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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!magnus.acs.ohio-state.edu!usenet.ins.cwru.edu!agate!ucbvax!lrw.com!leichter
- From: leichter@lrw.com (Jerry Leichter)
- Newsgroups: comp.os.vms
- Subject: Querent
- Message-ID: <9212291317.AA28716@uu3.psi.com>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 11:49:01 GMT
- Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU
- Distribution: world
- Organization: The Internet
- Lines: 29
-
- Carl Lydick recently began to use the word "querant" to describe a person who
- asks a question on INFO-VAX.
-
- According to the OED, "querant" is an obsolete and rare variation on "querent"
- and is actually a French word. (Both forms derive from the Latin quaere, to
- inquire.)
-
- "Querent" is a curiously appropriate word in this context:
-
- querent, n. One who asks or inquires; {\it spec} on who consults,
- or seeks to learn something by means of, an astrologer.
-
- Note that Mr. Lydick works for an organization that does astronomy.
-
- A "rare" additional meaning is:
-
- adj. Complaining.
-
- Could this perhaps apply to another class of recent INFO-VAX posters, though
- I think "querimonious" (full of, addicted to, complaining) is even better.
-
- Finally, "querent" in law means a complainant or plaintiff.
-
- Yet another variation of the word is:
-
- querist, n. One who asks or inquires; a questioner, interrogator.
-
- -- Jerry
-
-