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Law Practice

Jul. 26, 2018

A puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a pundit

There are only about 200 words in the English language borrowed directly from Sanskrit, including three of my favorites: pajamas, ganja and loot. All of them still mean just what they meant during the Sepoy Mutiny, except one: pundit.

James Attridge

Law Ofc of James Attridge

270 Divisadero St #3
San Francisco , CA 94117

Phone: (415) 552-3088

Email: jattridge@attridgelaw.com

U Denver School of Law

James is an attorney and mediator in San Francisco. He is writing a book about presidential legal careers.

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A puppet, a pauper, a pirate, a pundit
>Unfortunately thanks to the ubiquity of cable TV panel shows, "pundit" is no longer an accolade bestowed by an admiring public, but a job one applies for, usually without any credentials. (Shutterstock)

There are only about 200 words in the English language borrowed directly from Sanskrit, including three of my favorites: pajamas, ganja and loot. All of them still mean just what they meant during the Sepoy Mutiny, except one: pundit. Once upon a time a pundit was someone like H.L. Mencken or William F. Buckley, a public intellectual known for pithy, clever observations. Mark Twain said "Wagner's music is better than it sounds." Winston Churchill described Clement Atl...

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