30 April 2015 – chintzy

30 April 2015

chintzy

[chint-see]

adjective, chintzier, chintziest.
1. of, like, or decorated with chintz.
2. cheap, inferior, or gaudy.
3. stingy; miserly:
a chintzy way to entertain guests.

Origin of chintzy
1850-1855; chintz + -y1; cf. chinchy, which has reinforced figurative senses

Synonyms
3. cheap, close, niggardly, stinting.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for chintzy
– Only a true icon makes every other product in its category seem chintzy and dated, if not totally obsolete.
– And unlike other, flimsier slider phones, the plastic hardware isn’t chintzy.
– Despite the notebook’s mostly plastic construction, it doesn’t come off as chintzy.

Anagram

thy zinc


Today’s aphorism

Is there any point in public debate in a society where hardly anyone has been taught how to think, while millions have been taught what to think?

– Peter Hitchens


On this day

30 April – International Jazz Day.

30 April 1945 – German Fuhrer, Adolf Hitler and his wife, Eva Braun, commit suicide in a bunker in Germany. Hitler had been Chancellor of Germany since 2 August 1934. He was born in Austria on 20 April 1889.

29 April 2015 – importunate

29 April 2015

importunate

[im-pawr-chuh-nit]

adjective
1. urgent or persistent in solicitation, sometimes annoyingly so.
2. pertinacious, as solicitations or demands.
3. troublesome; annoying:
importunate demands from the children for attention.

Origin of importunate
1520-1530; importune (adj.) + -ate1

Related forms
importunately, adverb
importunateness, noun
unimportunate, adjective
unimportunately, adverb
unimportunateness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for importunate
– The palace was fairly besieged all day by importunate persons appealing for some last favor before the curtain drops.
– Willy gives away his meager inheritance to the needy and importunate.

Anagram

minaret pout
top ruminate
eruption mat
unto a permit


Today’s aphorism

Enjoy the little things in life because one day you`ll look back and realize they were the big things.

– Kurt Vonnegut Jr


On this day

29 April 711 – Islamic conquest of Hispania as Moorish forces led by Tariq ibn-Ziyad land on Gibraltar in preparation for the invasion of Spain.

29 April 1770 – Captain James Cook names Botany Bay after landing there on this day.

29 April 1910 – British Parliament passes ‘The People’s Budget’, the first budget in British history that is aimed at redistributing wealth to all.

29 April 1945 – the Dacchau concentration camp near Munich is liberated by US forces.

29 April 1967 – Muhammad Ali stripped of his boxing title after refusing, on religious grounds, being drafted into the Army.

29 April 1980 – death of Alfred Hitchcock, English movie producer and director.

28 April 2015 – apologue

28 April 2015

apologue

[ap-uh-lawg, -log]

noun
1. a didactic narrative; a moral fable.
2. an allegory.

Origin of apologue
Middle French, Latin, Greek
1545-1555; (< Middle French) < Latin apologus < Greek apólogos fable. See apo-, -logue

Related forms
apologal, adjective

Dictionary.com

Anagram

Ague Loop


If you’re losing your soul and you know it, then you’ve still got a soul left to lose.

– Charles Bukowski


On this day

28 April 1789 – Mutiny on the ‘Bounty’. Lieutenant Bligh and 18 of his crew from the Royal Navy ship HMS Bounty, are set afloat in an open boat following a mutiny led by Christian Fletcher. After 47 days Bligh landed the boat on Timor, in the Dutch East Indies. The mutineers settled on Pitcairn Island and in Tahiti. In 1856, the British Government granted Norfolk Island to the Pitcairners because population growth had outgrown the small island.

28 April 1926 – birth of Harper Lee, American author. Harper wrote the iconic ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’, which detailed the racism that she witnessed as she grew up in her hometown of Monroeville, Alabama.

28 April 1945 – Italians execute former dictator Benito Mussolini and his mistress, Clara Petacci.

28 April 1996 – Port Arthur massacre in Tasmania, when Martin Bryant shoots 35 people dead. He is currently serving a life sentence for the murders.

27 April 2015 – habile

27 April 2015

habile

[hab-il]

adjective
1. skillful; dexterous; adroit.

Origin of habile
late Middle English Latin
1375-1425; late Middle English habyll < Latin habilis handy, apt; see able

Dictionary.com

Anagram

hail be
hi able


Today’s aphorism

Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear.

– Harry S. Truman


On this day

27 April 1904 – The Australian Labor Party wins the federal election, making Chris Watson Australia’s third prime minister. The ALP was the first such labour party in the world to win a national election.

27 April 1950 – apartheid formally commences in South Africa with the implementation of the Group Areas Act that segrated races.

27 April 1951 – birth of Paul Daniel ‘Ace’ Frehley, former lead guitarist with Kiss. Frehley’s character with the band was the ‘Spaceman’. He has since launched a solo career and formed a band called Frehley’s Comet.

27 April 1953 – President Dwight D. Eisenhower signs Executive Order 10450 ‘Hiring and Firing Rules for Government Employment’. The order declared homosexuality, communism and moral perversion to be national security threats and grounds for sacking a government employee or not hiring an applicant.

27 April 1994 – South Africa’s first democratic election in which citizens of all races could vote. The interim constitution is enacted. The African National Congress won the election with 62% of the vote, bringing Nelson Mandela to power. 27 April is celebrated as Freedom Day in South Africa.

26 April 2015 – spy

26 April 2015

spy

[spahy]

noun, plural spies.
1. a person employed by a government to obtain secret information or intelligence about another, usually hostile, country, especially with reference to military or naval affairs.
2. a person who keeps close and secret watch on the actions and words of another or others.
3. a person who seeks to obtain confidential information about the activities, plans, methods, etc., of an organization or person, especially one who is employed for this purpose by a competitor:
an industrial spy.
4. the act of spying.
verb (used without object), spied, spying.
5. to observe secretively or furtively with hostile intent (often followed by on or upon).
6. to act as a spy; engage in espionage.
7. to be on the lookout; keep watch.
8. to search for or examine something closely or carefully.
verb (used with object), spied, spying.
9. to catch sight of suddenly; espy; descry:
to spy a rare bird overhead.
10. to discover or find out by observation or scrutiny (often followed by out).
11. to observe (a person, place, enemy, etc.) secretively or furtively with hostile intent.
12. to inspect or examine or to search or look for closely or carefully.

Origin of spy
Middle English, Old French
1200-1250; (v.) Middle English spien, aphetic variant of espien to espy; (noun) Middle English, aphetic variant of espy a spy < Old
French espie

Related forms
spyship, noun
outspy, verb (used with object), outspied, outspying.
superspy, noun, plural superspies.
unspied, adjective
unspying, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for spy
– That brings about the reason why she is being suspected as a spy for vermillion.
– Agent provocateur a police spy who infiltrates a group to disrupt or discredit it.
– The outlaws surrendered once being identify by the soldiers with the help of a spy.


Today’s aphorism

‘I call it, “feeding the chooks”.’

– Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen on news conferences.


On this day

26 April 121AD – birth of Marcus Aurelius, Roman emperor. Died 17 March 180AD.

26 April 1865 – Union troopers corner and shoot dead John Wilkes Booth, the man who fired the fatal bullet on 14 April 1865 that assassinated President Abraham Lincoln.

26 April 1894 – birth of Rudolf Hess. Prominent Nazi politician who served as Deputy Fuhrer under Adolf Hitler. In 1941, Hess flew solo to Scotland in an effort to negotiate peace after being ignored by Hitler in various plans associated with the war. The flight was not sanctioned by Hitler. Hess was taken prisoner and charged with crimes against peace. He served a life sentence and remained in prison until his death. Died 17 August 1987.

26 April 1945 – birth of Dick Johnson, Australian racing car legend. Five-time Australian Touring Car Champion, three-time winner of the Bathurst 1000, inducted into the V8 Supercar Hall of Fame in 2001.

26 April 1986 – the Chernobyl nuclear disaster when an explosion and fire at the No 4 reactor in the Chernobyl nuclear plant, Ukraine, releases radioactive gas across Northern Europe. It is estimated to have killed up to 1 million people from radioactive related cancers.

26 April 1989 – the deadliest tornado in world history strikes Central Bangladesh, killing more than 1300, injuring 12,000 and leaving up to 80,000 homeless.

25 April 2015 – soldier

25 April 2015

soldier

[sohl-jer]

noun
1. a person who serves in an army; a person engaged in military service.
2. an enlisted man or woman, as distinguished from a commissioned officer:
the soldiers’ mess and the officers’ mess.
3. a person of military skill or experience:
George Washington was a great soldier.
4. a person who contends or serves in any cause:
a soldier of the Lord.
5. Also called button man. Slang. a low-ranking member of a crime organization or syndicate.
6. Entomology.
a member of a caste of sexually underdeveloped female ants or termites specialized, as with powerful jaws, to defend the colony from invaders.
a similar member of a caste of worker bees, specialized to protect the hive.
7. a brick laid vertically with the narrower long face out.

Compare rowlock (def 2).

verb (used without object)
9. to act or serve as a soldier.
10. Informal. to loaf while pretending to work; malinger:
He was soldiering on the job.
Verb phrases
11. soldier on, to persist steadfastly in one’s work; persevere:
to soldier on until the work is done.

Origin of soldier
Middle English, Old French
1250-1300; Middle English souldiour < Old French soudier, so (l) dier, equivalent to soulde pay (< Latin solidus; see sol2) + -ier -ier2

Related forms
soldiership, noun
nonsoldier, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for soldier
– With the introduction of the bayonet, each soldier could be both pikeman and musketeer.
– There’s the shopworn military cliche about every soldier being a sensor.
– They used the captured scientist and soldier avatars as hostages when the military approached.

Anagram

red soil
or slide
re idols


Today’s aphorism

The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.

– Sun Tzu


On this day

25 April – Anzac Day. National day of remembrance for Australia and New Zealand to commemorate ANZACs who fought at Gallipoli during World War I, honouring all service-men and women who served their country.

25 April – World Penguin Day.

25 April 1915 – World War I: the battle of Gallipoli begins, when Australian, New Zealand, British and French forces invade Turkey’s Gallipoli Peninsula, landing at Cape Helles, and what is now called Anzac Cove. The attack followed a failed British attempt on 18 March 1915 to seize Constantinople by sailing a fleet into the Dardenelle Straits. The Turks laid naval mines and sank three British ships. The Gallipoli Campaign resulted in the deaths of 56,643 Turks, 56,707 allies, which included 34,072 from Britain, 9,798 from France, 8,709 from Australia, 2,721 from New Zealand, 1,358 from British India, 49 from Newfoundland. More than 107,000 Turks and 123,000 allies were injured. The Gallipoli Campaign is seen as a defining moment in the national histories of both Australia and Turkey.

25 April 1983 – American schoolgirl, Samantha Smith, is invited to the Soviet Union after its leader, Yuri Andropov, reads her letter expressing her fears of nuclear war.

24 April 2015 – tailor

24 April 2015

tailor (1)

[tey-ler]

noun
1. a person whose occupation is the making, mending, or altering of clothes, especially suits, coats, and other outer garments.
verb (used with object)
2. to make by tailor’s work.
3. to fashion or adapt to a particular taste, purpose, need, etc.:
to tailor one’s actions to those of another.
4. to fit or furnish with clothing.
5. Chiefly U.S. Military. to make (a uniform) to order; cut (a ready-made uniform) so as to cause to fit more snugly; taper.
verb (used without object)
6. to do the work of a tailor.

Origin of tailor (1)
Middle English,Anglo-French, Old French
1250-1300; Middle English (noun) < Anglo-French tailour, Old French tailleor, equivalent to taill (ier) to cut (< Late Latin tāliāre, derivative of Latin tālea a cutting, literally, heel-piece; see tally ) + -or -or2

tailor (2)

[tey-ler]

noun, British Dialect
1. a stroke of a bell indicating someone’s death; knell.

Origin
alteration by folk etymology of teller

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for tailor
– Blues musicians frequented local hairdressers, tailor shops and clothing stores.
– Add any of the following enhancements to tailor your job ad to your unique hiring needs.
– It should be possible to tailor these so that sound waves are bent such that no echo results.

Anagram

to rail
oil art


Today’s aphorism

Don’t find fault, find a remedy.

– Henry Ford


On this day

24 April 1581 – birth of St Vincent de Paul, Catholic priest, born in France, who dedicated himself to serving the poor. Died 27 September 1660.

24 April 1915 – arrest of 250 Armenian intellectuals and leaders in Istanbul, Turkey, leads to the Armenian Genocide. It is estimated that the Ottoman Empire massacred between 1 million and 1.5 million Armenians.

24 April 1933 – Hitler begins persecuting Jehovah’s Witnesses by shutting down the Watch Tower Society office in Magdeburg. Around 10,000 Witnesses were incarcerated during Hitler’s reign, with approximately 1,200 dying in custody, including 250 who were executed.

23 April 2015 – tinker

23 April 2015

tinker

[ting-ker]

noun
1. a mender of pots, kettles, pans, etc., usually an itinerant.
2. an unskillful or clumsy worker; bungler.
3. a person skilled in various minor kinds of mechanical work; jack-of-all-trades.
4. an act or instance of tinkering:
Let me have a tinker at that motor.
5. Scot., Irish English.
a gypsy.
any itinerant worker.
a wanderer.
a beggar.
6. chub mackerel.
verb (used without object)
7. to busy oneself with a thing without useful results:
Stop tinkering with that clock and take it to the repair shop.
8. to work unskillfully or clumsily at anything.
9. to do the work of a tinker.
verb (used with object)
10. to mend as a tinker.
11. to repair in an unskillful, clumsy, or makeshift way.

Origin of tinker
Middle English
1225-1275; Middle English tinkere (noun), syncopated variant of tinekere worker in tin

Related forms
tinkerer, noun
untinkered, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for tinker
– For them, the news that scientists could soon genetically tinker more easily and more extensively is anything but good.
– But the details have been fuzzy because it’s difficult to tinker with the mixture of hydrocarbons that decorate the flies.
– If one must tinker with hormone-replacement therapy, one may-briefly, in moderation.

Anagram

trek in


Today’s aphorism

Love all, trust a few, do wrong to none.

– William Shakespeare


On this day

23 April 1564 – birth of William Shakespeare, the Bard. English poet and playwright.

23 April 1616 – death of William Shakespeare, the Bard. English poet and playwright. Shakespeare invented more than 1700 words which are now in common use. He changed nouns into verbs, verbs into adjectives and joining words that normally wouldn’t be joined.

23 April 1928 – birth of Shirley Temple, American actress, singer, dancer and former U.S. ambassador to Ghana and Czechoslovakia. Died 10 February 2014.

22 April 2015 – silvery

22 April 2015

silvery

[sil-vuh-ree]

adjective
1. resembling silver; of a lustrous grayish-white color:
the silvery moon.
2. having a clear, ringing sound like that of silver :
the silvery peal of bells.
3. containing or covered with silver :
silvery deposits.

Origin of silvery
1590-16001590-1600; silver + -y1

Related forms
silveriness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for silvery
– After all, those silvery tubes continue to work even today.
– After a quick breath at the surface, dolphins swim to the bottom of the pool and expel a long, silvery ring of air.
– Its flowers are tiny, greenish-yellow and globular, and its indented leaves have a silvery -gray sheen.
– Her silvery voice contrasted with his raspy singing.


Today’s aphorism

I have no special talents. I am only passionately curious.

– Albert Einstein


On this day

22 April – Earth Day. The United Nations created International Mother Earth Day by resolution A/RES/63/278 to be celebrated on 22 April each year. It recognises that ‘the Earth and its ecosystems are our home‘ and that ‘it is necessary to promote harmony with nature and Earth‘.

22 April 1889 – at high noon, thousands rush to claim land in the ‘Land Run of 1889′ resulting in the creation of Oklahoma City and Guthrie with populations greater than 10,000 within a few hours.

22 April 1979 – birth of Daniel Johns, Australian musician, singer-songwriter. Played in Silverchair and The Dissociatives.

22 April 1995 – death of Maggie Kuhn, activist and founder of the Gray Panthers, who campaigned for nursing home reform and opposed ageism. She also fought for human rights, social and economic justice, global peace, integration, and mental health issues.

21 April 2015 – supererogate

21 April 2015

supererogate

[soo-per-er-uh-geyt]

verb (used without object), supererogated, supererogating.
1. to do more than duty requires.

Origin of supererogate
Late Latin
1730-1740; < Late Latin superērogātus (past participle of superērogāre to pay out in addition), equivalent to super- super- + ērogātus past participle of ērogāre to pay out, equivalent to ē- e-1+ rog (ere) to ask + -ātus -ate1

Related forms

supererogation, noun
supererogator, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the web for supererogate
– As was stated in substance in an early case, the court cannot be called upon to perform a work of mere supererogation.
– Is so universal and its merits so well known that it scorns a work of supererogation to endorse it.

Anagram

peerage tours
goatee purser
pour steerage
opera gesture
a sure protege


Today’s quote

Something I like to do a lot is just sit by water when there’s a current and just stare into the water. I don’t fish, I don’t hunt, I don’t scuba, I don’t spear, don’t boat, don’t play basketball or football – I excel at staring into space. I’m really good at that.

– Iggy Pop


On this day

21 April 753BC – Romulus founds Rome.

21 April 1782 – the city of Rattanaskosin is founded by King Buddha Yodfa Chulaloke. The city is now known as Bangkok.

21 April 1910 – death of Mark Twain, U.S. novellist, author of ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’ and ‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’. Born 30 November 1835.

21 April 1947 – birth of Iggy Pop, punk, garage & glam rocker, actor.

21 April 1970 – Prince Leonard (born Leonard Casley), self-appointed sovereign secedes the Hutt River Province from Australia. Now known as the Principality of Hutt River, it is located 517km north of Perth, Western Australia and is the oldest micronation in Australia. Its sovereignty is not recognised by Australia or other nations. On 2 December 1977, Prince Leonard declared war on Australia after the Australian Tax Office pursued him for non-payment of taxes. Hostilities were ceased a few days later and Prince Leonard wrote to the Governor-General declaring his sovereignty based on the Province being undefeated in war. In 2012, the ATO again unsuccessfully attempted to recover claimed taxes. Hutt River has its own stamps and currency.

21 April 1972 – The Province of Hutt River attains legal status when Australia fails to challenge its sovereignty within two years of its formation, as required by Australian law.