Skip to content

Peter Andersen

Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… planet (noun) – 1. (a) In the traditional model of solar systems, a celestial body larger than an asteroid or comet, illuminated by light from a star, such as the sun, around which it revolves. (b) A celestial body that orbits the sun, has sufficient mass

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… ostentatious (adj) – Characterised by or given to ostentation. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Showy, pretentious, and ostentatious all mean “given to outward display,” but there are subtle differences in their meanings. Showy implies an imposing or striking appearance, but usually also implies cheapness or bad

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… ostentatious (adj) – Characterised by or given to ostentation. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Showy, pretentious, and ostentatious all mean “given to outward display,” but there are subtle differences in their meanings. Showy implies an imposing or striking appearance, but usually also implies cheapness or bad

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… nosegay (noun) – A small bunch of flowers; a bouquet. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Nosegay is a homegrown word—that is, it originated in English. 15th-century Middle English speakers joined nose (which meant then what it does today) with gay (which, at the time, meant

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… manque (adj) – Unfulfilled or frustrated in the realisation of one’s ambitions or capabilities. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : After a noun, “that might have been but is not,” 1778, from French manqué (fem. manquée), past participle of manquer “to miss, be lacking” (16th century)

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… Europhobia (adj) – (sometimes not capital) (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) hostile to Europe, Europeans, or the European Union. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Euro- +? -phobic

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… embezzle (verb) – To take (money one has been entrusted with) for personal use. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : English has a lot of verbs that mean “to steal,” including pilfer, rob, swipe, plunder, filch, and thieve. Embezzle differs from these by stressing the improper appropriation

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… dearth (noun) – 1. A scarce supply; a lack. 2. Shortage of food; famine. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The facts about the history of the word dearth are quite simple: the word derives from the Middle English form derthe, which has the same meaning as

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… auxiliary (adj) – 1. Giving assistance or support; helping. 2. Acting as a subsidiary; supplementary. 3. Held in or used as a reserve: auxiliary troops. 4. (Nautical) Equipped with a motor as well as sails. 5. (Grammar) Of, relating to, or being an auxiliary verb. (noun)

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… metathesis (noun) – 1. (Linguistics) Transposition within a word of letters, sounds, or syllables, as in the change from Old English brid to modern English bird or in the confusion of modren for modern. 1. (Chemistry) Double displacement. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : One familiar example

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… lionize (verb) – To treat as an object of great interest or importance. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : The lion is traditionally regarded as the king of beasts, and perhaps rightly so—the lion is brave, stately, and quite often ferocious. Those qualities that earn the

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… flair (noun) – 1. A natural talent or aptitude; a knack. 1. Instinctive discernment; keenness. 2. Distinctive elegance or style. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : In the 14th century, if someone told you that you had flair (or flayre as it was then commonly spelled), you

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… churlish (adj) – 1. Having a bad disposition; surly: “as valiant as the lion, churlish as the bear” (Shakespeare). 1. (Archaic) Of, like, or befitting a churl; boorish or vulgar. 2. (Archaic) Difficult to work with; intractable. Used as of soil. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology

Members Public
Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… spruik (verb) – (archaic slang Australia) To speak in public (used esp of a showman or salesman). Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : 1916, Australia and New Zealand slang, of unknown origin.

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… schlemazel also schlimazel (noun) – An extremely unlucky or inept person; a habitual failure. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : “Born loser,” 1948, from Yiddish shlim mazel “rotten luck,” from Middle High German slim “crooked” + Hebrew mazzal “luck.” British slang shemozzle “an unhappy plight” (1889) is probably

Members Public
Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… schemozzle or shemozzle or shimozzle (noun) – (informa A noisy confusion or dispute; uproar. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : UK late-19th century. Borrowed from Yiddish late 19th century: Yiddish, suggested by late Hebrew šel-l?’-mazz?l ‘of no luck’.

Members Public