| Advertisement | | | Word of the Day for Wednesday, April 26, 2006 | | equipoise \EE-kwuh-poiz; EK-wuh-\, noun: 1. A state of being equally balanced; equilibrium; -- as of moral, political, or social interests or forces. 2. Counterbalance. | | | What matters is the poetry, and the truest readings of it "are those which are sensitive to the strangeness of Marvell's genius: its delicate equipoise, held between the sensual and the abstract, its refusal to treat experience too tidily, the uncanny tremor of implication that makes the poems' lucid surfaces shimmer with a sense of something undefined and undefinable just beneath." -- James A. Winn, "Tremors of Implication", New York Times, July 9, 2000 I cannot see how the unequal representation which is given to masses on account of wealth becomes the means of preserving the equipoise and the tranquillity of the commonwealth. -- Edmund Burke, "Reflections on The Revolution In France" Our little lives are kept in equipoise By opposite attractions and desires. -- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, "Haunted Houses" | |
| Equipoise is equi-, "equal" + poise, from Middle English poisen, "to balance, weigh," from Old French peser, pois-, ultimately from Latin pensare, "to weigh." Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for equipoise | | Yesterday's Word - Previous Words - Help | | Please visit our Sponsors | | | | |
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Keep a civil tongue.