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Author Topic: Word of the Day
Morbo
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Indubitably.
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for November 5 is:

inchoate • \in-KOH-ut\ • adjective
: being partly in existence or operation; especially : imperfectly formed or formulated : formless

Example sentence:
By the end of our first meeting, we had only an inchoate idea of how we should market the new product.

Did you know?
"Inchoate" derives from "inchoare," which means "to begin" in Latin but translates literally as "to hitch up." "Inchoare" was formed from the prefix "in-" and the noun "cohum," which refers to the strap that secures a plow beam to a pulling animal's yoke. The concept of implementing this initial step toward the larger task of plowing a field can help provide a clearer understanding of "inchoate," an adjective used to describe the imperfect form of something (as a plan or idea) in its early stages of development. Perhaps because it looks a little like the word "chaos" (although the two aren't closely related), "inchoate" now not only implies the formlessness that often marks beginnings, but also the confusion caused by chaos.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 06 is:
diluvial \ duh-LOO-vee-ul\ adjective
: of, relating to, or brought about by a flood


Example sentence:
"Not since 1935 have Houstonians . . . seen the magnitude of diluvial disaster experienced the last few days in the wake of Tropical Storm Allison." (The Houston Chronicle, June 11, 2001)

Did you know?
Late Latin "diluvialis" means "flood." It's from "diluere" ("to wash away") and ultimately from "lavere" ("to wash"). English "diluvial" and its variant "diluvian" initially referred to the Biblical Flood. Geologists, archaeologists, fossilists, and the like used the words, beginning back in the mid-1600s, to mark a distinct geological turning point associated with the Flood. They also used "antediluvian" and "postdiluvian" to describe the periods before and after the Flood. It wasn't until the 1800s that people started using "diluvial" for floods and flooding in general. American educator and essayist Caroline M. Kirkland, one early user of this sense, wrote, "Much of our soil is said to be diluvial — the wash of the great ocean lakes as they overflowed towards the south," in her essay Forest Life in 1850.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 07 is:
scuttlebutt \ SKUH-tul-butt\ noun
: rumor, gossip


Example sentence:
After he retired, Bob regularly stopped by his old office to visit his buddies and catch up on the latest scuttlebutt about his former coworkers.

Did you know?
Nowadays, office workers catch up on the latest scuttlebutt around the water cooler, and when they do, they are continuing a long-standing (although not necessarily honorable) tradition. That kind of gossip sharing probably also occurred on the sailing ships of yore. Back in the early 1800s, the cask containing a ship's daily supply of freshwater was called a "scuttlebutt"; that name was later applied to a drinking fountain on a ship or at a naval installation. Eventually, the term for the water source was also applied to the gossip and rumors generated around it, and the latest chatter has been called "scuttlebutt" ever since.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 08 is:
placate \ PLAY-kayt\ verb

: to soothe or mollify especially by concessions : appease


Example sentence:
In an effort to placate the angry customer, the store manager replaced the defective product with a more expensive model at no extra charge.

Did you know?
The earliest documented uses of "placate" in English date from the late 17th century. The word is derived from the Latin "placatus," the past participle of "placare," and even after more than 300 years in English, it still carries the basic meaning of its Latin ancestor: "to soothe" or "to appease." Other "placare" descendants in English are "implacable" (meaning "not easily soothed or satisfied") and "placation" ("the act of soothing or appeasing"). Even "please" itself, derived from the Latin "placēre" ("to please"), is a distant relative of "placate."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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Placate? Placate? Oh, then I guess I look rather silly wearing this stylish pantsuit and mooning over a picture of Spencer Tracy.
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 09 is:
onerous \ AH-nuh-russ\ adjective

*1 : involving, imposing, or constituting a burden : troublesome
2 : having legal obligations that outweigh the advantages


Example sentence:
Christy found driving her sister to ballet practice to be an onerous task.

Did you know?
"Onerous," "burdensome," "oppressive," and "exacting" all refer to something which imposes a hardship of some kind. "Onerous" stresses a sense of laboriousness and heaviness, especially because something is distasteful ("the onerous task of cleaning up the mess fell to the lowest-ranked member")."Burdensome" suggests something which causes mental as well as physical strain ("the burdensome responsibilities of being a supervisor tired her out"). "Oppressive" implies extreme harshness or severity in what is imposed ("the oppressive tyranny of a police state takes its toll upon the residents"). "Exacting" suggests rigor or sternness rather than tyranny or injustice in the demands made or in the one demanding ("the exacting employer required great attention to detail, but rewarded it well").

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 10 is:
accoutrement \ uh-KOO-ter-munt\ noun

*1 : an accessory item of clothing or equipment — usually used in the plural
2 : an identifying characteristic


Example sentence:
Jonah was decked out in all the accoutrements of a tourist, including a camera around his neck and sunglasses atop his head.

Did you know?
"Accoutrement" and its relative "accoutre," a verb meaning "to provide with equipment or furnishings" or "to outfit," have been appearing in English texts since the 16th century. Today both words have variant spellings — "accouterment" and "accouter." Their French ancestor, "accoutrer," descends from an Old French word meaning "seam" and ultimately traces to the Latin word "consuere," meaning "to sew together." You probably won't be too surprised to learn that "consuere" is also an ancestor of "couture," meaning "the business of designing fashionable custom-made women's clothing."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 11 is:
grotesque \ groh-TESK\ adjective

*1 : fanciful, bizarre
2 : departing markedly from the natural, the expected, or the typical


Example sentence:
While I waited in the lobby, the child sitting across from me kept making grotesque faces by lolling out his tongue and turning up his eyes.

Did you know?
During the Italian Renaissance, Romans of culture took a great interest in their country's past and began excavating ancient buildings. During their excavations, they uncovered chambers (known in Italian as "grotte," in reference to their cavelike appearance) decorated with artwork depicting fantastic combinations of human and animal forms interwoven with strange fruits and flowers. The Italian word "grottesca" became the name for this unique art style, and by 1561 it had mutated into the English noun "grotesque." The adjective form of "grotesque" was first used in the early 17th century to describe the decorative art but is now used to describe anything fanciful or bizarre.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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People today have it easy. You can just go into any store and pick up a tesque, cheap. In my day we had to grotesque.
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rivka
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[ROFL]
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 12 is:
ennead \ EH-nee-ad\ noun

: a group of nine


Example sentence:
"An ennead of gorillas — four bachelors on one side of a waterfall, a family of five safely on the other — scuff their knuckles as they proudly prowl." (Richard Corliss, Time, April 20, 1998)

Did you know?
To the ancients, nine was a very special number, one often associated with gods and divinity. Legends and literature have long characterized groups of nine as having a special, in some cases magical, significance. Ancient Egyptians organized their gods into groups of nine; even today, their principal group of gods (headed by sun god Re-Atum) is called the "Great Ennead of Heliopolis." The "Ennead" English speakers use in that name traces to "ennea," the Greek word for "nine." "Ennead" is also used generally to refer to other groups of ancient gods. Furthermore, it is the name given to six sets of nine treatises by Greek philosopher Plotinus that were collected and organized by his 3rd-century disciple, Porphyry.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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A friend ennead is usually accompanied by eight more who will eat you out of house and home!
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 13 is:
gumption \GUMP-shun\ noun

1 chiefly dialect : common sense, horse sense
*2 : enterprise, initiative


Example sentence:
"It took a lot of gumption to keep the family farm going," said Jake, "when all the farmers around us were selling out to developers."

Did you know?
English speakers have had "gumption" (the word, that is) since the early 1700s. The term's exact origins aren't known, but its earliest known uses are found in British and especially Scottish dialects (which also include the forms "rumblegumption" and "rumgumption"). In its earliest uses, "gumption" referred to intelligence or common sense, especially when those qualities were combined with high levels of energy. By the 1860s, American English speakers were also using "gumption" to imply ambition or tenacity, but it wasn't until the early 1900s that "gumption" began to appear in English texts as a direct synonym of "courage" or "get-up-and-go." American showman P.T. Barnum also claimed that "gumption" named a particular kind of hard cider, but that sense is far from common today.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 14 is:
flummox \FLUH-muks\ verb

: confuse


Example sentence:
Peter was flummoxed by the directions given to him by the gas station attendant, as they called for him to turn the wrong way onto a one-way street.

Did you know?
No one is completely sure where the word "flummox" comes from, but we do know that its first known use in English is found in Charles Dickens' 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers. One theory expressed by some etymologists is that it was influenced by "flummock," a word of English dialectical origin used to refer to a clumsy person (and perhaps this word is the source of "lummox" as well). By no means is "flummox" just a relic of the Victorian era — by the end of the 19th century the word had become quite common in both British and American English.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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It takes gumption to use a word like flummox on a family bulletin board!
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 15 is:
perspicacious \per-spuh-KAY-shuss\ adjective

: of acute mental vision or discernment : keen


Example sentence:
The average time for solving the puzzle was seven minutes, but some of the more perspicacious subjects did it in under three minutes.

Did you know?
"Perspicacious" is similar in meaning to "shrewd" and "astute," but a sharp mind will discern subtle differences among them. All three mean acute in perception and sound in judgment, but "shrewd" stresses practical, hardheaded cleverness ("a shrewd judge of character"), whereas "perspicacious" implies unusual power to see through and comprehend what is puzzling or hidden ("the perspicacious general correctly determined the enemy's next move"). "Astute" suggests both shrewdness and perspicacity, as well as diplomatic skill ("an astute player of party politics").

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 16 is:
conciliate \kun-SIH-lee-ayt\ verb

1 : to gain (as goodwill) by pleasing acts
*2 : to make compatible : reconcile
3 : appease
4 : to become friendly or agreeable


Example sentence:
The negotiating team was faced with the difficult task of conciliating the views of two nations whose leaders disagreed on nearly every foreign policy topic.

Did you know?
A council is "an assembly or meeting for consultation, advice, or discussion," and it is often the task of a council to conciliate opposing views. It is perhaps fitting, therefore, that the words "council" and "conciliate" both derive from the Latin word "concilium," which means "assembly, council." "Conciliate" comes to us from the Latin "conciliatus," the past participle of the verb "conciliare" (meaning "to assemble, unite, win over"), which in turn is from "concilium." ("Council," on the other hand, derives from the Anglo-French "cunseil" or "cuncile," from "concilium.") Other "concilium" descendants in English include "conciliar" ("of, relating to, or issued by a council") and the rare "conciliabule" ("a clandestine meeting especially of conspirators or rebels").

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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One must be perspicacious to effectively conciliate.
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rivka
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*snickers at today's WotD, but posts it anyway*

The Word of the Day for Nov 17 is:
hegemony \hih-JEH-muh-nee\ noun

*1 : preponderant influence or authority over others : domination
2 : the social, cultural, ideological, or economic influence exerted by a dominant group


Example sentence:
The nation maintained unrelenting hegemony over its young, struggling colonies.

Did you know?
"Hegemony" comes to English from the Greek "hēgemonia," a noun formed from the verb "hēgeisthai" ("to lead"), which also gave us the word "exegesis" ("exposition" or "explanation"). The word was first used in English in the mid-16th century in reference to the control once wielded by the ancient Greek states, and it was reapplied in later centuries as other nations subsequently rose to power. By the 20th century, it had acquired a second sense referring to the social or cultural influence wielded by a dominant member over others of its kind, such as the domination within an industry by a business conglomerate over smaller businesses.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 18 is:
brusque \ BRUSK\ adjective

1 : markedly short and abrupt
*2 : blunt in manner or speech often to the point of ungracious harshness


Example sentence:
Her curt, brusque manner, often mistaken by newcomers as unfriendliness, is actually caused by extreme shyness.

Did you know?
We borrowed "brusque" from French in the 1600s. They, in turn, had borrowed it from Italian, where it was "brusco" and meant "tart." It could suggest something good when used of wine, but it could also refer to a sour disposition. French "brusque" in the 1600s meant "brisk and lively," and "vin brusque" was pleasantly sharp, effervescent wine. But "brusque" ultimately comes from "bruscus," the Medieval Latin name for butcher's broom, a shrub whose bristly leaf-like twigs have long been used for making brooms. In the end, the good senses were swept aside in English (as well as in French). "Brusque" came to denote a harsh and stiff manner — which is just what you might expect of a word bristling with associations to stiff, scratchy brooms.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 19 is:
florilegium \flor-uh-LEE-jee-um\ noun, plural florilegia

: a volume of writings : anthology


Example sentence:
One prominent critic hailed Tara's third poetry collection as "an elegant florilegium of old favorites and sophisticated new works."

Did you know?
Editors who compile florilegia can be thought of as gathering a bouquet of sweet literary blossoms. English speakers picked up "florilegium" from a New Latin word that derives from the Latin "florilegus," which can be translated as "culling flowers." In fact, "florilegium" initially applied to a collection of flowers, and later to books about flowers, but it wasn't long before it began to be used for (as the Oxford English Dictionary puts it) "a collection of the flowers of literature." And "florilegium" isn't the only English collecting term with a floral heritage; its synonym "anthology" comes from the Greek word for "flower gathering."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 20 is:
plenary \PLEE-nuh-ree\ adjective

*1 : complete in every respect : absolute, unqualified
2 : fully attended or constituted by all entitled to be present


Example sentence:
The U.S. Congress has plenary power to pass laws regulating immigration and naturalization.

Did you know?
In the 14th century, the monk Robert of Brunne wrote, "When Arthures court was plener, and alle were comen, fer and ner. . . ." For 200 years, "plener" (also spelled "plenar"), served us well for both senses that we reserve for "plenary" today. (Our monk was saying that all the knights of King Arthur's Round Table were present at court.) But we'd borrowed "plener" from Anglo-French, and, although the French had relied on Latin "plenus" ("full") for their word, the revival of interest in the Classics during the English Renaissance led scholarly types to prefer purer Latin origins. In the 1500s, English speakers turned to Late Latin "plenarius" and came up with "plenary." ("Plenarius" also comes from "plenus," which is the source of our "plenty" and "replenish" as well.)

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 21 is:
quixotic \kwik-SAH-tik\ adjective

*1 : foolishly impractical especially in the pursuit of ideals; especially : marked by rash lofty romantic ideas or extravagantly chivalrous action
2 : capricious, unpredictable


Example sentence:
Marta tried desperately to convince her friends to give up their cars and computers and return to nature on Earth Day, but it was a quixotic crusade.

Did you know?
If you guessed that "quixotic" has something to do with Don Quixote, you're absolutely right. The romance of chivalry so enamored old Alonso Quijano that he assumed the title Don Quixote and set out to undo the wrongs of the world. The hero of the 17th-century novel Don Quixote de la Mancha (by Miguel de Cervantes) didn't change the world through his battles with windmills, but he did leave the legacy of "quixotic." The word is based on his name and has been used in English to describe unrealistic idealists since at least the early 18th century.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Bob_Scopatz
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To be brusque, a Card florilegium would fast become plenary reading for all who wish to experience the quixotic hegemony of our host and favorite author.
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Zalmoxis
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I'd invite you to fawn over my rare orchids and roses florilegium, but I'm afraid you might find the experience too taxing.
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 22 is:
eschew \es-CHOO\ verb

: to avoid habitually especially on moral or practical grounds


Example sentence:
In his stand-up comedy routines, Michael eschews the vulgar language and gross humor frequently used by his colleagues.

Did you know?
"Eschew" derives from the Anglo-French verb "eschiver" and is akin to the Old High German "sciuhen" ("to frighten off"), an ancestor of our word "shy." In his famous dictionary of 1755 Dr. Samuel Johnson characterized "eschew" as "almost obsolete." History has proven that the great lexicographer was wrong on that call, however. William Thackeray found "eschew" alive enough to use it almost one hundred years later in his classic novel Vanity Fair: "He has already eschewed green coats, red neckcloths, and other worldly ornaments." The word swelled in usage in English during the 19th and 20th centuries and is now common enough to be included even in small paperback dictionaries.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 23 is:
demesne \dih-MAYN\ noun

1 : legal possession of land as one's own
2 a : the land attached to a mansion b : landed property : estate *c : region, territory
3 : realm, domain


Example sentence:
Lewis and Clark were commissioned to explore the vast demesne of forests and plains that the United States acquired in the Louisiana Purchase.

Did you know?
Why isn't "demesne" pronounced the way it's spelled? Our word actually began as "demayn" or "demeyn" in the 14th century, when it was borrowed from Anglo-French property law. At that time, the Anglo-French form was "demeine." Later, the Anglo-French spelling changed to "demesne," perhaps by association with another term from Anglo-French property law: "mesne," meaning "intermediate." ("Mesne" has entered English as a legal term as well.) According to rules of French pronunciation, the "s" was silent and the vowel was long. English speakers eventually followed suit, adopting the "demesne" spelling. Our word "domain" (which overlaps with the meaning of "demesne" in some applications) also comes from Anglo-French "demeine."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 24 is:
temerity \tuh-MAIR-uh-tee\ noun

*1 : unreasonable or foolhardy contempt of danger or opposition : rashness, recklessness
2 : an act or instance of temerity


Example sentence:
Kenny had the temerity to talk back to his father, and his impudence got him grounded for two weeks.

Did you know?
When it comes to flagrant boldness, "temerity," "audacity," and "effrontery" have the cheek to get your meaning across. Of those synonyms, "temerity" (from the Latin "temere," meaning "blindly" or "recklessly") suggests boldness arising from contempt of danger, while "audacity" implies a disregard of the restraints commonly imposed by convention or prudence ("an entrepreneur of audacity and vision"). "Effrontery" suggests a shameless disregard of propriety and courtesy ("had the effrontery to pretend to be innocent"). If you're looking for a more informal term for a brash attitude, you might consider "nerve" ("the nerve of that guy!"), "cheek" ("had the cheek to call herself a singer"), "gall" ("had the gall to demand proof"), or "chutzpah" ("the chutzpah needed for a career in show business").

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 25 is:
extemporaneous \ek-stem-puh-RAY-nee-us\ adjective

*1 : composed, performed, or uttered on the spur of the moment : impromptu
2 : provided, made, or put to use as an expedient : makeshift


Example sentence:
After receiving the award, Jodi was urged by the enthusiastic applause into making an extemporaneous speech.

Did you know?
"Extemporaneous," which comes from Latin "ex tempore" ("out of the time"), joined the English language in 1673. About a century later, "impromptu" appeared as a synonym for it. In general usage, "extemporaneous" and "impromptu" are used interchangeably to describe off-the-cuff remarks or speeches, but this is not the case when they are used in reference to the learned art of public speaking. Teachers of speech will tell you that an extemporaneous speech is one that has been thoroughly prepared and planned but not memorized, whereas an impromptu speech is one for which absolutely no preparations have been made.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 26 is:
envisage \in-VIZ-zij\ verb

1 : to view or regard in a certain way
*2 : to have a mental picture of especially in advance of realization


Example sentence:
The mayor's revitalization plan envisages a dynamic new development along the riverfront that includes a park, shops, and restaurants.

Did you know?
"Envisage" has been part of the English language since the 17th century. In the early 19th century, it was sometimes used with the now archaic sense of "to meet squarely" or "to confront." By 1837, the word had developed the sense "to have a mental picture of." In the 1920s, some usage commentators began deriding "envisage" for reasons not entirely clear, declaring it "undesirable." Today, time and usage have won out, and "envisage" is widely used and accepted, though it is slightly formal in tone. The same can be said of its near twin "envision" ("to picture to oneself"), which has been with us since the late 19th century and is interchangeable with "envisage" in many contexts.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

© 2003 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 27 is:
cornucopia \kor-nuh-KOH-pee-uh\ noun

1: a curved goat's horn overflowing with fruit and ears of grain that is used as a decorative motif emblematic of abundance
*2: an inexhaustible store : abundance
3 : a receptacle shaped like a horn or cone


Example sentence:
The Web site contained a cornucopia of useful information.

Did you know?
"Cornucopia" comes from the Latin "cornu copiae," which translates literally as "horn of plenty." A traditional staple of feasts, the cornucopia is believed to represent the horn of a goat from Greek mythology. According to legend, it was from this horn that the god Zeus was fed as an infant. Later, the horn was filled with flowers and fruits, and given as a present to Zeus. The filled horn (or a receptacle resembling it) has long served as a traditional symbol in art and decoration to suggest a store of abundance. The word first appeared in English in the early 16th century; a century later, it developed the figurative sense of an overflowing supply.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

© 2003 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 28 is:
zeugma \ZOOG-muh\ noun

: the use of a word to modify or govern two or more words usually in such a manner that it applies to each in a different sense or makes sense with only one (as in "opened the door and her heart to the homeless boy")


Example sentence:
"She left in a huff and a Chevy," said Jack, employing vivid zeugma to report of Marissa's departure.

Did you know?
"Zeugma, like the pun, is economical: it contracts two sentences into one . . . it links unrelated terms — mental with moral, abstract with physical, high with low — and thus generates surprise."(Walter Redfern & Basil Blackwell, Puns) "Zeugma," which has been with us since the 15th century, comes from Greek, where it literally means "a joining." The Greek word has another connection to English as well. In the early 1970s, a chemistry professor named Paul Lauterbur developed a technique for producing images of internal organs. He called it "zeugmatography," because it involved the joining of magnetic fields. The name didn't stick (the technique is known today as magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI), but Lauterbur was awarded a Nobel Prize.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

© 2003 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 29 is:
whimsical \WIM-zih-kul\ adjective

1 : full of, actuated by, or exhibiting whims
*2 : resulting from or characterized by whim or caprice; especially : lightly fanciful
3 : subject to erratic behavior or unpredictable change


Example sentence:
The whimsical decor of Mary's home reflects her playful personality.

Did you know?
As you may have guessed, the words "whimsical," "whim," and "whimsy" are related. All three ultimately derive from the word "whim-wham" ("a whimsical object" or "a whim"), which is of unknown origin and dates to at least 1500. "Whimsy" was the first of the three to spin off from "whim-wham," debuting in print in 1605. English speakers then had the whim to add the adjective suffix "-ical" to "whimsy" to create "whimsical," dated 1653. Not until 1686 do we find evidence of "whim," which came about as a shortened version of "whim-wham."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

© 2003 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Nov 30 is:
junket \JUNG-kut\ noun

1 : a dessert of sweetened flavored milk set with rennet
2 a : a festive social affair *b : trip, journey


Example sentence:
Just as charges of perjury were being brought against him, the senator embarked on an unexpected junket to Mexico.

Did you know?
The road "junket" has traveled has been a long one, with frequent stops for food along the way. Since at least the 15th century, the word has named various comestibles, ranging from curds and cream to sweet confections. By the 16th century, "junket" had also come to mean "banquet." In this, it seems to have followed the lead of "junkery," a now-obsolete term that, like "junket," also named both delicacies and feasts. Apparently, traveling must have been involved to reach some junkets, because eventually that term was also applied to pleasure outings or trips (whether or not food was the focus). Today, the word especially refers to pleasure trips taken under the guise of legitimate business, with someone other than the traveler footing the bill.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

© 2003 by Merriam-Webster, Incorporated

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rivka
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I think it might be amusing to eat a dish of junket while on a junket.
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Bob_Scopatz
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Bob was on a junket last month, and as a result had to throw his best suit in the trash.
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Zalmoxis
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He drove out every weekend to visit his immanent demesne.
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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Dec 01 is:
comestible \kuh-MESS-tuh-bul\ adjective
: edible


Example sentence:
The magazine's December issue features recipes for roast goose, plum pudding, gingerbread, and other comestible treats for the holidays.

Did you know?
Did you expect "comestible" to be a noun meaning "food"? You're probably not alone. As it happens, "comestible" is used both as an adjective and a noun. The adjective is by far the older of the two; it has been part of English since at least the 1400s. (In fact, one of its earliest known uses was in a text printed in 1483 by William Caxton, the man who established England's first printing press.) The noun (which is most often used in the plural form, "comestibles") dates only from 1837. It made its first appearance in a novel in which a character fortified himself with "a strong reinforcement of comestibles."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Dec 02 is:
bathetic \buh-THEH-tik\ adjective

1 : extremely commonplace or trite
*2 : characterized by insincere or overdone pathos : excessively sentimental


Example sentence:
The movie is a bathetic weeper, one that all but the most maudlin and sentimental viewers will find overly dramatic and unbelievable.

Did you know?
When English speakers turned "apathy" into "apathetic" in the 1700s, using the suffix "-etic" to turn the noun into the adjective, they modeled it on "pathetic," the adjectival form of "pathos" from Greek "pathētikos." People also applied that bit of linguistic transformation to coin "bathetic." In the mid-19th century, English speakers added the suffix "-etic" to "bathos," the Greek word for "depth," which has been used in English since the early 1700s and means "triteness" or "excessive sentimentalism." The result: the ideal adjective for the incredibly commonplace or the overly sentimental.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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rivka
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The Word of the Day for Dec 03 is:
gam \GAM\ verb

intransitive sense : to engage in a gam
transitive senses 1 : to have a gam with
*2 : to spend or pass (as time) talking


Example sentence:
The two strangers discovered that they had a lot in common as they gammed the hours away on the long train ride.

Did you know?
"But what is a gam? You might wear out your index-finger running up and down the columns of dictionaries, and never find the word." So says the narrator, who calls himself Ishmael, of Herman Melville's Moby Dick. We imagine you are also wondering what a gam is, and you're in luck, for you will indeed find "gam" entered in dictionaries today. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary defines the noun "gam" as "a visit or friendly conversation at sea or ashore especially between whalers." (It can also mean "a school of whales.") Melville's narrator explains that when whaling ships met far out at sea, they would hail one another and the crews would exchange visits and news. English speakers have been using the word "gam" to refer to these and similar social exchanges since the mid-19th century.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

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Trisha the Severe Hottie
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I always thought a "gam" was an expression of appreciation for the female lower limb. As in "Look at the gams on that dame".
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Bob_Scopatz
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We had a gam about her gams.
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jehovoid
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That's funny. I just read Moby Dick. Book about a sperm whale, and he includes the word "dick" in the title. What a joker.

Anyway, so I just learned today the origin of the word "decimate" and I figured this would be an appropriate location for that post:

quote:
Usage Note: Decimate originally referred to the killing of every tenth person, a punishment used in the Roman army for mutinous legions. Today this meaning is commonly extended to include the killing of any large proportion of a group. Sixty-six percent of the Usage Panel accepts this extension in the sentence The Jewish population of Germany was decimated by the war, even though it is common knowledge that the number of Jews killed was much greater than a tenth of the original population. However, when the meaning is further extended to include large-scale destruction other than killing, as in The supply of fresh produce was decimated by the nuclear accident at Chernobyl, only 26 percent of the Panel accepts the usage.
I got that here. It never occured to me that the root of the word is the latin for "ten," so that it literally means "counting to ten," which is funny when you think that nowadays this is seen as a way of calming yourself down.
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Da_Goat
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*bump* I liked this thread.

The Word of the Day for March 10 is:

swivet • \SWIV-ut\ • noun
: a state of extreme agitation

Example sentence:
The residents of Cedar Hills are in a swivet over the state's proposal to extend the highway through their town.

Did you know?
People have been in a swivet over one thing or another since the 1890s. That, at least, is when the word first appeared in print in a collection of "Peculiar Words and Usages" of Kentucky published by the American Dialect Society. In the ensuing years, "swivet" popped up in other pockets of the South as well. Chances are it had already been around for some time before it was recorded in writing, and by the time it was, nobody could say where or how it had originated. What we do know is that its use gradually spread, so that by the 1950s it was regularly appearing in national magazines like Time and The New Yorker. Thus, it entered the mainstream of American English.

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skillery
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tau·tol·o·gy noun

A needless repetition of the same sense in different words.

Word used recently by: Jon Boy (twice in the same day in two different threads...wow!)

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Ryuko
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Wow. I have a powerful love for that word and I don't know why...
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skillery
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Kabbalistic gematria noun

The use of numerology to assign mystic meaning to Hebrew scripture.

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rivka
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Gematria is not only kabbalistic, and not only used for scripture.
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lcarus
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I am in a swivet over the fact that we have stopped using these words in sentences.
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