/tagged/word+of+the+day/page/2

word of the day: anachronism

anachronism[uh-nak-ruh-niz-uhm], noun

1. something or someone that is not in its correct historical orchronological time, especially a thing or person that belongsto an earlier time: The sword is an anachronism in modernwarfare.

2. an error in chronology in which a person, objectevent,etc., is assigned a date or period other than the correctone: To assign Michelangelo to the 14th century is an anachronism.

(definition via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: ingenious

because a lot of people get this wrong - it neither means genius, nor the opposite of genius. here’s what it really does mean…

Ingenious

1. (of a person) Clever, original, and inventive
2. (of a machine or idea) Cleverly and originally devised and well suited to its purpose.

Tiny Radio-Powered Device Swims Through Your Veins, Proves Scientists Wrong.

…The transmitter and the antenna connect magnetically, so any change in current flow from the transmitter produces voltage in the coiled-wire receiver, which powers the device. It’singenious.

Jason Kennedy, PC World

(via Newswordy)

word of the day: recrudescence

today’s word is a submission from darling Eli (do follow him here please)

re·cru·des·cence   [ree-kroo-des-uhns]  

noun
breaking out afresh or into renewed activity; revival orreappearance in active existence.
Also, re·cru·des·cen·cy.

Origin: 1721, from L. recrudescere “re-open” (of wounds), lit. “becomeraw again,” from re- “again” + crudescere, from crudus “raw” (seecrude) + inchoative suffix -escere.
There is a recrudescence of the ‘humanitarian corridors’ and ‘safe havens’ thingy. Sad to relate, all depends on Turkey. - Foreign Policy blog

(definition via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: sempervirens

  • The Chinese Elm Ulmus parvifolia cultivar ‘Sempervirens’ is an American introduction, commonly known by the synonym ‘Evergreen’, and may also be in synonymy for U. parvifolia ‘Pendens’.

“She nudged an unopened box of Sal Hepatica a little with the trowel of her extended fingers to align it with the other sempervirents in its row, and then closed the cabinet door.” - Franny and Zooey, J.D. Salinger

definition via wikipedia

word of the day: miscreants

A person who behaves badly or in a way that breaks the law.

In any out-of-court settlement for alleged wrongdoing, the test of whether prosecutors got a good deal rests on the answers to three questions: Does it hold the miscreants accountable? Does it make victims whole? And does it prevent similar misconduct in the future?

Bloomberg

(via newswordy)

word of the day: maelstrom

the word was inspired by this here article, in the NYTimes 

maelstrom [meyl-struhmnoun

1. a large, powerful, or violent whirlpool.
2. a restless, disordered, or tumultuous state of affairs: themaelstrom of early morning traffic.
3. initial capital letter) a famous hazardous whirlpool off theNW coast of Norway.
1682 (Hakluyt has Malestrand, c.1560), “whirlpool off thenorthwest coast of Norway,” from Dan. malstrøm (1673), fromDu. Maelstrom, lit. “grinding-stream

word of the day: persnickety

a word that is just really fun to say

persnickety \per-SNIK-i-tee\adjective:

1. Overparticular; fussy.
2. Snobbish or having the aloof attitude of a snob.
3. Requiring painstaking care.

The point here is to make your animal understand that its upstairs neighbour is exceptionally persnickety about territory.
— Yann Martel, Life of Pi

Persnickety dates back to the late 1800s. It is a variant of the Scots word pernickety, which is of uncertain origin. Pernickety is perhaps related to other Scots words with the per- prefix, like perskeetwhich meant “fastidious.”

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: deucedly

pretty sure i’m just going to keep thinking it’s “douchedly” though

deucedly \DOO-sid-lee, adverb:

Devilishly; damnably.

When I went in I had seen that there was a deucedly pretty girl sitting in that particular seat, so I had taken the next one.
— P. G. Wodehouse, Man With Two Left Feet and Other Stories
It’s most important. You will put me in a deucedly awkward position if you don’t.
— C. S. Lewis, The Magician’s Nephew

Deucedly is related to the word deuce which refers to the face of a die with one dot, as in “to roll deuces.” It comes from the Latin word for two, duos. In the mid-1600s, it became associated with bad luck, probably because it was the lowest score you could get when playing dice.

(via Dictionary.com)

“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter – it’s the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.”
– Mark Twain, 1888
(via)

“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter – it’s the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.”

– Mark Twain, 1888

(via)

word of the day: solecism

i’ve been trying to commit this fucker to memory all week. figured it might help if i made it the word of the day 

solecism \SOL-uh-siz-uhm, noun:

1. A breach of good manners or etiquette.
2. A nonstandard or ungrammatical usage, as unflammable and they was.
3. Any error, impropriety, or inconsistency.

To pick a fight with a visiting lord is a solecism, but being caught that way would have put the solecism squarely on Minch’s head…
— Joel Rosenburg, Hour of the Octopus

originally a toponym for people from the Greek city of Cilicia where a corrupt form of Greek was spoken. It came to mean “a mistake in speaking or writing” in Middle French in the 1500s. The sense of “a breach in manners” was recorded in the early 1600s.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: gasconade

remind you of anyone you know?

gasconade \gas-kuh-NEYD, noun:

1. Extravagant boasting; boastful talk.

verb:
1. To boast extravagantly; bluster.

The British officers laugh, because they are well armed and many, and Kemal’s men are pitifully few, but they enjoy and admire Kemal’s swashbuckling gasconade, and they let his party pass.
— Louis de Bernières, Birds Without Wings
The papers, barely days old, were full of boastful malarkey and gasconade, but of much more evident value when it came to information about the state of things in France, and in the local area.
— Dewey Lambdin, Troubled Waters

Gasconade originally referred to people who were from the Gascony region of southwest France, bordering Spain. Gascons reputedly boast and exaggerate their success, and their toponym took on a life of its own. It became common in English in the early 1700s.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: weald

since i’m stuck in the woods and all

weald \weeld, noun:

1. Wooded or uncultivated country.
2. A region in SE England, in Kent, Surrey, and Essex counties: once a forest area; now an agricultural region.

I am tempted to give one other case, the well-known one of the denudation of the Weald.
— Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species
And your advertisements must refer to the other, which is Great Willingden or Willingden Abbots, and lies seven miles on the other side of Battle. Quite down in the weald.
— Jane Austen, Sanditon

Related to the word wildweald comes from the Old English word weald meaning “forest.”

(via Dictionary.com)

When did misusing the word “penultimate” become the hip thing to do on the Internet?

somewhatnifty:

Come on world.  It means next to last not supercool.

this is our word of the day. thank you, Art! 

word of the day: rankle

rankle \RANG-kuhl, verb:

1. To cause keen irritation or bitter resentment in.2. To continue to cause keen irritation or bitter resentment within the mind; fester; be painful.

She holds that scornful expression long enough to make sure I notice. I make believe I don’t. I try not to let it rankle me.— Joseph Heller, Something Happened
The section of it which chiefly rankled in Charteris’s mind, and which had continued to rankle ever since, was that in which the use of the word “buffoon” had occurred.— P. G. Wodehouse, Tales of St. Austin’s

Rankle has a complex history. It derives from the Middle English word rancler meaning “to fester” which is a derivative of draoncle, late Latin for “a sore” which itself comes from the Latin draco meaning “a serpent.”

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: aioli

here’s a food related vocab entry to start the day off right!

aioli \ahy-OH-lee, noun:

A sauce made of oil and eggs, usually flavored with garlic, from the Provence region of France.

He said he was treating. There was roast artichoke topped with a sort of sly aioli. Mutton stuffed with foie gras, double chocolate rum cake. Seven kinds of cheese.
— David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

Aioli comes from the Provençal word for garlic, ai and the Latin word for oil, oli.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: anachronism

anachronism[uh-nak-ruh-niz-uhm], noun

1. something or someone that is not in its correct historical orchronological time, especially a thing or person that belongsto an earlier time: The sword is an anachronism in modernwarfare.

2. an error in chronology in which a person, objectevent,etc., is assigned a date or period other than the correctone: To assign Michelangelo to the 14th century is an anachronism.

(definition via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: ingenious

because a lot of people get this wrong - it neither means genius, nor the opposite of genius. here’s what it really does mean…

Ingenious

1. (of a person) Clever, original, and inventive
2. (of a machine or idea) Cleverly and originally devised and well suited to its purpose.

Tiny Radio-Powered Device Swims Through Your Veins, Proves Scientists Wrong.

…The transmitter and the antenna connect magnetically, so any change in current flow from the transmitter produces voltage in the coiled-wire receiver, which powers the device. It’singenious.

Jason Kennedy, PC World

(via Newswordy)

word of the day: recrudescence

today’s word is a submission from darling Eli (do follow him here please)

re·cru·des·cence   [ree-kroo-des-uhns]  

noun
breaking out afresh or into renewed activity; revival orreappearance in active existence.
Also, re·cru·des·cen·cy.

Origin: 1721, from L. recrudescere “re-open” (of wounds), lit. “becomeraw again,” from re- “again” + crudescere, from crudus “raw” (seecrude) + inchoative suffix -escere.
There is a recrudescence of the ‘humanitarian corridors’ and ‘safe havens’ thingy. Sad to relate, all depends on Turkey. - Foreign Policy blog

(definition via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: sempervirens

  • The Chinese Elm Ulmus parvifolia cultivar ‘Sempervirens’ is an American introduction, commonly known by the synonym ‘Evergreen’, and may also be in synonymy for U. parvifolia ‘Pendens’.

“She nudged an unopened box of Sal Hepatica a little with the trowel of her extended fingers to align it with the other sempervirents in its row, and then closed the cabinet door.” - Franny and Zooey, J.D. Salinger

definition via wikipedia

word of the day: miscreants

A person who behaves badly or in a way that breaks the law.

In any out-of-court settlement for alleged wrongdoing, the test of whether prosecutors got a good deal rests on the answers to three questions: Does it hold the miscreants accountable? Does it make victims whole? And does it prevent similar misconduct in the future?

Bloomberg

(via newswordy)

word of the day: maelstrom

the word was inspired by this here article, in the NYTimes 

maelstrom [meyl-struhmnoun

1. a large, powerful, or violent whirlpool.
2. a restless, disordered, or tumultuous state of affairs: themaelstrom of early morning traffic.
3. initial capital letter) a famous hazardous whirlpool off theNW coast of Norway.
1682 (Hakluyt has Malestrand, c.1560), “whirlpool off thenorthwest coast of Norway,” from Dan. malstrøm (1673), fromDu. Maelstrom, lit. “grinding-stream

word of the day: persnickety

a word that is just really fun to say

persnickety \per-SNIK-i-tee\adjective:

1. Overparticular; fussy.
2. Snobbish or having the aloof attitude of a snob.
3. Requiring painstaking care.

The point here is to make your animal understand that its upstairs neighbour is exceptionally persnickety about territory.
— Yann Martel, Life of Pi

Persnickety dates back to the late 1800s. It is a variant of the Scots word pernickety, which is of uncertain origin. Pernickety is perhaps related to other Scots words with the per- prefix, like perskeetwhich meant “fastidious.”

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: deucedly

pretty sure i’m just going to keep thinking it’s “douchedly” though

deucedly \DOO-sid-lee, adverb:

Devilishly; damnably.

When I went in I had seen that there was a deucedly pretty girl sitting in that particular seat, so I had taken the next one.
— P. G. Wodehouse, Man With Two Left Feet and Other Stories
It’s most important. You will put me in a deucedly awkward position if you don’t.
— C. S. Lewis, The Magician’s Nephew

Deucedly is related to the word deuce which refers to the face of a die with one dot, as in “to roll deuces.” It comes from the Latin word for two, duos. In the mid-1600s, it became associated with bad luck, probably because it was the lowest score you could get when playing dice.

(via Dictionary.com)

“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter – it’s the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.”
– Mark Twain, 1888
(via)

“The difference between the almost right word and the right word is really a large matter – it’s the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.”

– Mark Twain, 1888

(via)

word of the day: solecism

i’ve been trying to commit this fucker to memory all week. figured it might help if i made it the word of the day 

solecism \SOL-uh-siz-uhm, noun:

1. A breach of good manners or etiquette.
2. A nonstandard or ungrammatical usage, as unflammable and they was.
3. Any error, impropriety, or inconsistency.

To pick a fight with a visiting lord is a solecism, but being caught that way would have put the solecism squarely on Minch’s head…
— Joel Rosenburg, Hour of the Octopus

originally a toponym for people from the Greek city of Cilicia where a corrupt form of Greek was spoken. It came to mean “a mistake in speaking or writing” in Middle French in the 1500s. The sense of “a breach in manners” was recorded in the early 1600s.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: gasconade

remind you of anyone you know?

gasconade \gas-kuh-NEYD, noun:

1. Extravagant boasting; boastful talk.

verb:
1. To boast extravagantly; bluster.

The British officers laugh, because they are well armed and many, and Kemal’s men are pitifully few, but they enjoy and admire Kemal’s swashbuckling gasconade, and they let his party pass.
— Louis de Bernières, Birds Without Wings
The papers, barely days old, were full of boastful malarkey and gasconade, but of much more evident value when it came to information about the state of things in France, and in the local area.
— Dewey Lambdin, Troubled Waters

Gasconade originally referred to people who were from the Gascony region of southwest France, bordering Spain. Gascons reputedly boast and exaggerate their success, and their toponym took on a life of its own. It became common in English in the early 1700s.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: weald

since i’m stuck in the woods and all

weald \weeld, noun:

1. Wooded or uncultivated country.
2. A region in SE England, in Kent, Surrey, and Essex counties: once a forest area; now an agricultural region.

I am tempted to give one other case, the well-known one of the denudation of the Weald.
— Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species
And your advertisements must refer to the other, which is Great Willingden or Willingden Abbots, and lies seven miles on the other side of Battle. Quite down in the weald.
— Jane Austen, Sanditon

Related to the word wildweald comes from the Old English word weald meaning “forest.”

(via Dictionary.com)

When did misusing the word “penultimate” become the hip thing to do on the Internet?

somewhatnifty:

Come on world.  It means next to last not supercool.

this is our word of the day. thank you, Art! 

word of the day: rankle

rankle \RANG-kuhl, verb:

1. To cause keen irritation or bitter resentment in.2. To continue to cause keen irritation or bitter resentment within the mind; fester; be painful.

She holds that scornful expression long enough to make sure I notice. I make believe I don’t. I try not to let it rankle me.— Joseph Heller, Something Happened
The section of it which chiefly rankled in Charteris’s mind, and which had continued to rankle ever since, was that in which the use of the word “buffoon” had occurred.— P. G. Wodehouse, Tales of St. Austin’s

Rankle has a complex history. It derives from the Middle English word rancler meaning “to fester” which is a derivative of draoncle, late Latin for “a sore” which itself comes from the Latin draco meaning “a serpent.”

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: aioli

here’s a food related vocab entry to start the day off right!

aioli \ahy-OH-lee, noun:

A sauce made of oil and eggs, usually flavored with garlic, from the Provence region of France.

He said he was treating. There was roast artichoke topped with a sort of sly aioli. Mutton stuffed with foie gras, double chocolate rum cake. Seven kinds of cheese.
— David Foster Wallace, Infinite Jest

Aioli comes from the Provençal word for garlic, ai and the Latin word for oil, oli.

(via Dictionary.com)

word of the day: miscreants
When did misusing the word “penultimate” become the hip thing to do on the Internet?

About:

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