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Part 4 of a 5-part series on forgotten verbs
Perquest means to search.
You might say, "Chad had to perquest his trashcan to find my email."
Canadian criminal law today still refers to a warranted search as a perquisition.
Part 3 of a 5-part series on forgotten verbs
Gignate means to produce.
You might say, "Chad gignated 200 leads with his email."
Nowadays we honor the verb's Latin root, oriri, to begin, and only say originate.
Part 2 of a 5-part series on forgotten verbs
Perstringe means to put down or rebuke.
You might say, "Chad was fired after he perstringed his employer on Facebook."
The verb derives from the Latin word perstringo, to reprimand.
Part 1 of a 5-part series on forgotten verbs
English comprises more than half a million words.
Many are undeservedly forgotten.
Attinge means to touch or influence.
You might say, "Chad's post about great customer service attinged thousands of users."
We preserve the verb's Latin root whenever we use the word tangent.
In Contagious, Wharton School marketing professor Jonah Berger offers a science-based sequel to Malcolm Gladwell's The Tipping Point, the 2000 book that put the word "viral" in everyone's vocabulary.
In 200 pages, Berger examines the "six principles of contagiousness."
He asks readers to visualize the principles as the six "ingredients" baked into every piece of viral content.
- Berger claims viral content is spread because it makes carriers "look smart," a facet of that content he calls "social currency."
- Viral content also contains "triggers," cues to some outside world; when people enter that world, they're spurred to talk about the content (for example, during breakfast-hours, Tweets mentioning "Cheerios" spike because the cereal is inextricably linked to that time of day).
- Viral content pulls the heartstrings. Content that evokes strong "emotion" (the threat of a tax increase, for example) is apt to spread.
- Viral content always has a "public" aspect; people witness others engaged and follow the herd.
- Viral content has "practical value," which encourages people to pass it on.
- Viral content tells "stories," prompting people, like the poet Homer, to recite that content.
For readability, Contagious doesn't compare to The Tipping Point; and whether you master Berger's "recipe" will depend on your culinary skills.
But, as chefs like to say, "Great food begins with great ingredients."