1 August 2013
traduce
[truh-doos, -dyoos]
verb (used with object), tra·duced, tra·duc·ing.
– to speak maliciously and falsely of; slander; defame: to traduce someone’s character.
Origin:
1525–35; < Latin trādūcere, variant of trānsdūcere to transfer, display, expose, equivalent to trāns- trans- + dūcere to lead
Related forms
tra·duce·ment, noun
tra·duc·er, noun
tra·duc·ing·ly, adverb
un·tra·duced, adjective
Synonyms
vilify, decry, disparage.
Antonyms
praise.
Today’s aphorism
Say not always what you know, but always know what you say.
– Claudius
On this day
1 August – the official birthday for all thoroughbred horses in the Southern Hemisphere. (see 1 January for Northern Hemisphere).
1 August 10BC – birthday of Claudius, Roman Emperor.
1 August 1774 – Joseph Priestly discovers oxygen. Controversially, Carl Willhelm Scheele claims to have discovered oxygen in 1773, but did not publish his findings until 1777, well after Priestly published his own in 1775. Other claimants to the discovery of oxygen include Michal Sędziwój (in the 16th century) and Antoine Laurent Lavoisier who was working concurrently with Priestly and Scheele.
1 August 1794 – Whiskey Rebellion, which was a protest against a tax imposed by George Washington on the production of whiskey by grain growers.
1 August 1799 – France becomes the first country to introduce the metric system.
1 August 1834 – slavery officially abolished throughout the British Empire.
1 August 1882 – death of Henry Kendall, Australian poet.
1 August 1936 – Adolph Hitler opens the XI Olympiad in Berlin, Germany.
1 August 2012 – death of Gore Vidal, American author, playwright, essayist and political activist.