The word for today is…


devious (adjective) – 1 (a) wandering, roundabout, (b) moving without a fixed course : errant

2 out-of-the-way, remote

3 (a) deviating from a right, accepted, or common course, (b) not straightforward : cunning

Source : Mirriam – Webster

Etymology : If you think someone devious has lost their way, you’re right, etymologically speaking—the word derives from the Latin adjective devius, itself formed from the prefix de- (“from” or “away”) and the noun via (“way”). When devious was first used in the 16th century, it implied a literal wandering off the way, suggesting something that meandered or had no fixed course (as in “a devious route” or “devious breezes”). Relatively quickly, however, the word came to describe someone or something that had left the right path metaphorically rather than literally, or to describe deceitful rather than straightforward behaviour.

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David is a retired surgeon originally from London who came to New Zealand twenty-seven years ago after being delayed in Singapore for thirteen years on leaving the UK. He was coerced into studying Latin...