1 September 2016 – sjambok

1 September 2016

sjambok

[sham-bok, -buhk]

noun

1. (in southern Africa) a heavy whip, usually of rhinoceros hide.
verb (used with object)
2. to whip with or as if with such a whip.

Origin of sjambok

Afrikaans Malay Hindi
1820-1830; < Afrikaans s (j) ambok < Malay cambuk whip < Hindi cābuk

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sjambok

Contemporary example

‘Security! Beat this person with a sjambok’
Have you heard the one about the piece of string?
First Dog on the Moon
26 August 2016

Historical Examples

They generally carry a sjambok, a strip of rhinoceros hide about three feet long and an inch thick.
Seven Legs Across the Seas
Samuel Murray

sjambok occurs in 17th-century accounts of India in the form chawbuck.
The Romance of Words (4th ed.)
Ernest Weekley

I exerted all my powers of persuasion to arrest the flight of my burghers; even bringing the sjambok into the argument.
Three Years’ War
Christiaan Rudolf de Wet

Anagram

mask job


Today’s quote

The world is a hellish place, and bad writing is destroying the quality of our suffering.

– Tom Waits


On this day

1 September 1875 – birth of Edgar Rice Burroughs, American science fiction author: Tarzan, Mars series (on which the 2012 movie ‘John Carter‘ was based).

1 September 1939 – official commencement date of World War II, when Germany invaded Poland.

September 2016 – WOTDs

September 2016 – WOTDs


,hr>
30 September 2016

Sapphic

[saf-ik]

adjective

1. pertaining to Sappho or to certain meters or a form of strophe or stanza used by or named after her. (prosody) denoting a metre associated with Sappho, consisting generally of a trochaic pentameter line with a dactyl in the third foot.
2. Lesbian (def 2).
noun
3. a Sapphic verse.

Origin of Sapphic

Latin, Greek
1495-1505; < Latin sapphicus < Greek sapphikós, equivalent to Sapph (ṓ) Sappho + -ikos -ic. Sappho (c620 – c565 BC) was a Greek poet from the island of Lesbos.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Sapphic

Contemporary Examples

No doubt she’s sitting in her Sapphic palace cackling on her money.
Newcomers Invade Emmys
Choire Sicha
August 29, 2010

The game has a long history in media and popular culture, and its depictions have hardly all been Sapphic.
Softball’s Not Just for Lesbians!
Rebecca Dana
May 18, 2010

They would later be dubbed a “bloodthirsty” “lesbian she-wolf pack” and—most famously—“a seething, Sapphic septet.”
‘Out in the Night’ and the Redemption of the ‘Killer Lesbian Gang’
Nina Strochlic
June 20, 2014

Historical Examples

Its essence is flavored with the day and lyric trail of the Sapphic students.
I, Mary MacLane
Mary MacLane

He forgot all about Sappho, but the Sapphic vibrations went on increasingly.
Yellowstone Nights
Herbert Quick

She never summered in soft Sapphic seas, nor hankered after poetic Leucadian promontories.
Unicorns
James Huneker

The influence of the Sapphic legend, I fancy, not alone because of the sweet inversion.
Painted Veils
James Huneker

The Asclepiadeian stanza he employs much less frequently, the Sapphic only once, and that with indifferent success.
Types of Weltschmerz in German Poetry
Wilhelm Alfred Braun

Erinna and Damophyla study together the composition of Sapphic metres.
Greek Women
Mitchell Carroll

Lesbian, or Sapphic love is, so Taxel claims, prevalent to an enormous degree among the fashionable ladies of Paris.
Woman and Socialism
August Bebel


29 September 2016

scofflaw

[skawf-law, skof-]

noun

1. a person who flouts the law, especially one who fails to pay fines owed.
2. a person who flouts rules, conventions, or accepted practices.

Origin of scofflaw

1920-1925; scoff1+ law1

Dictionary.com

Example

– Following the Stamp Act upheavals, he tried to keep smugglers and other scofflaws from flouting Parliament’s authority.

– Its recent editorial critical of increasing fines on cellphone scofflaw motorists ignores the gains in safety on California’s roads.

Anagram

claws off


28 September 2016

rara avis

[rair-uh ey-vis; Latin rah-rah ah-wis]

noun, plural rarae aves [rair-ee ey-veez; Latin rah-rahy ah-wes] (Show IPA)

1. a rare person or thing; rarity.

Origin of rara avis

Latin

1600-1610; < Latin rāra avis rare bird

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for rara avis

Contemporary Examples

The Goldfinch proves Tartt to be a rara avis; her own species, willingly chained to her demanding muse.
Time Bandit: Donna Tartt’s “Goldfinch”
Liesl Schillinger
October 22, 2013

He is that rara avis, the politician who writes his own books.
Sorry, Dad, I’m Voting for Obama
Christopher Buckley
October 9, 2008

Historical Examples

Carey always declared that he was that rara avis an atheist, and that he had been born an atheist.
The Woman With The Fan
Robert Hichens


27 September 2016

nouveau riche

[noo-voh reesh; French noo-voh reesh]

noun, plural nouveaux riches [noo-voh reesh; French noo-voh reesh] (Show IPA)

1. a person who is newly rich:
the ostentation of the nouveaux riches of the 1920s.

Origin of nouveau riche
1805-1815; < French: new rich (person)

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for nouveau riche

Contemporary Examples

Then the international monetary boom and its immediate effects on China transformed the middle class into the nouveau riche.
How China Conquered the Art World
Arne Glimcher
March 10, 2009

Historical Examples

The nouveau riche of the new Plutocratic type comes thrusting among you, demonstrating that sometimes quite obtrusively.
New Worlds For Old
Herbert George Wells

What I didn’t tell you is that we’re nouveau riche —no class at all.
The Plastic Age
Percy Marks

Anagram

a eunuch vireo


26 September 2016

swatch

[swoch]

noun

1. a sample of cloth or other material.
2. a sample, patch, or characteristic specimen of anything.

Origin of swatch

1505-1515; akin to switch

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for swatch

Contemporary Examples

The swatch itself comes to the Met from the Vatican, where it seems to have landed 1,200 or more years ago.
Swank Threads, 1,200 Years Old
Blake Gopnik
April 1, 2012

Historical Examples

Then he took a swatch of black velveteen from his pocket and arranged it over the sample-table with the two gems in its folds.
Potash & Perlmutter
Montague Glass

No mail but a swatch of ads drenched in the season’s gladness, and the janitor would never provide a wastebasket in the entry.
The Trial of Callista Blake
Edgar Pangborn


25 September 2016

brash

[brash]

adjective, brasher, brashest. Also, brashy.

1. impertinent; impudent; tactless:
a brash young man.
2. hasty; rash; impetuous.
3. energetic or highly spirited, especially in an irreverent way; zesty:
a brash new musical.
4. (used especially of wood) brittle.
noun
5. a pile or stack of loose fragments or debris, as of rocks or hedge clippings.
6. brash ice.
7. Pathology. heartburn (def 1).
8. Scot. and North England Dialect.
a sudden shower or burst of rain.
any sudden, minor sickness or indisposition, especially of the digestive tract.
an assault; attack.

Origin of brash

late Middle English Old English
1400-1450; (noun) late Middle English brass (c) he a slap, crash, perhaps blend of brok (e) ( Old English broc breach, fragment, sickness; akin to break ) and dasch smashing blow; see dash1; (adj.) in sense “brittle,” derivative of noun; in sense “hasty” by confusion with rash1

Related forms

brashly, adverb
brashness, noun

Synonyms

2. reckless, overhasty, imprudent, foolhardy, precipitate.

Antonyms

2. cautious, wary, prudent, careful.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for brash

Contemporary Examples

It’s inspired by the women she sees on Tumblr who are “bright, brash, and brassy,” she explains.
The Plus-Size Blogging Craze
Judy McGuire
February 12, 2013

The frat-boy Calvinist megachurch pastor Mark Driscoll has drawn attention for his brash stage manner and his graphic sex advice.
Can Nadia Bolz-Weber Resurrect Liberal Christianity?
Jonathan D. Fitzgerald
November 23, 2013

When Djokovic burst onto the scene after winning the Aussie Open in 2008, he was a brash hotshot challenging Federer and Nadal.
Tennis Phenom Andy Murray’s Personality Problem
Sujay Kumar
January 26, 2013


24 September 2016

truepenny

[troo-pen-ee]

noun, plural truepennies.

1. a trusty, honest fellow.

Origin of truepenny

1580-1590; true + penny

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for truepenny

Historical Examples

“Delighted, indeed,” stammered Mr. truepenny, colouring like a girl.
Punch – Volume 25 (Jul-Dec 1853)
Various

“A very nice sermon,” said Mr. truepenny, trying to say something.
Punch – Volume 25 (Jul-Dec 1853)
Various

“Of—of course,” said Mr. truepenny ; and then with the awkwardest bow in the world, he left me and Fred together.
Punch – Volume 25 (Jul-Dec 1853)
Various

Instead of Mr. Bliss and that truepenny, came two letters of apology.
Punch – Volume 25 (Jul-Dec 1853)
Various

Anagram

penury net
retype nun


23 September 2016

hullabaloo

[huhl-uh-buh-loo]

noun, plural hullabaloos.

1. a clamorous noise or disturbance; uproar.

Origin of hullabaloo

Scots

1750-1760; apparently variant of haloobaloo, rhyming compound based on Scots baloo lullaby

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for hullabaloo

Contemporary Examples

Chris Christie is taking all the hullabaloo about his body fat in stride.
Give Chris Christie a Break on His Weight
Michelle Cottle
February 7, 2013

Yet for all the hullabaloo about outside groups, the race may simply come down to old-fashioned retail politics.
Nebraska’s GOP Cage Match
Ben Jacobs
March 20, 2014

Anagram

hula all boo


 

22 September 2016

herky-jerky

 

[hur-kee-jur-kee]

adjective

1. progressing in a fitfully jerky or irregular manner:
a herky-jerky home movie shown on an old projector.

Origin of herky-jerky

1955-1960; rhyming compound based on jerk1, -y1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for herky-jerky

Contemporary Examples

You, too, will be zipping along to the angular guitars and zigzagging, herky-jerky vocals.
The 10 Best Albums of 2014: Taylor Swift, Sia, Run the Jewels, and More
Marlow Stern
December 27, 2014

It was superficial and jumpy and herky-jerky, bopping all over the place.
Debate III: Obama Wins, But Does It Do Him Any Good?
Michael Tomasky
October 22, 2012
Historical Examples

herky-jerky put me to carrying Dick’s breakfast from the campfire up into the cave.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

The most striking thing about herky-jerky, however, was his perpetual grin.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

herky-jerky kept on grinning and cracking jokes on my failure to escape.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

I got a blurred glimpse of herky-jerky leaning back on the taut lasso.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

herky-jerky was the only one of his companions brave enough to start to help him.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

Its body shifted back and forth in herky-jerky motions like an old-fashioned washing machine.
Jubilation, U.S.A.
G. L. Vandenburg

herky-jerky ‘s boots suddenly stood on end, and I knew then he had also risen.
The Young Forester
Zane Grey

Slang definitions & phrases for herky-jerky
herky-jerky

adjective

Jerky; spasmodic; not smooth : bellow and quiver with those herky-jerky spasms/ herky-jerky instability of Shepard’s plays/ producing a herky-jerky style of governing (mid-1950s+)


21 September 2016

artless

[ahrt-lis]

adjective

1. free from deceit, cunning, or craftiness; ingenuous:
an artless child.
2. not artificial; natural; simple; uncontrived:
artless beauty; artless charm.
3. lacking art, knowledge, or skill.
4. poorly made; inartistic; clumsy; crude:
an artless translation.

Origin of artless

1580-1590; art1+ -less

Related forms

artlessly, adverb
artlessness, noun

Synonyms

1. naive, unsophisticated, guileless, open, frank, plain, unaffected, candid, sincere.

Antonyms

1. cunning.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for artless

Contemporary Examples

Closest as in “closest to her heart,” or something clutched, or something unvarnished, artless, some plain truth?
Three Cheers for Alice Munro’s Nobel Prize in Literature
Malcolm Jones
October 9, 2013

Relevant backstory is condensed into a few lines of artless dialogue.
Ashton Kutcher’s ‘Jobs’ Is Actually Not That Bad
Rob Fishman
August 15, 2013

It was spoken as if by a condemned man: largely devoid of emotion, implausible, halting, artless, and sad.
Four Exes on Tiger
Rebecca Dana
February 18, 2010

Anagram

re salts
El Tsars


20 September 2016

ablate

[a-bleyt]

verb (used with object), ablated, ablating.

1. to remove or dissipate by melting, vaporization, erosion, etc.:
to ablate a metal surface with intense heat.
verb (used without object), ablated, ablating.
2. to become ablated; undergo ablation.

Origin of ablate

Latin

1535-1545; < Latin ablātus carried away (past participle of auferre), equivalent to ab- ab- + lātus (past participle of ferre to bear); see -ate1

Dictionary.com

Anagram

a table
bat ale


19 September 2016

mise en scène

[mee zahn sen]

noun, French.

1. the process of setting a stage, with regard to placement of actors, scenery, properties, etc.
2. the stage setting or scenery of a play.
3. surroundings; environment.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for mise en scène

Contemporary Examples

But the master manipulator of mise-en-scène is back to what he does best in his fifth feature.
Michel Gondry on ‘Mood Indigo,’ Kanye West, and the 10th Anniversary of ‘Eternal Sunshine’
Marlow Stern
July 19, 2014

Historical Examples

Since nothing was altered in the mise-en-scène of their love, why should their love itself be changed?

The Child of Pleasure
Gabriele D’Annunzio

There is no pose about this town, no mise-en-scène, no stage-setting.
Cooking and Dining in Imperial Rome
Apicius

There is no mise-en-scène, no searching after recondite ideas, with Verrocchio.
A Popular Handbook to the National Gallery, Volume I, Foreign Schools
Various

It would seem that the dramatists have not so much influence in the matter of mise-en-scène as they might wish.
The English Stage
Augustin Filon

At any rate, the above lonely landmarks cannot affect our comprehensive estimate of the mise-en-scène.
The Dramatic Values in Plautus
Wilton Wallace Blancke

Only their uniforms, the ribands and decorations, the mise-en-scène render them tolerable imitations of the average military man.
Secret Memoirs: The Story of Louise, Crown Princess
Henry W. Fischer

Thus the mise-en-scène of the Lubliner closing was excellent.
Elkan Lubliner, American
Montague Glass

The mise-en-scène is then excellent, and Browning was always careful to make it right, fitting and enlivening.
The Poetry Of Robert Browning
Stopford A. Brooke

The brilliant picture before him became the mise-en-scène of an opera, the babble of voices its chorus.
A Daughter of the Vine
Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton

Anagram

incenses me
sense mince
me in scenes


18 September 2016

schlep or schlepp, shlep, shlepp

[shlep] Slang.

verb (used with object), schlepped, schlepping.

1. to carry; lug:
to schlep an umbrella on a sunny day.
verb (used without object), schlepped, schlepping.
2. to move slowly, awkwardly, or tediously:
We schlepped from store to store all day.
noun
3. Also, schlepper. someone or something that is tedious, slow, or awkward; drag.

Origin of schlep

Middle High German dialect Middle Dutch
1920-1925; < Yiddish shlepn to pull, drag, (intransitive) trudge < Middle High German dialect sleppen < Middle Low German, Middle Dutch slēpen; cognate with Middle High German, Old High German sleifen (German schleifen); akin to slip1, slippery

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for schlep

Contemporary Examples

Miss Blankenship, as brittle as her bones were, sure knew how to schlep bottles of liquor around the office.
Eulogy for Don Draper’s Secretary
The Daily Beast Video
September 19, 2010

It’s a 50-minute car ride (30 on the train) and well worth the schlep.
Gal With a Suitcase
Jolie Hunt
January 15, 2010

Like other schlep Lab projects, this video is meant to spark a conversation between generations.
The New Great Schlep
Mira Sucharov
October 30, 2012


17 September 2016

objet d’art

[awb-zhe dar]

noun, plural objets d’art [awb-zhe dar]. French.

1. an object of artistic worth or curiosity, especially a small object.

Also called objet.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for objet d’art

Historical Examples

Remember, we may inherit a good antique or objet d’art, buy one, or bequeath one.
The Art of Interior Decoration
Grace Wood

If you look into the history of any objet d’art you will find that it was first used for a purpose.
The House in Good Taste
Elsie de Wolfe

Anagram

bad jotter
jotted bar


16 September 2016

bibelot

[bib-loh; French beebuh-loh]

noun, plural bibelots [bib-lohz; French beebuh-loh] (Show IPA)

1. a small object of curiosity, beauty, or rarity.

Origin of bibelot

1870-1875; < French, equivalent to bibel- (expressive formation akin to bauble ) + -ot noun suffix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for bibelot

Historical Examples

She was terribly hurt; in her heart she had always feared her husband regarded her as a bibelot.
The Twelfth Hour
Ada Leverson

I set to work at once, and in a very little while my bibelot was selected.
Certain Personal Matters
H. G. Wells

Regarded as a bibelot, Mrs. Wigger was, I think, of the first perfection.
Turns about Town
Robert Cortes Holliday

Anagram

to bible
boil bet
tie blob


15 September 2016

bagatelle

[bag-uh-tel]

noun

1. something of little value or importance; a trifle.
2. a game played on a board having holes at one end into which balls are to be struck with a cue.
3. pinball.
4. a short and light musical composition, typically for the piano.

Origin of bagatelle

French

1630-1640; French < Upper Italian bagat (t) ella, equivalent to bagatt (a) small possession (perhaps bag (a) berry (< Latin bāca; cf. bay4) + -att (a) diminutive suffix) + -ella < Latin -illa diminutive suffix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for bagatelle

Historical Examples

This morning I had the “No. 9” towed to the railing of bagatelle by means of its guide rope.
My Airships
Alberto Santos-Dumont

I don’t know that there is much soaring upwards in bagatelle.
Is He Popenjoy?
Anthony Trollope

In the region of bagatelle in the Argonne two German counterattacks were repulsed.
The Story of the Great War, Volume III (of VIII)
Various

But this is a mere trifle, a bagatelle, to the many other infractions of which he is guilty.
The Mystery of Space
Robert T. Browne

I know one to be had a bargain,—a bagatelle,—five hundred naps a-year.
The Parisians, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton

Anagram

gate label
beat legal
agate bell


14 September 2016

gewgaw

[gyoo-gaw, goo-]

noun

1. something gaudy and useless; trinket; bauble.

Also, geegaw.

Origin of gewgaw

Middle English

1175-1225; Middle English giuegaue; gradational compound of uncertain origin; perhaps akin to Middle French, French gogo (see À gogo )

Related forms

gewgawed, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for gewgaw

Historical Examples

To the gewgaw fetters of rhyme (invented by the monks to enslave the people) I have a rooted objection.
Rejected Addresses
James Smith

Then sprang into existence the tawdry, the common, the gewgaw.
The Gentle Art of Making Enemies
James McNeill Whistler

Some of them have been won by a mess of pottage, a mere bauble or a gewgaw.
Prisons and Prayer: Or a Labor of Love
Elizabeth Ryder Wheaton


13 September 2016

wampum

[wom-puh m, wawm-]

noun

1. Also called peag, seawan, sewan. cylindrical beads made from shells, pierced and strung, used by North American Indians as a medium of exchange, for ornaments, and for ceremonial and sometimes spiritual purposes, especially such beads when white but also including the more valuable black or dark-purple varieties.
2. Informal. money.

Origin of wampum

1630-1640; short for wampumpeag

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for wampum

Contemporary Examples

America with lakes of lucre, waves of wampum, a Superstorm Sandy of simoleons, a Hurricane Katrina of cash.
The Federal Government Has Violated My Right to Chainsaw
P. J. O’Rourke
April 26, 2014

Historical Examples

In the old days she used to do it in one plait wound around with wampum.
Indian Child Life
Charles A. Eastman

If you love your women and children, receive the belt of wampum I present you.
Daniel Boone
John S. C. Abbott

It was the wampum which recorded their words and gave their pledge of sincerity.
Wampum
Ashbel Woodward

Sh-me-ks-see, the Wolf; one of the Chiefs; his head curiously ornamented, and numerous strings of wampum on his neck.
Adventures of the Ojibbeway and Ioway Indians in England, France, and Belgium; Vol. I (of 2)
George Catlin

But hides and furs were not the only articles which wampum purchased from the natives.
Wampum
Ashbel Woodward

In the early days the usual fee was ƒ6 in wampum, paid over to the church funds.
Jersey City and its Historic Sites
Harriet Phillips Eaton

Anagram

mum paw


12 September 2016

mazuma

[muh-zoo-muh]

noun, Slang.

1. money.

Origin of mazuma

Hebrew

1875-1880; Yiddish mezumen < Hebrew mezūmān set, fixed

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for mazuma

Historical Examples

But don’t forget to burn a few punk sticks in the joss house to the great god mazuma from time to time.
The Four Million
O. Henry

I think you’re out of mazuma, and that’s why I’m doing this.
The Fiction Factory
John Milton Edwards

When they want it, every one of these memoranda must be Johnny-on-the-spot before they can dig up the mazuma.
Bucky O’Connor
William MacLeod Raine


11 September 2016

quittance

[kwit-ns]

noun

1. recompense or requital.
2. discharge from a debt or obligation.
3. a document certifying discharge from debt or obligation, as a receipt.

Origin of quittance

Middle English, Old French

1175-1225; Middle English quitaunce; Old French quitance, equivalent to quit (er) to quit1+ -ance -ance

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for quittance

Historical Examples

Hereat the brewer did wonder, and desired to see the quittance.
The Sources and Analogues of ‘A Midsummer-night’s Dream’
Compiled by Frank Sidgwick

The guerdon; the quittance ; could it be possible after all, the end was not far?
Under the Rose
Frederic Stewart Isham

The portrait has the look of being designed as a quittance in full of old scores.
Atlantic Monthly, Volume 2, Issue 10, August, 1858
Various

I’ve sent him his quittance papers, and he’s your enemy for all time.
A Captain in the Ranks
George Cary Eggleston

The man was a bankrupt; but still he had given her all he had to give, a quittance.
The Talk of the Town, Volume 2 (of 2)
James Payn

In a few minutes I should receive a quittance, and be free to think only of myself.
A Gentleman of France
Stanley Weyman

The deputy turned over his charge to him, received his quittance, and went away.
Robert Tournay
William Sage

Anagram

enact quit
quiet cant
acquit ten


10 September 2016

proscenium

[proh-see-nee-uh m, pruh-]

noun, plural proscenia [proh-see-nee-uh, pruh-] (Show IPA). Theater.

1. Also called proscenium arch. the arch that separates a stage from the auditorium.
Abbreviation: pros.
2. (formerly) the apron or, especially in ancient theater, the stage itself.

Origin of proscenium

Latin, Greek
1600-1610; < Latin proscēnium, proscaenium < Greek proskḗnion entrance to a tent, porch, stage ( Late Greek: stage curtain), equivalent to pro- pro-2+ skēn (ḗ) (see scene ) + -ion neuter noun suffix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for proscenium

Historical Examples

The proscenium Arch is the arch or frame extending around the front of the stage of a theatre.
The Boy Craftsman
A. Neely Hall

Anyway, I’m going to propose, him for the Stuyvesant and the proscenium.
The Younger Set
Robert W. Chambers

The chief feat however is not yet performed, that which is to be acted in front of the proscenium!
Beethoven’s Letters 1790-1826 Vol. 2
Lady Wallace

Anagram

income spur
upon crimes
Sumo prince


9 September 2016

allonym

[al-uh-nim]

noun

1. the name of another person taken by an author as a pen name.
Compare pseudonym.
2. a work published under a name that is not that of the author.

Origin of allonym

1865-1870; all- + -onym; cf. pseudonym

Related forms

allonymous [uh-lon-uh-muh s], adjective
allonymously, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples

Some people believe that Shakespeare’s works were written by various authors who used his allonym.

(wordsmith.org)

‘Her name was Diane and I had known her intermittently for about a year. I had never flown with her, having met her in the Atlanta airport terminal, and she knew me under the alias Robert F. Conrad, a Pan-Am first officer, an allonym I used on occasion’.
Frank W. Abagnale and Stan Redding
Catch Me If You Can.
Random House, 2000

Anagram

yon mall
lo manly


8 September 2016

baksheesh or bakshish, bakshis
[bak-sheesh, bak-sheesh] (in the Near and Middle East)

noun

1. a tip, present, or gratuity.
verb (used with or without object)
2. to give a tip.

Origin of baksheesh

Persian

1615-1625; Persian bakhshish gift

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for baksheesh

Historical Examples

Still, I am sorry now I didn’t contribute the baksheesh he expected.
The Ship Dwellers
Albert Bigelow Paine

The next best thing to do is to forget the wish, pay two-pence in baksheesh and ride away to get the most of a glorious view.
The Walls of Constantinople
Bernard Granville Baker

For the first two years of war he kept out of the army by means of baksheesh.
Eastern Nights – and Flights
Alan Bott

In common with the rest of the world I had heard of baksheesh, but until then I never understood its magic power.
The Making Of A Novelist
David Christie Murray

Mounted men were racing off full speed to Kabul and the other big towns; those who got in first received the baksheesh.
At the Court of the Amr
John Alfred Gray

Anagram

he she bask


7 September 2016

indicia

[in-dish-ee-uh]

plural noun, singular indicium.

1. a postal marking used rather than a stamp or a regular cancellation on each item in a large shipment of prepaid mail.
2. Often, indicium.
a printed message or instruction, especially one stamped on a package: an indicium of “bulk mail.”.
an indication or token.

Origin of indicia

1615-1625;Latin, plural of indicium indicium

indicium

[in-dish-ee-uh m]

noun, plural indicia [in-dish-ee-uh], indiciums.

1. indicia (def 2).

Origin

1615-25; Latin: disclosure, sign, indication, equivalent to indic (āre) to make known (see indicate ) + -ium -ium

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for indicia

Historical Examples

They form the indicia to a people’s mission, and are our best guides to God’s purpose in creating us.
The Negro Problem
Booker T. Washington, et al.

Averages may be indicia of causation, but they are not themselves causes.
The Value of Money
Benjamin M. Anderson, Jr.

He next tried to bring forward what might be called a number of indicia supporting his view.
The Science and Philosophy of the Organism
Hans Driesch

Anagram

I in acid


6 September 2016

titular

[tich-uh-ler, tit-yuh-]

adjective

1. existing or being such in title only; nominal; having the title but none of the associated duties, powers, etc.:
the titular head of the company.
2. from whom or which a title or name is taken:
His titular Saint is Michael.
3. of, relating to, or of the nature of a title.
4. having a title, especially of rank.
5. designating any of the Roman Catholic churches in Rome whose nominal incumbents are cardinals.
noun
6. a person who bears a title.
7. a person from whom or thing from which a title or name is taken.
8. Ecclesiastical. a person entitled to a benefice but not required to perform its duties.

Origin of titular

Latin

1585-1595; < Latin titul (us) title + -ar1

Related forms

titularity [tich-uh-lar-i-tee, tit-yuh-] (Show IPA), noun
titularly, adverb
multititular, adjective
nontitular, adjective
nontitularly, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for titular

Contemporary Examples

But House Speaker John Boehner, while he is the titular leader of the Congressional Republicans, is nothing like a CEO.
Fiscal Cliff Vote Fails Due to Republican Theology on Taxes
Daniel Gross
December 20, 2012

George Soros, also 83, is titular chairman of Soros Fund Management.
Don’t Count Rupert Murdoch Out Yet: Why The Magnate Hasn’t Given Up on Time Warner
Daniel Gross
July 15, 2014

There are the titular detectives, Rust Cohle and Marty Hart.
Sasha Grey on Her Secret ‘True Detective’ Cameo, ‘Open Windows,’ and the Duke Porn Star Backlash
Marlow Stern
March 11, 2014

In Shantytown, the titular slum of Buenos Aires is the backdrop for a series of killings that threaten the entire community.
This Week’s Hot Reads: Nov. 18, 2013
Thomas Flynn
November 17, 2013

Historical Examples

Such are the titular archbishops in partibus, and certain archbishops of Italian sees who have no bishops under them.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Slice 4
Various

He reviewed his information on Dovenilid titular systems while he touched the switch.
Citadel
Algirdas Jonas Budrys

On each side of the altar is the figure of a youth, the titular deities; and at the back a crown.
Rambles in Rome
S. Russell Forbes

In 1855 the third of the titular Nawabs died without any son to succeed him.
The Story of Madras
Glyn Barlow

Anagram

rail tut
tail rut
it ultra


5 September 2016

banshee or banshie

[ban-shee, ban-shee]

noun

1. (in Irish folklore) a spirit in the form of a wailing woman who appears to or is heard by members of a family as a sign that one of them is about to die.

Origin of banshee

Irish

1765-1775; < Irish bean sīdhe woman of a fairy mound; see sídh

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for banshee

Contemporary Examples

When the sheriff-to-be is killed, the man assumes his identity, Lucas Hood, and becomes the new Sheriff of banshee.
‘Banshee,’ Cinemax’s Deliciously Over-the-Top Carnival of Sex and Violence, Is Must-See TV
Marlow Stern
January 9, 2014

The first season of banshee, meanwhile, was completely outrageous (in a good way).
‘Banshee,’ Cinemax’s Deliciously Over-the-Top Carnival of Sex and Violence, Is Must-See TV
Marlow Stern
January 9, 2014

Historical Examples

When you’re going right it sounds a pass between a peanut roaster and a banshee with bronchitis.
Half Portions
Edna Ferber

But that was the last act of destruction that the banshee was destined to accomplish.
The World Peril of 1910
George Griffith

She dug her little heel into the ground to show how she would crush the banshee.
The Meadow-Brook Girls Under Canvas
Janet Aldridge

The banshee corked the bottle and held it up proudly to the light.
David and the Phoenix
Edward Ormondroyd

The figure waved her arms towards the house, and my mother heard the bitter wailing of the banshee.
The Best Ghost Stories
Various

I thought it might be a banshee, if thair is that crayther in this counthry.
The Castaways
Captain Mayne Reid

Presently he heard the long-drawn, quavering, banshee wail of a locomotive.
The Escape of Mr. Trimm
Irvin S. Cobb

He marched his men up, with the thin wailing of a banshee in his ears.
Police Your Planet
Lester del Rey

Anagram

has been


4 September 2016

unrequited

[uhn-ri-kwahy-tid]

adjective

1. not returned or reciprocated:
unrequited love.
2. not avenged or retaliated:
an unrequited wrong.
3. not repaid or satisfied.

Origin of unrequited

1535-1545; un-1+ requite + -ed2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for unrequited

Contemporary Examples

And of course I loved the Lancelot story because it is all about longing and unrequited love.
Only Six Books: Excerpt From Jeanette Winterson’s New Memoir
Jeanette Winterson
March 6, 2012

The convent, obviously, but also the court—and even her unrequited longing for the elusive lady of her sonnets.
Sor Juana: Mexico’s Most Erotic Poet and Its Most Dangerous Nun
Katie Baker
November 7, 2014

“It was not just an obsession, a one-sided romance of unrequited love,” said Overland.
L.A. Policewoman on Trial for Murdering Her Ex’s Wife
Christine Pelisek
March 7, 2012

I loved the tragedy of the unrequited love in Brief Encounter– and her vulnerability, her wonderful voice, and her big eyes.
Tracey Ullman’s 11 Favorite British Performances Ever
Tracey Ullman
December 25, 2010

Historical Examples

Her affections were untrammelled by false hopes or unrequited love.
Lady Rosamond’s Secret
Rebecca Agatha Armour

This sonata is a true drama of life, a story of unrequited passion.
The Pianolist
Gustav Kobb

He is taken prisoner by mountain tribesmen, and set free by a girl who drowns herself on account of her unrequited love.
An Outline of Russian Literature
Maurice Baring

What cared he for love, either successful or unrequited, now?
The Floating Light of the Goodwin Sands
R.M. Ballantyne

The house has one record at least of unrequited hospitality.
Highways and Byways in Surrey
Eric Parker

Anagram

endure quite
quid tenure


3 September 2016

gargantuan

[gahr-gan-choo-uh n]

adjective

1. gigantic; enormous; colossal:
a gargantuan task.

Origin of gargantuan
1585-1595; Gargantu(a) + -an

Synonyms

huge, mammoth, immense, vast, elephantine.
Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for gargantuan

Contemporary Examples

“The amount of venom that can be delivered from a single bite can be gargantuan.” You know, I’ve always liked that word, “gargantuan.” I so rarely have an opportunity to use it in a sentence.
Elle describing to Budd the amount of venom delivered by a Black Mamba snake.
Kill Bill 2

The death of the gargantuan Hummer marks the passing of our obsession with largeness.
The End of Really Big
Tunku Varadarajan
February 23, 2010

But the gargantuan department, while assailed for scandals and big spending, has not had its basic existence threatened—until now.
Can the Housing and Urban Development Department Survive a Romney Administration?
Miranda Green
April 20, 2012

The other funeral home is not in operation because it is behind the gargantuan fence and considered part of the red zone.
‘It Was Like Hiroshima’: A Tour Through the Quebec Town Destroyed by a Runaway Train
Christine Pelisek
July 14, 2013

Anagram

A rang gaunt
A ragtag nun
gaga ant run


2 September 2016

yip

[yip]

plural noun

1. (informal) the yips, (in sport, originally esp golf) nervous twitching or tension that destroys concentration and spoils performance
Word Origin

Word Origin and History for yip

yip
1903, possibly from dialectal yip “to cheep like a bird” (early 19c.), from Middle English yippen (mid-15c.), of imitative origin.

Slang definitions & phrases for yip

yips

noun
: The president mused about his ”yips” anxiety when putting (1963+ Golf)

yip
verb

To talk in an insistent, petulant, and annoying way : Will you please stop yipping about your rights?

[1907+; echoic of the high-pitched bark of a small dog]

The Dictionary of American Slang

Dictionary.com


1 September 2016

sjambok

[sham-bok, -buhk]

noun

1. (in southern Africa) a heavy whip, usually of rhinoceros hide.
verb (used with object)
2. to whip with or as if with such a whip.

Origin of sjambok

Afrikaans Malay Hindi
1820-1830; < Afrikaans s (j) ambok < Malay cambuk whip < Hindi cābuk

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sjambok

Contemporary example

‘Security! Beat this person with a sjambok’
Have you heard the one about the piece of string?
First Dog on the Moon
26 August 2016

Historical Examples

They generally carry a sjambok, a strip of rhinoceros hide about three feet long and an inch thick.
Seven Legs Across the Seas
Samuel Murray

sjambok occurs in 17th-century accounts of India in the form chawbuck.
The Romance of Words (4th ed.)
Ernest Weekley

I exerted all my powers of persuasion to arrest the flight of my burghers; even bringing the sjambok into the argument.
Three Years’ War
Christiaan Rudolf de Wet

Anagram

mask job

 

31 August 2016 – campestral

31 August 2016

campestral

[kam-pes-truh l]

adjective

1. of or relating to fields or open country.

Origin of campestral

Latin

1730-1740; < Latin campestr (is) flat, equivalent to camp (us) field + -estris adj. suffix) + -al1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for campestral

Historical Examples

campestral, kam-pes′tral, adj. growing in or pertaining to fields.
Chambers’s Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D)
Various

Anagram

camel strap
lace tramps
claret maps


Today’s quote

A puritan is a person who pours righteous indignation into the wrong things.

Gilbert K. Chesterton


On this day

31 August 12AD – birth of Caligula, also known as Gaius Caesar, 3rd Roman Emperor from 37 – 41AD. Died 24 January 41AD. First Roman Emperor to be assassinated following a conspiracy to restore the Roman Republic. While the plot to kill Caligula succeeds, the restoration of the Republic fails when the Praetorian Guard appoint Caligula’s uncle, Claudius, as Emperor.

31 August 1897 – Thomas Edison granted a patent for the world’s first movie camera, the Kinetograph. The patented incorporated a number of inventions related to the capture of moving pictures, including the kinetoscope.

31 August 1928 – birth of James Coburn, actor (‘The Great Escape‘, ‘The Magnificent Seven‘). Died 18 November 2002.

31 August 1997 – death of Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales, in a car crash in Paris. Born 1 July 1961.

30 August 2016 – pyx

30 August 2016

pyx or pix

[piks]

noun

1. Ecclesiastical.
the box or vessel in which the reserved Eucharist or Host is kept.
a watch-shaped container for carrying the Eucharist to the sick.
2. Also called pyx chest. a box or chest at a mint, in which specimen coins are deposited and reserved for trial by weight and assay.

Origin of pyx

Middle English, Latin, Greek
1350-1400; Middle English pyxe < Latin pyxis < Greek pyxís a box, orig. made of boxwood

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for pyx

Historical Examples

The bossed kite-shield occurs in the enamel of Geoffrey Plantagenet; in the pyx named above; and in Harl.
Ancient Armour and Weapons in Europe
John Hewitt

In the church of Orivellas, a pyx with a consecrated host was stolen.
A History of the Inquisition of Spain; vol. 3
Henry Charles Lea

The whole question of the pyx Chapel is one of vast interest, and much of its history is still an insoluble riddle.
Westminster Abbey
Mrs. A. Murray Smith

The pyx is the box in which the Host is kept or conveyed, often made of silver or ivory.
Curiosities of Christian History
Croake James

In the cloister beyond the library entrance a heavy oak door, clamped with iron bars, leads into the chamber or chapel of the pyx.
Westminster Abbey
Mrs. A. Murray Smith

The leather cover for the pyx should not be taken into a smallpox room.
Essays In Pastoral Medicine
Austin Malley

He took a pyx from his pocket and reverently took out the desecrated Host from the box, placing it in the pyx.
A Lost Cause
Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull

If there are any crumbs left in the pyx make the patient take them.
Essays In Pastoral Medicine
Austin Malley

Again, the pyx which containeth the host, whether consecrated or not consecrated, typifieth the human memory.
Churches and Church Ornaments
William Durandus

I also hung round my neck the pyx containing the Blessed Sacrament, then I went out on the street, not knowing what way to take.
The Great War As I Saw It
Frederick George Scott


Today’s quote

Time is like a river, you cannot touch the same water twice because the flow that has passed will never pass again.

– Tanu B. Singh


On this day

30 August 580 – birth of Muhammad, prophet and founder of Islam.

30 August 1146 – European leaders optimistically outlaw the cross-bow with the belief that it will end war for evermore. The ban was flouted and cross-bows continued to be used until they were replaced by fire-arms in the 16th century.

30 August 2003 – Death of Charles Bronson, American actor. Born 3 November 1921 as Charles Dennis Buchinsky.

29 August 2016 – oryx

29 August 2016

oryx

[awr-iks, ohr-]

noun, plural oryxes (especially collectively) oryx.

1. a large African antelope, Oryx gazella, grayish with black markings and having long, nearly straight horns: an endangered species.
2. gemsbok.

Origin of oryx

Middle English Latin Greek
1350-1400; Middle English < Latin < Greek óryx pickax, oryx

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for oryx

Contemporary Examples

If it is a young man, they should start with oryx and Crake.
How I Write: Margaret Atwood
Noah Charney
October 9, 2013

Historical Examples

The oryx, or Gemsbok, is a middle-sized species, dwelling in the same neighbourhood with the gnus.
Quadrupeds, What They Are and Where Found
Mayne Reid

An interesting point occurred in the conversation about the oryx.
The Young Yagers
Mayne Reid

Anagram

Roxy


Today’s quote

Fascism is capitalism in decay.

– Vladimir Lenin


On this day

29 August 29AD – John the Baptist beheaded.

29 August 1991 – the Supreme Soviet of the USSR suspends the Communist Party. The Soviet Union was formally dissolved on 26 December 1991.

29 August 2001 – death of Graeme ‘Shirley’ Strachan, in a helicopter crash near Maroochydore, Queensland. Lead singer of Australian band, Skyhooks. Born 2 January 1952.

29 August 2005 – Hurricane Katrina strikes southeastern United States with wind speeds reaching 280km/h. New Orleans is one of the worst hit areas. At least 1,836 people died in the storm and subsequent flooding.

29 August 2012 – Hurricane Isaac strikes southeastern United States with wind speeds reaching 130km/h, making landfall in Louisiana, leaving at least 400,000 houses in New Orleans without power.

27 August 2016 – paroxysm

27 August 2016

paroxysm

[par-uh k-siz-uh m]

noun

1. any sudden, violent outburst; a fit of violent action or emotion:
paroxysms of rage.
2. Pathology. a severe attack or a sudden increase in intensity of a disease, usually recurring periodically.

Origin of paroxysm

Greek

1570-1580; earlier paroxismos < Greek paroxysmós irritation, derivative of paroxýnein to irritate. See par-, oxy-1, -ism

Related forms

paroxysmal, paroxysmic, adjective
paroxysmally, adverb
hyperparoxysm, noun
postparoxysmal, adjective
preparoxysmal, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for paroxysm

Historical Examples

The crowd, delirious, cries and sobs in a paroxysm of despair.
Woman on Her Own, False Gods & The Red Robe
Eugne Brieux

After a while the paroxysm of drunkenness is completely formed.
Select Temperance Tracts
American Tract Society

He did not recognise me for some time, but as soon as he did, he fell into a paroxysm half hysterical, half frantic.
The Felon’s Track
Michael Doheny

If this paroxysm of sorrow was to assail him again that night, there was but one place for him to be.
The Octopus
Frank Norris

Before I had well reached the top of the passage and felt for the match-box on the slab, I was in a paroxysm of horror.
Johnny Ludlow, Fifth Series
Mrs. Henry Wood

The deep-seated travail of his grief abruptly reached the paroxysm.
The Octopus
Frank Norris

He was fairly beside himself in a paroxysm of rage and struck at the air with his clenched fist.
The Last Shot
Frederick Palmer

Sits down, breaks into a paroxysm of laughter, wild and continued.
Modern Icelandic Plays
Jhann Sigurjnsson

The paroxysm was as short as it was violent, and her features again returned to their usual placidity of majestic beauty.
Rattlin the Reefer
Edward Howard

She looked up timidly; the paroxysm had passed, but her lashes yet glittered.
In the Carquinez Woods
Bret Harte

Anagram

max or spy
spar my ox
pays Mr ox


Today’s quote

If you think we can’t change the world, it just means you’re not one of those that will.

– Jacque Fresco


On this day

27 August 1883 – the world’s biggest recorded explosion occurs on Krakatoa, an Indonesian island as a volcano erupts, killing between 36,000 and 120,000 people. The noise is heard in Perth, Western Australia, 3,500km away and Mauritius, 4,800km away where it was thought to be cannon fire. Tsunamis up to 30m high were recorded. It generated a cloud of ash 27km high. In the 12 months after the explosion, global temperatures fell by 1.2oC. The explosion darkened the sky for years afterward.

27 August 1908 – birth of Sir Donald Bradman (The Don), Australia’s (and arguably, the world’s) greatest cricketer. In his last Test, Bradman’s batting average was 101.39 runs per innings, but on the second ball he faced, he was bowled for a duck (zero), reducing his batting average to 99.94. It is the highest batting average in test cricket. Died 25 February 2001.

27 August 1975 – death of Haile Selassie I, Emperor of Ethiopia. Although Selassie was an Ethiopian Orthodox Christian, Rastafarians believe that he is the Messiah returned. Born 23 July 1892.

26 August 2016 – sensate

26 August 2016

sensate

[sen-seyt]

adjective

1. perceiving or perceived through the senses.

Origin of sensate

Late Latin

1490-1500; < Late Latin sēnsātus. See sense, -ate1

Related forms

sensately, adverb
nonsensate, adjective
unsensate, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sensate

Historical Examples

It is the declamation, when the model is alive or sensate ; it is the tone, when the model is in sensate.
Library of the World’s Best literature, Ancient and Modern, Vol. 12
Various

Its long, funnel-shaped form dipped and lifted, trailing back and forth like some sensate thing.
Winning the Wilderness
Margaret Hill McCarter

Anagram

a tenses
ants see


Today’s quote

I’ve never believed in God, but I believe in Picasso.

– Diego Rivera


On this day

26 August 580 – toilet paper invented by the Chinese.

26 August 1910 – birth of Mother Teresa (Agnes Gonxha Bojaxhiu) in Yugoslavia, winner of Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her work in the slums of Calcutta. Died 5 September 1997.

26 August 1946 – George Orwell’s revolutionary novel, Animal Farm, is published.

25 August 2016 – daubery

25 August 2016

daubery

[daw-buh-ree]

noun
1. unskillful painting or work.

Also, daubry [daw-bree]

Origin of daubery

1540-1550; daub + -ery

Dictionary.com

Examples

She works by charms, by spells, by the figure, and such daubery as this is, beyond our element: we know nothing.

Turn tail!” replied Larry, “it is I that wouldn’t — I appale to St. Patrick himself over beyond” — pointing to a picture of the Prime Saint of Ireland, which hung in gilt daubery behind his master’s chair, right opposite to him.

Anagram

year dub
a bud rye


Today’s quote

We may have all come on different ships, but we’re in the same boat now.

– Martin Luther King


On this day

25 August 325 – conclusion of the First Council of Nicea, a cabal of 1800 bishops convened by Roman Emperor Constantine I (Constantine the Great) to gain consensus within the church for various doctrinal issues, such as the divinity of Christ, the Holy Trinity and the date for Easter which were articulated in the ‘Creed of Nicea’. The Council was officially opened on 20 May 325.

25 August 1227 – death of Genghis Khan, founder and emperor of the Mongol Empire, which became the largest, contiguous empire in history. At its peak, it covered stretched from Eastern Europe to the Sea of Japan, and included Southeast Asia, the Indian sub-continent, the Iranian Plateau and the Middle East. It covered 24 million km2 (16% of the Earth’s total land area) and had a population of over 100 million. Born circa 1162.

25 August 1330 – Antipope Nicolaas V overthrows himself by presenting a confession of sins to Pope John XXII, who absolved him. Nicolaas V had previously been excommunicated by Pope John XXII. After his absolution, Nicolaas V was held in ‘honourable imprisonment’ in the papal palace at Avignon until his death in 1333.

25 August 1949 – birth of Gene Simmons (born Chaim Witz) in Haifa, Israel. American rock guitarist and song-writer. Co-founder of Kiss.

25 August 1991 – founding of computer operating system, Linux, by Linus Torvalds.

25 August 2012 – death of Neil Armstrong. First man to walk on the moon. Born 5 August 1930.

24 August 2016 – latex

24 August 2016

latex

[ley-teks]

noun, plural latices [lat-uh-seez] (Show IPA), latexes.

1. a milky liquid in certain plants, as milkweeds, euphorbias, poppies, or the plants yielding India rubber, that coagulates on exposure to air.
2. Chemistry. any emulsion in water of finely divided particles of synthetic rubber or plastic.

Origin of latex

Latin

1655-1665; < New Latin, special use of Latin latex water, juice, liquid

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for latex

Contemporary Examples

Models wore slicked-back ponytails mounted high on their heads with strips of latex that looked like masking tape.
Backstage at Jason Wu Fall 2012 Show (PHOTOS)
Isabel Wilkinson, Kevin Tachman
February 10, 2012

Historical Examples

The trouble may be traced to the use of defective straining sieves when the latex is being handled.
The Preparation of Plantation Rubber
Sidney Morgan

From the latex of the opium poppy the opium of commerce is extracted.
Elements of Structural and Systematic Botany
Douglas Houghton Campbell

Equal regard must be given to the mixture of the solution with the latex.
The Preparation of Plantation Rubber
Sidney Morgan

The latex is poured into the dabree, where it naturally coagulates into sheets.
Rubber
Edith A. Browne

The latex is strained and mixed with some acid, usually acetic, in order to coagulate or thicken it.
Makers of Many Things
Eva March Tappan

Throughout the 19th century, the British empire exported opium from India to China. By 1905 around a quarter of Chinese men were addicted to opium, a narcotic produced from the latex of the poppy plant.

Anagram

let ax


Today’s quote

Never worry about numbers. Help one person at a time, and always start with the person nearest you.

– Mother Teresa


On this day

24 August 79AD – eruption of Mt Vesuvius, Italy, completely destroying the cities of Pompeii, Herculaneum and Stabiae. The cities were buried under approximately 75m of tephra. The initial eruption produced a cloud of ash and pumice ranging from 15km to 30km high. It is estimated that 16,000 people perished.

24 August 479 – Fall of the Roman Empire as Visigoths conquer Rome.

24 August 1936 – establishment of the Australian Antarctic Territory.

24 August 1954 – Communist Party outlawed in the United States with the passing of the Communist Control Act.

24 August 1995 – Microsoft launches Windows 95. Bill Gates is embarrassed during a demonstration of the product, when his audience experiences the infamous ‘blue screen of death’.

23 August 2016 – spoonerism

23 August 2016

spoonerism

[spoo-nuh-riz-uh m]

noun

1. the transposition of initial or other sounds of words, usually by accident, as in a blushing crow for a crushing blow.

Origin of spoonerism

1895-1900; after W. A. Spooner (1844-1930), English clergyman noted for such slips; see -ism

Dictionary.com

Example

They speak in spoonerisms and malapropisms and put forward bizarre concepts and beliefs.

Anagram

Promise son
Merinos sop
snoop miser


Today’s quote

It’s not our differences that divide us. It’s our judgements about each other that do. Curiosity and good listening bring us back together.

– Margaret Wheatley


On this day23 August 1305 – Sir William Wallace, leader of Scottish rebellion, executed for high treason in England.

23-24 August 1572 – St Bartholomew’s Day massacre. Part of the French Wars of Religion, the massacre was a undertaken against Huguenot Protestants by Catholics following the assassination of Admiral de Coligny by the Guises (Cardinal of Lorraine and his nephews). Two leading Huguenot princes, Henry of Navarre and his cousin, the Prince of Conde) were spared their lives by converting to Catholicism. French Catholic peasants attacked Protestants during August to October. The exact death toll is unknown and depends on who reports it. Catholics claim it was 2,000. Protestants claim it was 70,000.

23 August 1791 – St Domingue Slave Revolt – commencing 21 August, the slaves of St Domingue (now known as Haiti) revolted against the French colonial government, plunging the country into civil war. This revolt was the catalyst for the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade.

23 August 1948 – death of José Paronella. He was born on 26 February 1887 in Catalonia, northern Spain. In 1913, Paronella travelled to Innisfail, Queensland, to establish himself before bringing his fiance, Matilda, over to join him. Eleven years later he returned for her, only to find that she’d married someone else. José was determined to return to Australia with a wife, so proposed to Matilda’s younger sister, Margarita, and the couple travelled to Australia 12 months later. José purchased 5 hectares (13 acres) of land at Mena Creek where the couple commenced building their dream home, which ended up being a regal Catalan-style castle. They planted more than 7,000 trees around the property and in 1933, built North Queensland’s first hydro-electric plant to power the property. They built a 47 step stair case, tennis courts, a pavilion with turret-topped balconies, a movie theatre which they transformed into a ball-room with live bands that people from surrounding areas could enjoy for dances, a museum that housed collections of coins, pistols, dolls, timbers and keepsakes. He also excavated a tunnel through a small hill on the property. It was never completed, but he had intended on it becoming a ‘tunnel of love’. He and Margarita had two children. Margarita died in 1967. In 1979 the castle was ravaged by fire, leaving on the walls and turrets standing. In 1986, the park was further damaged from Cyclone Winifred. In 1993, the park was partially restored. The park again suffered damage in 2006 when Cyclone Larry struck. In 2009, the hydro-electric plant was rebuilt. Today, visitors can tour the grounds and walk through what would have been the ‘tunnel of love’, which is now inhabited by ghost bats. The property is heritage-listed and a fascinating and spectacular part of North Queensland’s history.

23 August 1946 – birth of Keith Moon, British musician, drummer for ‘The Who’. Died 7 September 1978.

23 August – International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition. The United Nations chose this date as it is the anniversary of the St Domingue Slave Revolt.