31 December 2016 – glebe

31 December 2016

glebe

[gleeb]

noun

1. Also called glebe land. Chiefly British. the cultivable land owned by a parish church or ecclesiastical benefice.
2. Archaic. soil; field.

Origin of glebe

Middle English, Latin

1275-1325; Middle English < Latin glēba, glaeba clod of earth

Related forms

glebeless, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for glebe

Historical Examples

It had never occurred to me that a parson has no fee-simple in the house and glebe he occupies.
The Works of William Cowper
William Cowper

A terrier of glebe lands, with any exchange noted, should be made.
Churchwardens’ Manual
George Henry

One could almost make an accurate restoration drawing of this glebe house from the description.
Virginia Architecture in the Seventeenth Century
Henry Chandlee Forman

Anagram

be leg


Today’s quote

You need power, only when you want to do something harmful, otherwise love is enough to get everything done.

– Charlie Chaplin


On this day

31 December – the seventh day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

31 December 1948 – birth of Disco star, Donna Summer. Died 17 May 2012.

31 December 1967 – Evel Knievel unsuccessfully attempts a motorcycle jump over the fountains of Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas. He received concussion and numerous broken bones, which left him in a coma for 29 days.

31 December 2007 – Murder statistics in the United States reveal that murder rate is 0.055 per head of population, which is slightly less than it was in 1947, when the rate was 0.0551. The population in 1947 was 145,000,000 and there were 8,000 murders. In 2007, the population was 300,000,000 and there were 16,500 murders.

30 December 2016 – poseur

30 December 2016

poseur

[poh-zur; French paw-zœr]

noun, plural poseurs [poh-zurz; French paw-zœr]

1. a person who attempts to impress others by assuming or affecting a manner, degree of elegance, sentiment, etc., other than his or her true one.

Origin of poseur

French

1880-1885; < French; see pose1, -eur

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for poseur

Historical Examples

It is the poseur who is soft—soft at the very top, where Henry Ford is hard.
Abroad at Home
Julian Street

Poet and poseur he was, the strangest combination ever seen in man.
The Daffodil Mystery
Edgar Wallace

They were inclined to think he was somewhat of a poseur at first, but later they came to like him—all of them.
The “Genius”
Theodore Dreiser

He may be named only to be cursed as wanton and mocker, poseur, trifler and vagrant.
Ezra Pound: His Metric and Poetry
T. S. Eliot

He was not a poseur ; he was merely sensitively conscious of himself and of life as an art.
The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson – Swanston Edition
Robert Louis Stevenson

He’s not a bit like an actor; he’s natural and not a bit of a poseur.
My Actor-Husband
Anonymous

As to his personality, it seems to be that of the poseur —almost of the snob.
The Key to Yesterday
Charles Neville Buck

Even in “De Profundis” the poseur supplemented the artist, and the truth was not in him.
Oscar Wilde
Leonard Cresswell Ingleby

Mr. Bellton was at heart the poseur, but he was also the fighter.
The Key to Yesterday
Charles Neville Buck

Many consider Tolstoy a poseur, but he sincerely believes in himself.
Abroad with the Jimmies
Lilian Bell

Anagram

rope us
so pure


Today’s quote

Nietzsche was stupid and abnormal.

– Leo Tolstoy


On this day

30 December – the sixth day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

30 December 1922 – Lenin establishes the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).

30 December 1945 – birth of Davy Jones, singer with British 1960’s rock band, The Monkees. Died 29 February 2012.

30 December 2006 – Former Iraqi dictator, Saddam Hussein, hanged after being found guilty of committing crimes against humanity.

29 December 2016 – raillery

29 December 2016

raillery

[rey-luh-ree]

noun, plural railleries.

1. good-humored ridicule; banter.
2. a bantering remark.

Origin of raillery

French

1645-1655; < French raillerie, equivalent to Middle French raill (er) to rail2+ -erie -ery

Synonyms

1. jesting, joking, badinage, chaff, pleasantry.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for raillery

Historical Examples

For my own part, I thought pride in his case an improper subject for raillery.
Clarissa, Volume 1 (of 9)
Samuel Richardson

Poussin studied nature with a minuteness that often exposed him to raillery.
Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, No. 462
Various

His powers of wit and raillery never failed him, even to the Deathbed wit last.
A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year
Edwin Emerson

Her raillery, like the raillery of princes, was without fear of retort.
Tales And Novels, Volume 4 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

He had disdained to reply further than by shaking his wise old head, but had omitted no precaution because of her raillery.
Dorothy’s House Party
Evelyn Raymond

I was a little afraid of his raillery, and of the quickness of his observation.
Tales And Novels, Volume 9 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

He, he, I swear though, your raillery provokes me to a smile.
The Comedies of William Congreve
William Congreve

Notwithstanding this raillery, all that was said did take place.
The Memoirs of Count Grammont, Complete
Anthony Hamilton

He ignored her raillery, and told her what he thought of a courage so fine and ready.
A Daughter of the Dons
William MacLeod Raine

If your mood incline to raillery you’ll find your match in some lad of the stables.
The Shame of Motley
Raphael Sabatini

Anagram

rare lily
rely rail


Today’s quote

Do not judge others by your standards, for everyone is making their way home, in the way they know best.

– Leon Brown


On this day

29 December – the fifth day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

29 December 1890 – Massacre at Wounded Knee. The last battle of the American Indian Wars was fought at Wounded Knee Creek, on the Lakota Pine Ridge Indian reservation, South Dakota. The US 7th Cavalry Regiment opened fire on the Reservation, massacring around 300 people, including 200 women and children, and wounding 51. Twenty-five US soldiers died, most from friendly fire.

29 December 1998 – Six people die in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race as huge waves swamp the vessels during the 1167km race.

29 December 1998 – Former Khmer Rouge leaders apologise for the Pol Pot led genocide in Kampuchea (now known as Cambodia), which killed 1 million people between 1975 and 1979.

28 December 2016 – cisgender

28 December 2016

cisgender or cis-gender

[sis-jen-der]

adjective

1. Also, cisgendered. noting or relating to a person whose gender identity corresponds with that person’s biological sex assigned at birth.
noun
2. a person who is cisgender.

Not transgender.

Origin of cisgender

1990-1995; cis- ( def 3 ) + gender1; modeled on transgender

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cisgender

Contemporary Examples

Cis Male (see also Cis Man, cisgender Male, cisgender Man); a male who identifies as a man/has a masculine gender identity.
If gender isn’t binary, if it is fluid and can transgress boundaries, than a binary between cisgender and transgender cannot exist.
I am NOT cisgendered
J. Nelson Aviance
18 July 2014
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/j-nelson-aviance/i-am-not-cisgendered_b_5598113.html

Anagram

cede grins
creed sign
green disc


Today’s quote

Life is a tragedy full of joy.

– Bernard Malamud


On this day

28 December – the fourth day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

28 December 1945 – the United States Congress officially recognises the pledge of allegiance to the flag, which states, ‘I pledge allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America, and to the Republic for which it stands, one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all’.

28 December 1981 – the world’s first test-tube baby is born after being conceived in a lab dish. Her name is Elizabeth Jordan Carr and she weighed 5lb 12oz.

27 December 2016 – whist drive

27 December 2016

whist drive

noun

1. a social gathering where whist is played; the winners of each hand move to different tables to play the losers of the previous hand.

Example

Every Friday night, for years they attended a whist drive.

Anagram

diver whits
TV whirs die


Today’s quote

The mark of your ignorance is the depth of your belief in injustice and tragedy. What the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the Master calls the butterfly.

– Richard Bach


On this day

27 December – the third day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

27 December 1822 – birth 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). Died 28 September 1895.

27 December 1923 – death of Gustave Eiffel, French engineer and architect, co-designed the Eiffel Tower. Born 15 December 1832.

27 December 1979 – Soviet Union overthrows the Afghan government, replacing President Hufizullah Amin with Babrak Karmal.

27 December 2007 – Benazir Bhutto, former Pakistani Prime Minister, is assassinated by a suicide bomber immediately after shots were fired at her. Bhutto was the first female head of an Islamic nation. The bombing killed 24 other people.

26 December 2016 – taciturn

26 December 2016

taciturn

[tas-i-turn]

adjective

1. inclined to silence; reserved in speech; reluctant to join in conversation.
2. dour, stern, and silent in expression and manner.

Origin of taciturn

Latin

1765-1775; Latin taciturnus, quiet, maintaining silence, equivalent to tacit (us) silent (see tacit ) + -urnus adj. suffix of time

Related forms

taciturnly, adverb
untaciturn, adjective
untaciturnly, adverb

Synonyms

1. silent, uncommunicative, reticent, quiet.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for taciturn

Contemporary Examples

Tall and taciturn, he exuded the easy authority of a young man used to money and the deference that came with it.
Doug Kenney: The Odd Comic Genius Behind ‘Animal House’ and National Lampoon
Robert Sam Anson
February 28, 2014

No one would confuse him the taciturn, forgetful and vengeful Senate Majority Leader.
Nevada Guv Faces Fans and Foes in Reelection
Lloyd Green
March 17, 2014

The exuberant, indefatigable Democrat from Oregon and the dour, taciturn Republican from New Hampshire made an odd couple.
The Senate’s New Taxman Won’t Be Controlled By His Own Party
Linda Killian
February 17, 2014

But he was also taciturn, rarely betraying his inner thoughts, his friends have said.
Moon Men: The Private Lives of Neil Armstrong and Pals in “Togethersville”
Lily Koppel
August 31, 2012

Historical Examples

Sometimes Master Tommy is obstinate, as well as taciturn, and his “won’t” is as strong as his will.
Manners and Rules of Good Society
Anonymous

Don Saturnino was taciturn and of violent temper, but very industrious.
An Eagle Flight
Jos Rizal

This was the hope which had produced his taciturn resignation and brought that savage smile on his lips.
The Collection of Antiquities
Honore de Balzac

A loquacious advocate is more likely to gain his case than a taciturn one.
The Proverbs of Scotland
Alexander Hislop

Little by little, one word at a time, he gained from the taciturn negro an idea of what had taken place while he slept.
“Forward, March”
Kirk Munroe

Anagram

attic urn
tacit run


Today’s quote

Men are not prisoners of fate, but only prisoners of their own minds.

– Franklin D. Roosevelt


On this day

26 December – the second day of the 12 days of Christmas (Western Christianity).

26 December 1941 – U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs a bill establishing the fourth Thursday in November as Thanksgiving Day in the United States.

26 December 1966 – The first Kwanzaa is celebrated by Maulana Karenga, the chair of Black Studies at California State University, Long Beach. a secular festival observed by many African Americans from 26 December to 1 January as a celebration of their cultural heritage and traditional values.

26 December 1982 – Time’s Man of the Year is for the first time a non-human, the personal computer.

26 December 1991 – formal dissolution of the USSR (Union of Soviet Socialist Republics) when the Supreme Soviet dissolved itself following the Alma-Ata Protocol of 21 December 1991 and the resignation of President Gorbachev on 25 December 1991.

26 December 2004 – the Boxing Day tsunami originates in Indonesia and spreads across the Indian Ocean killing 230,000 people in 14 countries. It was triggered by a massive earthquake which registered a magnitude of between 9.1 and 9.3 and caused the entire planet to vibrate by up to 1cm and caused earthquakes as far away as Alaska.

25 December 2016 – pied-à-terre

25 December 2016

pied-à-terre

[pee-ey-duh-tair, -dah-, pyey-]

noun, plural pieds-à-terre [pee-ey-duh-tair, -dah-, pyey-]

1. a residence, as an apartment, for part-time or temporary use.

Origin of pied-à-terre

1820-1830; < French: literally, foot on ground

Dictionary.com

Example

The pied-à-terre was a secret from his wife, to be used with his mistress.

Anagram

tired peer


Today’s quote

With faith, discipline and selfless devotion to duty, there is nothing worthwhile that you cannot achieve.

– Muhammad Ali Jinnah


On this day

25 December 1876 – birthday of Muhammad Ali Jinnah, the father of Pakistan. Leader of the Muslim League calling for the creation of Pakistan. Served as Pakistan’s first Governor-General from 15 August 1947 until his death on 11 September 1948. Pakistan celebrates his birthday with a national holiday.

25 December 1914 – Soldiers from Britain, Germany, Russia and France agree to a ‘Christmas’ truce. They crossed no-man’s land and wished each other ‘Merry Christmas’ in each nation’s language.

25 December 1974 – Cyclone Tracy strikes Darwin, Northern Territory, killing 71 people and flattening 70% of the city, leaving 41,000 homeless (out of a population of 47,000). The cyclone had winds up to 240km/h, central pressure of 950 hectorpascals,

25 December 1991 – Soviet President Gorbachev resigns, declaring the Soviet presidency extinct, and hands power to Russian President Boris Yeltsin, effectively bringing an end to the Soviet Union.

25 December 2006 – death of James Brown, the Godfather of Soul. He was born 3 May 1933.

25 December 2008 – death of Eartha Kitt, American singer and actress. She played Catwoman in the 1960’s Batman TV series. Two of her more famous songs were ‘C’est Si Bon’ and ‘Santa Baby’. She was born on 17 January 1927.

24 December 2016 – kybosh

24 December 2016

kybosh or kibosh

[kahy-bosh, ki-bosh]

noun

1. a variant spelling of kibosh

Collins English Dictionary – Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Examples from the Web for kybosh

Contemporary Examples

For all intents and purposes Australia now has two federal governments. Government number one appears to front the people, attend official functions, promise things then backtrack. Government number two seems to call the shots and kybosh the other’s policy.Government number two seems to call the shots and kybosh the other’s policy.
Comment: Malcolm Turnbull buckles on effective climate action
Sydney Morning Herald
12 December 2016
http://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/comment-malcolm-turnbull-buckles-on-effective-climate-action/ar-AAlqAh3

This definitely puts the kybosh on the make-up rumors, as there is no way Harry could marry a movie star.
Cressida Bonas Cast In New Weinstein Movie
Tom Sykes
June 10, 2014

Historical Examples

That put the kybosh on one bit, but it didn’t ‘urt the general scheme not a bit.
Twelve Stories and a Dream
H. G. Wells

kybosh ; some sort of difficulty or ‘fix’:—’He put the kybosh on him: he defeated him.’
English As We Speak It in Ireland
P. W. Joyce

There’ll be a dickens of a kybosh if they find we’ve broken parole, and I don’t want you hauled into the beastly thing.
The Riddle of the Spinning Wheel
Mary E. Hanshew

Anagram

hob sky


Today’s quote

To kill an error is as good a service as, and sometimes even better than, the establishing of a new truth or fact.

– Charles Darwin


On this day

24 December 1865 – Ku Klux Klan formed by a group of confederate veterans who are opposed to civil rights for African-Americans.

24 December 1979 – The Soviet Army, comprised of 100,000 troops, invades Afghanistan in response to Afghan insurgents (armed by the United States) who had been attacking Soviet troops. The occupation lasts for 10 years and results in the deaths of between 600,000 and 2,000,000 Afghan civilians, as well as 6,000,000 refugees who fled to Pakistan and Iran. The Soviets withdrew in 1989. The cost of the Afghan occupation is a significant factor that led to the economic collapse of the Soviet Union. During the Soviet occupation, the United States funded Afghan resistance in the form of the Mujahideen and other militant Islamic groups, out of whom emerged Al Qaeda and the Taliban. The real victims in this war were the Afghan people, who continue to suffer and to comprise a significant portion of global refugee numbers because of the involvement of the USSR and the USA during this period.

23 December 2016 – ponzi

23 December 2016

Ponzi

[pon-zee]

noun

1. a swindle in which a quick return, made up of money from new investors, on an initial investment lures the victim into much bigger risks.

Also called Ponzi game, Ponzi scheme.

Origin of Ponzi

after Charles Ponzi (died 1949), the organizer of such a scheme in the U.S., 1919-20

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Ponzi

Contemporary Examples

De la Villehuchet’s suicide adds yet another gruesome chapter to the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme.
Suicides on Wall Street
Charlie Gasparino
December 30, 2008

Through Vennes, religious investors poured money into what turned out to be a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.
Bachmann and Pawlenty’s Ponzi Pal
Michelle Goldberg
April 27, 2011

Many of the victims of the Ponzi scheme are actually not victims at all but people who got out more than they put in.
Madoff Victims’ Gibraltar Money Grab
Lucinda Franks
March 17, 2009

I don’t think he ever even slipped—you know, dropped some hint—about his Ponzi scheme to any of his mistresses.
Madoff’s Other Girlfriends
Lucinda Franks
August 14, 2009

Perry called Social Security a Ponzi scheme and “a monstrous lie.”
Paul Begala to Rick Perry: Adios, Mofo
Paul Begala
January 18, 2012

When the Ponzi scheme collapsed, the couple was forced to sell the two-bedroom apartment at the distressed price of $1.2 million.
Meet Madoff’s Mistress
Allan Dodds Frank
August 13, 2009

Prosecutors said the Ponzi scheme, run over decades, moved more than $170 billion in and out of more than 4,000 customer accounts.
Feds Want 150 Years for Bernie
Allan Dodds Frank
June 25, 2009

Now that would be a neat trick: the alleged Ponzi artist bringing his victims down to his own level.
Sticking It to Madoff Victims
Benjamin Sarlin
January 27, 2009

Anagram

zip on


Today’s quote

The fact that people die because of an AK-47 is not because of the designer, but because of politics.

– Mikhail Kalashnikov


On this day

23 December 1947 – Bell Laboratories demonstrates the world’s first transistor radio.

23 December 1972 – 16 survivors of a plane-crash in the Andes, Argentina are rescued. The plane had crashed on 13 October 1972, carrying 45 people. A number of passengers were killed in the crash and some died later from exposure to the cold. Eight died in an avalanche. The survivors lived on chocolate bars, cabin food and the bodies of those who had died.

23 December 1982 – Israeli Consulate in Sydney and Hakoah Club in Bondi, Australia, bombings – both bombings were undertaken by the same three suspects. Two people were injured in the Israeli Consulate bombing and no injuries were recorded in the Hakoah bombing.

23 December 2005 – an earthquake in South-East Asia kills approximately 87,000 people, followed by a chemical spill that poisons China’s Songhue River, contaminating the water supply of millions of people.

23 December 2013 – death of Mikhail Kalashnikov, Soviet Union hero, inventor of the world’s most popular assault weapon, the AK-47, or ‘Kalashnikov’. The AK-47 stood for Kalashnikov Assault, 1947, the year it was designed. He was awarded the ‘Hero of Russia’ medal as well as Lenin and Stalin prizes. Kalashnikov invented the AK-47 to protect the national borders of the Soviet Union. The AK-47 has a simple design, which makes it very reliable and easy to replicate. Kalashnikov hadn’t patented the design internationally. As a result, of the estimated 100 million AK-47s in the world today, it is believed that at least half are copies. Although his weapon has been favoured by armies and guerillas across the globe, Kalashnikov claimed he never lost sleep over the numbers of people killed by it. He always maintained that he invented it to protect the ‘Fatherland’s borders’. He did however, rue the use of it by child soldiers. Kalashnikov was a World War II veteran who was wounded in 1941. While recovering in hospital he conceived the design. Born 10 November 1919.

22 December 2016 – ex parte

22 December 2016

ex parte

[eks pahr-tee]

adjective, adverb

1. from or on one side only of a dispute, as a divorce suit; without notice to or the presence of the other party.

Origin of ex parte

Latin

1665-1675; < Latin

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ex parte

Contemporary Examples

The unusual procedure by Swain of reviewing documents ” ex parte ” amounted to the judge going an extra mile to be fair.
Madoff Secretary Annette Bongiorno Jailed Over Ponzi Millions
Allan Dodds Frank
December 20, 2010

Historical Examples

It was an ex parte judgment which a look at the other fellow might have modified.
From the Bottom Up
Alexander Irvine

ex parte : on one side; an ex parte statement is a statement on one side only.
The Verbalist
Thomas Embly Osmun, (AKA Alfred Ayres)

Anagram

a expert
pert axe
peer tax
peter ax


Today’s quote

To find fault is easy; to do better may be difficult.

– Plutarch


On this day

22 December 1880 – death of Mary Ann Evans. One of England’s greatest novelists, she published under the name ‘George Eliot’ in order to be taken seriously. Some of her novels include ‘Adam Bede’, ‘Mill on the Floss’, ‘Silas Marner’, and ‘Daniel Deronda’. Her novel, ‘Middlemarch’, was described as the greatest novel in the English language. Born 22 November 1819.

22 December 1936 – Italy sends thousands of troops to Spain to support the Nationalists in the Spanish Civil War who were opposed to the democratically elected left-wing ‘Popular Front’ government which comprised of Trotskyists, communists and other left-wing groups.

22 December 1949 – birth of Maurice Gibb on the Isle of Man. Founded the Bee Gees with his brothers, Robin and Barry. Died 12 January 2003 in Miami, Florida.

22 December 1989 – The Brandenburg Gate opens for the first time in almost 30 years, allowing access between East and West Germany.

22 December 2002 – Death of Joe Strummer, co-founder, guitarist, lyricist and vocalist with UK punk band, The Clash. Born 21 August 1952.