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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… sedulous (adjective): 1: involving or accomplished with careful perseverance 2: diligent in application or pursuit Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : The word sedulous ultimately comes from Latin se dolus, which literally means "without guile." Those two words were eventually melded into one, sedulo, meaning

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… fete (noun, verb): noun 1: festival 2a: a lavish often outdoor entertainment b: a large elaborate party verb 1: to honour or commemorate with a fete 2: to pay high honour to Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Fete is a word that has been around since

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… kamikaze (noun, adjective): noun 1: a member of a Japanese air attack corps in World War II assigned to make a suicidal crash on a target (such as a ship) 2: an aeroplane containing explosives to be flown in a suicide crash on a target

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… voyeur (noun): 1a: someone who obtains sexual gratification from observing unsuspecting individuals who are partly undressed, naked, or engaged in sexual acts broadly : someone who habitually seeks sexual stimulation by visual means b: a person who commits the crime of voyeurism 2: a prying observer

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… pernicious (adjective): 1: highly injurious or destructive : deadly 2 archaic : wicked Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Few would choose to be associated with people or things that are insidious, sinister, or pernicious; all three of these words have decidedly unpleasant meanings, each with its own particular

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… convoke (verb): : to call together to a meeting Source : Merriam -Webster 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

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… obtuse (adjective): 1a: not pointed or acute : blunt b (1) of an angle : exceeding 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees (2): having an obtuse angle c of a leaf : rounded at the free end 2a: lacking sharpness or quickness of sensibility or intellect : insensitive,

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… chutzpah (noun): : supreme self-confidence : nerve, gall Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : The word chutzpah has been boldly circulating through English since the mid-1800s. It comes from the Yiddish word khutspe, which comes in turn from the Hebrew word ḥuṣpāh. The ch in chutzpah indicates

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… brachiate (verb): : to progress by swinging from hold to hold by the arms Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Certain members of the ape family, such as the gibbon, have the ability to propel themselves by grasping hold of an overhead tree branch (or other projection) and

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… ecstatic (adjective, noun): adjective : of, relating to, or marked by ecstasy noun : one that is subject to ecstasies Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Ecstatic has been used in English since the late 1500s, arriving (via Medieval Latin) from the Greek adjective ekstatikós meaning, among other things

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… genre (noun): 1: a category of artistic, musical, or literary composition characterized by a particular style, form, or content 2: kind, sort 3: painting that depicts scenes or events from everyday life usually realistically Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Genre, as you might guess from the

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… malapropism (noun): : the usually unintentionally humorous misuse or distortion of a word or phrase especially : the use of a word sounding somewhat like the one intended but ludicrously wrong in the context Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Mrs. Malaprop, a character in Richard Sheridan's

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… presage (noun, verb): noun 1: something that foreshadows or portends a future event : omen 2: an intuition or feeling of what is going to happen in the future 3 archaic : prognostication 4: warning or indication of the future verb 1: to give an omen or

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The Dangers of Degrowth

The Dangers of Degrowth

Degrowth is simply another example of the antihuman environmentalism we have seen in the last few years. Just as ancient cultures sacrificed people to the spirits of the Earth, the Cult of Climate Change is attempting to sacrifice people on a new altar.

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The Good Oil Word of the Day

The Good Oil Word of the Day

The word for today is… somnolent (adjective): 1: of a kind likely to induce sleep 2: inclined to or heavy with sleep : drowsy Source : Merriam -Webster Etymology : Somnolent first appeared in the late 15th century in the redundant phrase "somnolent sleep." It came into English by way of

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