Remember, the basic meaning of Latin extra is not "more," but "outside." E.g. extraterrestrial, extrasensory, extralegal. Extraordinary means outside the ordinary, not more ordinary. And it does not imply magnificence. People can be extraordinarily stupid and buildings can be extraordinarily ugly.Why does extraordinary mean something magnificent and not something extra ordinary?
"Genitals" is used in place of the more proper "genitalia," a Latin word in which the plural sense is not so prominent. The primary meaning is "external sex organs," but it's also used to mean all of them, so it's not incorrect to use in the plural for female anatomy.And do women have genitals? Its plural and I don't think I have plural.
You're mixing up your parts of speech. "Genital" is an adjective in the phrase "genital warts." Admittedly that may not be obvious since English is an analytic language and we shove nouns together all the time... bird seed, dog house, business expense, railroad track, etc. But in this case "genital" is taken from the Latin adjective.so its not genital warts but genitals warts?
Uh, where do you live? It's the Brits who pronounce it as two syllables: strawd-nry. We speak the language more slowly in America and everybody I've ever known says "extra-ordinary," five syllables just like it's written.but why is it pronounced ex-traor-din-ary and not extra-ordinary?
That would be "magnificend," like "addend" and "subtrahend."Spider, doesn't magnificent mean "need to be magnified"?
Real cute! I'll have to start a thread for imaginative etymologies."magnificent" is a conjoined word, like a lot of Latin words we still use. From magnus, meaning great or large, and ficus, a fig-tree. The Latin word magnificus means "great fig-tree". But it came to mean "important" or "grand", or "impressive", sort of thing
in America and everybody I've ever known says "extra-ordinary," five syllables just like it's written.