, which means a senior member of a group, is the feminine of doyen, and comes from the French word meaning "leader of 10" and I believe it shares some ancestors with dean. I joted it down and forgot to note where I'd seen it, but here's a nice juicy phrase I read in a review of the biography of Brooke Astor who lived to be 105. I guess she was in pretty good shape until she was 100 . . . For that birthday party guest list she wanted "99 men and me." She had a thing for Charlie Rose.
"Mrs. Astor Regrets" is a saga about sex, avarice, jealousy, betrayal, infidelity, alcoholism, social position, gossip, power, vanity and ultimately money - lots of it, and Brooke Russell Kuser Marshall Astor, the doyenne or queen of New York City, is at the center of it all.
And here's a two-fer--
denizen was also in that review, so I checked to be sure I was using it correctly--means one who frequents a place.
2 comments:
Murray sez:
When I was in high school we had an english teacher that we thought physically was a doyen but mentally was a doyenne.
And we are all so thankful we had such an excellent English teacher, aren't we?
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