Word of the Day for Wednesday May 25, 2005
artifice \AR-tuh-fis\, noun:
1. Cleverness or skill; ingenuity; inventiveness.
2. An ingenious or artful device or expedient.
3. An artful trick or stratagem.
4. Trickery; craftiness; insincere or deceptive behavior.
Built by design and artifice, it fell apart in confusion
and chaos.
--John Gray, [1]False Dawn
This theatricality is necessary to signal Prospero's
farewell to magic, and indeed the play debates that very
contrast between artifice and reality, illusion and truth.
--Amy Rosenthal, "An insubstantial pageant," [2]New
Statesman, February 3, 2003
The smoke had cleared enough for him to see bayonets flash
in the distance, behind the wall, what looked like
thousands of them, the wall itself appearing to rise out of
the smoke as if produced by the artifice of some magician.
--Kathleen Cambor, [3]In Sunlight, in a Beautiful Garden
The intuitive connection children feel with animals can be
a tremendous source of joy. The unconditional love received
from pets, and the lack of artifice in the relationship,
contrast sharply with the much trickier dealings with
members of their own species.
--Frans De Waal, [4]The Ape and the Sushi Master
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Artifice comes from artificium, from artifex, artific-,
"artificer, craftsman," from Latin ars, art-, "art" + facere,
"to make." It is related to artificial.
References
1. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1565845927/ref=nosim/lexico
2. http://www.newstatesman.co.uk/
3. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060007575/ref=nosim/lexico
4. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0465041760/ref=nosim/lexico
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=9&q=artifice

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