31 December 2017 – halitosis

31 December 2017

halitosis

[hal-i-toh-sis]

noun

1. a condition of having offensive-smelling breath; bad breath.

Origin of halitosis

1870-1875 From New Latin, dating back to 1870-75; See origin at halitus, -osis

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for halitosis

Contemporary Examples

Otherwise the halitosis of the old, their extreme make up and the heavy jewels they wear on their tired ears, get in the way.
The 10 Rules of Kissing Hello
Claire Howorth
September 4, 2010

Anagram

Haiti loss
hoist sail
it so hails


Today’s quote

Human greatness does not lie in wealth or power, but in character and goodness.

– Anne Frank


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 2017 – Poujadism

30 December 2017

Poujadism

/ˈpuːʒɑːdɪzəm/

noun

1. a conservative reactionary movement to protect the business interests of small traders

Derived Forms

Poujadist, noun, adjective

Word Origin
named after Pierre Poujade (1920–2003), French publisher and bookseller who founded such a movement in 1954
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

Example

It is a mistake to disqualify such people as racist. Their concerns are widespread, genuine and not to be dismissed. Unfortunately, populist xenophobes such as Nigel Farage exploit these emotions, linking them to subterranean English nationalism and talking, as he did in the moment of victory, of the triumph of “real people, ordinary people, decent people”. This is the language of Orwell hijacked for the purposes of a Poujade.
As an English European, this is the biggest defeat of my political life
Timothy Garton Ash
The Guardian
24 June 2016

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/commentisfree/2016/jun/24/lifelong-english-european-the-biggest-defeat-of-my-political-life-timothy-garton-ash-brexit

Anagram

adios jump
jam duo sip
I jump soda


Today’s quote

I am no longer accepting the things I cannot change. I am changing the things I cannot accept.

– Angela Davis


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 2017 – unguent

29 December 2017

unguent

[uhng-gwuh nt]

noun

1. an ointment or salve, usually liquid or semiliquid, for application to wounds, sores, etc.

Origin of unguent

late Middle English Latin

1400-1450; late Middle English < Latin unguentum, alteration (probably by association with the suffixes -men, -mentum) of unguen fat, grease, derivative of unguere to smear, anoint

Related forms

unguentary [uhng-gwuh n-ter-ee], adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for unguent

Historical Examples

But the unguent was not forthcoming, and the emperor was crowned without its aid.
Historical Tales, Vol. 6 (of 15)
Charles Morris

At such a time the man should apply some unguent, so as to make the entrance easy.
The Kama Sutra of Vatsyayana
Vatsyayana

The Selgic iris1246 also, and the unguent which is made from it, are in great esteem.
The Geography of Strabo, Volume II (of 3)
Strabo

Addressing her sportively, Krishna said, For whom are you carrying that unguent ?
Curiosities of Superstition
W. H. Davenport Adams

And she gave them as much of the unguent as was sufficient for their persons.
Curiosities of Superstition
W. H. Davenport Adams

She also ‘invented’ many a lotion and unguent for the preservation and creation of beauty.
She Stands Accused
Victor MacClure

Against my burial she has kept this unguent ; for me ye have not always.
The Expositor’s Bible: The Gospel of St John, Vol. II
Marcus Dods

Now, this unguent has done ‘a deal of good’ to the leather of my boots.
Six to Sixteen
Juliana Horatia Ewing

They anointed the fingers with some unguent, and lighted them.
The Haunters & The Haunted
Various

In such cases the influence of the god, communicated to the victim, passed with the unguent into the stone.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Slice 2
Various


Today’s quote

God is a comedian playing to an audience that is too afraid to laugh.

– Voltaire


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 2017 – blench

28 December 2017

blench(1)

[blench]

verb (used without object)

1. to shrink; flinch; quail:
an unsteady eye that blenched under another’s gaze.

Origin of blench(1)

Middle English, Old English
1000 before 1000; Middle English blenchen, Old English blencan; cognate with Old Norse blekkja, Middle High German blenken

Related forms

blencher, noun
blenchingly, adverb

blench(2)

[blench]

verb (used with or without object)

1. to make or become pale or white; blanch.

Origin

First recorded in 1805-15; variant of blanch(1)

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for blench

Historical Examples

Like Hamlet with the king at the play, “If he but blench, I know my course!”
Weighed and Wanting
George MacDonald

But she did not blench in the least, though she remembered whose words he was quoting.
T. Tembarom
Frances Hodgson Burnett

But though it fell, the people of the dauntless city did not blench.
Vistas in Sicily
Arthur Stanley Riggs


Today’s quote

Heresy is another word for freedom of thought.

– Graham Greene


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 2017 – parapet

27 December 2017

parapet

[par-uh-pit, -pet]

noun

1. Fortification.
a defensive wall or elevation, as of earth or stone, in a fortification.
an elevation raised above the main wall or rampart of a permanent fortification.
2. any low protective wall or barrier at the edge of a balcony, roof, bridge, or the like.

Origin of parapet

Italian

1575-1585; < Italian parapetto, equivalent to para- para-2+ petto chest, breast < Latin pectus

Related forms

parapeted, adjective
parapetless, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for parapet

Contemporary Examples

The head of this family, atop his roof with the rest, poked his head gingerly above the parapet, fearing the worst.
Michael Ware on Staff Sgt. Robert Bales, Accused of Killing Afghan Civilians
Michael Ware
March 19, 2012

Then a German soldier popped up from behind a parapet and fired.
My Father, The Inglourious Basterd
Kim Masters
August 8, 2009

Historical Examples

Let us sit down on the parapet and try to realise the scene.
Camps, Quarters and Casual Places
Archibald Forbes

He swung himself on—near—near—nearer—a yard from the parapet.
Night and Morning, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton

“This is where Gordon used to stand,” the Sirdar stopped us near the parapet.
It Happened in Egypt
C. N. Williamson


Today’s quote

A kind gesture can reach a wound that only compassion can heal.

– Steve Maraboli


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 2017 – decorous

26 December 2017

decorous

[dek-er-uh s, dih-kawr-uh s, -kohr-]

adjective

1. characterized by dignified propriety in conduct, manners, appearance, character, etc.

Origin of decorous

Latin

1655-1665; < Latin decōrus seemly, becoming, derivative of decus; see decorate, -ous

Related forms

decorously, adverb
decorousness, noun
nondecorous, adjective
nondecorously, adverb
nondecorousness, noun

Synonyms

proper, becoming.

Antonyms

undignified.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for decorous

Contemporary Examples

Not for Rodriguez the decorous, red-carpet likes of Gwynnie, Sandra Bullock, or Tom Cruise, but “hot criminal” Jeremy Meeks.
Meet the PR Guru for the ‘Hot Convict,’ the Octomom, and Every Other D-List Trainwreck
Erin Cunningham
July 16, 2014

A decorous group of nine panelists presented their positions one at a time, following distinctly un-Israeli rules of etiquette.
Israel’s New Election Discourse
Don Futterman
January 7, 2013

Historical Examples

Thus our conversation ran– decorous and harmless enough, in all conscience.
In the Valley
Harold Frederic

Anagram

sour code
do course
door cues
us or code
scour ode


Today’s quote

When we give cheerfully and accept gratefully, everyone is blessed.

– Maya Angelou


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 2017 – insensate

25 December 2017

insensate

[in-sen-seyt, -sit]

adjective

1. not endowed with sensation; inanimate:
insensate stone.
2. without human feeling or sensitivity; cold; cruel; brutal.
3. without sense, understanding, or judgment; foolish.

Origin of insensate

Late Latin

1510-1520 First recorded in 1510-20, insensate is from the Late Latin word insēnsātus irrational. See in-3, sensate

Related forms

insensately, adverb
insensateness, noun

Synonyms

1. lifeless, inorganic. 2. insensible. 3. stupid, irrational, senseless, witless, dumb.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for insensate

Contemporary Examples

He was “overwhelmed by the feeling” that “the Suffolk expanses” had “shrunk once and for all to a single, blind, insensate spot.”
Walking In The Footsteps Of W.G. Sebald, Hiker, Novelist, Strange Genius
Edward Platt
June 4, 2014

Historical Examples

It was insensate folly on his part, ridiculous from any point of view.
The Black Bag
Louis Joseph Vance

More than once he had hoped the insensate fury of the blizzard might abate.
Nan of Music Mountain
Frank H. Spearman

Anagram

I neatness
senate sin
teases inn
insane set
sea tennis
nine seats
as intense


Today’s quote

My idea of Christmas, whether old-fashioned or modern, is very simple: loving others. Come to think of it, why do we have to wait for Christmas to do that?

– Bob Hope


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 2017 – escritoire

24 December 2017

escritoire

[es-kri-twahr]

noun

1. writing desk (def 1).

Origin of escritoire

Middle French, Latin
1605-1615; < French, Middle French < Latin scrīptōrium. See scribe1, -tory2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for escritoire

Historical Examples

I took him to my room, and shewed him my escritoire, my casket, and my will.
The Memoires of Casanova, Complete
Jacques Casanova de Seingalt

Ernest and myself were seated side by side by the escritoire.
Ernest Linwood
Caroline Lee Hentz

The magistrate pointed to the escritoire with its open drawers.
Fantmas
Pierre Souvestre

Anagram

Sir Coterie
icier store
rice sortie

 

 


Today’s quote

We live in the age of the refugee, the age of the exile.

– Ariel Dorfman


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 2017 – deontology

23 December 2017

deontology

[dee-on-tol-uh-jee]

noun

1. ethics, especially that branch dealing with duty, moral obligation, and right action.

Origin of deontology

Greek

1820-1830; < Greek deont- that which is binding (stem of déon, neuter present participle of deîn to bind), equivalent to de- bind + -ont- present participle suffix + -o- + -logy

Related forms

deontological [dee-on-tl-oj-i-kuh l], adjective
deontologist, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for deontology

Historical Examples

This edition does not include the deontology, which, much rewritten, had been published by Bowring in 1834.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Slice 6
Various

To Bowring we also owe the deontology, which professes to represent Bentham’s dictation.
The English Utilitarians, Volume I.
Leslie Stephen

Anagram

goodly note
ogled on toy
not to lodge


Today’s quote

Everyone has talent at twenty-five. The difficulty is to have it at fifty.

– Edgar Degas


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.

21 December 2017 – mulct

21 December 2017

mulct

[muhlkt]

verb (used with object)

1. to deprive (someone) of something, as by fraud, extortion, etc.; swindle.
2. to obtain (money or the like) by fraud, extortion, etc.
3. to punish (a person) by fine, especially for a misdemeanor.
noun
4. a fine, especially for a misdemeanor.

Origin of mulct

Latin

1475-1485 First recorded in 1475-85, mulct is from the Latin word mul(c)ta penalty involving loss of property

Related forms

unmulcted, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for mulct

Historical Examples

The entire business is carried on to catch and mulct tourists.
Paris Vistas
Helen Davenport Gibbons

If he come into debt by Contract, or mulct, the case is the same.
Leviathan
Thomas Hobbes

It is too early yet to say what the result of the “ mulct ” Act will be.
Sober by Act of Parliament
Fred A. McKenzie

The offence that held 1500 soldiers in check was met by a mulct of two half-crowns.
Merchantmen-at-Arms
David W. Bone

The mulct to be imposed upon the parish of Epinal was never exacted.
The Twilight of the Gods, and Other Tales
Richard Garnett

When he is warned on a jury, he had rather pay the mulct than appear.
Character Writings of the 17th Century
Various


Today’s quote
Laughter and tears are both responses to frustration and exhaustion. I myself prefer to laugh, since there is less cleaning up to do afterward.

– Kurt Vonnegut


On this day

21 December 1913 – American newspaper, New York World, publishes the world’s first crossword puzzle. It was created by English journalist, Arthur Wynne.

21 December 1940 – birth of Frank Zappa, American revolutionary musician. Died 3 December 1993.

21 December 1991 – representatives of all Soviet Republics, except Georgia, signed the Alma-Ata Protocol which confirmed the Belavezha Accords of 8 December 1991 that declared the Soviet Union dissolved.

21 December 2012 – end of the world as predicted by the Ancient Mayans … or is it just the end of an age within their calendar? All was revealed … and it was a non-event …

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