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Peter Andersen

The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… gallivant (verb) – 1. To roam about in search of pleasure or amusement. 2. To play around amorously; flirt. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Back in the 14th century, gallant, a noun borrowed from the French galant, denoted a young man of fashion. By the middle

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… fulgent (adj) – Shining brilliantly; radiant. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : “The weary Sun betook himself to rest; — / Then issued Vesper from the fulgent west.” That’s how the appearance of the evening star in the glowing western sky at sunset looked to 19th-century poet William

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… foible (noun) – 1. A minor weakness or failing of character. 2. The weaker section of a sword blade, from the middle to the tip. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : In the 1600s, English speakers borrowed the French word foible to refer to the weakest part

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… evergreen (adj) – 1. Having foliage that persists and remains green throughout the year. 2. Perennially fresh or interesting; enduring. 3. Automatically renewed or repeatedly made valid. (noun) – 1. A tree, shrub, or plant having foliage that persists and remains green throughout the year. 2. evergreens

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… elixir (noun) – 1. A sweetened aromatic solution of alcohol and water, serving as a vehicle for medicine. 2. (a) See philosophers’ stone. (b) A substance believed to maintain life indefinitely. Also called elixir of life. (c) A substance or medicine believed to have the power

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… dragoon (verb) – 1. To subjugate or persecute by the imposition of troops. 2. To compel by violent measures or threats; coerce. (noun) – A member of a European military unit trained and armed to fight mounted or on foot. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : A dragoon

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… discriminate (verb) – 1. To make a clear distinction; distinguish. 2. To make distinctions on the basis of class or category without regard to individual merit, especially to show prejudice on the basis of ethnicity, gender, or a similar social factor. 3. To perceive or notice

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… convoke (verb) – To cause to assemble in a meeting; convene. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The Latin noun vox (“voice”) and verb vocare (“to call”) have given rise to many English words, including convoke. Other English descendants of those roots are usually spelled with voc

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… carrel (noun) – A partially partitioned nook in or near the stacks in a library, used for private study. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : 1590s, “a small study in a cloister,” from Medieval Latin carula “enclosure in a cloister in which to sit and read,” which

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… belated (adj) – Having been delayed; done or sent too late. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Long ago, there was a verb belate, which meant “to make late.” From the beginning, belate tended to mostly turn up in the form of its past participle, belated. Eventually,

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… agrarian (adj) – 1. Relating to the cultivation of land; agricultural. 2. Relating to or concerning the land and its ownership, cultivation, and tenure. (noun) – A person who favors equitable distribution of land. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Today, an acre is generally considered to be

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… xenophobia (noun) – Fear, hatred, or mistrust of that which is foreign, especially strangers or people from different countries or cultures. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : If you look back to the ancient Greek terms that underlie the word xenophobia, you’ll discover that xenophobic individuals

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… mellifluous (adj) – Having a pleasant and fluid sound. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : In Latin, mel means “honey” and fluere means “to flow.” Those two linguistic components flow smoothly together in mellifluus (from Late Latin) and mellyfluous (from Middle English), the ancestors of mellifluous. The

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… kowtow (verb) – 1. To kneel and touch the forehead to the ground in expression of deep respect, worship, or submission, as formerly done in China. 2. To show servile deference. (noun) – 1. The act of kneeling and touching the forehead to the ground. 2. An

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… haggard (adj) – 1. Exhausted or distraught and often gaunt in appearance. 2. Wild and intractable. Used of a hawk in falconry. (noun) – An adult hawk captured for training. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Haggard comes from falconry, the sport of hunting with a trained bird

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The BFD Word of the day

The BFD Word of the day

The word for today is… flibbertigibbet (noun) – A silly, scatterbrained, or garrulous person. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Flibbertigibbet is one of many incarnations of the Middle English word flepergebet, meaning “gossip” or “chatterer” (others include flybbergybe, flibber de’ Jibb, and flipperty-gibbet). It is a word of onomatopoeic origin, created

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