Weekly Word: Winnow

“Winnowing” by Maureen K

To winnow is “to separate or distinguish”, “to analyze critically”. But it can also just mean “to fan” or “blow away”, especially to separate grain from dirt “by throwing it into the air and allowing the wind or a forced current of air to blow away impurities”.

Not only have I never heard this word before, but I’ve also never heard of separating grain that way. I don’t know much about farming. :P According to Wikipedia’s entry on winnowing, the practice was developed in ancient times. Latin even had a word, vanuus, meaning “winnowing fan” (a shaped basket used to shake and separate the grain from the inedible parts).

I love how this ancient word is still used today in a modern context — for example, in headlines like “Primary to Winnow the Field of Candidates”. Isn’t it fun to imagine presidential candidates being tossed into the wind to separate the good from the bad?

Posted on August 19th, 2008 | Leave a comment | Trackback URL

4 Comments

  1. Shravan

    August 19th, 2008

    This is a very common practice in India. Food grains (rice, wheat, pulses) aren’t processed much before they are sold, so you have to winnow and clean everything before you cook them.

    And presidential candidates are already so full of hot air that you can only separate the bad from the worst - there’s no good.

  2. Craig Mullins

    August 19th, 2008

    Good to keep learning some new vocabulary not SEO, PPC, or programming related!

  3. Peter

    August 19th, 2008

    Great word! I look forward to using it in a paper.

  4. LearningNerd

    August 20th, 2008

    Shravan - How true! Lots and lots of hot air, haha.

    Thanks everyone for the comments. Nice to see that people still like to learn new words!

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