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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… insurgency (noun): : the quality or state of being insurgent - specifically : a condition of revolt against a government that is less than an organised revolution and that is not recognised as belligerency Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Insurgencies fall into the category of "irregular warfare&

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… impute (verb): 1: to lay the responsibility or blame for (something) often falsely or unjustly 2: to credit or ascribe (something) to a person or a cause : attribute Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Impute is a formal word typically used in contexts in which a motive,

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… elegiac (adjective): 1a: of, relating to, or consisting of two dactylic hexameter lines the second of which lacks the arsis in the third and sixth feet b(1): written in or consisting of elegiac couplets (2): noted for having written poetry in such couplets c:

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… minutia (noun): : a minute or minor detail - usually used in plural Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Minutia was borrowed into English in the 18th century from the Latin plural noun minutiae, meaning “trifles” or “details,” which comes from the singular noun minutia, meaning “smallness.” In

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… kayfabe (noun): 1: the tacit agreement between professional wrestlers and their fans to pretend that overtly staged wrestling events, stories, characters, etc., are genuine broadly : tacit agreement to behave as if something is real, sincere, or genuine when it is not 2: the playacting involved

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… plenist (noun): : one who maintains that there are no vacuums in nature Source : Collins Etymology : A plenist is a follower of the philosophical theory of plenism that there are no vacuums in nature. It is often associated with the phrase "nature abhors a vacuum,

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… sea change (noun): 1 archaic : a change brought about by the sea 2: a marked change : transformation Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : In The Tempest, William Shakespeare’s final play, sea change refers to a change brought about by the sea: the sprite Ariel, who aims

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… argot (noun): : the language used by a particular type or group of people : an often more or less secret vocabulary and idiom peculiar to a particular group Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : We borrowed argot from French in the early 1800s, although our language already had

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… tutelage (noun): 1a: instruction especially of an individual b: a guiding influence 2: the state of being under a guardian or tutor 3a: an act or process of serving as guardian or protector : guardianship b: hegemony over a foreign territory Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Tutelage

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… Herculean (adjective): 1: of, relating to, or characteristic of Hercules 2 often not capitalised : of extraordinary power, extent, intensity, or difficulty Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : The hero Hercules, son of the god Zeus by a human mother, was famous for his superhuman strength. As penance

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… nascent (adjective): : coming or having recently come into existence Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Nascent descends from the Latin verb nasci, meaning “to be born,” as does many an English word, from nation and nature to innate and renaissance. But rather than describing the birth of

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… fiasco (noun, noun): noun : a complete failure noun : bottle, flask, especially : a bulbous long-necked straw-covered bottle for wine Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : English speakers picked up fiasco from the French, who in turn adopted it from the Italian phrase fare fiasco—literally, "to make

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… interminable (adjective): : having or seeming to have no end, especially : wearisomely protracted Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : This word was borrowed into English in the 15th century, from a Latin word combining the prefix in- ("not") and the verb terminare, meaning "to terminate&

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… commemorate (verb): 1: to call to remembrance 2: to mark by some ceremony or observation : observe 3: to serve as a memorial of Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : When you remember something, you are mindful of it. And you are especially mindful when you commemorate something,

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… abstruse (adjective): : difficult to comprehend : recondite Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Look closely at the following Latin verbs, all of which are derived from the verb trudere ("to push, thrust"): extrudere, intrudere, obtrudere, protrudere. Remove the last two letters of each of these and

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