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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… sporadic (adj) – 1. Occurring at irregular intervals or in isolated or scattered places; having no pattern or order. 2. (Medicine) Not epidemic, endemic, or inherited. Used of a disease or condition. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Sporadic describes the distribution of something across space or

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… misnomer (noun) – 1. An error in naming a person or place. 2. (a) Application of a wrong name. (b) A name wrongly or unsuitably applied to a person or object. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : What’s in a name? Well, in some cases, a

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… hiatus (noun) – 1. A gap or interruption in space, time, or continuity; a break. 2. (Linguistics) A slight pause that occurs when two immediately adjacent vowels in consecutive syllables are pronounced, as in reality and naive. 3. (Anatomy) A separation, aperture, fissure, or short passage

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… excursion (noun) – 1. A usually short journey made for pleasure; an outing. 1. A roundtrip in a passenger vehicle at a special low fare. 2. A group taking a short pleasure trip together. 3. A diversion or deviation from a main topic; a digression. 4.

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… ethereal (adj) – Intangible; delicate; heavenly; spiritual. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : If you’re burning to know the history of ethereal, you’re in the right spirit to fully understand that word’s etymology. The ancient Greeks believed that the Earth was composed of earth,

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… clarity (noun) – 1. Clearness of appearance. 2. Clearness of thought or style; lucidity. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Circa 1300, clarte, clerte “brightness, radiance; glory, splendor,” from Old French clerte, clartet (Modern French clarté) “clarity, brightness,” from Latin claritas “brightness, splendor,” also, of sounds, “clearness;

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… chivy (verb) – 1. To vex or harass with petty attacks. 2. To manoeuvre or secure gradually. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Chivy, which is also spelled chivvy, became established in our language in the 19th century and, at first, meant “to harass or chase.” Early

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… brandish (verb) – To wave or flourish (something, often a weapon) in a menacing, defiant, or excited way. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Often when we encounter the word brandish in print, it is soon followed by a word for a weapon, such as knife or

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… totem (noun) – 1. (a) An animal, plant, or natural object serving among certain tribal or traditional peoples as the emblem of a clan or family and sometimes revered as its founder, ancestor, or guardian. (b) A representation of such an object. (c) A social group

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… smite (verb) – 1. (a) To inflict a heavy blow on, with or as if with the hand, a tool, or a weapon. (b) To drive or strike (a weapon, for example) forcefully onto or into something else. 2. To attack, damage, or destroy by or

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… satiate (verb) – 1. To satisfy (an appetite, for example) fully. 2. To provide (someone) with more than enough; glut. (adj) – (Archaic) Filled to satisfaction. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Satiate, sate, surfeit, cloy, pall, glut, and gorge all mean to fill to repletion. Satiate and

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A Well-Deserved Comeuppance Awaits the Kiddy-Gender Fiddlers

A Well-Deserved Comeuppance Awaits the Kiddy-Gender Fiddlers

In one of the most astonishing feats of social engineering since the Soviet “New Man”, Western nations have been caught off guard by the onslaught of Marxist “transgender” ideology. But the pushback is growing, as civil society and responsible professionals marshal their arguments. Unhinged advocates, especially in positions of responsibility,

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… ransack (verb) – 1. To search through (something) thoroughly and often roughly. 2. To go through (a place) stealing valuables and causing disarray; pillage. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Ransack carries the image of a house being roughly disarranged, as might happen when you are frantically

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Word of the day

Word of the day

plaintive (adj) – Expressing sorrow; mournful. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Like its relative plangent, plaintive is often used to describe sad sounds. “A plaintive wail,” for example, is a common use. Plaintive and plangent (along with relatives plaintiff and complain) ultimately derive from the Latin verb plangere, meaning “to strike,

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Word of the day

Word of the day

The word for today is… passim (adverb) – Throughout or frequently; here and there. Used in textual annotation to indicate that something, such as a word or passage, occurs frequently in the work cited. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Passim is from the Latin word passus (“scattered”), itself from pandere, meaning

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Word of the Day

Word of the Day

The word for today is… panjandrum (noun) – An important or self-important person. Source : The Free Dictionary Etymology : Mock name for a pompous personage, 1755, invented by Samuel Foote (1720-1777) in a long passage full of nonsense written to test the memory of actor Charles Macklin (1697-1797), who said he could

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