7 February 2015 – morose

7 February 2015

morose

[muh-rohs]

adjective
1. gloomily or sullenly ill-humored, as a person or mood.
2. characterized by or expressing gloom.

Origin
Latin
1555-1565; < Latin mōrōsus fretful, peevish, willful, equivalent to mōr- (stem of mōs) will, inclination + -ōsus -ose1

Related forms
morosely, adverb
moroseness, morosity [muh-ros-i-tee] (Show IPA), noun
supermorose, adjective
supermorosely, adverb
supermoroseness, noun

Synonyms
1. moody, sour, sulky, surly. See glum.
Antonyms
1. cheerful.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for morose Expand
– He was unusually morose, even for a man who is usually morose.
– I’ve been so morose today, thinking of everything I failed at.
– Audiences also loved this biopic, which is loosely based on the life of a morose comic-book creator.

Anagram

Romeos
more so


Today’s aphorism

We cast a shadow on something wherever we stand, and it is no good moving from place to place to save things; because the shadow always follows. Choose a place where you won’t do harm – yes, choose a place where you won’t do very much harm, and stand in it for all you are worth, facing the sunshine.

– E.M. Forster, A Room With a View


On this day

7 February 1812 – birth of Charles Dickens, English writer and social critic. Author of numerous works, including The Pickwick Papers, David Copperfield, A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, Oliver Twist. Died 9 June 1870.

7 February 1967 – Black Tuesday bushfires in Tasmania, which kill 62 and injure 900.

7 February 1971 – Switzerland gives women the right to vote.

7 February 1984 – Bruce McAndless becomes the first man to fly freely in space when he unclips his harness and uses a jet-pack to fly 300 feet away from the space shuttle, Challenger, before flying safely back to it.

7 February 1992 – Twelve members of the European Union ratify the Maastricht Treaty for greater economic integration, security and policing. The Treaty is implemented in November 1993. The nations were Great Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Denmark, Greece, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium and the Irish Republic.

6 February 2015 – harridan

6 February 2015

harridan

[hahr-i-dn]

noun
1. a scolding, vicious woman; hag; shrew.

Origin
French
1690-1700; perhaps alteration of French haridelle thin, worn-out horse, large, gaunt woman (compared with the initial element of haras stud farm, though derivation is unclear)

Synonyms
nag, virago, scold.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for harridan
– Ann is a shrill, sarcastic harridan who has nothing pleasant to say as she makes her way to the gin bottle in the office bar.
– She’s a harridan of a manager-ripping through the staff, sacking many old stalwarts, and slashing operating costs.
– Eddie is warmed by her sporty friendliness, especially in contrast to the harridan convalescing in his hotel bedroom.

Anagram

darn hair
hard rain


Today’s aphorism

Managers light a fire under people; leaders light a fire in people.

– Kathy Austin


On this day

6 February 1851 – Black Thursday bushfires that swept across Victoria, Australia. The fires killed 12 people and scorched a quarter of Victoria, approximately 5,000,000 hectares (12.5 million acres). More than 1 million sheep died. It is the largest Australian bushfire in a populous region in recorded history.

6 February 1938 – ‘Black Sunday’, when freak waves strike Bondi Beach, Australia, dragging swimmers hundreds of metres out to sea. Five people drowned and 250 needed rescuing.

6 February 1945 – birth of Bob Marley, Jamaican reggae singer and musician. Died 11 May 1981.

6 February 1952 – King George VI dies, resulting in new sovereign being Queen Elizabeth II.

6 February 1971 – Alan Shephard becomes the first man to hit golf balls on the moon. He smuggled the club and balls on board lunar spacecraft, Apollo 14, by hiding them inside his suit.

5 February 2015 – polymath

5 February 2015

polymath

[pol-ee-math]

noun
1. a person of great learning in several fields of study; polyhistor.

Origin
Greek
1615-1625; < Greek polymathḗs learned, having learned much, equivalent to poly- poly- + -mathēs, adj. derivative of manthánein to learn

Related forms
polymathic, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for polymath
– Part literary critic, part existential elegist, he presents himself as the polymath ‘s polymath.
– The polymath ‘s polymath on his epic cookbook, patent-licensing and the law, and why he’s getting into nuclear power.
– He has been a polymath all his life, plunging into one discipline after another.

Anagram

opal myth
play moth


Today’s aphorism

You will never be free until you free yourself from the prison of your own false thoughts.

– Philip Arnold


On this day

5 February 1914 – birth of William Seward Burroughs, otherwise known as William S. Burroughs or William Lee, Beat Generation author, painter, spoken word performer. The beat generation rose to prominence in the 1950s and experimented with innovation in art, style, rules and drugs. Burroughs work includes Junkie, Queer, and Naked Lunch. Burroughs died on 2 August 1997.

5 February 1922 – Readers Digest first published by DeWitt and Lila Wallace.

5 February 2009 – China tells Canada not to accept 17 Chinese Uyghur prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay. The Uyghurs had applied for refugee status in Canada. They had been arrested in Afghanistan during the 2001 US invasion.

4 February 2015 – hidebound

4 February 2015

hidebound

[hahyd-bound]

adjective
1. narrow and rigid in opinion; inflexible:
a hidebound pedant.
2. oriented toward or confined to the past; extremely conservative:
a hidebound philosopher.
3. (of a horse, cow, etc.) having the back and ribs bound tightly by the hide.

Origin
1550-1560; hide2+ -bound1

Related forms

hideboundness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for hidebound
– And a lot of its buyers are hidebound truck guys, suspicious of change or fads.
– That’s amazing considering how hidebound truck buyers can be.
– Perhaps you are using satire to point out how impossibly hidebound is the traditional structure.

Anagram

behind duo
honied bud


Today’s aphorism

Constantly choosing the lesser of the two evils, is still choosing evil.

– Jerry Garcia


On this day

4 February 1904 – birth of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, German pastor, theologian and anti-Nazi dissident. He was executed on 9 April 1945 at Flossenburg Concentration Camp, two weeks before the camp was liberated by US soldiers.

4 February 1948 – birth of Alice Cooper, (Vincent Damon Furnier), legendary American shock rocker.

4 February 1948 – Ceylon (now Sri Lanka) is granted independence from Britain, but remains a member of the British Commonwealth.

4 February 1959 – the barbie doll is invented by Ruth Handler.

4 February 1993 – Yugoslavia is dissolved and replaced by a union between Serbia and Montenegro.

4 February 2004 – Facebook founded by Mark Zuckerberg.

3 February 2015 – fugue

3 February 2015

fugue

[fyoog]

noun
1. Music. a polyphonic composition based upon one, two, or more themes, which are enunciated by several voices or parts in turn, subjected to contrapuntal treatment, and gradually built up into a complex form having somewhat distinct divisions or stages of development and a marked climax at the end.
2. Psychiatry. a period during which a person suffers from loss of memory, often begins a new life, and, upon recovery, remembers nothing of the amnesic phase.

Origin
French, Italian
1590-1600; < French < Italian fuga < Latin: flight

Related forms
fuguelike, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for fugue

– Dissociative fugue or dissociative amnesia is a rare but intriguing emotional disorder.
– Maybe novelists can go into some kind of fugue state while they’re writing and it’s enjoyable.
– Even in this fugue of misery, they understand and accept the situation


Today’s aphorism

If you look to others for fulfillment, you will never truly be fulfilled.

– Lao Tzu


On this day

3 February 1830 – Greece achieves full independence from the Ottoman Empire following Great Britain, France and Russia agreeing to the London Protocol (1830). This followed on from Greece obtaining internal autonomy through the London Protocol (1829) on 22 March 1829. The borders of Greece were finalised in the London Conference of 1832.

3 February 1919 – Inaugural meeting of the League of Nations (the predecessor of the United Nations), which was headed by US President Woodrow Wilson, aimed at promoting world peace and security.

3 February 1959 – ‘The Day the Music Died’. Plane crash during a storm near Clear Lake, Iowa, claims the lives of some of America’s finest rock and roll stars: Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, Big Bopper (J.P. Richardson). The pilot, Roger Peterson, also died. Another rock star, Dion Di Mucci, decided not to board the plane. The stars had performed at Clear Lake as part of ‘The Winter Dance Party Tour’ and were on their way to the next venue. Don McLean’s iconic song ‘American Pie’ paid homage to the tragedy, declaring it the ‘Day the Music Died’.

3 February 1966 – The Soviet Union achieves the first moon landing when the unmanned Lunix 9 spacecraft touches down on the moon’s Ocean of Storms area.

2 February 2015 – squalid

2 February 2015

squalid

[skwol-id, skwaw-lid]

adjective
1. foul and repulsive, as from lack of care or cleanliness; neglected and filthy.
2. wretched; miserable; degraded; sordid.

Origin

Latin

1585-1595; < Latin squālidus dirty, equivalent to squāl (ēre) to be dirty, encrusted + -idus -id4

Related forms

squalidly, adverb
squalidness, squalidity [skwo-lid-i-tee] (Show IPA), noun

Synonyms

1. unclean. See dirty.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for squalid
– The urban poor often lived and worked in squalid and dangerous conditions.
– Finding potable water is a problem for those living in squalid camps, but it may not be their biggest concern.
– The only landscapes he noticed were window-views of houses and his own squalid gardens, full of buddleia, which he also painted

Anagram

la squid


Today’s aphorism

Hardships often prepare ordinary people for an extraordinary destiny.

– C.S. Lewis.


On this day

2 February 1943 – the German 6th Army surrenders to Soviet forces in Stalingrad.

2 February 1964 – Hasbro launches G.I. Joe (‘Government Issue Joe), an Armed Forces toy.

2 February 1971 – Idi Amin declares himself President of Uganda and launches a genocidal program that massacres between 80,000 and 300,000 people.

2 February 1990 – South African President, F.W. De Klerk orders the release of Nelson Mandela from jail. Mandela had served 27 years in prison for his anti-apartheid work with the African National Congress. De Klerk also lifted the 30 year ban on the ANC.

1 February 2015 – propitiate

1 February 2015

propitiate

[pruh-pish-ee-eyt]

verb (used with object), propitiated, propitiating.
1. to make favorably inclined; appease; conciliate.

Origin

Latin

1635-1645; < Latin propitiātus, past participle of propitiāre to appease. See propitious, -ate1

Related forms

propitiable [pruh-pish-ee-uh-buh l] (Show IPA), adjective
propitiatingly, adverb
propitiative, adjective
propitiator, noun
nonpropitiable, adjective

Synonyms
See appease.

Antonyms
anger, arouse.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for propitiate
– It is a vision of tribes who worship together, propitiate the gods together, and die together.

Anagram

opiate trip
patriot pie
irate pi pot
pair tiptoe
I pot pirate


Today’s aphorism

I’m just a human being trying to make it in a world that is very rapidly losing it’s understanding of being human.

– John Trudell


On this day

1 February 1979 – After 14 years in exile, the Ayatollah Khomeini returns to a hero’s welcome in Tehran in which 5 million people welcomed him. He led a revolutionary army that overthrew the Shah of Iran.

1 February 1992 – the Cold War ends when US President George H.W. Bush and Russian leader, Boris Yeltsin issue a joint statement declaring an end to the decades long ‘war’.

February 2015 WOTDs


28 February 2015

cabotage

[kab-uh-tij, kab-uh-tahzh]

noun
1. navigation or trade along the coast.
2. Aviation. the legal restriction to domestic carriers of air transport between points within a country’s borders.

Origin
Middle French, Spanish
1825-1835; < French, derivative of caboter to sail coastwise, verbal derivative of Middle French cabo < Spanish cabo headland, cape2; see -age

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for cabotage
– cabotage services are reserved to national companies.

Anagram

boat cage


27 February 2015

zonule

zonule

[zohn-yool]

noun
1. a little zone, belt, band, or the like.

Origin
1825-1835; < New Latin zōnula. See zone, -ule

Related forms

zonular [zohn-yuh-ler], adjective

Dictionary.com


26 February 2015

subrogate

[suhb-ruh-geyt]

verb (used with object), subrogated, subrogating.
1. to put into the place of another; substitute for another.
2. Civil Law. to substitute (one person) for another with reference to a claim or right.

Origin
late Middle English Latin
1400-1450; 1540-50 for def 1; late Middle English (past participle) < Latin subrogātus (past participle of subrogāre to nominate (someone) as a substitute), equivalent to sub- sub- + rogā (re) to request + -tus past participle suffix

Related forms
subrogation, noun
unsubrogated, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for subrogate
– Waives the state’s right to subrogate with regard to any party to a contract, lease, or other written agreement.
– On occasion, one carrier may subrogate against the other in either property or casualty losses.
– We do however strongly object to the use of fee demonstration projects to harm, displace or subrogate concessioner operations.

Anagram

bat rogues
bags route


25 February 2015

Ghoughphtheightteeau

Courtesy of Grammarly.com:

 

potato1

 


24 February 2015

obviate

[ob-vee-eyt]

verb (used with object), obviated, obviating.
1. to anticipate and prevent or eliminate (difficulties, disadvantages, etc.) by effective measures; render unnecessary:
to obviate the risk of serious injury.

Origin
Latin
1590-1600; < Latin obviātus, past participle of obviāre to act contrary to, derivative of obvius; see obvious, -ate1

Related forms
obviable [ob-vee-uh-buh l] (Show IPA), adjective
obviation, noun
obviator, noun
preobviate, verb (used with object), preobviated, preobviating.
unobviable, adjective

Can be confused
ameliorate, obviate, vitiate.

Synonyms
preclude, avert, anticipate.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for obviate
– The new system also would not obviate concerns about the accidental or malicious storage of images.

Anagram

above it


23 February 2015

amative

[am-uh-tiv]

adjective
1. disposed to love; amorous.

– With an amative look in his eye, he gave her flowers and a kiss.

Origin
Medieval Latin
1630-1640; < Medieval Latin amātīvus, equivalent to amāt (us) (past participle of amāre to love) + -īvus -ive

Related forms
amatively, adverb
amativeness, noun
unamative, adjective
unamatively, adverb

Dictionary.com

Anagram

via mate


22 February 2015

woebegone

[woh-bi-gawn, -gon]

adjective
1. beset with woe; affected by woe, especially in appearance.
2. showing or indicating woe:
He always had a woebegone look on his face.

Origin
Middle English, Old English
1300-1350; Middle English wo begon orig., woe (has or had) surrounded (someone); wo woe + begon, past participle of begon, Old English begān to surround, besiege (see be-, go1)

Related forms
woebegoneness, noun

Synonyms
2. suffering, troubled, forlorn, gloomy.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for woebegone
– Redemption for the poem’s woebegone mariner comes when he embraces all life, no matter how lowly.
– Reasons and results couldn’t be worse than the woebegone state of expression to which human discord has devolved.
– Woebegone wooden houses, many of them falling down, dot the hillsides along the road.

Anagram

one web ego


21 February 2015

niveous

[niv-ee-uh s]

adjective
1. resembling snow, especially in whiteness; snowy.

E.g. You contemplate all the hours you sat attentive and alert on the flight deck, and how you never grew less enamored of the niveous white magnificence of clouds as you gazed down at them from thirty or thirty-five thousand feet.
-Chris Bohjalian, The Night Strangers, 2011

Origin
Latin
1615-1625; < Latin niveus snowy, snow-white, of, from snow, equivalent to niv- (stem of nix) snow + -eus -eous
Dictionary.com

Anagram

envious


20 February 2015

dour

[doo r, douuh r, dou-er]

adjective
1. sullen; gloomy:
The captain’s dour look depressed us all.
2. severe; stern:
His dour criticism made us regret having undertaken the job.
3. Scot. (of land) barren; rocky, infertile, or otherwise difficult or impossible to cultivate.

Origin
Middle English, Latin
1325-1375; Middle English < Latin dūrus dure1

Related forms
dourly, adverb
dourness, noun
Synonyms

1. morose, sour, moody. See glum.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for dour

– So far the show favors dour bickering over fish-out-of-water rural humor, much to its detriment.
– And people ask me why I look so dour.
– These tales will undoubtedly delight dog lovers and will not fail to charm even the most dour skeptics of supernatural phenomena


19 February 2015

lenity

[len-i-tee]

noun, plural lenities.
1. the quality or state of being mild or gentle, as toward others.
2. a lenient act.

Origin

Latin
1540-1550; < Latin lēnītās. See lenis, -ty2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for lenity

– The jury was informed of the factual basis for each charge and the rule of lenity does not apply.
– Under the rule of lenity, any ambiguity is interpreted to favor the defendant.
– Court declines to apply the common law rule of lenity and applies the common law no fractions of the day rule.

Anagram

ye lint
yet nil


18 February 2015

periphrasis

[puh-rif-ruh-sis]

noun, plural periphrases [puh-rif-ruh-seez]
1. the use of an unnecessarily long or roundabout form of expression; circumlocution.
2. an expression phrased in such fashion.

Also, periphrase [per-uh-freyz]

Origin
Latin, Greek
1525-1535; < Latin < Greek períphrasis. See peri-, phrase, -sis

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for periphrasis

– Other languages employ periphrasis, with idiomatic expressions or auxiliary verbs.

Anagram

sapphire sire
rip parishes
per airships


17 February 2015

accroach

[uh-krohch]

verb (used with object)
1. to assume to oneself without right or authority; usurp.

Origin
Middle English, Anglo-French, Germanic
1275-1325; Middle English acrochen < Anglo-French a (c) crocher to catch hold of, seize, usurp, Old French: derivative of croc hook, crook1(< Germanic) with ac- ac-; cf. encroach

Related forms
accroachment, noun

Dictionary.com

Anagram

coach car


16 February 2015

interpose

[in-ter-pohz]

verb (used with object), interposed, interposing.
1. to place between; cause to intervene:
to interpose an opaque body between a light and the eye.
2. to put (a barrier, obstacle, etc.) between or in the way of.
3. to put in (a remark, question, etc.) in the midst of a conversation, discourse, or the like.
4. to bring (influence, action, etc.) to bear between parties, or on behalf of a party or person.
verb (used without object), interposed, interposing.
5. to come between other things; assume an intervening position or relation.
6. to step in between parties at variance; mediate.
7. to put in or make a remark by way of interruption.

Origin

Middle French
1590-1600; < Middle French interposer. See inter-, pose1

Related forms
interposable, adjective
interposal, noun
interposer, noun
interposingly, adverb
uninterposed, adjective

Synonyms
1. introduce, insert, insinuate, inject. 3, 7. interject. 6. intervene, intercede.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for interpose
– And the speaker may interpose his own personality between you and the poem, for better or worse.
– Instead of soup kitchens or shelters, the movement tries to interpose education between children and their poverty.
– Repeatedly, he interrupts a dramatic moment to interpose information.

Anagram

entire ops
stereo pin


15 February 2015

clod

[klod]

noun
1. a lump or mass, especially of earth or clay.
2. a stupid person; blockhead; dolt.
3. earth; soil.
4. something of lesser dignity or value, as the body as contrasted with the soul:
this corporeal clod.
5. a part of a shoulder of beef.

Origin
late Middle English Old English
1400-1450; late Middle English clodde, Old English clod- (in clodhamer fieldfare); see cloud

Related forms
cloddily, adverb
cloddiness, noun
clodlike, adjective
cloddy, adjective

Synonyms
2. boor, yokel, lout, oaf, dunce.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for clod
– Chipping off a clod or two, he reveals silvery veins of ice.
– Spray the clod and wait a minute or two before dropping the clod in a jar of water.
– She will also help create and deploy the clod cards.

Anagram

cold


14 February 2015

fusty

[fuhs-tee]

adjective, fustier, fustiest.
1. having a stale smell; moldy; musty:
fusty rooms that were in need of a good airing.
2. old-fashioned or out-of-date, as architecture, furnishings, or the like:
They still live in that fusty, gingerbread house.
3. stubbornly conservative or old-fashioned; fogyish.

Origin
Middle English
1350-1400; Middle English fusti, equivalent to fust (noun) < Old French: wine cask, tree trunk (< Latin fūstis stick, pole) + -y1

Related forms
fustily, adverb
fustiness, noun

Synonyms
1. close, stuffy, oppressive; smelly, malodorous.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for fusty
– The fuming magicians with their fusty deceits ought to stop griping and get with the times.


13 February 2015

canard

[kuh-nahrd; French ka-nar]

noun, plural canards [kuh-nahrdz; French ka-nar]
1. a false or baseless, usually derogatory story, report, or rumor.
2. Cookery. a duck intended or used for food.
3. Aeronautics.
an airplane that has its horizontal stabilizer and elevators located forward of the wing.
Also called canard wing. one of two small lifting wings located in front of the main wings.
an early airplane having a pusher engine with the rudder and elevator assembly in front of the wings.

Origin
Old French
1840-1850; < French: literally, duck; Old French quanart drake, orig. cackler, equivalent to can (er) to cackle (of expressive orig.) + -art -art, as in mallart drake; see mallard

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for canard
– There’s that canard again, from people who ought to know better.
– And the canard about tenure making it difficult to fire teachers is ridiculous.
– By repeating this false canard you provide an interesting example of the tide of misinformation.

Anagram

narc ad
and car


12 February 2015

stour

[stoo r]

noun
1. British Dialect.
tumult; confusion.
a storm.
2. British Dialect. blowing dust or a deposit of dust.
3. Archaic. armed combat; battle.
4. British Dialect. a time of tumult.

Origin
Middle English, Old French, Germanic
1250-1300; Middle English < Old French estour battle < Germanic; akin to storm

Dictionary.com

Anagram

roust


11 February 2015

numpty

numpty
[nuhmp-tee}
/ˈnʌmptɪ/
noun (pl) -ties
1. (Scot, informal) a stupid person
– He was quite the numpty.

Word Origin
– of unknown origin

Collins English Dictionary

Anagram

my punt


10 February 2015

animadvert

[an-uh-mad-vurt]

verb (used without object)
1. to comment unfavorably or critically (usually followed by on or upon):
to animadvert at length upon his faulty use of English.
verb (used with object)
2. Obsolete. to take cognizance or notice of.

Origin

Latin

1630-1640; < Latin animadvertere to heed, censure, equivalent to anim (um), accusative of animus (see animus ) + advertere to advert

Related forms
animadverter, noun

Dictionary.com

Anagram

data vermin
invader mat
main advert
rad Vietnam
A dim tavern


8 February 2015

dolorous

[dol-er-uh s, doh-ler-]

adjective
1. full of, expressing, or causing pain or sorrow; grievous; mournful:
a dolorous melody; dolorous news.

Origin
Middle English, Old French
1375-1425; Middle English dolorous, dolerous < Anglo-French, Old French; see dolor, -ous

Related forms
dolorously, adverb
dolorousness, noun
undolorous, adjective
undolorously, adverb
undolorousness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for dolorous
– It is a heavy and labored drama in the old dolorous manner.
– What happened was not all dolorous lamentation, though there is some of that.
– The movie turns dolorous and grim-and also spectacular in a conventional way, with cars and buses flung across open spaces.

Anagram

soul door
solo dour


7 February 2015

morose

[muh-rohs]

adjective
1. gloomily or sullenly ill-humored, as a person or mood.
2. characterized by or expressing gloom.

Origin
Latin
1555-1565; < Latin mōrōsus fretful, peevish, willful, equivalent to mōr- (stem of mōs) will, inclination + -ōsus -ose1

Related forms
morosely, adverb
moroseness, morosity [muh-ros-i-tee] (Show IPA), noun
supermorose, adjective
supermorosely, adverb
supermoroseness, noun

Synonyms
1. moody, sour, sulky, surly. See glum.
Antonyms
1. cheerful.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for morose Expand
– He was unusually morose, even for a man who is usually morose.
– I’ve been so morose today, thinking of everything I failed at.
– Audiences also loved this biopic, which is loosely based on the life of a morose comic-book creator.

Anagram

Romeos
more so


6 February 2015

harridan

[hahr-i-dn]

noun
1. a scolding, vicious woman; hag; shrew.

Origin
French
1690-1700; perhaps alteration of French haridelle thin, worn-out horse, large, gaunt woman (compared with the initial element of haras stud farm, though derivation is unclear)

Synonyms
nag, virago, scold.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for harridan
– Ann is a shrill, sarcastic harridan who has nothing pleasant to say as she makes her way to the gin bottle in the office bar.
– She’s a harridan of a manager-ripping through the staff, sacking many old stalwarts, and slashing operating costs.
– Eddie is warmed by her sporty friendliness, especially in contrast to the harridan convalescing in his hotel bedroom.

Anagram

darn hair
hard rain


5 February 2015

polymath

[pol-ee-math]

noun
1. a person of great learning in several fields of study; polyhistor.

Origin
Greek
1615-1625; < Greek polymathḗs learned, having learned much, equivalent to poly- poly- + -mathēs, adj. derivative of manthánein to learn

Related forms
polymathic, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for polymath
– Part literary critic, part existential elegist, he presents himself as the polymath ‘s polymath.
– The polymath ‘s polymath on his epic cookbook, patent-licensing and the law, and why he’s getting into nuclear power.
– He has been a polymath all his life, plunging into one discipline after another.

Anagram

opal myth
play moth


4 February 2015

hidebound

[hahyd-bound]

adjective
1. narrow and rigid in opinion; inflexible:
a hidebound pedant.
2. oriented toward or confined to the past; extremely conservative:
a hidebound philosopher.
3. (of a horse, cow, etc.) having the back and ribs bound tightly by the hide.

Origin
1550-1560; hide2+ -bound1

Related forms

hideboundness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for hidebound
– And a lot of its buyers are hidebound truck guys, suspicious of change or fads.
– That’s amazing considering how hidebound truck buyers can be.
– Perhaps you are using satire to point out how impossibly hidebound is the traditional structure.

Anagram

behind duo
honied bud


3 February 2015

fugue

[fyoog]

noun
1. Music. a polyphonic composition based upon one, two, or more themes, which are enunciated by several voices or parts in turn, subjected to contrapuntal treatment, and gradually built up into a complex form having somewhat distinct divisions or stages of development and a marked climax at the end.
2. Psychiatry. a period during which a person suffers from loss of memory, often begins a new life, and, upon recovery, remembers nothing of the amnesic phase.

Origin
French, Italian
1590-1600; < French < Italian fuga < Latin: flight

Related forms
fuguelike, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for fugue

– Dissociative fugue or dissociative amnesia is a rare but intriguing emotional disorder.
– Maybe novelists can go into some kind of fugue state while they’re writing and it’s enjoyable.
– Even in this fugue of misery, they understand and accept the situation


2 February 2015

squalid

[skwol-id, skwaw-lid]

adjective
1. foul and repulsive, as from lack of care or cleanliness; neglected and filthy.
2. wretched; miserable; degraded; sordid.

Origin

Latin

1585-1595; < Latin squālidus dirty, equivalent to squāl (ēre) to be dirty, encrusted + -idus -id4

Related forms

squalidly, adverb
squalidness, squalidity [skwo-lid-i-tee] (Show IPA), noun

Synonyms

1. unclean. See dirty.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for squalid
– The urban poor often lived and worked in squalid and dangerous conditions.
– Finding potable water is a problem for those living in squalid camps, but it may not be their biggest concern.
– The only landscapes he noticed were window-views of houses and his own squalid gardens, full of buddleia, which he also painted

Anagram

la squid


1 February 2015

propitiate

[pruh-pish-ee-eyt]

verb (used with object), propitiated, propitiating.
1. to make favorably inclined; appease; conciliate.

Origin

Latin

1635-1645; < Latin propitiātus, past participle of propitiāre to appease. See propitious, -ate1

Related forms

propitiable [pruh-pish-ee-uh-buh l] (Show IPA), adjective
propitiatingly, adverb
propitiative, adjective
propitiator, noun
nonpropitiable, adjective

Synonyms
See appease.

Antonyms
anger, arouse.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for propitiate
– It is a vision of tribes who worship together, propitiate the gods together, and die together.

Anagram

opiate trip
patriot pie
irate pi pot
pair tiptoe
I pot pirate