31 March 2018 – espy

31 March 2018

espy

[ih-spahy]

verb (used with object), espied, espying.

1. to see at a distance; catch sight of.

Origin of espy

Middle English, Old French, German
1175-1225; Middle English espyen; Old French espier ≪ Germanic; compare German spähen to spy

Related forms

unespied, adjective

Synonyms

discern, descry, discover, perceive, make out.

Espy

[es-pee]

noun

1. James Pollard [pol-erd] (Show IPA), 1785–1860, U.S. meteorologist.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for espy

Contemporary Examples

But in 2003, Foxx hilariously sang a tribute to Serena Williams at the espy Awards.
13 Award Show Hosts Dos and Don’ts
Sujay Kumar
November 29, 2010

Historical Examples

If danger lay there I could not espy it nor detect its presence.
The House Under the Sea
Sir Max Pemberton

There were no tall trees near behind which we could run should he espy us.
My First Voyage to Southern Seas
W.H.G. Kingston

As soon as we were outside the door, whom should we espy there, in the large hall, just at the entrance?
Cuore (Heart)
Edmondo De Amicis

I’ve lodged them with the Capuchins, where not even a prying sunbeam can espy them.
Fiesco or, The Genoese Conspiracy
Friedrich Schiller

“I should like to buy the squirrel, if espy will sell him,” said Phonny.
Stuyvesant
Jacob Abbott

They rode on rapidly, intending to go to the house and inquire for espy.
Stuyvesant
Jacob Abbott

No,” said the great boy; “it belongs to espy, and I am going to keep it for him.
Stuyvesant
Jacob Abbott

But God had ane other work to wyrk then the eyes of men could espy.
The Works of John Knox, Volume 2 (of 6)
John Knox

Now and then one could espy amongst the branches a beautiful mot-mot.
A Glimpse at Guatemala
Anne Cary Maudslay


Today’s quote

What if … we stopped celebrating busy as a measurement of importance? What if instead we celebrated how much time we had spent listening, pondering, meditating, and enjoying time with the most important people in our lives?

– Greg McKeown


On this day

31 March 1992 – the Warsaw Pact ends. This was a defence treaty between the Soviet Union and Communist states in Central and Eastern Europe.

31 March 1993 – death of Brandon Lee on set, while filming ‘The Crow’, during a scene in which Lee’s character, Eric Draven, was shot. A real bullet had been lodged in the barrel of the pistol used and when the dummy bullet was loaded and fired, it triggered the real bullet which hit and fatally wounded Lee. Lee is the son of martial arts champion, Bruce Lee. He was to marry his fiance, Eliza Hutton, on 17 April 1993. ‘The Crow’ was dedicated to Brandon and Eliza.

31 March 2005 – death of Terry Schiavo who was the centre of the most prolonged right-to-die case in U.S. history. She had collapsed in 1990 from a cardiac arrest and entered a coma from which she did not recover. Doctors declared her to be in a ‘persistent vegetative state’. Her husband petitioned the court in 1998 to remove her feeding tubes, but her parents opposed the request. The case ran from 1998 – 2005 with numerous petitions to either remove the tubes or to keep them in. Terry died 13 days after her feeding tubes were removed on order of the court in 2005.

31 March 2017 – death of Gilbert Baker, American artist and gay rights activist, who designed the ‘rainbow flag’ in 1978 which came to symbolise the gay rights movement. Born 2 June 1951.

30 March 2018 – rarebit

30 March 2018

rarebit

[rair-bit]

noun

1. Welsh rabbit.

Origin of rarebit

1715-1725 First recorded in 1715-25
Can be confused

rabbet, rabbit, rarebit, rebate.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for rarebit

Historical Examples

They had the Welsh rarebit, with beer, and Carl helped to make it.
The Trail of the Hawk
Sinclair Lewis

“Let’s stop in and have a rarebit,” he suggested one midnight.
Sister Carrie
Theodore Dreiser

We are going over to the Lewinsohns for four-handed rummy and then a rarebit.
Local Color
Irvin S. Cobb


Today’s quote

Be present. Make love. Make tea. Avoid small talk. Embrace conversation. Buy a plant, water it. Make your bed. Make someone else’s bed. Have a smart mouth, and quick wit. Run. Make art. Create. Swim in the ocean. Swim in the rain. Take chances. Ask questions. Make mistakes. Learn. Know your worth. Love fiercely. Forgive quickly. Let go of what doesn’t make you happy. Grow.

– Paolo Coelho


On this day

30 March – Land Day, annual day of commemoration for Palestinians following the events of 1976 in which 6 Palestinian protestors were killed campaigning against the Israeli government’s announcement of plans to expropriate large amounts of Palestinian land for Israel. Land Day is recognised as a pivotal event in the struggle over Palestinian land and Palestine’s relationship to Israel.

30 March 1853 – birthday of Vincent Van Gogh, dutch painter. Died 29 July 1890.

30 March 1878 – the USA buys Alaska from Russia for $7.2 million.

30 March 1981 – US President Ronald Reagan shot at close range by John Hinckley, who was later found not guilty by reason of insanity. Hinckley was obsessed with actress Jodie Foster and thought he could get her attention and impress her, by killing the President. Also shot were Reagan’s press secretary, a Washington police officer and a Secret Service agent. None were injured fatally. Reagan underwent emergency surgery. He was released from hospital on 11 April 1981 and is the first president to survive an assassination attempt.

30 March 1987 – an anonymous buyer purchases the Vincent Van Gogh painting, ‘Sunflowers‘ for $36.3 million.

30 March 2002 – the Queen Mother dies at the age 101. Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon was born 4 August 1900. She was the wife of King George VI and the mother of Queen Elizabeth II and Princess Margaret Countess of Snowden. She was the Queen Consort of the United Kingdom and its Dominions. After the death of King George VI, she was known as Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother to avoid confusion with her daughter.

28 March 2018 – nanoscale

28 March 2018

nanoscale

[nan-uh-skeyl, ney-nuh-]

adjective

1. of or relating to microscopic particles of matter, devices, etc., that are measured in nanometers or microns:
a nanoscale sensor made of a single molecule.
noun
2. Measurements. a scale of measurement that uses nanometers or microns as units of measure.

Origin of nanoscale

1980-1985 First recorded in 1980-85; nano- + scale2

Dictionary.com

nanoscale in Science

nanoscale (nān’ə-skāl’)

Relating to or occurring on a scale of nanometers.

The American Heritage® Science Dictionary
Copyright © 2002. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.

Anagram

canal ones
nasal cone


Today’s quote

To play a wrong note is insignificant; to play without passion is inexcusable.

– Ludwig van Beethoven


On this day

28 March 1930 – Turkey changes the name of Constantinople to Istanbul and Angora to Ankara.

28 March 1939 – end of the Spanish Civil War, with Nationalist General Francisco Franco taking control of Madrid after a 3 year war against the Government of the Second Spanish Republic, which was led by President Manuel Azaña. Franco established a fascist dictatorship which lasted for 36 years. The Civil War had been fought between Fascist and Republican forces. The Republicans were comprised of a number of socialist, communist and anarchist forces. The Soviet Union backed the Republicans, but opposed other socialist forces such as the POUM (Workers Party of Marxist Unification), PSOE (Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party), CNT (Confederationo of anarcho-syndicalist trade unions) and others.

28 March 1964 – The Beatles have 10 hits in the Billboard charts at the same time.

28 March 2008 – President George W. Bush states that the USA is not in recession, but just slowing down and that tax cuts will stimulate spending. The US National Bureau of Economic Research declared the USA recession started in December 2007 and ended in July 2009.

28 March 2008 – The Pew Centre reports that the USA has the highest number of incarcerations in the world, at 2.3 million, which surpasses the number of prisoners in China, Russia and Iran. The USA also has the highest rate of imprisonments in the world as a percentage of population.

27 March 2018 – boustrophedon

27 March 2018

boustrophedon

[boo-struh-feed-n, -fee-don, bou-]

noun

1. an ancient method of writing in which the lines run alternately from right to left and from left to right.

Origin of boustrophedon

Greek

1775-1785-85; < Greek boustrophēdón literally, like ox-turning (in plowing), equivalent to bou- (stem of boûs) ox + -strophē- (see strophe ) + -don adv. suffix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for boustrophedon

Historical Examples

It is written in the most ancient Greek characters, and in the boustrophedon manner.
Museum of Antiquity
L. W. Yaggy

The words of the text are ranged in squares in such a manner as to be read either vertically or boustrophedon.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 15, Slice 6
Various

Anagram

rebound photos
bedpost honour
rosebud photon
both ponderous


Today’s quote

Truth is so obscure in these times, and falsehood so established, that, unless we love the truth, we cannot know it.

– Blaise Pascal


On this day

27 March 1963 – birth of Quentin Tarantino, Hollywood producer, director and writer. He has developed a cult-following with movies such as Pulp Fiction, Reservoir Dogs, Kill Bill, Natural Born Killers, Killing Zoe, True Romance, Four Rooms, From Dusk Till Dawn, Jackie Brown, Sin City, Hostel, Grindhouse, Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained.

27 March 2001 – California electricity prices rise by up to 46% following the partial deregulation of the electricity system.

26 March 2018 – cicerone

26 March 2018

cicerone

[sis-uh-roh-nee, chich-uh-; Italian chee-che-raw-ne]

noun, plural cicerones Italian, ciceroni [chee-che-raw-nee]

1. a person who conducts sightseers; guide.

Origin of cicerone

Italian, Latin

1720-1730; Italian < Latin Cicerōnem, accusative of Cicerō Cicero, the guide being thought of as having the knowledge and eloquence of Cicero

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cicerone

Historical Examples

Having introduced us, she desired him to act as cicerone to me until I was tired.
The First Violin
Jessie Fothergill

Then, as the Emperor has been often at Lyndalberg, he can act as cicerone for a stranger.
The Princess Virginia
C. N. Williamson

To the animated and curious Frenchwoman what a cicerone was Ernest Maltravers!
Ernest Maltravers, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton

So she had a right to come there as well as he,—and she could act as cicerone !
Tales of Trail and Town
Bret Harte

Well, we have arrived, said the cicerone, stopping at a mound of ruins.
The Hero of the People
Alexandre Dumas

Not at all, it was the call of the cicerone who had something to impart.
The Surprises of Life
Georges Clemenceau

The detective who was to be our cicerone was known to every evil-doer in the metropolis.
London in the Sixties
One of the Old Brigade

He had, of course, much to see, and it was a delight to me to be his cicerone.
William Sharp (Fiona Macleod)
Elizabeth A. Sharp

In doing so we are in the hands of a cicerone who is not satisfied to speak by rote.
The Marquis D’Argenson: A Study in Criticism
Arthur Ogle

“With your permission, Walter, I will take the part of cicerone,” said the new voice.
The Wizard’s Son, vol. 3
Margaret Oliphant

Anagram

nice core


Today’s quote

I have striven not to laugh at human actions, not to weep at them, nor to hate them, but to understand them.

– Baruch Spinoza


On this day

26 March 1827 – death of Ludwig van Beethoven, German composer. One of the world’s most influential composers. He composed 9 symphonies, 5 concertos for piano, 32 piano sonatos and 16 string quartets. Baptised on 17 December 1770.

26 March 1971 – The country of East Pakistan declares its independence and renames itself Bangladesh.

25 March 2018 – gomero

25 March 2018

gomero/gomera

noun

Mexican term for opium poppy worker. The person who slashes the poppy so that the “goma” will exude. During the 1950’s, the term was used to describe people who worked in the opium business in the golden triangle of Mexico (where Sinaloa, Durango and Chihuahua meet in the Sierra Madre Oriental). Un gomero is a male, una gomera is a female.

In the 1950’s, a nickname for people from Culiacán Sinaloa was “gomero”. Los gomeros from Sinaloa were also called “gangsters with huaraches”.

Example

His father had been a gomero, an opium farmer, like all his uncles and everyone else he knew, tending the fields, irrigating the crops, then slicing the seed head with razor blades and carefully collecting the thick white sap until they had enough to sell to the middlemen who drove around the area and screwed everyone on price: everyone except his father.
Chapter 48
Solomon Creed (Book #1)
Simon Toyne


Today’s quote

Don’t judge each day by the harvest that you reap, but by the seeds that you plant.

– Robert Louis Stevenson


On this day

25 March 1947 – birth of Elton John (Reginald Dwight), British singer-songwriter.

25 March 1957 – the Treaty of Rome is signed by France, West Germany, Holland, Belgium, Italy and Luxembourg, establishing the European Economic Community (EEC). In 1993, following the ratification of the Maastricht Treaty, the European Union (EU) was created, and the EEC incorporated to became known as the European Community (EC).

24 March 2018 – goma

24 March 2018

goma

noun

– Crude opium (1960s+ Narcotics), ‘they were smoking goma’.

The Dictionary of American Slang, Fourth Edition by Barbara Ann Kipfer, PhD. and Robert L. Chapman, Ph.D.
Copyright (C) 2007 by HarperCollins Publishers.

Examples from the Web for goma

Historical Examples

Soon after Holy Week, I was hurriedly implored one morning to go and see an old man who was suffering from “goma.”
A Glimpse at Guatemala
Anne Cary Maudslay


Today’s quote

You may never know what results come of your actions, but if you do nothing, there will be no results.

– Mahatma Gandhi


On this day

24 March 1958 – Elvis Presley is conscripted into the U.S. Army as a Private. He was discharged on 2 March 1960 with the rank of Sergeant.

24 March 1989 – the oil-tanker, Exxon Valdez, is seriously damaged after running aground on a reef in Alaska’s Prince William Sound. Over 11 million gallons of crude oil was released, resulting in a five mile oil slick, which caused severe environmental damage, including the deaths of 250,000 birds, 3,000 sea otters, 300 seals, 22 killer whales and an untold number of fish.

24 March 1973 – Pink Floyd release their iconic ‘Dark Side of the Moon’ album, which is the 6th best-selling album of all time with over 40 million sales worldwide.

23 March 2018 – gomer

23 March 2018

gomer

[goh-mer]

noun, Slang.

1. an undesirable hospital patient.
2. an enemy aviator, especially in a dogfight.
3. an inept or stupid colleague, especially a trainee (US military slang)

Origin of gomer

1965-1970 First recorded in 1965-70; of disputed orig.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for gomer

Contemporary Examples

Historical Examples

gomer stands for the Germans in part, for those who descended from gomer.
The Lost Ten Tribes, and 1882
Joseph Wild

The gomer chamber (which see) is generally adopted in our service.
The Sailor’s Word-Book
William Henry Smyth

That the descendants of the gomer moved northward and established themselves in parts of Germany seems to be an established fact.
The Prophet Ezekiel
Arno C. Gaebelein

Slang definitions; phrases for gomer

gomer

noun

A patient needing extensive care; a vegetative comatose patient : We got a real gomer in from ICU yesterday/ He says the guy’s a total gomer now (1960s+ Medical)
A first-year Air Force Academy cadet, esp a clumsy trainee (1950s+)
[origin uncertain; medical sense said to be an acronym of ”get out of my emergency room”]

The Dictionary of American Slang, Fourth Edition by Barbara Ann Kipfer, PhD. and Robert L. Chapman, Ph.D.
Copyright (C) 2007 by HarperCollins Publishers.


Today’s quote

The unexamined life is not worth living.

– Socrates


On this day

23 March 1919 – Benito Mussolini establishes the Italian National Fascist Party. In 1936, Mussolini joins forces with Adolf Hitler through the Axis Pact. Following Mussolini’s arrest in 1943, the party was dissolved. The Italian Constitution has banned the reformation of the INF.

23 March 1924 – birth of Bette Nesmith Graham in Dallas, Texas. Bette is the inventor of Liquid Paper. Her son, Mike Nesmith, was a member of 1960s UK/American pop/rock band, The Monkees.

23 March 1956 – Pakistan becomes the first Islamic republic in the world. Republic Day in Pakistan.

22 March 2018 – entreaty

22 March 2018

entreaty

[en-tree-tee]

noun, plural entreaties.

1. earnest request or petition; supplication.

Origin of entreaty

1515-1525 First recorded in 1515-25; entreat + -y3

Synonyms

appeal, suit, plea, solicitation.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for entreaty

Historical Examples

“Hear me,” he went on, in an agony of entreaty mingled with something like anger.
Weighed and Wanting
George MacDonald

She then went away, at her friend’s entreaty, after emptying her purse in my nurse’s hands.
My Double Life
Sarah Bernhardt

Her entreaty was so earnest, that the boy had not the heart to stay there.
Life And Adventures Of Martin Chuzzlewit
Charles Dickens

That was my mother’s position, and neither argument nor entreaty could move her from it.
Micah Clarke
Arthur Conan Doyle

The words were those of entreaty, but the voice was that of authority.
Beauty and The Beast, and Tales From Home
Bayard Taylor

What you must read unmoved by the pity too far for entreaty.
Poems
William D. Howells

His level glance met Sir Richard’s in earnestness and entreaty.
The Lion’s Skin
Rafael Sabatini

It was an entreaty that she might be permitted to come and see me.
That Boy Of Norcott’s
Charles James Lever

Protesting that I had strong reasons to believe so, I renewed my entreaty.
Jack Hinton
Charles James Lever

How could I resist a request, perhaps an entreaty, from her?
Tom Burke Of “Ours”, Volume II (of II)
Charles James Lever

Anagram

try eaten
yen treat
neat tyre
tea entry


Today’s quote

One should believe in marriage as in the immortality of the soul.

– Honore de Balzac


On this day

22 March – World Water Day. Established by the UN in 1993 to encourage nations to implement UN initiatives and promote wise use of water resources. People are encouraged to not use their taps all day.

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

22 March 1829 – Following the Greek War of Independence, the London Protocol (1829) is signed by Great Britain, Russia and France, establishing the borders of an internally autonomous Greece, although it remained under Ottoman Empire suzerainty. The Ottoman Empire was forced to accept the London Protocol following the Treaty of Adrianople. Greece achieved full independence from the Ottoman Empire with the signing of the London Protocol (1830) of 3 February 1830.

22 March 1916 – The last Emperor of China, Yuan Shikai, abdicates the throne and the Republic of China is restored.

22 March 1963 – the Beatles’ first album, Please, Please Me, is released in the UK.

21 March 2018 – honey-tongued

21 March 2018

honey-tongued

[huhn-ee [tuhngd]

adjective

(of a person) speaking sweetly or softly, or in a way that is intended to please, often without being sincere; (of a statement, piece of text, etc.) written or spoken in this way

Examples

As a handsome, honey-tongued politician, he convinced the nation that going to war was a good idea.
a honey-tongued lie.

His beautiful verses contain echoes of Shakespeare’s honey-tongued romantic poetry.

Oxford Learners Dictionaries

Anagram

thou edgy neon


Today’s quote

If I waited for perfection, I would never write a word.

– Margaret Atwood

 

 


On this day

21 March – International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination.

21 March – National Harmony Day in which Australia celebrates its cultural diversity.

21 March – World Poetry Day. Declared by UNESCO in 1999 to promote the reading, writing, publishing and teaching of poetry.

21 March 1960 – Sharpeville Massacre in South Africa, when Afrikaner police opened fire on unarmed protestors in front of the police station, killing 69 people and wounding 180. In South Africa, every 21 March is a public holiday to celebrate human rights and commemorate the Sharpeville massacre.

21 March 1963 – President John F. Kennedy orders the closure of federal penitentiary, Alcatraz (The Rock).