Lazy
Bored
Looky-LOO
Does this look bad?
Canker in a hedge
100

ennui 

(ahn WE) This noun is the French import for referring to boredom,

listlessness. If you’re bored, you can at least give a Gallic shrug to express

your state.

100

pall 

(rhymes with wall) This verb describes the fact of a phenomenon’s

becoming boring or wearying. (It is a verbal cousin to appall, to be filled

with shock or dismay.)

100

descry

 (dih SCRY) This verb comes to us from the French word for “to call

out.” It means “to catch sight of something that is difficult to see” or “to

discover something by very careful scrutiny” (see #1). It should not be

confused with “decry,” which comes from the same French root but means

“to openly condemn.”

100

placebo 

(pla-SEE-bo) A substance that contains no medicinal value but one

which the patient believes has such value. (In English it is a noun but

comes directly from the Latin verb form meaning “I shall please.”)

100

salubrious 

(sal-OO-bree-us) Describing circumstances or conditions favorable

to good health.

200

enervated

 (EN er vat ed) This adjective (from the verb “enervate”)

describes a sense of weakened vitality, a loss of energy, letting you feel as

if some vital nerve had been removed.

200

banal 

(buh NAL or buh NAHL or even BAY nul) This adjective describes the

predictably trite, the ordinary.

200

gander 

(GAN der) Aside from being “a male goose,” this noun is an informal

way of saying “a look or glance.”

200

elixir 

(ee-LIX-er) A liquid potion or medicine falsely believed to cure any

ailment.

200

malinger 

(ma-LING-er) To pretend to be ill in order to get out of unpleasant

work.

300

jaded

 (JAY ded) This condition of world-weariness may come from

overfamiliarity or overindulgence in something originally pleasant. The

word has nothing to do with the gemstone “jade” but derives from an old

word for a broken-down or useless horse.

300

somnolent 

(SOM no lent) This adjective is a fancy way of saying “sleepy.”

(Memory trick: think of “insomnia,” not getting any sleep.)

300

askance 

(ah SKANS) The origin of this adverb is unknown, but it describes the

way a person looks at something. It means “with disapproval or suspicion” or

“sideways” (which suggests that it might come from the Italian for “slantingly”

or “obliquely”).

300

panacea 

(pan-a-SEE-a) Literally, a “cure-all,” a substance believed to be a

remedy for any disease or difficulty.

300

benign 

(be-NINE) Used in a general sense to mean kind or friendly, this

word has the specific medical sense of meaning not dangerous to health.

400

lassitude 

(LASS ih tude) Another noun for emotional fatigue or a dreamy,

lazy mood, “lassitude” comes from the Latin word for “weary.”

400

phlegmatic 

(fleg MAT ik) Here is an adjective describing a person who is

slow to act, slow to get angry—more or less the far extreme from

temperamental. While it can have the positive sense of “calm,” today it

more often has a negative feel, possibly as suggested by the feel of a throat

full of phlegm. (Word historians may enjoy knowing the long pedigree of

this concept: as early as 400 BCE it was regarded as one of four basic

“humors” or temperaments.)

400

ogle 

(OH gle) This verb comes to us from the German word for “eye.” It

means “to stare at,” usually in a rude or flirtatious way.

400

nostrum 

(NOS-trum) In past eras, an ineffective potion or pill sold by a

dishonest person; now, any possible remedy, not scientifically proven, for

a minor ailment or bodily condition.

400

noxious 

(nock-shus) and innocuous (in NOCK u-us) Describing, respectively,

that which does harm and that which does no harm.

500

otiose 

(O te ose) This adjective may describe a condition of idleness or laziness

or a person or thing that is ineffective. The word derives from the

Latin word for “leisure.”

500

torpid

 (TOR pid) If you’re torpid, you have no energy. If you’re a certain

kind of animal, you might be hibernating, but if you’re a plain old

human being, you’ve let yourself get bored stiff. And that’s what the

Latin root means.

500

espy 

(es SPY) Like descry, this verb that means “to glimpse something

partially hidden.” It comes to us from the French, using the same root as

the word “espionage,” which means “spying in order to obtain secret information.”

500

myopic 

(my OPP ik) From the Greek word for “nearsighted,” this adjective

can be used both literally and figuratively. Someone who needs glasses

because they can not see clearly at a distance is “myopic,” but so is

someone who is “short-sighted” and “lacks long-range perspective.”

500

dyspeptic 

(dis PEP-tic) Literally, descriptive of a person suffering from

indigestion but often used more generally for a person who is grouchy

or ill-tempered.