Word of the Day for Sunday February 2, 2003
propound pruh-POWND, transitive verb: To offer for consideration; to put forward; to propose.
When Samuelson first propounded this potentially radical idea, it was greeted with astonishment, bordering on outrage. --Jonathan Davis, "Samuelson's argument still holds true," Independent, October 4, 1997
Aristarchus not only challenged God, but he, and then Copernicus, propounded a theory that seemed so stupid on the face of it that even a fool would not believe it. --William E. Burrows, This New Ocean
Propound is a variation of earlier propone, from Latin proponere, "to set forth, to propose," from pro, "for, before, in favor of" + ponere, "to put." |