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Word of the Week
Archive
Paralympian
noun
[C] / p r l mpi n/
a competitor in a four-yearly international
sports event for people with physical disabilities
Paralympian
adjective
‘After a nerve-wracking final the 49-year-old became a gold medallist
for the second consecutive time in the women’s 10m SH1 air pistol …
But the seven-times Paralympian still was not totally satisfied.’
(BBC
Sport, 19th September 2004)
‘The 16 Paralympian sports in which Britain is competing have received
£8.9m, compared with £56.7m for the Olympic sports.’
(The
Guardian, 17th October 2000)
From
17th to 28th September 2004, over 4000 athletes, with ages
ranging from 11 to 66, are taking part in the second largest
international sporting event in the world –
The Paralympic
Games. In Athens, Greece, physically disabled athletes, referred
to as Paralympians, are participating in 19 different sports,
including the new categories of
five-a-side blind football, sitting volleyball for women, and quads
wheelchair tennis.
The competition in Athens is the twelfth Paralympic Summer Games,
the official equivalent of the Olympics for athletes with physical
disabilities, including those with visual disabilities and Cerebral
Palsy. The first summer Paralympic competition was held
in 1960 in Rome, and the first winter competition in Sweden in 1976.
Subsequent competitions have been held every four years, and in 2001,
an agreement was signed between the
International Olympic
Committee and the International Paralympic Committee, stating that
the Paralympic Games would always be held alongside the Olympic Games.
Although the term Paralympics and a derived adjective
Paralympic have been around since the 1950s, when the competition
was first conceived, the countable noun Paralympian, referring to a
competitor in the event (and also used adjectivally as a variant of
paralympic), has only in recent years begun to enter some
dictionaries of English, despite plenty of evidence for popular use.
Background
The term Paralympian as a derivative of Paralympic(s) is
of course modelled on the word Olympian as a derivative of
Olympic(s), used to refer to a competitor in the games.
The term Paralympics was coined in the 1950s as a blend of
Olympics and the word paraplegic, a noun referring
to someone who cannot move the parts of the body below the waist. The
prefix para- within this word is of Greek origin, and in fact
means ‘beside’, featuring in words such as paralysis,
from the Greek paralusis meaning ‘be disabled at the side’.
The prefix’s original meaning of ‘beside’ has been extended into a
variety of contexts. It often relates to the idea of something having
an auxiliary or subsidiary function as in words such as paramedic
or paramilitary. Another popular interpretation is
‘beyond’ or ‘distinct from’ as in paranormal.
The appearance of
what looks like the same prefix in words such as parasol and
parachute in fact traces back to completely different origins.
Here para- derives from the Italian parare, meaning
‘defend’ or ‘shield’.
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