General
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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”
Where are the MISSING Gun Records, Stuart?
I’ve been tediously reviewing all the various submissions on the Arms Legislation Bill. Whilst reviewing submissions from the Auckland select committee meeting, I came across an interesting revelation in one of them. Part Registration is already active in New Zealand. From 1983 NZ focused on a “Fit and proper
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
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
The Normalisation of Paedophilia Isn’t Letting Up
As I’ve written before, there is a disturbing trend on the left extreme of the political spectrum to normalise paedophilia as just another “sexual orientation” (and I’m not the only one to notice). In many ways, this is back to the future: the 70s and early 80s witnessed
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
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
The Transgender Language Police
PA Pundits – International Katrina Trinko Katrina Trinko is the editor-in-chief of The Daily Signal at The Heritage Foundation and co-host of The Daily Signal podcast A friend of mine has an amusing tale of a heated fight she got in as a child with her then-teenage