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Peter Andersen

Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… blandish (verb) – To coax by flattery or wheedling; cajole. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The word blandish has been a part of the English language since at least the 14th century with virtually no change in its meaning. It ultimately derives from blandus, a Latin

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… belfry (noun) – 1. A bell tower, especially one attached to a building. 2. The part of a tower or steeple in which bells are hung. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Surprisingly, belfry does not come from bell, and early belfries did not contain bells at

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… amaranthine (adj) – 1. Of, relating to, or resembling an amaranth*. 2. Eternally beautiful and unfading; everlasting. 3. Deep purple-red. *amaranth – Any of various annual plants of the genus Amaranthus having dense green or reddish clusters of tiny flowers and including weeds, ornamentals, and species cultivated

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… unexpurgated (adj) – (of a book, text, etc) not amended or censored by removing potentially offensive material. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : 1882, from un- (1) “not” + past participle of expurgate. Etymology of expurgate : 1620s, “to purge” (in anatomy), back-formation from expurgation or from Latin expurgatus,

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… sawbones (noun) – A physician, especially a surgeon. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Sawbones cut its first literary tooth in Charles Dickens’s 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers, when Sam Weller says to Mr. Pickwick, “Don’t you know what a sawbones is, sir? … I thought

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… posthaste (adv) – With great speed; rapidly. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : In the 16th century, the phrase “haste, post, haste” was used to inform posts (as couriers were then called) that a letter was urgent and must be hastily delivered. Posts would then speedily gallop

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Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… mitigate (verb) – 1. To make less severe or intense; moderate or alleviate. 2. To make alterations to (land) to make it less polluted or more hospitable to wildlife. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The meaning of mitigate is straightforward enough: it is most often used

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… buttress (noun) – 1. A structure, usually brick or stone, built against a wall for support or reinforcement. 2. Something resembling a buttress, as: (a) The flared base of certain tree trunks. (b) A horny growth on the heel of a horse’s hoof. 3. Something

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

* The word for today is… stench (noun) – 1. A strong, foul odour; a stink. 2. A foul or objectionable quality Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Old English stenc “a smell, odor, scent, fragrance” (either pleasant or unpleasant), from Proto-Germanic *stankwiz (source also of Old Saxon stanc, Old High German stanch,

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… suffuse (verb) – 1. To spread through or over, as with liquid or light. 2. To fill thoroughly or permeate, as with a quality or emotion. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The Latin word suffendere, ancestor to suffuse by way of Latin suff?sus, has various

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… lèse-majesté (noun) – Lèse-majesté, a French term meaning “to do wrong to majesty”, is an offence against the dignity of a reigning sovereign or against a state. Source : Wikipedia Etymology : Lèse-majesté (or lese majesty, as it is also styled in English publications) comes into English by

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… hegemony (noun) – The predominance of one state or social group over others. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Hegemony comes to English from the Greek h?gemonia, a noun formed from the verb h?geisthai (“to lead”), which also gave us the word exegesis (meaning “exposition”

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… frowsy (adj) – 1. Unkempt; slovenly. 2. Having an unpleasant smell; musty. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The exact origins of frowsy are perhaps lost in an old, frowsy book somewhere, but some etymologists have speculated that frowsy (also spelled frowzy) shares a common ancestor with

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… detritus (noun) – 1. Loose fragments or grains that have been worn away from rock. 2. Disintegrated or eroded matter; debris. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : If you use detritus in speech, remember to stress the second syllable, as you do in the words arthritis and

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… cleave (verb) – 1. To split with a sharp instrument. 2. To make or accomplish by or as if by cutting. 3. To pierce or penetrate. 4. Chemistry To split (a complex molecule) into simpler molecules. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Cleave has two homographs, each

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… axiomatic (adj) – Of, relating to, or resembling an axiom; self-evident. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : An axiom is a principle widely accepted on the basis of its intrinsic merit, or one regarded as self-evidently true. A statement that is axiomatic, therefore, is one against which

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