Faucian
English
Etymology 1
From the name of the American physician-scientist and immunologist Anthony Fauci (1940—).
Adjective
Faucian (comparative more Faucian, superlative most Faucian)
- Ascribed to or characteristic of Anthony Fauci.
- 2020 April 30, William F. Meehan III, “Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. Part III: The 7 Principles of Faucian Leadership”, in Forbes:
- Anthony S. Fauci, M.D. has served […] as our heroic servant leader during our current COVID-19 pandemic. His authoritative persona has engendered our trust because he is seen as an honest, credible truth-teller
- 2020 November 18, Faiyaz Kara, “Make Thanksgiving dinner easy with tasty takeout from these Orlando standbys”, in Orlando Weekly:
- Sensible folks will take a more Faucian approach and hold small gatherings at home
- 2021 March 10, Michael Hendrix, “Massive $1.9 trillion bill is a bailout for blue states”, in New York Post:
- The biggest winners will be states who locked down the hardest during the pandemic. Their “Faucian bargain” has now paid off.
- 2021 August 27, Nick Gatsoulis, “Letters to the Editor”, in New York Post:
- People need clarity and truth, not Faucian Newspeak.
Etymology 2
From Fauci, the name of one of the genes, or clans, of Ancient Rome.
Adjective
Faucian (comparative more Faucian, superlative most Faucian)
- Pertaining to the Fauci family of Ancient Rome.
- 1855, Sir George Cornewall Lewis, An Inquiry Into the Credibility of the Early Roman History:
- The Faucian curia is likewise stated to have been considered unlucky , as having been the first in the year both of the Gallic capture of the city , and of the Caudine disaster -- to which Licinius Macer added the Cremera;
- 1868, Livy, translated by Daniel Spillan, Cyrus R. Edmonds, and William Alexander McDevitte, The History of Rome, page 614:
- Papirius appointed Caius Junius Bubulcus master of the horse; and, as he was proceeding in an assembly of the Curiæ to get an order passed respecting the command of the army, an unlucky omen obliged him to adjourn it; for the Curia which was to vote first, happened to be the Faucian, remarkably distinguished by two disasters, the taking of the city, and the Caudine peace; the same Curia having voted first in those years in which the said events are found.
- 1896, Joseph-Louis-Elzéar Ortolan, Iltudus Thomas Prichard, David Nasmith, The History of Roman Law, page 29:
- The lot had fallen to this Faucian curia to be first in two calamitous years, that of the capture of Rome and of the Claudine forts.
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