Skip to content

Table of Contents

The word for today is…

regale (verb) – 1. To provide with great enjoyment; entertain.
2. To entertain sumptuously with food and drink; provide a feast for.

(noun) – 1. A great feast.
2. A choice food; a delicacy.
3. Refreshment.

Source : The Free Dictionary

Etymology : Regale has been an English verb since the early half of the 1600s; it was adapted from French régaler, which has the same meaning as regale. The French verb traces back to Middle French galer, which means “to have a good time,” and, ultimately, to gale, meaning “pleasure.” (Gala, meaning “a festive celebration,” is from the same source.) Regale also has a history as a noun meaning “a sumptuous feast.” Early use of the noun appears in a 1670 notice: “My Lord Duke will not be able to get away yet…, all the regales that are intended for him not being yet at an end.” (The man referred to is the Duke of Buccleuch, whose regales ended once and for all 15 years later when he was beheaded.)

Latest

The Politics of Not Wanting To Know

The Politics of Not Wanting To Know

Jihadist attacks are followed not by sober engagement but by a sequence of shock, condemnation and symbolic reassurance. Leaders urge unity, we’re prompted not to ‘look back in anger‘, candles are lit, teddy bears are hugged and attention is steered firmly away from questions of causation.

Members Public
Ooh, Tim Walz Is Angry

Ooh, Tim Walz Is Angry

But it’s rational Americans – regardless of political affiliation – who should be angry: angry that the people destroying America act like they’re the victims when their own policies produce the chaos.

Members Public