Knowledge
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Today's Word "irenic"
irenic \i-REH-nik\ (adjective) - Favoring, conducive to, or operating toward peace, moderation, or conciliation.
"Jasmine had always been one of the more irenic students on campus, so no one was surprised to learn that she had helped negotiate a truce between feuding student factions."
In Greek mythology, Eirene was one of the Horae, the ...Read more
Today's Word "murrain"
murrain \meh-REYN\ (noun) - A plague, a pestilence, especially affecting cattle, such as anthrax or foot-and-mouth disease; any horrendous event.
"A murrain upon your head!" or, as Trinculo put it in Shakespeare's 'The Tempest' (III, ii, 50), "A murrain on your monster, and the devil take your fingers!"
Borrowed from Old French morine, from ...Read more
Today's Word "evanescent"
evanescent \e-veh-NE-sehnt\ (adjective) - Tending to vanish like vapor, transient.
"The popular tune by the one-hit-wonder was so evanescent as to disappear from ones mind mere moments after vanishing from the airwaves."
Latin evanescens, present participle of evanescere "to vanish, disappear" from e(x) "from" + vanescere "vanish" from van-us ...Read more
Today's Word "onomastics"
onomastics \o-neh-MAES-tiks\ (noun) - 1 : The study of the formation and origins of (proper) names; 2 : the system that underlies the formation of names and specialized nomenclature (related terms).
"Aubrey looked into the onomastics of his name and discovered that it a variant of 'Alberic,' which originally meant "elf power," which seemed ...Read more
Today's Word "inglenook"
inglenook \ING-gl-nuk\ (noun) - The corner of a large open fireplace with space on either side of the hearth or built-in stove.
"Jerzey wouldn't recommend putting plants in the inglenooks lest the fire reduce them to the vegetable course of dinner."
In medieval times, fires were located in the middle of the room and the smoke wandered freely ...Read more
Today's Word "prelapsarian"
prelapsarian \pree-laep-SEr-ee-ehn\ (adjective) - Characteristic of or belonging to the time or state before the fall of mankind.
"A five minute walk brought Jamie to a prelapsarian spot so pristine and undisturbed it struck her that Adam and Eve might have just abandoned it."
The invention of this word is relatively recent. Its first attested...Read more
Today's Word "dinkum"
dinkum \DING-kehm\ (noun) - Genuine, honest person or thing.
"Fair dinkum, you won the lottery?" asked an incredulous Mick as Jason walked in wearing a new suit, after he told everyone of his good fortune.
Fair dinkum is "the real stuff, the truth." Americans and Brits trying to cut back on their profanity now have the perfect substitute for "...Read more
Today's Word "extirpate"
extirpate \EK-stehr-peyt\ (verb) - 1 : To completely remove surgically. 2 : To annihilate, exterminate, destroy completely, especially by rooting out.
"We are going to extirpate every single source of drugs in the city."
Latin exstirpare "to root out, eradicate" from ex "out (of)" + stirp-s "trunk, root." Related to torp-ere "to be stiff" ...Read more
Today's Word "obscurant"
obscurant \ehb-SKYU-rehnt\ (adjective) - That which obscures (adjective); one who obscures, prevents inquiry or enlightenment (noun).
"Lindsey felt that our cardinal problem was that the halls of government were inhabited by too many obscurants threatened by the free flow of information."
From "obscure," borrowed from Latin obscurus "dark, ...Read more
Today's Word "snook"
snook \SNOOK\ (noun) - 1 : A gesture of defiance and/or derision. 2 : Any of several kinds of salt-water fish of family Centropomidae, such as the sergeant-fish and the robalo.
"Sarah's rendition of 'I'm still standing' at the karaoke evening was a transparent snook aimed at the management cabal trying to force her resignation."
No-one knows ...Read more
Today's Word "boogie"
boogie \BU-gee\ (verb) - (Humorous slang) To dance in a fast and unrestrained fashion; to move quickly, hurry; to leave or get moving.
"Devon determined that he'd better boogie if he was to finish his papers, study for his mid-terms, and manage to work his customary sixty-hour week at the coffee shop."
From "boogie-woogie" a reduplication of "...Read more
Today's Word "zeugma"
zeugma \ZUG-meh\ (noun) - The Greek correlate of the Latinate word, "syllepsis" [si-'lep-sis], a syntactic construction in which a single word governs at least two other words or phrases even though its sense applies to them in different ways, e.g. "He flew off the handle and straight to Rio."
"Miss Nipper shook her head and a tin canister, and...Read more
Today's Word "veronica"
veronica \veh-RAH-ni-keh\ (noun) - 1 : A cloth with a representation of Jesus' face on it (from the legend that the face of Jesus was impressed on the kerchief offered him by Saint Veronica on the road to Calvary). 2 : A maneuver in bullfighting in which the matador stands erect with both feet firmly planted, attracts the bull with his cape, ...Read more
Today's Word "veronica"
veronica \veh-RAH-ni-keh\ (noun) - 1 : A cloth with a representation of Jesus' face on it (from the legend that the face of Jesus was impressed on the kerchief offered him by Saint Veronica on the road to Calvary). 2 : A maneuver in bullfighting in which the matador stands erect with both feet firmly planted, attracts the bull with his cape, ...Read more
Today's Word "unique"
unique \yu-NEEK\ (adjective) - Sole, one of a kind, without equal or match.
"Going out with Mary Ellen to the county sausage-eating contest was an almost unique experience in my life."
Today's word comes to us, as so many others, from Latin "unicus" via Old French. The underlying root is oi-no- from which English "one" is derived and the ...Read more
Today's Word "unique"
unique \yu-NEEK\ (adjective) - Sole, one of a kind, without equal or match.
"Going out with Mary Ellen to the county sausage-eating contest was an almost unique experience in my life."
Today's word comes to us, as so many others, from Latin "unicus" via Old French. The underlying root is oi-no- from which English "one" is derived and the ...Read more
Today's Word "oscitancy"
oscitancy \AH-si-tehn-si\ (noun) - 1 : Yawning or a yawn, hence 2 : the drowsiness or dullness associated with yawning.
"Jack insisted that his oscitancy came more from lack of sleep than from lack of interest."
Latin oscitare "yawn" from os- "mouth" and citare "to move". The stem cit- is also found in "cite" and "excite". It comes from Proto...Read more
Today's Word "snook"
snook \SNOOK\ (noun) - 1 : A gesture of defiance and/or derision. 2 : Any of several kinds of salt-water fish of family Centropomidae, such as the sergeant-fish and the robalo.
"Sarah's rendition of 'I'm still standing' at the karaoke evening was a transparent snook aimed at the management cabal trying to force her resignation."
No-one knows ...Read more
Today's Word "rumint"
rumint \RU-mint\ (noun) - (Nonce word)Intelligence based on rumor or false information.
"The CIA reported an outbreak of anthrax in the Caucasus based on rumint from a disgruntled emigre."
Today's word is a play on a recombined double clipping. A clipping is a shortening of the pronunciation of a word, such as reducing "doctor" to "doc," "...Read more
Hi-Yo, 'Silver Bullet'!
"AI Fires Silver Bullet for Creating New Life," read a recent newspaper headline. The story below it reported that molecular scientists are using AI to design new organisms that destroy lethal bacteria such as Escherichia coli.
Let's send that headline to ballistics. What exactly is a "silver bullet"? Is it the same as a "magic bullet"...Read more







