Meretricious! An anecdote (and a Christmas pun) from acclaimed science fiction author Isaac Asimov
The late science fiction writer, Isaac Asimov, told this story:
Once Horace Gold [my editor] went too far. He rejected a story of mine which he called ‘meretricious.’ The word is from the Latin meretrix, meaning ‘prostitute,’ so that the implication was that I was prostituting my talent and was writing a bad story that would get by on my name alone because I was too lazy to write a good one. (This was not true, by the way. This particular story was sold elsewhere and received considerable acclaim.)
Swallowing my annoyance, I said mildly, ‘What was that word you used?’
Obviously proud at knowing a word he felt I didn’t know, Horace enunciated carefully, ‘Meretricious!’
Whereupon I said, ‘And a Happy New Year to you.’