Some words are meant only to be used in print because to use them in normal speech makes one sound ridiculously and falsely intellectual.
Such a word is "sycophant". And I've known what that word means for a very long time. But I do remember wondering about it when I first encountered it as a kid. What the hell's that? The elephant at the Bates Motel?
Anyway, it's one of those words that intellectuals often use to sniff at lesser beings than themselves and it means "mean, servile flatterer".
For me these days, however, it's not good enough to merely know the meaning of a word; I have to know where it came from. And it's amusing to discover that the words that fancy-pants intellectuals often use have their origins in the common and vulgar language of ancient streets.
Sycophant
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Online Etymology', '1')537 (in L. form sycophanta), originally "One who shows the fig," from sykon "fig" + phanein "to show." "Showing the fig" was a vulgar gesture made by sticking the thumb between two fingers, a display which vaguely resembles a fig, itself symbolic of a cunt (sykon also meant "vulva"). The story goes that prominent politicians in ancient Greece held aloof from such inflammatory gestures, but privately urged their followers to taunt their opponents. The sense of "mean, servile flatterer" is first recorded in Eng. 1575.




