1 October 2015 – sacristy

1 October 2015

sacristy

[sak-ri-stee]

noun, plural sacristies.

1. an apartment in or a building connected with a church or a religious house, in which the sacred vessels, vestments, etc., are kept.

Origin of sacristy

late Middle English Medieval Latin

1400-1450; late Middle English < Medieval Latin sacristia vestry, equivalent to sacrist (a) (see sacristan ) + -ia -y3

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sacristy

Historical Examples

In the library above the sacristy are several early paintings in carved and gilt frames.
The Shores of the Adriatic
F. Hamilton Jackson

Somebody went to the sacristy and told the Father what was happening outside.
The Christian
Hall Caine

I have been in the sacristy before the mass, and at the convent feast after it.
Chronicles of the Schonberg-Cotta Family
Elizabeth Rundle Charles

Anagram

its scary
icy stars


Today’s quote

Not till we are completely lost or turned around … do we begin to find ourselves.

– Henry David Thoreau


On this day

1 October – International Day of Older Persons.

1 October – World Vegetarian Day.

1 October 1867 – ‘Das Kapital‘ by Karl Marx first published.

1 October 1869 – The world’s first postcards are issued in Vienna, Austria.

1 October 1893 – birth of Yip Man, Wing Chun Kung Fu grand-master. Immortalised in the movie, Ip Man. Died 2 December 1972.

1 October 1908 – the Model T Ford rolls out.

1 October 1918 – Damascus captured by Arab forces under the direction of Lawrence of Arabia (T.E. Lawrence) in World War I.

1 October 1942 – Little Golden Books commences publishing.

1 October 1957 – United States commences printing ‘In God We Trust’ on its paper currency.

1 October 1958 – Britain transfers Christmas Island to Australia.

October 2015 – WOTDs


31 October 2015

rakish (1)

[rey-kish]

adjective

1. like a rake; dissolute:
rakish behavior.

Origin of rakish (1)

1700-1710; rake2+ -ish1

Related forms

rakishly, adverb
rakishness, noun

rakish (2)

[rey-kish]

adjective

1. smart; jaunty; dashing:
a hat worn at a rakish angle.
2. (of a vessel) having an appearance suggesting speed.

Origin

1815-25; rake3+ -ish1

Synonyms

1. sporting, dapper, debonair, breezy.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for rakish

Contemporary Examples

Last of Robin Hood also centers on a young woman who falls for a rakish older movie star.
Susan Sarandon on Her Love Affair With David Bowie, Woody Allen’s Creepiness, and Psychedelics
Marlow Stern
July 23, 2014

Sometimes his leather jackets were sporty and rakish, at others they were sculpted into prim, hourglass shapes.
Paris Fashion Week Frenzy: Let’s Focus on Clothes
Robin Givhan
March 8, 2011

The prince was rakish and clever and yes, even charming at times.
How the Sultan of Brunei Violated His Sharia Law With Me
Jillian Lauren
May 5, 2014


30 October 2015

empirical

[em-pir-i-kuh l]

adjective

1. derived from or guided by experience or experiment.
2. depending upon experience or observation alone, without using scientific method or theory, especially as in medicine.
3. provable or verifiable by experience or experiment.

Origin of empirical

1560-1570; empiric + -al1

Related forms

empirically, adverb
empiricalness, noun
antiempirical, adjective
antiempirically, adverb
nonempirical, adjective

Synonyms

1, 2. practical, firsthand, pragmatic.

Antonyms

1, 2. secondhand, theoretical.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for empirical

Contemporary Examples

There’s also a fair amount of empirical support for the theory that lobbying dollars are driving up home prices in the District.
Is DC Real Estate Headed Up or Down?
Megan McArdle
October 22, 2012

Manzi, who founded a company that makes software expediting RFTs, is an enthusiast of this empirical approach, and rightly so.
David’s Book Club: Uncontrolled
Kenneth Silber
May 11, 2012

Those are the kinds of things that the IMF, for the first time, is actually studying in details and with empirical data.
Transcript: Thomas Friedman Interviews Hillary Clinton and Christine Lagarde
April 4, 2014

Anagram

ripe claim
eclair imp


29 October 2015

hermetic or hermetical

[hur-met-ik]

adjective

1. made airtight by fusion or sealing.
2. not affected by outward influence or power; isolated.
3. (sometimes initial capital letter) of, relating to, or characteristic of occult science, especially alchemy.
4. (initial capital letter) of or relating to Hermes Trismegistus or the writings ascribed to him.

Origin of hermetic

Medieval Latin

1630-1640; < Medieval Latin hermēticus of, pertaining to Hermes Trismegistus, equivalent to Latin Hermē (s) Hermes + -ticus -tic

Related forms

unhermetic, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for hermetic

Contemporary Examples

The government of Colombia decided to loan the 28,000 square meter fixer-upper to a fraternity of hermetic Benedictine monks.
Pablo Escobar’s Private Prison Is Now Run by Monks for Senior Citizens
Jeff Campagna
June 6, 2014

And Demme, by barely indicating the visual presence of the audience until the end, intensifies the closed-off, hermetic feeling.
The Stacks: Pauline Kael’s Talking Heads Obsession
Pauline Kael
November 21, 2014

We love to laugh at Kim and Company because it distracts our souls from the horrific reality of their hermetic regime.
Pyongyang Shuffle: Hollywood In Dead Panic Over Sony Hack
James Poulos
December 18, 2014

Anagram

creme hit
the crime
therm ice


28 October 2015

iatrophobia

[eye(ee)-at-roh-foh-bee-uh]

noun

– abnormal or irrational fear of going to the doctor.

Anagram

a phobia riot
to pariah bio
bait hair hoop


27 October 2015

quiddity

[kwid-i-tee]

noun, plural quiddities.

1. the quality that makes a thing what it is; the essential nature of a thing.
2. a trifling nicety of subtle distinction, as in argument.

Origin of quiddity

Medieval Latin

1530-1540; < Medieval Latin quidditās, equivalent to Latin quid what + -itās -ity

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for quiddity

Historical Examples

The suchness of being implies a previously existing being and quiddity.
Plotinos: Complete Works, v. 1
Plotinos (Plotinus)

Aristotle has thus shown how the Essence or quiddity (τί ἐστι) may become known in this class of cases.
Aristotle
George Grote

The lawyer’s clerk, whose name was quiddity, also set about publishing the whole of the matter abroad.
Forgotten Tales of Long Ago
E. V. Lucas

Anagram

Tidy quid


26 October 2015

lorn

[lawrn]

adjective

1. forsaken, desolate, bereft, or forlorn.
2. Archaic. lost, ruined, or undone.

Origin of lorn
Middle English, Old English
1250-1300; Middle English; Old English loren, past participle of -lēosan to lose (recorded in compounds)

Related forms

lornness, noun

Lorne or Lorn

[lawrn]

noun

1. Firth of, an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean, on the W coast of Scotland, leading NE to the Caledonian Canal.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for lorn

Historical Examples

This interesting historic memorial is still preserved by the lineal descendant of the Macdougals of lorn.
The Archaeology and Prehistoric Annals of Scotland
Daniel Wilson

I’m a lone, lorn grass-widow, dear, but I will not sleep in my stays.
The Works of Rudyard Kipling: One Volume Edition
Rudyard Kipling

This results in the galley of lorn being in chief, and the Campbell gyrons in base.
A Complete Guide to Heraldry
Arthur Charles Fox-Davies


25 October 2015

effendi

[ih-fen-dee]

noun, plural effendis.

1. a former Turkish title of respect, especially for government officials.
2. (in eastern Mediterranean countries) a man who is a member of the aristocracy.

Origin of effendi

Turkish, Greek
1605-1615; < Turkish efendi < Modern Greek, Greek authentḗs doer, master. See authentic

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for effendi

Historical Examples

This privilege is granted to them on payment of a sum of money to the effendi in charge of the Haram.
Jerusalem Explored, Volume I–Text
Ermete Pierotti

“Everything that you have ordered has been done, effendi,” he said humbly.
The Clue of the Twisted Candle
Edgar Wallace

“You may think that those are, effendi,” said Yussuf in his quiet way.
Yussuf the Guide
George Manville Fenn

Anagram

feed fin
find fee


24 October 2015

hikikomori

noun, adjective

a state or condition of acute social withdrawal, esp. among adolescents or young adults; an extreme introvert

Examples

A majority of people experiencing hikikomori are male.

Word Origin

2000; Japanese. ‘pulling away’

Dictionary.com


23 October 2015

cotillion

[kuh-til-yuh n, koh-]

noun

1. a formal ball given especially for debutantes.
2. a lively French social dance originating in the 18th century, consisting of a variety of steps and figures and performed by couples.
3. any of various dances resembling the quadrille.
4. music arranged or played for these dances.
5. a formalized dance for a large number of people, in which a head couple leads the other dancers through elaborate and stately figures.

Origin of cotillion

French

1760-1770; < French cotillon kind of dance, in Old French: petticoat, equivalent to cote coat + -illon diminutive suffix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cotillion

Contemporary Examples

Mitt, dear chap, one is delighted to escort Muffy to the cotillion.
Paul Begala: Huntsman Wins South Carolina Debate by Dropping Out
Paul Begala
January 16, 2012

Historical Examples

A toy harness from the cotillion favors jangled on her dress.
The House of Fulfilment
George Madden Martin

I simply said I wanted to be excused from taking her to the cotillion.
Stanford Stories
Charles K. Field

Anagram

ionic toll
licit loon
in cool lit


Origin of coxcomb

1565-1575; spelling variant of cockscomb

Related forms

coxcombical [koks-kom-i-kuh l, -koh-mi-], coxcombic, adjective

coxcombically, adverb

Synonyms

1. dude, popinjay, jackanapes.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for coxcomb

Historical Examples

Mr. Dashwood could not be mistaken for a pedant, unless a coxcomb be a sort of pedant.
Tales And Novels, Volume 1 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

Somebody says, that nature may make a fool, but a coxcomb is always of his own making.
Tales And Novels, Volume 4 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

He hints that this is perhaps the reason why a coxcomb always believes himself to be handsome.
Critical Miscellanies (Vol 2 of 3)
John Morley


20 October 2015

fribble

[frib-uh l]

verb (used without object), fribbled, fribbling.

1. to act in a foolish or frivolous manner; trifle.
verb (used with object), fribbled, fribbling.
2. to waste foolishly (often followed by away):
He fribbled away one opportunity after another.
noun
3. a foolish or frivolous person; trifler.
4. anything trifling or frivolous.
5. frivolousness.
adjective
6. frivolous; foolish; trifling.

Origin of fribble

1620-1630; perhaps alteration of frivol

Related forms

fribbler, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for fribble

Historical Examples

Out here a Howat Penny, just like any fribble about the Court.
The Three Black Pennys
Joseph Hergesheimer

And so he became a priest, a fribble, and a coxcomb, but a man of truth.
The Browning Cyclopedia
Edward Berdoe


19 October 2015

peripeteia

[per-uh-pi-tahy-uh, -tee-uh]

noun

1. a sudden turn of events or an unexpected reversal, especially in a literary work.

Also, peripetia, peripety [puh-rip-i-tee]

Origin of peripeteia

Greek

1585-1595; < Greek peripéteia sudden change, equivalent to peripet (ḗs) literally, falling round ( peri- peri- + pet-, base of píptein to fall) + -eia -y3

Dictionary.com

Anagram

pear pie tie
eat pie pier


18 October 2015

timocracy

[tahy-mok-ruh-see]

noun, plural timocracies.

1. a form of government in which love of honor is the dominant motive of the rulers.
2. a form of government in which a certain amount of property is requisite as a qualification for office.

Origin of timocracy

Greek

1580-1590; earlier timocratie (< F) < Greek tīmokratía, equivalent to tīmo- (combining form of tīmḗ honor, worth) + -kratia -cracy

Related forms

timocratic [tahy-muh-krat-ik] (Show IPA), timocratical, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for timocracy

Historical Examples

Out of this timocracy, or timarchy, the city will next pass into an oligarchy, or government of wealth.
Plato and the Other Companions of Sokrates, 3rd ed. Volume IV (of 4)
George Grote

The individual who answers to timocracy has some noticeable qualities.
The Republic
Plato

Yet the question might be asked, under what category we would place the timocracy, or government of the rich.
Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. 1
Henry Hallam

Anagram

macro city


17 October 2015

aesthetics

[es-thet-iks or, esp. British, ees-]

noun, ( used with a singular verb)

1. the branch of philosophy dealing with such notions as the beautiful, the ugly, the sublime, the comic, etc., as applicable to the fine arts, with a view to establishing the meaning and validity of critical judgments concerning works of art, and the principles underlying or justifying such judgments.
2. the study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty.

Also, esthetics.

Origin of aesthetics

1815-1825; see aesthetic, -ics

aestheticor esthetic
[es-thet-ik or, esp. British, ees-]

adjective

1. relating to the philosophy of aesthetics; concerned with notions such as the beautiful and the ugly.
2. relating to the science of aesthetics; concerned with the study of the mind and emotions in relation to the sense of beauty.
3. having a sense of the beautiful; characterized by a love of beauty.
4. relating to, involving, or concerned with pure emotion and sensation as opposed to pure intellectuality.
noun
5. the philosophical theory or set of principles governing the idea of beauty at a given time and place:
the clean lines, bare surfaces, and sense of space that bespeak the machine-age aesthetic; the Cubist aesthetic.
6. Archaic. the study of the nature of sensation.

Origin
1815-25; < New Latin aestheticus < Greek aisthētikós, equivalent to aisthēt (ḗs) (see aesthete ) + -ikos -ic

Related forms

nonaesthetic, adjective
pseudoaesthetic, adjective

Can be confused

acetic, aesthetic, ascetic.

Synonyms

2. discriminating, cultivated, refined.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for aesthetics

Contemporary Examples

To Vorotnikov and his wife, aesthetics and diplomacy have long ceased being a part of the discussion.
Russian Protesters Use Art as Act of War
Anna Nemtsova
January 5, 2012

The newspaper interviews two industrial designers—both of whom place value on the aesthetics of more “invisible” technologies.
Jennifer Lawrence Gets ‘Chopped’; Viktor & Rolf Return to Couture
The Fashion Beast Team
April 21, 2013

We often talk about religion in terms of commitment and ideology, but the aesthetics and experience matter, too.
Is American Christianity Becoming a Workout Cult?
Michael Schulson
April 26, 2014

Anagram

teaches its


16 October 2015

improvident

[im-prov-i-duh nt]

adjective

1. not provident; lacking foresight; incautious; unwary.
2. neglecting to provide for future needs.

Origin of improvident
1505-1515; im-2+ provident

Related forms

improvidence, noun
improvidently, adverb

Synonyms

1. thoughtless, careless, imprudent, heedless. 2. shiftless, thriftless, unthrifty, wasteful, prodigal.

Antonyms

1. prudent. 2. economical.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for improvident

Contemporary Examples

The old elite worried that the masses were too improvident and seditious.
The New Heat Center
Michael Lind
January 18, 2009

Government nurtured these behemoths by weaving an improvident safety net, and by practicing crony capitalism.
Break Up the Banks?
Megan McArdle
February 10, 2013

Historical Examples

It is said by some that the native is shiftless and improvident.
The Philippine Islands
Ramon Reyes Lala
1899

Anagram

divine mr top
primed ion tv


15 October 2015

wheedle

[hweed-l, weed-l]

verb (used with object), wheedled, wheedling.

1. to endeavor to influence (a person) by smooth, flattering, or beguiling words or acts:
We wheedled him incessantly, but he would not consent.
2. to persuade (a person) by such words or acts:
She wheedled him into going with her.
3. to obtain (something) by artful persuasions:
I wheedled a new car out of my father.
verb (used without object), wheedled, wheedling.
4. to use beguiling or artful persuasions:
I always wheedle if I really need something.

Origin of wheedle

1655-1665; origin uncertain

Related forms

wheedler, noun
wheedlingly, adverb
unwheedled, adjective

Synonyms

1. flatter, cajole. 2, 3. coax, beguile, inveigle.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for wheedle

Contemporary Examples

Instantly there flashes to mind the image of a carpet salesman in the Istanbul bazaar trying to wheedle me into his stall.
So, When Do We Become a Third World Nation?
James Atlas
December 1, 2008

Many times he would approach a patient and wheedle his great head under the patient’s hand.
RIP Cobber
David Frum
September 30, 2012

Historical Examples

I know that I have but to wheedle you and you, too, will yield!
Chivalry
James Branch Cabell

Anagram

wheeled
held ewe
wed heel


14 October 2015

chork

verb

mid-15c., now Scottish, “to make the noise which the feet do when the shoes are full of water” [Jamieson]. Related: Chorked ; chorking.

Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper

Examples from the Web for chork

Historical Examples

There, in the valley of the chork, it joined up with the Tenth Corps.
The Story of the Great War, Volume III (of VIII)
Various


13 October 2015

valise

[vuh-lees or, esp. British, -leez]

noun

1. a small piece of luggage that can be carried by hand, used to hold clothing, toilet articles, etc.; suitcase; traveling bag.

Origin of valise

French, Italian, Medieval Latin
1605-1615; < French < Italian valigia, of obscure origin; compare Medieval Latin valēsium

Can be confused

briefcase, handbag, pocketbook, purse, valise, wallet.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for valise

Contemporary Examples

Next morning Alcide packed my valise, and leaving him in charge of my apartments I took the Orient express for Constantinople.
Read ‘The King in Yellow,’ the ‘True Detective’ Reference That’s the Key to the Show
Robert W. Chambers
February 19, 2014

Historical Examples

Yes, it is, assented the young pitcher, for I did want Reggie Varley to know who really robbed his valise.
Baseball Joe in the Central League
Lester Chadwick

I will write you again as soon as we get into billets when I can find my valise.
Letters of Lt.-Col. George Brenton Laurie
George Brenton Laurie

Anagram

I slave
is veal
as veil


12 October 2015

expectorate

[ik-spek-tuh-reyt]

verb (used without object), expectorated, expectorating.

1. to eject or expel matter, as phlegm, from the throat or lungs by coughing or hawking and spitting; spit.
verb (used with object), expectorated, expectorating.
2. to eject or expel (matter) in this way.

Origin of expectorate

Latin

1595-1605; < Latin expectorātus (past participle of expectorāre to expel from the breast), equivalent to ex- ex-1+ pector- (stem of pectus) breast + -ātus -ate1

Related forms

expectorator, noun
unexpectorated, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for expectorate

Historical Examples

The others, sitting on the floor, backs to the wall and knees drawn up to chins, smoke their pipes and expectorate.
‘Neath Verdun, August-October, 1914
Maurice Genevoix

So absorbed was his attention that he even forgot to expectorate.
Original Short Stories of Maupassant, Volume 1
Guy de Maupassant

He is advised not to blow the nose, but to hawk as much of the secretion as possible backwards and then expectorate it.
A System of Operative Surgery, Volume IV (of 4)
Various

Anagram

orate except
exert ace pot
re exact poet


11 October 2015

Utopia

[yoo-toh-pee-uh]

noun

1. an imaginary island described in Sir Thomas More’s Utopia (1516) as enjoying perfection in law, politics, etc.
2. (usually lowercase) an ideal place or state.
3. (usually lowercase) any visionary system of political or social perfection.

Origin of Utopia

Greek< New Latin (1516) < Greek ou not + tóp (os) a place + -ia -y3

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Utopia

Contemporary Examples

Until that Utopia arrives, it might be heartening to realize that most students have easy, albeit illegal, access to these drugs.
Randy Cohen’s Three Favorite Ethicist Columns
Randy Cohen
October 8, 2012

On Broadway, she won a Tony award in 2000 for The Real Thing and another in 2007 for The Coast of Utopia.
A Gifted Man’s Leading Lady
Jace Lacob
September 22, 2011

Paradise on earth is elusive; there is a reason that the Latin word “ Utopia ” translates as “no place.”
Must Read New Fiction: ‘Arcadia,’ ‘Men in Space,’ ‘The O’Briens,’ ‘Hot Pink’
Chloë Schama, Jacob Silverman, Wendy Smith, Daniel Roberts
March 22, 2012

Anagram

auto pi


10 October 2015

kulak

[koo-lahk, -lak; koo-lahk, -lak]

noun, (in Russia)

1. a comparatively wealthy peasant who employed hired labor or possessed farm machinery and who was viewed and treated by the Communists during the drive to collectivize agriculture in the 1920s and 1930s as an oppressor and class enemy.
2. (before the revolution of 1917) a prosperous, ruthless, and stingy merchant or village usurer.

Origin of kulak

1875-1880; < Russian kulák literally, fist

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for kulak

Historical Examples

Not I, seeing that I have had two and a half roubles per soul squeezed out of me by a brute of a kulak !
Dead Souls
Nikolai Vasilievich Gogol

The growth of the kulak far outstripped the general growth of agriculture. The policy of the government under the slogan “face to the country” was actually a turning of its face to the kulak … Bukharin, the theoretician of the ruling faction at that time, tossed to the peasantry his famous slogan, “Get rich!” In the language of theory that was supposed to mean a gradual growing of the kulaks into socialism. In practice it meant the enrichment of the minority at the
expense of the overwhelming majority.

The Revolution Betrayed
Leon Trotsky, 1936


9 October 2015

epoch

[ep-uh k or, esp. British, ee-pok]

noun

1. a particular period of time marked by distinctive features, events, etc.:
The treaty ushered in an epoch of peace and good will.
2. the beginning of a distinctive period in the history of anything:
The splitting of the atom marked an epoch in scientific discovery.
3. a point of time distinguished by a particular event or state of affairs; a memorable date:
His coming of age was an epoch in his life.
4. Geology. any of several divisions of a geologic period during which a geologic series is formed.
Compare age (def 12).
5. Astronomy.
an arbitrarily fixed instant of time or date, usually the beginning of a century or half century, used as a reference in giving the elements of a planetary orbit or the like.
the mean longitude of a planet as seen from the sun at such an instant or date.
6. Physics. the displacement from zero at zero time of a body undergoing simple harmonic motion.

Origin of epoch

Greek

1605-1615; < New Latin epocha < Greek epochḗ pause, check, fixed time, equivalent to ep- ep- + och- (variant stem of échein to have) + -ē noun suffix
Related forms Expand
subepoch, noun
superepoch, noun

Can be confused
epic, epoch.

Synonyms
1. age, date, era, time. See age.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for epoch

Contemporary Examples

As I said, Balzac wrote about an epoch that is curiously like our own.
Happy Birthday, Balzac: The Essential Novels
Ronald K. Fried
May 19, 2013

At the same time, it is the hallmark of brilliant people whatever their civilization, epoch, or area of expertise.
Insufferable Elitism of the SATs
James Poulos
March 7, 2014

Prague Fatale is authentic because Kerr can muffle the horror of this epoch in dramatic irony but he can also shout it out loud.
Must Read Fiction: ‘Prague Fatale,’ ‘Derby Day’ and More
Malcolm Forbes, Hillary Kelly, Mythili Rao
May 8, 2012

Historical examples

The utopian hopes of the epoch of military communism came in later for a cruel, and in many respects just, criticism.
The Revolution Betrayed.
Leon Trotsky, 1936

Anagram

he cop


8 October 2015

snafu

[sna-foo, snaf-oo]

noun

1. a badly confused or ridiculously muddled situation:
A ballot snafu in the election led to a recount.

Synonyms: snarl, bedlam, tumult, disarray, disorder, confusion, mess; foul-up.
Antonyms: order, efficiency, calm.

adjective, Rare.
2. in disorder; out of control; chaotic:
a snafu scheme that simply won’t work.

verb (used with object), snafued, snafuing. Rare.
3. to throw into disorder; muddle:
Losing his passport snafued the whole vacation.

Synonyms: confuse, mess up, bungle.

Origin of snafu

1940-1945; s(ituation) n(ormal): a(ll) f(–ked) u(p); sometimes euphemistically construed as f(ouled) u(p)

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for snafu

Contemporary Examples

So is this snafu an image problem, or is the real problem the reality behind the curtain—a curtain that needed to be pulled back?
Let the Military Mouth Off!
Christopher Brownfield
July 5, 2010

Anagram

fauns


7 October 2015

punk (1)

[puhngk]

noun

1. any prepared substance, usually in stick form, that will smolder and can be used to light fireworks, fuses, etc.
2. dry, decayed wood that can be used as tinder.
3. conk (3).
4. a spongy substance derived from fungi; amadou; touchwood.

Origin of punk (1)
1680-16901680-90, Americanism; origin uncertain

punk (2)

[puhngk]

noun

1. Slang.
something or someone worthless or unimportant.
a young ruffian; hoodlum.
an inexperienced youth.
a young male partner of a homosexual.
an apprentice, especially in the building trades.
Prison Slang. a boy.
2. punk rock.
3. a style or movement characterized by the adoption of aggressively unconventional and often bizarre or shocking clothing, hairstyles, makeup, etc., and the defiance of social norms of behavior, usually associated with punk rock musicians and fans.
4. a punker.
5. Archaic. a prostitute.
adjective
6. Informal. poor in quality or condition.
7. of, relating to, or characteristic of punk rock :
a punk band.
8. pertaining to, characteristic of, or adopting punk styles:
punk youths; punk hairstyles in various colors.

Origin
1590-1600; of obscure origin; the sense development is apparently “prostitute” > “catamite” > “hoodlum”; the adj. “poor in quality” (1896) is unclearly derived and perhaps a distinct word
Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for punk

Contemporary Examples

She was the Kathleen Hanna of Hollywood—a punk rock princess in a Barbie world.
Lori Petty on ‘Orange Is the New Black,’ the Halcyon ‘90s, and Discovering Jennifer Lawrence
Marlow Stern
June 7, 2014

Surfing, skating, punk rock—these were all very antisocial and rebellious at their births, but are now billion dollar industries.
U.S. Open of Surfing Turns Into Riot
Mark Lukach
July 30, 2013

The recently-engaged Miley Cyrus has added another line to her resume: punk.
Miley’s Punk New Haircut!
Isabel Wilkinson
August 12, 2012


6 October 2015

sanctimonious

[sangk-tuh-moh-nee-uh s]

adjective

1. making a hypocritical show of religious devotion, piety, righteousness, etc.:
They resented his sanctimonious comments on immorality in America.
2. Obsolete. holy; sacred.

Origin of sanctimonious

1595-1605; sanctimony + -ous

Related forms

sanctimoniously, adverb
sanctimoniousness, noun
nonsanctimonious, adjective
nonsanctimoniously, adverb
nonsanctimoniousness, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sanctimonious

Contemporary Examples

The pious, sanctimonious Oscar ceremony is how Hollywood wants to see itself.
The Gaudy, Gauche and Sometimes Corrupt Greatness of the Golden Globes
Richard Rushfield
January 15, 2012

One purported fan blogged a review calling the interlude “an interminable and sanctimonious speech.”
Intimate Madonna Show at Paris’s Olympia Hall Turns Ugly
Tracy McNicoll
July 26, 2012

The sanctimonious, the puritans of all stripes, and the killjoys in general raise the issue annually.
Keep Christmas Commercialized!
P. J. O’Rourke
December 5, 2014

Anagram

oust insomniac
Ascot unionism
insomnia scout
a stoicism noun
on to musicians
manic sinus too
stun mosaic ion


5 October 2015

solicitous

[suh-lis-i-tuh s]

adjective

1. anxious or concerned (usually followed by about, for, etc., or a clause):
solicitous about a person’s health.
2. anxiously desirous:
solicitous of the esteem of others.
3. eager (usually followed by an infinitive):
He was always solicitous to please.
4. careful or particular:
a solicitous housekeeper.

Origin of solicitous

Latin

1555-1565; < Latin sollicitus anxious. See solicit, -ous

Related forms

solicitously, adverb
solicitousness, noun
nonsolicitous, adjective
nonsolicitously, adverb
nonsolicitousness, noun

Synonyms

1. mindful, regardful, attentive.

Antonyms

1. unconcerned, careless.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for solicitous

Contemporary Examples

In a world increasingly bending toward snark, Updike managed to remain curious, solicitous, a gentleman.

The Literary Gentleman
John Freeman
January 29, 2009
Historical Examples

The youthful shepherd did her every little service in his power, and Amarillis was pleased to see him so solicitous to oblige her.
The Blossoms of Morality
Richard Johnson

I was not solicitous to vindicate him when I was not joined in their reflection.
Clarissa, Volume 1 (of 9)
Samuel Richardson

Anagram

I it us cools


4 October 2015

quintessential

[kwin-tuh-sen-shuh l]

adjective

1. of the pure and essential essence of something:
the quintessential Jewish delicatessen.
2. of or relating to the most perfect embodiment of something:
the quintessential performance of the Brandenburg Concertos.

Related forms

quintessentially, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for quintessential

Contemporary Examples

But in reality he is the quintessential example of how Washington corrupts.
Leon Panetta Is What’s Wrong With D.C.
Michael Cohen
October 7, 2014

Ignoring people you hooked up with at Shooters when encountering them on campus is a quintessential Duke experience.
Random Hook-Ups or Dry Spells: Why Millennials Flunk College Dating
Ellie Schaack
December 31, 2014

“That was quintessential Breitbart,” Irby said, sipping on a “Wave,” a frozen margarita swirled with sangria.
At Bars Nationwide, Conservatives Raise a Glass to Andrew Breitbart
Ben Jacobs, Laura Isensee
March 1, 2013

Anagram

Sequential tins
tennis tequilas


3 October 2015

capacious

[kuh-pey-shuh s]

adjective

1. capable of holding much; spacious or roomy:
a capacious storage bin.

Origin of capacious

1605-1615; capaci(ty) + -ous

Related forms

capaciously, adverb
capaciousness, noun
uncapacious, adjective
uncapaciously, adverb
uncapaciousness, noun

Synonyms

ample, large.

Antonyms
confining.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for capacious

Contemporary Examples

As we were getting ready to repair to his capacious table, we were joined by Claude Lanzmann, the maker of the film Shoah.
My Moments With Ariel Sharon
Seth Lipsky
January 10, 2014

Yet I doubt that she will become a capacious judge with wide-ranging interests and intense curiosity.
Elena Kagan’s Surprise Defender
Richard A. Epstein
May 10, 2010

Anagram

a ciao cups


2 October 2015

carrel
or carrell

[kar-uh l]

noun

1. Also called cubicle, stall. a small recess or enclosed area in a library stack, designed for individual study or reading.
2. a table or desk with three sides extending above the writing surface to serve as partitions, designed for individual study, as in a library.

Origin of carrel
1585-1595; variant spelling of carol enclosure


1 October 2015

sacristy

[sak-ri-stee]

noun, plural sacristies.

1. an apartment in or a building connected with a church or a religious house, in which the sacred vessels, vestments, etc., are kept.

Origin of sacristy

late Middle English Medieval Latin

1400-1450; late Middle English < Medieval Latin sacristia vestry, equivalent to sacrist (a) (see sacristan ) + -ia -y3

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sacristy

Historical Examples

In the library above the sacristy are several early paintings in carved and gilt frames.
The Shores of the Adriatic
F. Hamilton Jackson

Somebody went to the sacristy and told the Father what was happening outside.
The Christian
Hall Caine

I have been in the sacristy before the mass, and at the convent feast after it.
Chronicles of the Schonberg-Cotta Family
Elizabeth Rundle Charles

Anagram

its scary
icy stars

30 September 2015 – plebeian

30 September 2015

plebeian

[pli-bee-uh n]

adjective

1. belonging or pertaining to the common people.
2. of, relating to, or belonging to the ancient Roman plebs.
3. common, commonplace, or vulgar:
a plebeian joke.
noun
4. a member of the common people.
5. a member of the ancient Roman plebs.

Origin of plebeian
Latin
1525-1535; < Latin plēbēi (us) of the plebs ( plēbē (s) plebs + -ius adj. suffix) + -an

Related forms

plebeianism, noun
plebeianly, adverb
plebeianness, noun
unplebeian, adjective

Synonyms
3. lowbrow, low, ordinary, popular.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for plebeian

Historical Examples

Appius Claudius was seized with a criminal passion for violating the person of a young woman of plebeian condition.
The History of Rome, Books 01 to 08
Titus Livius

He’s a plebeian from his thick shoe soles to his thin hair; but he’s honest.
The Bacillus of Beauty
Harriet Stark

Kiss her in the vestibule before ringing the door-bell, as if we were plebeian sweethearts?
H. R.
Edwin Lefevre

Anagram

enable pi
bale pine
be in leap


Today’s quote

Our real discoveries come from chaos, from going to the place that looks wrong and stupid and foolish.

– Chuck Palahniuk


On this day

30 September 1947 – birth of Marc Bolan, singer/guitarist for T-Rex. (Born as Mark Feld). Died 16 September 1977.

29 September 2015 – Weltanschauung

29 September 2015

Weltanschauung

[velt-ahn-shou-oo ng]

noun, German.

1. a comprehensive conception or image of the universe and of humanity’s relation to it.

Origin of Weltanschauung

literally, world-view

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Weltanschauung

Contemporary Examples

If you favor Swift, you are embracing a Weltanschauung that says that all of life is a high-school melodrama.
Battle of the Blondes
Bryan Curtis
January 27, 2010

Obamacare is an existential threat to their Weltanschauung, their idea of America?
Enough Already on HealthCare.gov. Don’t You Remember Medicare Part D?
Michael Tomasky
October 28, 2013

Historical Examples

For many years past my mind has been growing into a certain type of Weltanschauung.
Essays in Radical Empiricism
William James

Anagram

chew gun sultana
chug wet annuals
snug walnut ache


Today’s quote

We Greeks believe that a man who takes no part in public affairs is not merely lazy, but good for nothing.

― Thucydides


On this day

29 September – National Coffee Day

29 September 1997 – death of Roy Lichtenstein, American pop artist. Born 27 October 1923.

29 September – World Heart Day.

28 September 2015 – elegiac

28 September 2015

elegiac

[el-i-jahy-uh k, -ak, ih-lee-jee-ak]

adjective, Also, elegiacal

1. used in, suitable for, or resembling an elegy (a mournful, melancholy, or plaintive poem, especially a funeral song or a lament for the dead).
2. expressing sorrow or lamentation:
elegiac strains.
3. Classical Prosody. noting a distich or couplet the first line of which is a dactylic hexameter and the second a pentameter, or a verse differing from the hexameter by suppression of the arsis or metrically unaccented part of the third and the sixth foot.
noun
4. an elegiac or distich verse.
5. a poem in such distichs or verses.

Origin of elegiac

Middle French, Latin, Greek

1575-1585; (< Middle French) < Latin elegīacus < Greek elegeiakós. See elegy, -ac

Related forms
elegiacally, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for elegiac

A media flurry of last interviews and elegiac articles followed.
ABC, Fiona Gruber, 25 September 2015, ‘A late afternoon with Clive James’, http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/booksandarts/a-late-afternoon-with-author-and-broadcaster-clive-james/6797740.

Contemporary Examples

The Rum Diary came from those six months in Puerto Rico in 1960, and is the basis of an elegiac new film starring Johnny Depp.
Inside ‘The Rum Diary’
William McKeen
November 3, 2011

But he is one of the best deadline artists in the business, and his series on the dying of his father was unflinching and elegiac.
John Avlon’s Picks for 12 Best Opinion Columns of 2012
John Avlon
December 30, 2012

Six Feet Under ended its six-season run with perhaps the most elegiac, moving final scene a series has ever produced.
‘Breaking Bad’ and TV’s Five Most Shocking Flash-Forward Scenes
Kevin Fallon
August 11, 2013

Anagram

lie cage
gale ice


Today’s quote

He who learns but does not think, is lost! He who thinks but does not learn is in great danger.

– Confucius


On this day

28 September 551BC – birth of Confucius, Chinese teacher and philosopher, founder of Confucianism. Died 479BC.

28 September 1330 – birth of Nicholas Flamel, French alchemist who purportedly made it his life’s work to decode a mysterious book, known as Book of Abramelin the Mage. Some believe he decoded the recipe for the Philosopher’s Stone, which could turn base metals into silver and gold, and was said to be the elixir of life. Died 22 March 1418(?) He was seen at least 3 times after his death, which led to rumour that he had produced the elixir of life and was therefore immortal. He has been immortalised in numerous books and movies, including ‘Harry Potter‘ by J.K. Rowling, and the ‘Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel‘ series by Michael Scott.

28 September 1864 – The birth of Revolutionary Marxism following a meeting at St Martin’s Hall in London of delegates from different countries in an effort to unify the various left-wing groups comprised of communists, socialists, anarchists and trade unionists. The meeting resulted in the founding of the International Workingmen’s Association or First International. The First International was headquartered in London and directed by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels who had long stated that the working class struggle had to be supported internationally or would fail.

28 September 1872 – birth of David Uniapon, indigenous preacher, author and inventor. He is on the Australian $50 note. David influenced government decision making regarding aboriginal issues and invented a hand-piece for shearing sheep. Died 7 February 1967.

28 September 1895 – death of Louis Pasteur, French bacteriologist, one of the founders of microbiology. Invented the process for preventing milk and wine from causing sickness, known as pasteurisation. (Not entirely fool-proof, as over-imbibing wine still seems to cause sickness in some). Born 27 December 1822.

28 September 1967 – birth of Moon Unit Zappa, American musician. Son of legendary musician, Frank Zappa.

27 September 2015 – jejune

27 September 2015

jejune

[ji-joon]

adjective

1. without interest or significance; dull; insipid:
a jejune novel.
2. juvenile; immature; childish:
jejune behavior.
3. lacking knowledge or experience; uninformed:
jejune attempts to design a house.
4. deficient or lacking in nutritive value:
a jejune diet.

Origin of jejune

Latin

1605-1615; < Latin jējūnus empty, poor, mean

Related forms
jejunely, adverb
jejuneness, jejunity, noun

Can be confused

jejune, juvenile.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for jejune

Contemporary Examples

My money is on Crusading Carly to oust the jejune and pointless Barbara Boxer.
Bet on California’s GOP Amazons
Tunku Varadarajan
June 6, 2010

Well, at least he came to see how jejune his earlier view was.
How Robert Nozick Turned on Robert Nozick
Michael Tomasky
May 21, 2012

So there we have it: My money is on Crusading Carly to oust the jejune and pointless Barbara Boxer.
Bet on California’s GOP Amazons
Tunku Varadarajan
June 6, 2010

Historical

It is evident to me that Gray meant by this to stigmatise the diction of Joseph Warton, which is jejune, verbose, and poor.
Some Diversions of a Man of Letters
Edmund William Gosse

All the native annalists are jejune to an exasperating degree.
Ireland under the Tudors, Volume I (of II)
Richard Bagwell

But it observed a very high standard of classical English, a little intolerant of neologism, but not stiff nor jejune.

A History of Nineteenth Century Literature (1780-1895)
George Saintsbury

The only thing to be regretted in the volume is the arid and jejune character of the style.
A Critic in Pall Mall
Oscar Wilde

The first verse is by far the best, and every subsequent verse seems to grow more loose and jejune as the composition proceeds.
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 71, No. 437, March 1852
Various

After some jejune remarks upon this question he drops into theology and winds up with a little sermon.
Flowers of Freethought
George W. Foote

Even then the great Florentine occasionally can be jejune enough.
The Mediaeval Mind (Volume II of II)
Henry Osborn Taylor


Today’s quote

Writing is about culture and should be about everything. That’s what makes it what it is.

– Irvine Welsh


On this day

27 September 1540 – The Jesuits (Society of Jesus) founded by Ignatius Loyola.

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

27 September 1722 – birth of Samuel Adams, American revolutionary and founding father. Died 2 October 1803.

27 September 1947 – birth of Marvin Lee Aday, American rocker – otherwise known as Meatloaf.

27 September 1961 – birth of Irvine Welsh, Scottish writer – ‘Train-spotting‘, ‘Ecstasy‘.

27 September 1963 – Lee Harvey Oswald visits Cuban embassy in Mexico to apply for a Cuban visa. The embassy initially denies the visa, stating that the man was not Lee Harvey Oswald. The embassy said he would need Soviet approval. Following scrutiny from the KGB and CIA, and intense debate between the Soviets, Cuba and Oswald (?) the visa was finally issued. Oswald, or the man purporting to be Oswald, never travelled to Cuba, but returned to the U.S. on 3 October 1963 … conspiracy, anyone?

26 September 2015 – dandle

26 September 2015

dandle

[dan-dl]

verb (used with object), dandled, dandling.

1. to move (a baby, child, etc.) lightly up and down, as on one’s knee or in one’s arms.
2. to pet; pamper.

Origin of dandle
1520-1530; dand- (obscurely akin to the base of French dandiner to dandle, se dandiner to waddle, and related Romance words) + -le

Related forms

dandler, noun
undandled, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dandle

Historical Examples

I trust Mrs. Terry will get her business easily over, and that you will soon ” dandle Dickie on your knee.”
Memoirs of the Life of Sir Walter Scott, Volume V (of 10)
John Gibson Lockhart

Before I die I’d love to dandle a child of yours upon my knee.
The Cuckoo Clock
Mrs. Molesworth

I have dandled your sons and daughters, Roberta, and may I live to dandle theirs!
The Martian
George Du Maurier

Anagram

lad end


Today’s quote

If you let go of negativity and fear of change you will realize that all is always well in the universe.

– Philip Arnold


On this day

26 September 1181 – birth of St Francis of Assisi, Italian friar and founder of the men’s Franciscan Order, the women’s Order of St Clare and the Third Order of St Francis. Although these are all Catholic Orders, he was never ordained as a Catholic priest. Died 3 October 1226.

26 September 1774 – birth of Johnny Appleseed (John Chapman), American environmentalist. Appleseed was a nurseryman who introduced significant numbers of apple trees to Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, West Virginia and Illinois. His legend grew while he was still alive because of his generous nature, care for animals and the environment, and respect he had for the American Indian tribes who believed he’d been touched by the ‘Great Spirit’ because of his love and admiration for them and the gospel message he preached. Born 26 September 1774. Died 11 March 1845. The exact date of Appleseed’s death is in dispute, with some sources claiming 18 March 1845 and others as ‘Summer 1845’. 11 March is celebrated in the USA as ‘Johnny Appleseed Day’.

26 September 1888 – birth of Thomas Stearns Eliot (T.S. Eliot), poet, playwright, publisher, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature, described as ‘arguably the most important English language poet of the 20th century’. Wrote ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock‘, ‘The Waste Land‘, ‘Ash Wednesday‘, ‘The Hollow Men‘. Died 4 January 1965.

26 September 1902 – death of Levi Strauss, German-born, American clothing manufacturer. Most notable for Levi jeans. Born 26 February 1829.

26 September 1907 – New Zealand declares independence from Great Britain.

26 September 1960 – Fidel Castro delivers the longest speech in U.N. history, at 4 hours, 29 minutes.

26 September 1964 – the first episode of the sit-com, Gilligan’s Island, airs in the United States. The final episode aired on 17 April 1967. It told the story of four men and three women on board the S.S. Minnow are ship-wrecked on a deserted island in the Pacific Ocean following a storm. Stranded are the ship’s mate, Gilligan and the ship’s skipper, a millionaire and his wife (the Howells), a sultry movie star (Ginger Grant), a professor and farm girl (Mary-Anne Summers).

26 September 1983 – Australia wins the America’s Cup yacht race; the first nation to take the cup off America in 132 years.

26 September 1997 – the Basilica of St Francis of Assisi (in Assisi, Italy) partially collapses after an earthquake strikes the region.

25 September 2015 – dreck

25 September 2015

dreck
(or drek)

[drek]

noun, Slang.

1. excrement; dung.
2. worthless trash; junk.

Origin of dreck

1920-1925; < Yiddish drek; cognate with German Dreck filth; compare Old English threax, Old Norse threkkr excrement

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dreck

Contemporary Examples

But we could toughen up—have a little higher standard of wit for ourselves and a greater willingness to discourage the dreck.
The Snark Hunter
The Daily Beast
January 7, 2009

In a television season that has given us dreck like Zero Hour, Mob Doctor, and Do No Harm, Southland should be a hit.
‘Southland’: Television’s Most Underrated Drama
Jace Lacob
February 19, 2013

The website, edited by well-known islamophobe David Horowitz, is home to all sort of virulent anti-Muslim, anti-Palestinian dreck.
The Bigoted Attacks on Palestinian NFL Player Oday Aboushi
Yousef Munayyer
July 10, 2013


Today’s quote

I’d far rather be happy than right any day.

– Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy


On this day

25 September 1780 – Major General Benedict Arnold, joins the British during the American Revolution, becoming forever known as a traitor. Arnold had been a successful officer. He had trained patriot (American) troops using his own time and money after the government failed to provide the resources he felt necessary for a successful Army. He leading troops to victory in the battle of Saratoga where he was injured. While recuperating his commanding officer claimed the credit for the victory. Some of his enemies had him unfairly charged with dereliction of duty. Arnold had invested considerable time, money and effort in the American forces, but felt betrayed and that the revolution had been corrupted. He claimed his only option was to change sides. He eventually moved to London, however, he was not welcomed there because he was seen as a traitor to his own country. He died in 1801.

25 September 1958 – End of World War I in Andorra … Andorra was not invited to the Treaty of Versailles in 1919, so diplomatic peace between Germany and Andorra, relating to World War I, was not settled until this date. Refer to 12 September 1990 for the end of World War II.

25 September 1980 – death of John Bonham, Led Zeppelin drummer. Born 31 May 1948.

25 September 2005 – death of Don Adams, American actor, most famous for his character Maxwell Smart (Agent 86) in the TV show ‘Get Smart’. Born 13 April 1923. Famous catchphrases include ‘missed it by that much‘, ‘would you believe …‘, ‘sorry about that Chief‘, ‘the old [something] trick‘, ‘that’s the second […..] I’ve ever seen‘.

24 September 2015 – screed

24 September 2015

screed

[skreed]

noun

1. a long discourse or essay, especially a diatribe.
2. an informal letter, account, or other piece of writing.
3. Building Trades.
a strip of plaster or wood applied to a surface to be plastered to serve as a guide for making a true surface.
a wooden strip serving as a guide for making a true level surface on a concrete pavement or the like.
a board or metal strip dragged across a freshly poured concrete slab to give it its proper level.
4. British Dialect. a fragment or shred, as of cloth.
5. Scot.
a tear or rip, especially in cloth.
a drinking bout.
verb (used with object), verb (used without object)
6. Scot. to tear, rip, or shred, as cloth.

Origin of screed

Middle English, Old English
1275-13251275-1325; Middle English screde torn fragment, irregular (with sc- for sh-) representing Old English scrēade shred

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for screed

Contemporary Examples

The media took notice: My screed appeared in New York magazine and on various gossip blogs.
Mea Culpa, Kiddo
Marty Beckerman
August 13, 2009

No word yet from Commentary (which has devoted a grand total of one screed to the hunger strikers thus far).
Striking a Deal
Peter Beinart
May 13, 2012


Today’s quote

You would better educate ten women into the practice of liberal principles than to organize a thousand on a platform of intolerance and bigotry.

– Susan B. Anthony


On this day

24 September 1724 – birth of Sir Arthur Guiness, Irish brewer and founder of the Guinness brewery. Died 23 January 1803.

24 September 1869 – Black Friday. Wall Street panic caused by two speculators, Fisk and Gould, trying to corner the gold market on the New York Gold Exchange. During reconstruction following the American Civil War, the US government had issued large amounts of money backed by nothing but credit. Rumour had it that the government would buy back the money with gold. Fisk and Gould attempted to profit from this by buying large amounts of gold, driving the price higher. The government unloaded $4 million of its own gold on the market which caused the price to plummet. As the price plummeted, investors panicked and sold their holdings, many were ruined.

24 September 1936 – birth of Jim Henson, American muppeteer (Sesame Street, the Muppet Show). Died 16 May 1990.

24 September 1952 – birth of Mark Sandman, US musician, singer, songwriter. Founder of the alternative rock band, Morphine, which blended heavy bass sounds with blues and jazz. Sandman was described as the most under-rated and skilled bass player of his generation. Sandman collapsed and died on stage during a Morphine concert in Latium, Italy. His death was the result of a heart attack and blamed on heavy smoking, stress and extreme heat, in which the temperature on the night was in excess of 38o Celsius. Died 3 July 1999.

24 September 1990 – The Supreme Soviet agrees to change to free market.

24 September 1991 – death of Theodore Seuss Geisel, (Dr Seuss), children’s author. Born 2 March 1904.

23 September 2015 – sophomore

23 September 2015

sophomore

[sof-uh-mawr, -mohr; sof-mawr, -mohr]

noun
1. a student in the second year of high school or college.
2. a person or group in the second year of any endeavor:
He’s a sophomore on Wall Street.
adjective
3. of or relating to a sophomore.
4. of or being a second effort or second version:
Their sophomore album was even better than their first.

Origin of sophomore
1645-1655; earlier sophumer, probably equivalent to sophum sophism + -er1

Related forms
presophomore, adjective

Dictionary.com

Anagram

home spoor
shoe promo
posh romeo


Today’s quote

You will never reach your destination if you stop and throw stones at every dog that barks.

― Winston S. Churchill


On this day

23 September 63BC – birth of Augustus Caesar, founder of the Roman Empire and first Roman Emperor. Died 19 August 14 AD.

23 September 1122 – The Concordat of Worms, sometimes known as Pactum Calixtinum, which was an agreement between Pope Calixtinum and Holy Roman Emperor Henry V, near the City of Worms, to end the first phase of the power struggle between the Papacy and the Emperors by granting Kings the right to grant Bishops in their territories with secular authority, but not sacred authority. Bishops then swore allegiance to the King and the Pope. The Kings could also call on them for military support.

23 September 1215 – birth of Kublai Khan, of the Mongol Empire. He was the grandson of Genghis Khan. In 1271, Kublia Khan established the Yuan Empire ruling over modern-day Mongolia, China and Korea. He became the first non-Chinese Emperor to conquer all of China. Died 18 February 1294.

23 September 1913 – French aviator Roland Garros, becomes the first person to fly across the Mediterranean Sea.

23 September 1918 – Birth of Faith Bandler. Australian civil rights activist. Her father was from Vanuatu. Her mother of Scottish-Indian descent. Campaigned for the rights of indigenous Australians and South Sea Islanders. She was a leader in the 1967 referendum on aboriginal Australians. She was involved with the Aboriginal–Australian Fellowship and the Federal Council for the Advancement of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders (FCAATSI). She was awarded a Member of the Order of Australia in 1984 and Companion of the Order of Australia in 2009. Died 12 February 2015.

23 September 1949 – birth of Bruce Springsteen (a.k.a. The Boss), American rocker.