1 July 2018 – cordon sanitaire

1 July 2018

cordon sanitaire

[French kawr-dawn sa-nee-ter]

noun, plural cordons sanitaires [French kawr-dawn sa-nee-ter]

1. a line around a quarantined area guarded to prevent the spread of a disease by restricting passage into or out of the area.
2. a group of neighboring, generally neutral states forming a geographical barrier between two states having aggressive military or ideological aims against each other.

Origin of cordon sanitaire

1840-1850 From French, dating back to 1840-50; See origin at cordon, sanitary

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cordon sanitaire

Historical Examples

Some of the French statesmen occasionally say what is not true ( cordon sanitaire); here they conceal the truth.
The Life of Albert Gallatin
Henry Adams

The plague is raging with unwonted fatality; but no cordon sanitaire is established—no adequate remedy sought.
Thoughts on African Colonization
William Lloyd Garrison

A proposal by President Carranza to draw a cordon sanitaire round the place has not yet reached Washington.
Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. CLVIII, January 7, 1920
Various


Today’s quote

When I despair, I remember that all through history the ways of truth and love have always won. There have been tyrants, and murderers, and for a time they can seem invincible, but in the end they always fall. Think of it.

– Gandhi


On this day

1 July – International Reggae Day

1 July 1862 – founding of the Russian State Library in Moscow. It is the fourth largest library in the world. It has 275km of shelves, 17.5 million books, 13 million journals, 350,000 music scores and sound records, 150,000 maps.

1 July 1921 – founding of the Communist Party of China.

1 July 1943 – Tokyo City is officially dissolved following its merger with the Tokyo Prefecture. Since then no Japanese city has been named Tokyo. Modern-day Tokyo is not officially a city, instead it is a prefecture consisting of 23 wards, 26 cities, five towns and eight villages.

1 July 1961 – birth of Diana Spencer, Princess of Wales. Died in a car crash in Paris on 31 August 1997.

1 July 1963 – ZIP codes introduced for United States mail.

1 July 1978 – Australia’s Northern Territory is granted self-government.

1 July 2002 – establishment of the International Criminal Court to prosecute individuals for genocide, crimes against humanity, war-crimes and the crime of aggression.

July 2018 WOTDs

July 2018 WOTDs


31 July 2018

sommelier

[suhm-uh l-yey; French saw-muh-lyey]

noun, plural sommeliers [suhm-uh l-yeyz; French saw-muh-lyey] (Show IPA)

1. a waiter, as in a club or restaurant, who is in charge of wines.

Origin of sommelier

1920-1925; < French, Middle French, dissimilated form of *sommerier, derivative of sommier one charged with arranging transportation, equivalent to somme burden (< Late Latin sagma horse load < Greek ságma covering, pack saddle) + -ier -ier2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sommelier

Contemporary Examples

A sommelier told me that his name for the family was “Rudinelli.”
Napa’s Earthquake Is Not The Only Thing Shaking The Vineyards
Clive Irving
August 31, 2014

sommelier Jordan Salcito on why these are the ultimate wine books.
‘The Drops of God’: Wine Books You Will Actually Want to Read
Jordan Salcito
January 19, 2014

In the American sommelier community, until very recently, South African wines have remained largely an afterthought.
Drink Like Nelson Mandela: South Africa’s Exciting New Wine
Jordan Salcito
December 14, 2013

Anagram

mere limos
more miles
smile more


30 July 2018

verdure

[vur-jer]

noun

1. greenness, especially of fresh, flourishing vegetation.
2. green vegetation, especially grass or herbage.
3. freshness in general; flourishing condition; vigor.

Origin of verdure

Middle English

1250-1300; Middle English < Middle French, equivalent to verd green (see vert ) + -ure -ure

Related forms

verdured, adjective
verdureless, adjective
unverdured, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for verdure

Historical Examples

But with me, the verdure and the flowers are not frostbitten in the midst of winter.
The Village Uncle (From “Twice Told Tales”)
Nathaniel Hawthorne

It seemed to the young couple as if they were being rocked on a sea of verdure.
The Fortune of the Rougons
Emile Zola

All around were lofty mountains covered with verdure and glory.
The Elm Tree Tales
F. Irene Burge Smith

Anagram

rude rev


29 July 2018

efface

[ih-feys]

verb (used with object), effaced, effacing.

1. to wipe out; do away with; expunge:
to efface one’s unhappy memories.
2. to rub out, erase, or obliterate (outlines, traces, inscriptions, etc.).
3. to make (oneself) inconspicuous; withdraw (oneself) modestly or shyly.

Origin of efface

Middle French

1480-1490 From the Middle French word effacer, dating back to 1480-90. See ef-, face

Related forms

effaceable, adjective
effacement, noun
effacer, noun
uneffaceable, adjective
uneffaced, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for efface

Historical Examples

Why should he efface himself, if it meant Sidney’s unhappiness?
K
Mary Roberts Rinehart

But here is a confession which a hundred crosses can not efface.
The Book of Khalid
Ameen Rihani

This was alone wanting to efface every trace of the old Republican spirit.
Tom Burke Of “Ours”, Volume II (of II)
Charles James Lever

Enough to efface it in the eyes of one who had never sinned?
Wisdom, Wit, and Pathos of Ouida
Ouida

Will it be possible to efface the evil impress left on that mind and body?
The Choice of Life
Georgette Leblanc

The better to efface the impress of their tyrannical past, I had to dip them into water.
The Choice of Life
Georgette Leblanc

Nothing can ever cure me, no dream of my mind can ever efface the dream of my heart.
The Child of Pleasure
Gabriele D’Annunzio

He forgot his resolution to efface himself, and whipped his horse forward.
A Soldier of the Legion
C. N. Williamson

The strength of the child is to efface himself in every possible way.
What Is and What Might Be
Edmond Holmes

The constant use of that paddle in the water, for fifteen days, did not efface the color.
The Adventures of the Chevalier De La Salle and His Companions, in Their Explorations of the Prairies, Forests, Lakes, and Rivers, of the New World, and Their Interviews with the Savage Tribes, Two Hundred Years Ago
John S. C. Abbott


28 July 2018

dentin

[den-tn, -tin]

noun, Dentistry.

1. the hard, calcareous tissue, similar to but denser than bone, that forms the major portion of a tooth, surrounds the pulp cavity, and is situated beneath the enamel and cementum.

Also, dentine [den-teen]

Origin of dentin

1830-1840 First recorded in 1830-40; dent- + -in2

Related forms

dentinal, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dentin

Historical Examples

The teeth are pointed and often have the dentine remarkably folded.
The Vertebrate Skeleton
Sidney H. Reynolds

This models the enamel cap which fits over the dentine like a glove.
Degeneracy
Eugene S. Talbot

A papilla of the dermis makes its appearance, the outer layer of which gradually calcifies to form the dentine and osseous tissue.
The Works of Francis Maitland Balfour, Volume III (of 4)
Francis Maitland Balfour

Anagram

intend
tinned


27 July 2018

phub

[fuhb] Slang.

verb (used with object), phubbed, phubbing.

1. to ignore (a person or one’s surroundings) when in a social situation by busying oneself with a phone or other mobile device: Hey, are you phubbing me?
I hate to see a mother wheeling a stroller while phubbing her baby.
verb (used without object), phubbed, phubbing.
2. to ignore a person or one’s surroundings in this way.

Origin of phub

2010-2014 First recorded in 2010-14; ph(one)1+ snub

Dictionary.com


26 July 2018

gimbals

[jim-buh lz, gim-]

noun (used with a singular verb)

Sometimes gimbal. a contrivance, consisting of a ring or base on an axis, that permits an object, as a ship’s compass, mounted in or on it to tilt freely in any direction, in effect suspending the object so that it will remain horizontal even when its support is tipped.

Origin of gimbals

First recorded in 1570–80; alteration of gimmal

Also called gimbal ring.

Dictionary.com

Historical Examples

The four pistons are carried upon the gimbal ring, which connects, by means of pivots, the two chair couplings.
Scientific American Supplement, No. 497, July 11, 1885
Various

Anagram

slime bag


25 July 2018

lèse majesté

[lez, leez] [maj-uh-stee]

noun

1. Law. a crime, especially high treason, committed against the sovereign power.
an offense that violates the dignity of a ruler.
2. an attack on any custom, institution, belief, etc., held sacred or revered by numbers of people:
Her speech against Mother’s Day was criticized as lese majesty.

Also, lèse majesty, lèse majesté [lez mah-juh-stey, lez maj-uh-stee, leez].

Origin of lese majesty

French, Latin

1530-15401530-40; < French lèse-majesté, after Latin (crīmen) laesae mājestātis (the crime) of injured majesty

Dictionary.com

Anagram

male jests
jam steels
jets meals


24 July 2018

dewlap

[doo-lap, dyoo-]

noun

1. a pendulous fold of skin under the throat of a bovine animal.
2. any similar part in other animals, as the wattle of fowl or the inflatable loose skin under the throat of some lizards.

Origin of dewlap

Middle English, Danish, Dutch

1350-1400; Middle English dew(e)lappe, apparently dewe dew + lappe lap1; compare Danish dog-læp, Dutch (dial.) dauw-zwengel; literal sense is unclear

Related forms

dewlapped, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dewlap

Historical Examples

He was very fat, with a shaven, swarthy face and the dewlap of an ox.
The Strolling Saint
Raphael Sabatini

Put setons, or rowels in the dewlap, so as to have a dependent opening.
Cattle and Their Diseases
Robert Jennings

The chief peculiarity of the animal is its lack of a dewlap.
The Western World
W.H.G. Kingston

There must be no loose skin, such as dewlap, etc., in this region.
Sporting Dogs
Frank Townend Barton

Then what sense is there in blistering, bleeding, and inserting setons in the dewlap ?
The American Reformed Cattle Doctor
George Dadd

The dewlap is very slightly extensible, and but little developed.
Discoveries in Australia, Volume 1.
J Lort Stokes

In doing so he noticed for the first time Dick’s stitches in the hound’s dewlap and shoulders.
Jan
A. J. Dawson

About once in so long a tiny spasm of the muscles would contract the dewlap under his chin.
The Escape of Mr. Trimm
Irvin S. Cobb

Apply strong counterirritant to chest and put seton in dewlap.
Special Report on Diseases of Cattle
U.S. Department of Agriculture

So likewise the pictorial historian is merry over ‘ dewlap alliances’ in his description of the society of that period.
The Short Works of George Meredith
George Meredith

Anagram

wed lap


23 July 2018

volte-face

[volt-fahs, vohlt-; French vawltuh-fas]

noun, plural volte-face.

1. a turnabout, especially a reversal of opinion or policy.

Origin of volte-face

French, Italian
1810-1820; < French < Italian voltafaccia, equivalent to volta turn (see volt2) + faccia face

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for volte-face

Contemporary Examples

It leaves out only the actual reason for her abrupt, 11th-hour volte-face.
How Hillary’s Feeling About Caroline
Christopher Buckley
January 24, 2009

Historical Examples

It was the same as that which he had for Hincks’s volte-face. ‘
The Tribune of Nova Scotia
W. L. (William Lawson) Grant

For if the volte-face is general, the only embarrassment arises from not executing it.
The Angel of Pain
E. F. Benson

But Russia’s betrayal is not sufficient to account for the Serbian volte-face.
After the Rain
Sam Vaknin

Such a volte-face as this was not only palpably unjust, it was altogether too nimble a bit of gymnastics for Duplay to appreciate.
Tristram of Blent
Anthony Hope

What will justify such a volte-face and with what excuse can he repudiate the principles with which he justified his takeover?
The Origins of Contemporary France, Volume 4 (of 6)
Hippolyte A. Taine

The volte-face sounds more abrupt than it really was if it be remembered that he never had more than one object in view at a time.
Sonia Between two Worlds
Stephen McKenna

And for all their talk of freedom, Lennan could see the volte-face his friends would be making, if they only knew.
The Dark Flower
John Galsworthy

These four factors coalesced during 1948 and led to a reassessment of policy and, finally, to a volte-face.
Integration of the Armed Forces, 1940-1965
Morris J. MacGregor, Jr.

Lastly, they have, in its highest development, the capacity to make a volte-face with grace and equanimity.
A Woman’s Impression of the Philippines
Mary H. (Mary Helen) Fee

Anagram

fecal vote
feta clove
to cave elf


22 July 2018

volta

[vohl-tuh, vol-; Italian vawl-tah]

noun, plural volte [vohl-tey, vol-; Italian vawl-te]. Music.

1. turn; time (used in phrases): una volta(“once”);
prima volta(“first time”).

Origin of volta

1635-1645; Italian: a turn; see volt2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for volta

Historical Examples

But it was too late: the volte face was too sudden and complete.
The Shewing-up of Blanco Posnet
George Bernard Shaw

He was not an uneducated man, but volte face, correctly pronounced, was unfamiliar in his ears.
The Postmaster’s Daughter
Louis Tracy

If I had inwardly reproached him for fickleness when he confessed his volte face, I exonerated him at sight of his old love.
The Brightener
C. N. Williamson

Pretending concern in her, had he not really joined the camp of her enemies and detractors, the volte face thing!
The Shriek
Charles Somerville

The simplicity of M. Fnelon was rudely shocked by this ” volte face.”
Montreal 1535-1914 under the French Rgime
William Henry Atherton

Morley speaks of the volte, and says it is characterised by ‘rising and leaping,’ and is of the same ‘measure’ as a coranto.
Shakespeare and Music
Edward W. Naylor

The miserable state of the nation seemed to demand a volte face.
Introduction to the Science of Sociology
Robert E. Park

His cabinet pictures were also lively; witness the four Seasons at volte, a seat of the noble family of Chigi.
The History of Painting in Italy, Vol. 1 (of 6)
Luigi Antonio Lanzi

Of all things, the ‘ volte sciollo’, and the ‘pensieri stretti’, are necessary.
The PG Edition of Chesterfield’s Letters to His Son
The Earl of Chesterfield

The volte is a circular movement, executed by the horse upon a curved line, not less than twelve of his steps in length.
Hand-book for Horsewomen
H. L. De Bussigny


21 July 2018

ka

[kah]

noun Egyptian Religion.

a spiritual entity, an aspect of the individual, believed to live within the body during life and to survive it after death.

Origin of ka

1890–95; Egyptian kʾ

kA

kiloampere; kiloamperes.

ka-

variant of ker-.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ka

Contemporary Examples

Ancient Egyptians believed that every person has three souls: Ka, Ba, and Akh.
Egypt’s Second Revolution: Purging the Mubarak Regime’s Legacy
Vivian Salama
June 20, 2012

Historical Examples

Breasted denies that the ka was an element of the personality.
The Evolution of the Dragon
G. Elliot Smith

Because my Ka has been with me, Rames, and told me that it is a bad act and if we do trouble will come to us.
Morning Star
H. Rider Haggard

Then the Ka that clings to it eternally awoke at my touch and knew me, or so I suppose.
The Mahatma and the Hare
H. Rider Haggard

This was to act as the protector Khepra, of the ka or immaterial vitality of the sahu or mummy.
Scarabs
Isaac Myer

The body was embalmed and the Ka dwelt in the sepulchre with it, but went in and out of the tomb.
Scarabs
Isaac Myer


20 July 2018

actus reus

/ˈæktəs ˈreɪəs/

noun

1. (law) a criminal action regarded as a constituent element of a crime, as compared with the state of mind of the perpetrator Compare mens rea

Word Origin

Latin, literally: guilty act

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

 

 


19 July 2018

palladium

[puh-ley-dee-uh m]

noun
1.
something believed to ensure protection; safeguard

Origin Expand
< Latin Palladium < Greek Palládion, noun use of neuter of Palládios of Pallas, equivalent to Pallad- (stem of Pallás) Pallas + -ios adj. suffix
Dictionary.com

Example

He praised the Second Amendment “as the true palladium … The right of self defense is the first law of nature: in most governments it has been the study of rulers to confine this right within the narrowest limits possible.
Walker, D.J., 2016. Necessary to the security of free states: the Second Amendment as the auxiliary right of federalism. American Journal of Legal History, 56(4), pp.365–391.

Anagram

mild Palau
pull a maid
a dual limp


18 July 2018

parrhesia

In rhetoric, parrhesia is a figure of speech described as: “to speak candidly or to ask forgiveness for so speaking”. This Ancient Greek word has three different forms, as related by Michel Foucault: parrhesia, is a noun, meaning “free speech”; parrhesiazomai, a verb, means “to use parrhesia”; and a parrhesiastes is one who uses parrhesia, for example “one who speaks the truth to power”.

Parrhesia is a kind of verbal activity where the speaker has a specific relation to truth through frankness, a certain relationship to his own life through danger, a certain type of relation to himself or other people through criticism (self-criticism or criticism of other people), and a specific relation to moral law through freedom and duty. More precisely, parrhesia is a verbal activity in which a speaker expresses his personal relationship to truth, and risks his life because he recognizes truth-telling as a duty to improve or help other people (as well as himself). In parrhesia, the speaker uses his freedom and chooses frankness instead of persuasion, truth instead of falsehood or silence, the risk of death instead of life and security, criticism instead of flattery, and moral duty instead of self-interest and moral apathy.[16]

Origin

The term parrhesia first appears in Greek literature in Euripides and can be found in ancient Greek texts throughout the end of the fourth century and during fifth century B.C. The term is borrowed from the Greek παρρησία parrhēsía (πᾶν “all” and ῥῆσις “utterance, speech”) meaning literally “to speak everything” and by extension “to speak freely”, “to speak boldly”, or “boldness”. It implies not only freedom of speech, but the obligation to speak the truth for the common good, even at personal risk.

Example

It is necessary to speak with parrhesia, without holding back at anything without concealing anything.
On the Embassy
Demosthenes

www.wikipedia.org

Anagram

air phrase
has repair
spare hair


17 July 2018

partisan(1)

[pahr-tuh-zuh n, -suh n; British pahr-tuh-zan]

noun

1. an adherent or supporter of a person, group, party, or cause, especially a person who shows a biased, emotional allegiance.
2. Military. a member of a party of light or irregular troops engaged in harassing an enemy, especially a member of a guerrilla band engaged in fighting or sabotage against an occupying army.
adjective
3. of, relating to, or characteristic of partisans; partial to a specific party, person, etc.:
partisan politics.
4. of, relating to, or carried on by military partisans or guerrillas.
Expand
Also, partizan.

Origin of partisan(1)

1545-1555; < Middle French, from Upper Italian parteźan (Tuscan partigiano), equivalent to part(e) “faction, part ” + -eźan (from unattested Vulgar Latin *-ēs- -ese + Latin -iānus -ian )

Related forms

partisanship, partisanry, noun

Synonyms

3. biased, prejudiced.

Antonyms

1. opponent.

Synonym Study

1. See follower.

partisan(2)

[pahr-tuh-zuh n, -suh n]

noun

1. a shafted weapon of the 16th and 17th centuries, having as a head a long spear blade with a pair of curved lobes at the base.

Also, partizan.

Compare halberd.

Origin

1550-60; < Middle French partizane < Upper Italian parteźana, probably by ellipsis from *arma parteźana weapon borne by members of a faction; see partisan1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for partisan

Contemporary Examples

It was a rare moment of bi partisan unity in partisan Washington.
Final Chapter for Accused Africa Bomber
Jamie Dettmer
January 4, 2015

This is a job for independent committees, like Bowles-Simpson, not a partisan slugfest.
Red Tape Is Strangling Good Samaritans
Philip K. Howard
December 27, 2014

The first meeting featured multiple speakers deeply rooted in a partisan agenda.
The Left’s Answer to ALEC
Ben Jacobs
December 15, 2014

And lest you be deceived, primary elections are no partisan monopoly.
Reality Check: There Are No Swing Voters
Goldie Taylor
November 13, 2014

Despite any partisan enmities, the two top politicos maintained a cordial relationship.
The McConnell Friend Obama Just Hired
Jonathan Miller
November 10, 2014

Historical Examples

In a partisan warfare this position was the best that could have been taken.
A Sketch of the Life of Brig. Gen. Francis Marion
William Dobein James

Your young blood feels only the partisan promptings of dislike.
In the Valley
Harold Frederic

She was the partisan on Tom’s side, the adherent on her father’s.
Southern Lights and Shadows
Various

For at this moment I am sensible that I have not the temper of a philosopher; like the vulgar, I am only a partisan.
Phaedo
Plato

The two parties in Patusan were not sure which one this partisan most desired to plunder.
Lord Jim
Joseph Conrad

Anagram

I Spartan
Satan rip
sin apart
Tsar pain


16 July 2018

dogleg

[dawg-leg, dog-]

noun

1. a route, way, or course that turns at a sharp angle.
adjective
2. dog-legged.
verb (used without object), doglegged, doglegging.
3. to proceed around a sharp angle or along an angular or zigzag course:
The road doglegged through the mountains.

Origin of dogleg

1885-1890 First recorded in 1885-90; dog + leg

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for dogleg

Historical Examples

I could just pick out the dogleg at Connors, and imagined I could see the traffic light at Chalmers.
Cue for Quiet
Thomas L. Sherred

As we rode up we could see a gunyah made out of boughs, and a longish wing of dogleg fence, made light but well put together.
Robbery Under Arms
Thomas Alexander Browne, AKA Rolf Boldrewood

Anagram

old egg


15 July 2018

littoral

[lit-er-uh l]

adjective

1. of or relating to the shore of a lake, sea, or ocean.
2. (on ocean shores) of or relating to the biogeographic region between the sublittoral zone and the high-water line and sometimes including the supralittoral zone above the high-water line.
3. of or relating to the region of freshwater lake beds from the sublittoral zone up to and including damp areas on shore.

Compare intertidal.

noun

4.
a littoral region.

Origin of littoral

Latin

1650-1660; Latin littorālis, variant of lītorālis of the shore, equivalent to lītor- (stem of lītus) shore + -ālis -al1

Can be confused

literal, littoral.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for littoral

Contemporary Examples

ASW assets and crews have been diverted to reconnaissance missions in overland and littoral wars.
Tomorrow’s Stealthy Subs Could Sink America’s Navy
Bill Sweetman
May 12, 2014

Historical Examples

Mexican national life has not developed much upon the littoral.
Mexico
Charles Reginald Enock

These remarks apply chiefly to littoral and sub littoral deposits.
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin

It had been repacked in littoral sand only found in an ancient sea-board in Germany.
The Ocean World:
Louis Figuier

But the littoral of Western Africa is gifted with a flora as luxuriant as it is varied.
The Desert World
Arthur Mangin

They are, for the most part, shallow-water or littoral forms.
The Sea-beach at Ebb-tide
Augusta Foote Arnold

Maize is very prolific throughout the littoral and on the tableland.
Our First Half-Century
Government of Queensland

There is one Headman of some importance between them and the littoral.
Long Odds
Harold Bindloss

Later he was entrusted with the control of the whole of the Mediterranean littoral.
Napoleon’s Marshals
R. P. Dunn-Pattison

The motor-boat was nearing the centre of a deep indentation in the littoral.
The Bandbox
Louis Joseph Vance


14 July 2018

blotto

[blot-oh]

adjective, Slang.

1. very drunk; so drunk as to be unconscious or not know what one is doing.

Origin of blotto

1915-1920; blot1(v.) + -o

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for blotto

Historical Examples

We ceased to think there was any harm in being occasionally “blotto” at night, or in employing the picturesque army word “bloody.”
Tell England
Ernest Raymond


13 July 2018

panegyric

[pan-i-jir-ik, -jahy-rik]

noun

1. a lofty oration or writing in praise of a person or thing; eulogy.
2. formal or elaborate praise.

Origin of panegyric

Greek

1590-1600; < Latin, noun use of panēgyricus of, belonging to a public assembly < Greek panēgyrikós, equivalent to panḗgyr(is) solemn assembly ( pan- pan- + -ēgyris, combining form of ágyris gathering; cf. category ) + -ikos -ic

Related forms

panegyrical, adjective
panegyrically, adverb
self-panegyric, adjective

Synonyms

1. homage, tribute, encomium.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for panegyric

Historical Examples

I could not endure to change my invective into panegyric all at once, and so soon.
Clarissa, Volume 2 (of 9)
Samuel Richardson

The object of his discourse was a panegyric of himself and a satire on all other conjurors.
Vivian Grey
Earl of Beaconsfield, Benjamin Disraeli

He pronounced the panegyric of Robespierre, and the apotheosis of Marat.
Memoirs of the Court of St. Cloud, Complete
Lewis Goldsmith

The Menexenus veils in panegyric the weak places of Athenian history.
Menexenus
Plato

Or again, let us suppose that both should have occasion to pronounce a panegyric.
Hiero
Xenophon

There is no need for panegyric, for sounding phrases or rounded periods.
Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence
Various

Philibert looked on his friend admiringly, at this panegyric of the woman he loved.
The Golden Dog
William Kirby

His book is neither a panegyric on clericalism nor a libel on it.
A History of the French Novel, Vol. 2
George Saintsbury

But with all this panegyric, he does not seem to have been careful to be just to the memory of his hero.
Salem Witchcraft and Cotton Mather
Charles W. Upham

I could not resist uttering this panegyric on our well-loved captain.
Marmaduke Merry
William H. G. Kingston

Anagram

ace prying
rip agency


12 July 2018

inveigh

[in-vey]

verb (used without object)

1. to protest strongly or attack vehemently with words; rail (usually followed by against):
to inveigh against isolationism.

Today’s quote

gin hive


11 July 2018

vermilion or vermillion

[ver-mil-yuh n]

noun

1. a brilliant scarlet red.
2. a bright-red, water-insoluble pigment consisting of mercuric sulfide, once obtained from cinnabar, now usually produced by the reaction of mercury and sulfur.
adjective
3. of the color vermilion.
verb (used with object)
4. to color with or as if with vermilion.

Origin of vermilion

Middle English, Old French

1250-1300; Middle English vermilioun, vermillon < Anglo-French, Old French verm(e)illon, equivalent to vermeil vermeil + -on noun suffix

Examples from the Web for vermilion

Historical Examples

Her mouth, the vermilion of her lips, and her ivory teeth were all perfect.
The Memoires of Casanova, Complete
Jacques Casanova de Seingalt

Her lips, like bits of vermilion paper, stared as from an idol’s face.
Erik Dorn
Ben Hecht

They will work, as I have seen, with wax hardened with vermilion or softened with lard.
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin


10 July 2018

athame

/ˈɑːθæmeɪ/

noun

1. (in Wicca) a witch’s ceremonial knife, usually with a black handle, used in rituals rather than for cutting or carving

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


9 July 2018

lamia

[ley-mee-uh]

noun, plural lamias, lamiae [ley-mee-ee] (Show IPA), for 1, 2.

1. Classical Mythology. one of a class of fabulous monsters, commonly represented with the head and breast of a woman and the body of a serpent, said to allure youths and children in order to suck their blood.
2. a vampire; a female demon.
3. (initial capital letter, italics) a narrative poem (1819) by John Keats.

Origin of lamia

Middle English, Latin, Greek

1350-1400; Middle English < Latin < Greek lámia a female man-eater

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for lamia

Contemporary Examples

“The uprising has been a big challenge for us…really, the situation is awful,” said lamia Assem, director of marketing.
Winston Churchill’s Egyptian Getaway: The Old Cataract Hotel
Lauren Bohn
December 15, 2013

Historical Examples

But before it falls, a lamia comes to his aid and kills his sister.
Russian Fairy Tales
W. R. S. Ralston

“We had better get the lamia in condition first,” Trask said.
Space Viking
Henry Beam Piper

Suppose Dunnan comes and finds nobody here but Spasso and the lamia ?
Space Viking
Henry Beam Piper

The lamia bore a coiled snake with the head, arms and bust of a woman.
Space Viking
Henry Beam Piper


8 July 2018

rigmarole

[rig-muh-rohl]

noun

1. an elaborate or complicated procedure:
to go through the rigmarole of a formal dinner.
2. confused, incoherent, foolish, or meaningless talk.

Also, rigamarole.

Origin of rigmarole

1730-1740 First recorded in 1730-40; alteration of ragman roll

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for rigmarole

Contemporary Examples

After all the rigmarole, they found what any pediatrician already knew: the MMR causes fever.
Another Blow to Anti-Vaxxers’ Fortress of Pseudoscience
Kent Sepkowitz
July 2, 2014

Historical Examples

I was sitting with my finger in the hot water listening to this rigmarole.
The Stark Munro Letters
J. Stark Munro

What made that other child tell all that rigmarole about fairies?
A Little Maid of Old Philadelphia
Alice Turner Curtis


7 July 2018

touch paper

noun

1. paper saturated with potassium nitrate to make it burn slowly, used for igniting explosives and fireworks.

Origin of touch paper

First recorded in 1740-50

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for touch paper

Historical Examples

He then placed the touchpaper on an old cambric handkerchief.
Travels in North America, From Modern Writers
William Bingley

If a roman candle is intended to be fired singly, twist a piece of touchpaper round the mouth.
The Pyrotechnist’s Treasury
Thomas Kentish

After lighting the touchpaper, remove to a distance; as bits of string are likely to get driven into the face, on the explosion.
The Pyrotechnist’s Treasury
Thomas Kentish

Anagram

preach pout
capture hop
torch pupae
recoup path


6 July 2018

Mafflard

noun

A mafflard is a term for someone who is a pure klutz. The website “Words and Phrases From The Past” calls a mafflard: “a stammering or blundering fool; a term of contempt.” Sounds like that mafflard in your life might be good friends with the raggabrash you met last week.

www.dictionary.com


5 July 2018

parterre

[pahr-tair]

noun

1. Also called parquet circle. the rear section of seats, and sometimes also the side sections, of the main floor of a theater, concert hall, or opera house.
2. an ornamental arrangement of flower beds of different shapes and sizes.

Origin of parterre

1630-1640; < French, noun use of phrase par terre on the ground. See per, terra

Related forms

parterred, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for parterre

Historical Examples

Then, on emerging from the wood, on again reaching the parterre, he raised his eyes.
The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete
Emile Zola

But she resumed: ‘Would you like to go into the flower-garden, the parterre ?
Abbe Mouret’s Transgression
Emile Zola

His evenings were largely spent in the parterre of the opera.
The False Chevalier
William Douw Lighthall

And he returned through the parterre with slow and melancholy steps.
The Man in the Iron Mask
Alexandre Dumas, Pere

And again the working bees, down in the parterre, attracted his attention.
The History of Sir Richard Calmady
Lucas Malet

Nor were the dull-coloured occupants of the parterre alone in their attack.
The History of Sir Richard Calmady
Lucas Malet

If these are the flowers of the parterre, what must be the weeds?
Ernest Maltravers, Complete
Edward Bulwer-Lytton

She occupied the first floor, and he the parterre, or ground floor.
Historic Oddities
Sabine Baring-Gould

Then, finding all quiet, she stepped over the parterre, and ventured out on the walk.
Hildebrand
Anonymous

With a bound he was in the parterre and said merely: Out, quick!
The Life of Ludwig van Beethoven, Volume III (of 3)
Alexander Wheelock Thayer

Anagram

rarer pet


4 July 2018

postulant

[pos-chuh-luh nt]

noun

1. a candidate, especially for admission into a religious order.
2. a person who asks or applies for something.

Origin of postulant

French, Latin
1750-1760; French < Latin postulant- (stem of postulāns), present participle of postulāre to ask for, claim, require

Related forms

postulantship, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for postulant

Historical Examples

She trembled like a postulant when she wrote the Greek alphabet for the first time.
The Rainbow
D. H. (David Herbert) Lawrence

There are degrees in the struggle for saintliness; the journalist was but a postulant.
When It Was Dark
Guy Thorne

“But Juanita is not a postulant,” said Sarrion, with a laugh.
The Velvet Glove
Henry Seton Merriman

Mark concerned himself less with his own reception as a postulant.
The Altar Steps
Compton MacKenzie

One is a postulant for two years at least, often for four; a novice for four.
Les Misrables
Victor Hugo

I was the postulant, dumb before the mysteries; I adored without a thought.
Rest Harrow
Maurice Hewlett

The postulant, after receiving these three ordinations, becomes a full monk or Ho-shang and takes a new name.
Hinduism and Buddhism, An Historical Sketch, Vol. 3 (of 3)
Charles Eliot

No one can become a postulant for admission to the Society until fourteen years old, unless by special dispensation.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 15, Slice 3
Various

Quite often during my postulant period, while I was learning these Latin prayers, I would have to do sewing.
The Demands of Rome
Elizabeth Schoffen

Certainly, after such trials, the postulant is fully informed; nevertheless, his superiors contribute what they know.
The Origins of Contemporary France, Volume 6 (of 6)
Hippolyte A. Taine

Anagram

outplants
polutants


3 July 2018

confraternity

[kon-fruh-tur-ni-tee]

noun, plural confraternities.

1. a lay brotherhood devoted to some purpose, especially to religious or charitable service.
2. a society or organization, especially of men, united for some purpose or in some profession.

Origin of confraternity

late Middle English Medieval Latin Latin
1425-1475; late Middle English confraternite < Medieval Latin confrāternitās, derivative of confrāter (see confrere ), on the model of Latin frāternitās fraternity

Related forms

confraternal, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for confraternity

Historical Examples

The privilege of weaving was confined to the confraternity of the guild.
The Evolution of Modern Capitalism
John Atkinson Hobson

The men on the left are portraits of members and patrons of the confraternity.
The Venetian School of Painting
Evelyn March Phillipps

Did you ever hitherto find me in the confraternity of the faulty?
Gargantua and Pantagruel, Complete.
Francois Rabelais

But say not a word of them to the confraternity : nor laugh at me for them thyself.
Clarissa, Volume 4 (of 9)
Samuel Richardson

Then he asked the confraternity to dinner,—more Thackerayano,—and the confraternity came.
Thackeray
Anthony Trollope

To them the confraternity give what is necessary for their daily support.
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898: Volume XIV., 1606-1609
Various

A confraternity in the first case, a hierarchy in the second.
Amiel’s Journal
Henri-Frdric Amiel

Rather his confraternity describe their meetings as “swapping stories,” the flow circulating.
The Lincoln Story Book
Henry L. Williams

Garret had recently appeared once more in Oxford, and was meeting almost daily with the confraternity there.
For the Faith
Evelyn Everett-Green

This well-known black ” confraternity of Prayer and Death” accompanies the funerals of the poor gratuitously.
Rome
Mildred Anna Rosalie Tuker

Anagram

infancy retort
fritter canyon
tyrannic forte
cannot terrify
rarify content


2 July 2018

flic

[flik; French fleek]

noun, plural flics [fliks; French fleek] (Show IPA). Slang.

1. a police officer; cop.

Origin of flic

German, French
1895-1900; < French (slang), perhaps < German; Cf. flick boy, in early modern German thieves’ argot (of obscure origin)

Dictionary.com

Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2018.

Slang definitions & phrases for flic

flic

noun

A police officer : if the flic had the slightest suspicion

[fr French slang]

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


1 July 2018

cordon sanitaire

[French kawr-dawn sa-nee-ter]

noun, plural cordons sanitaires [French kawr-dawn sa-nee-ter]

1. a line around a quarantined area guarded to prevent the spread of a disease by restricting passage into or out of the area.
2. a group of neighboring, generally neutral states forming a geographical barrier between two states having aggressive military or ideological aims against each other.

Origin of cordon sanitaire

1840-1850 From French, dating back to 1840-50; See origin at cordon, sanitary

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cordon sanitaire

Historical Examples

Some of the French statesmen occasionally say what is not true ( cordon sanitaire); here they conceal the truth.
The Life of Albert Gallatin
Henry Adams

The plague is raging with unwonted fatality; but no cordon sanitaire is established—no adequate remedy sought.
Thoughts on African Colonization
William Lloyd Garrison

A proposal by President Carranza to draw a cordon sanitaire round the place has not yet reached Washington.
Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. CLVIII, January 7, 1920
Various

30 June 2018 – agnate

30 June 2018

agnate

[ag-neyt]

noun

1. a relative whose connection is traceable exclusively through males.
2. any male relation on the father’s side.
adjective
3. related or akin through males or on the father’s side.
4. allied or akin.

Origin of agnate

Latin

1525-1535; < Latin agnātus paternal kinsman, variant of ad(g)nātus born to (past participle of adgnāscī), equivalent to ad- ad- + -gnā be born + -tus past participle suffix

Related forms

agnatic [ag-nat-ik], agnatical, adjective

agnatically, adverb
agnation [ag-ney-shuh n] (Show IPA), noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for agnate

Historical Examples

The most elementary of these groups is the maegth, the association of agnatic and cognatic relations.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 2, Part 1, Slice 1
Various

A woman by her marriage forfeited her agnatic rights, to which rule there was no exception.
Ancient Society
Lewis Henry Morgan

agnatic inheritance would be apt to assert itself in this condition of things.
Ancient Society
Lewis Henry Morgan

The gens is to be found in Greek and Roman history, where it is known as the agnatic kindred.
The Iowa
William Harvey Miner

The importance they attached to the agnatic family is largely explained by their ideas of the future life.
The Private Life of the Romans
Harold Whetstone Johnston

As they understood it, the pater familis had absolute power over his children and other agnatic descendants.
The Private Life of the Romans
Harold Whetstone Johnston

Here again it will be convenient to employ the Roman terms, agnatic and Cognatic relationship.
Ancient Law
Sir Henry James Sumner Maine

This practical limitation of the inheritance to the nearest gentile kin discloses the germ of agnatic nheritance.
Ancient Society
Lewis Henry Morgan

It shows that property was hereditary in the gens, but restricted to the agnatic kindred in the female line.
Ancient Society
Lewis Henry Morgan

Whether the wife forfeited her agnatic rights by her marriage, as among the Romans, I am unable to state.
Ancient Society
Lewis Henry Morgan


Today’s quote

Only I can change my life. No one can do it for me.

– Carol Burnett


On this day

30 June 1934 – Night of the Long Knives (Operation Hummbingbird), in which Hitler purges his political enemies.

30 June 1937 – The world’s first emergency telephone number, 999, is introduced in London.

30 June 1950 – US President Truman sends troops to South Korea to assist in repelling the North Korean Army. He calls on the Soviet Union to negotiate a withdrawal from North Korea, however, the Soviets blame South Korea for an unprovoked attack.

30 June 1959 – US fighter jet, an F-100 Super Sabre, crashes into the Japanese Miyamori Elementary School at Ishikawa (now Uruma) on the US occupied island of Okinawa, Japan, killing 11 students, 6 other people from the neighbouring area and injuring 210 (including 156 students). The pilot, Captain John G. Schmitt Jr, had ejected to safety. The incident was one of many tragic events the Okinawans have suffered since the US occupation.

26 June 2018 – convoke

26 June 2018

convoke

[kuh n-vohk]

verb (used with object), convoked, convoking.

1. to call together; summon to meet or assemble.

Origin of convoke
Middle French, Latin

1590-1600; (< Middle French convoquer) < Latin convocāre, equivalent to con- con- + vocāre to call

Related forms

convocative [kuh n-vok-uh-tiv], adjective
convoker [kuh n-voh-ker], convocant [kon-vuh-kuh nt], noun

Synonyms

convene.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for convoke

Historical Examples

The Committee was assured that they intended to convoke the electors.
History of the Commune of 1871
P. Lissagary

It was high time to tell her relatives and mine and convoke a family council.
Atlantis
Gerhart Hauptmann

Malesherbes in those days, and good writers since, held that the only safe plan was to convoke the States-General.
Critical Miscellanies (Vol. 2 of 3)
John Morley

Under other conditions it might be the right thing to convoke a conference to be held after the war is over.
Face to Face with Kaiserism
James W. Gerard

Convene, which means “to come together,” should not be confused with convoke which means “to bring or call together.”
Word Study and English Grammar
Frederick W. Hamilton

Finally she found it best to convoke the family council for the purpose of deciding what was to be done with Simple Simon.
A Family of Noblemen
Mikhal Saltykov

It was not enough to convoke a Parliament or to open a negotiation with the Prince of Orange.
The History of England from the Accession of James II.
Thomas Babington Macaulay

The chancellor was therefore content to convoke a general conference of the clergy.
History of the Reformation in the Sixteenth Century, Volume V
J. H. Merle d’Aubigné

The necessity of having a single person to convoke the great council when separated.
Commentaries on the Laws of England
William Blackstone

He advised the Regent to convoke the States-General, and declare a national bankruptcy.
Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions
Charles Mackay


Today’s quote

The writer’s curse is that even in solitude, no matter its duration, he never grows lonely or bored.

– Criss Jami


On this day

26 June – International Day in Support of Victims of Torture.

26 June 1945 – 50 nations ratify the United Nations Charter in an effort to prevent another world war. The United Nations was formally established on 24 October 1945, replacing the League of Nations.

25 June 2018 – mudlark

25 June 2018

mudlark

[muhd-lahrk]

noun

1. Chiefly British. a person who gains a livelihood by searching for iron, coal, old ropes, etc., in mud or low tide.
2. Chiefly British Informal. a street urchin.
3. either of two black and white birds, Grallina cyanoleuca, of Australia, or G. bruijni, of New Guinea, that builds a large, mud nest.
verb (used without object)
4. to grub or play in mud.

Origin of mudlark

1790-1800 First recorded in 1790-1800; mud + lark1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for mudlark

Historical Examples

This was Captain Abersouth, formerly of the mudlark —as good a seaman as ever sat on the taffrail reading a three volume novel.
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 8
Ambrose Bierce

So I shipped as mate on the mudlark, bound from London to wherever the captain might think it expedient to sail.
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 8
Ambrose Bierce

On the voyage of which I write he had taken no cargo at all; he said it would only make the mudlark heavy and slow.
The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 8
Ambrose Bierce

You wade along in this way step by step, like a mudlark at Portsmouth Hard, hoping gradually to regain the surface.
South!
Sir Ernest Shackleton

As a lad I slept with the rats, held horses, swept crossings and lived like a mudlark !
The Strollers
Frederic S. Isham


Today’s quote

Freedom is the right to tell people what they do not want to hear.

– George Orwell


On this day

25 June 1903 – birth of George Orwell (born Eric Arthur Blair), Democratic Socialist and English author of works such as ‘Nineteen-Eighty Four‘, ‘Animal Farm‘, and ‘Homage to Catalonia‘. Died 21 January 1950.

25 June 1947 – The Diary of a Young Girl (better known as The Diary of Anne Frank) is first published.

25 June 1978 – the Rainbow Flag, symbol of gay pride, is flown for the first time in the San Francisco Gay Freedom Day Parade.

24 June 2018 – plugugly

24 June 2018

plugugly or plug-ugly

[pluhg-uhg-lee]

noun, plural pluguglies. Informal.

1. a ruffian; rowdy; tough.
2. extremely ugly

Origin of plugugly

1855-1860 An Americanism dating back to 1855-60; plug + ugly

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for plugugly

Historical Examples

“Let the plug-ugly have what he seems to be looking for,” advised Mern.
Joan of Arc of the North Woods
Holman Day

Every criminal and plug-ugly in the country is spitting in our faces this morning.
Cavanagh: Forest Ranger
Hamlin Garland

The “ plug-ugly ” of Baltimore is another name for the same class.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 13, Slice 6
Various

A giant ” plug-ugly ” bellowed with triumph over his successful shot, yelled “kill ’em all!”
Tom Strong, Lincoln’s Scout
Alfred Bishop Mason


Today’s quote

Life isn’t as serious as the mind makes it out to be.

– Eckhart Tolle


On this day

24 June 1950 – The Korean War begins as North Korean forces invade South Korea in response to the dividing of the Korean Peninsula by Allied forces after World War II. The US sends troops as part of the UN response to repel North Korea. In 1953 a demilitarised zone is established between North and South Korea. Although conflict ended in 1953 following a truce, both sides have remained on military alert ever since. Political posturing and a number of border clashes in the years since 1953 have brought the peninsula to the brink of war on numerous occasions.

24 June 1997 – the United States Air Force releases a report into the so-called ‘Roswell Incident’ in which there had been claims that an alien craft had crashed near Roswell, New Mexico, and the body of an alien was retrieved by the Air Force. The USAF report claimed that the bodies witnesses had seen were actually life-sized dummies.

24 June 2010 – Julia Gillard is appointed Australia’s first female prime minister after replacing Kevin Rudd in a leadership spill. On 26 June 2013, following ongoing ructions in the Labor Party, Gillard called another leadership ballot which was won by Kevin Rudd. Julia Gillard tendered her resignation, which took effect the following day when Rudd was sworn in as prime minister.

 

23 June 2018 – snifter

23 June 2018

snifter

[snif-ter]

noun

1. Also called inhaler. a pear-shaped glass, narrowing at the top to intensify the aroma of brandy, liqueur, etc.
2. Informal. a very small drink of liquor.

Origin of snifter

Middle English

1840-1850; derivative of snifter to sniff, snivel, Middle English snyfter; imitative

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for snifter

Historical Examples

For the love of goodness, Fritz, give me a snifter of tanglefoot!
Frank Merriwell’s Backers
Burt L. Standish

But he was just a snifter short on that potent and undisciplined drink.
Where the Pavement Ends
John Russell

He turned, snifter in hand, and it was easy to see that his privations had tried him sorely.
Right Ho, Jeeves
P. G. Wodehouse

But picking up the sail in other blows and picking it up in a Cape Horn snifter is a horse of another color.
The Viking Blood
Frederick William Wallace

At sunset he quit, easy winner, and went without taking so much as a ” snifter.”
Tonio, Son of the Sierras
Charles King


Today’s quote

Friends show their love in times of trouble, not in happiness.

– Euripides


On this day

23 June – International Widows’ Day – a UN ratified day to address the ‘poverty and injustice faced by millions of widows and their dependents in many countries’.

23 June 1912 – birth of Alan Turing, British mathematician and computer scientist. Turing is considered to be the father of computer science and artificial intelligence. He invented the ‘Turing machine’ which formulated the computer algorithm. It’s the forerunner for the modern computer. During World War 2, Turing was instrumental in cracking German messages encrypted by the Enigma machine. Sadly, Turing’s achievements were overshadowed by him being charged with gross indecency after admitting to being in a homosexual relationship. On 31 March 1952, following his guilty plea, he was chemically castrated. Two years later, on 7 June 1954,Turing took his own life with cyanide. On 10 September 2009, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown publicly apologised on behalf of the British Government for the ‘appalling way he was treated’. On 23 December 2013, Queen Elizabeth II issued a posthumous royal pardon, clearing Turing of the charge of gross indecency.

23 June 2000 – 15 backpackers perish in a fire at the Palace Backpackers Hostel, in Childers, Queensland, Australia.

23 June 2011 – death of Peter Falk, U.S. actor (Colombo) … ‘therrre ya go‘… (born 16 September 1927).

22 June 2018 – shank

22 June 2018

shank

[shangk]

noun

1. Anatomy. the part of the lower limb in humans between the knee and the ankle; leg.
2. a corresponding or analogous part in certain animals.
3. the lower limb in humans, including both the leg and the thigh.
4. a cut of meat from the top part of the front (foreshank) or back (hind shank) leg of an animal.
5. a narrow part of various devices, as a tool or bolt, connecting the end by which the object is held or moved with the end that acts upon another object.
6. a straight, usually narrow, shaftlike part of various objects connecting two more important or complex parts, as the stem of a pipe.
7. a knob, small projection, or end of a device for attaching to another object, as a small knob on the back of a solid button, or the end of a drill for gripping in a shaft.
8. the long, straight part of an anchor connecting the crown and the ring.
9. the straight part of a fishhook away from the bent part or prong.
10. Music. crook1(def 8).
11. Informal.
the early part of a period of time:
It was just the shank of the evening when the party began.
the latter part of a period of time:
They didn’t get started until the shank of the morning.
12. the narrow part of the sole of a shoe, lying beneath the instep.
13. shankpiece.
14. Printing. the body of a type, between the shoulder and the foot.
15. Golf. a shot veering sharply to the right after being hit with the base of a club shaft.
16. the part of a phonograph stylus or needle on which the diamond or sapphire tip is mounted.
17. Jewelry. the part of a ring that surrounds the finger; hoop.

verb (used with object)
18. Golf. to hit (a golf ball) with the base of the shaft of a club just above the club head, causing the ball to go off sharply to the right.
verb (used without object)
19. Chiefly Scot. to travel on foot.
Compare shanks’ mare.
Idioms
20. shank of the evening, the main or best part of the evening:
Don’t leave yet—it’s just the shank of the evening.

Origin of shank

Middle English, Old English

before 900; Middle English (noun); Old English sc(e)anca; cognate with Low German schanke leg, thigh; akin to German Schenkel thigh, Schinken ham

Related forms

unshanked, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for shank

Contemporary Examples

If she got caught with a shank, they would up her custody level.
How a ‘Real Housewife’ Survives Prison: ‘I Don’t See [Teresa Giudice] Having a Cakewalk Here’
Michael Howard
January 6, 2015

Seager writes about being threatened by a patient with a shank carved out of an eyeglass stem.
Inside a Hospital for the Criminally Insane
Caitlin Dickson
September 15, 2014

You see, the victim can slip up behind you on any given day and stick a shank in your ribs—or pay someone else to do it.
How Will Chelsea Manning Be Treated in Prison?
Mansfield Frazier
August 22, 2013

Everyone complains that Federer, Nadal, Djokovic, and Murray shank shots but stubbornly stick to the same strategy.
How to Play a Tennis Monster
Sujay Kumar
September 10, 2012

The bloodthirsty Young Turks of Bohane bide their time, waiting in the shadows to shank and supplant their revelry-addled elders.
Must Reads: Kennedy, Sontag and Paris, ‘A Partial History of Lost Causes,’ ‘City of Bohane,’ ‘Flatscreen’
Lauren Elkin, Mythili Rao, Drew Toal, Nicholas Mancusi
April 6, 2012

Historical Examples

He struck the rivet such a blow that he snapped one shank of his spur short off.
Chip, of the Flying U
B. M. Bower

This plate is soldered to the shank of the screw-eye and the cleat is complete.
Boys’ Book of Model Boats
Raymond Francis Yates

He’s in the shank of his honeymoon as we stands chattin’ yere.’
Faro Nell and Her Friends
Alfred Henry Lewis

He’s had just about time to make the trip on shank ‘s mare by takin’ short cuts.
Dwellers in the Hills
Melville Davisson Post

Next to the blade on the end of which is the cutting edge, is the shank, Fig. 65.
Handwork in Wood
William Noyes


Today’s quote

The first World Cup I remember was in the 1950 when I was 9 or 10 years old. My father was a soccer player, and there was a big party, and when Brazil lost to Uruguay, I saw my father crying.

– Pele


On this day

22 June 1938 – death of C.J. Dennis, Australian poet (Songs of a Sentimental Bloke). Born 7 September 1876. Note, that C.J. Dennis foretold email by about 90 years with his reference to ‘ethergrams thro’ space’ which appears in ‘The Stoush of Day‘, in ‘The Sentimental Bloke‘.

22 June 1986 – the controversial ‘hand of God’ incident in the FIFA World Cup match between Argentina and England, when Diego Maradona scored a goal that came off his hand. The referee didn’t see the hand infringement and awarded the goal. Four minutes after the ‘hand of God’ goal, Maradona scored the ‘goal of the century’, which is claimed to be the greatest individual goal of all time, which he scored after playing the ball for 60 metres within 10 seconds, through four English defenders to slot the goal. Argentina won the match 2-1 and went on to win the World Cup.

21 June 2018 – recumbent

21 June 2018

recumbent

[ri-kuhm-buh nt]

adjective

1. lying down; reclining; leaning.
2. inactive; idle.
3. Zoology, Botany. noting a part that leans or reposes upon its surface of origin.
noun
4. a recumbent person, animal, plant, etc.

Origin of recumbent

Latin

1765-1775; < Latin recumbent- (stem of recumbēns), present participle of recumbere to lie back, equivalent to re- re- + cumb-, akin to cubāre to lie down + -ent- -ent

Related forms

recumbency, recumbence, noun
recumbently, adverb
unrecumbent, adjective
unrecumbently, adverb

Synonyms

1. prone, supine; prostrate; inclined.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for recumbent

Historical Examples

As he approached the recumbent figure he yelled a panted “Hi, there!”
The Woman-Haters
Joseph C. Lincoln

“Truss him up, Kenneth,” he commanded, pointing to the recumbent figure.
The Tavern Knight
Rafael Sabatini

The repulsive task of searching the recumbent figure now lay before him.
The Vagrant Duke
George Gibbs


Today’s quote

There are only two things we should fight for. One is the defense of our homes and the other is the Bill of Rights.

– Smedley Butler


On this day

21 June 1940 – death of Smedley Butler, U.S. Marine Corp Major-General. He received 19 medals, five of which were for bravery. He twice received the Medal of Honor. Butler was, at the time of his death, the most decorated Marine in history. Nonetheless, he was an outspoken critic of war and military actions. He wrote a book called ‘War is a Racket’, which exposed the links between the military and industry, in which he stated that business interests directly benefit from warfare. Butler wrote a summary of the book, which stated: ‘War is a racket. It always has been. It is possibly the oldest, easily the most profitable, surely the most vicious. It is the only one international in scope. It is the only one in which the profits are reckoned in dollars and the losses in lives. A racket is best described, I believe, as something that is not what it seems to the majority of the people. Only a small ‘inside’ group knows what it is about. It is conducted for the benefit of the very few, at the expense of the very many. Out of war a few people make huge fortunes‘. He was born on 30 July 1881.

21 June 1953 – birth of Benazir Bhutto, elected Prime Minister of Pakistan in 1988, becoming the first female leader of a Muslim country. She was dismissed as Prime Minister in 1996 amid accusations of corruption. She went into exile, living in the United Arab Emirates. In 2007, against the orders of President Musharraf, she returned to Pakistan to contest the 2008 election. She was assassinated at a rally on 27 December 2007.

21 June 1964 – Three civil rights activists (James Chaney, Andrew Goodman, Michael Schwerner) disappear in Mississippi while investigating an allegation that the Ku Klux Klan had burned down an African-American church. Their bodies were discovered six weeks later. In 1966, seven Ku Klux Klan members were found guilty of the murders, while eight others were found not guilty, including Edgar Ray ‘Preacher’ Killen who was retried in 2005 and found guilty.

21 June 2001 – death of John Lee Hooker, American blues guitarist. Born 22 August 1917.

21 June 2005 – Edgar Ray ‘Preacher’ Killen, former Ku Klux Klansman, is found guilty of manslaughter for his part in the 1964 killing of three civil rights activists and sentenced to 60 years imprisonment.

20 June 2018 – seneschal

20 June 2018

seneschal

[sen-uh-shuh l]

noun

1. an officer having full charge of domestic arrangements, ceremonies, the administration of justice, etc., in the household of a medieval prince or dignitary; steward.

Origin of seneschal

Middle English, Middle French, Frankish, Medieval Latin

1350-1400; Middle English < Middle French < Frankish; compare Medieval Latin seniscalcus senior servant, cognate with Old High German senescalh (sene- old, senior + scalh servant)

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for seneschal

Historical Examples

“He shall have four silver candlesticks,” said the seneschal moodily.
The White Company
Arthur Conan Doyle

The castle is taken and on fire, the seneschal is slain, and there is nought left for us.
The White Company
Arthur Conan Doyle

“It is the seneschal of Toulouse, with his following,” said Johnston, shading his eyes with his hand.
The White Company
Arthur Conan Doyle

Anagram

Chelseans


Today’s quote

Perfection is not attainable, but if we chase perfection we can catch excellence.

– Vince Lombardi


On this day

20 June – World Refugee Day – to raise awareness of the plight of refugees across the globe. Refugee Week is held Sunday to Saturday of the week that includes 20 June.

20 June 1864 – birth of Worm Pander, sculptor. Died 6 September 1919 … … no relation to this site’s Panda Man …

20 June 1909 birth of Errol Flynn, Australian-born American actor. Died 14 October 1959.

20 June 1966 – The Beatles release their ‘Yesterday and Today’ album with the controversial ‘butcher cover’. The Beatles appeared on the cover wearing white smocks and covered with decapitated baby dolls and pieces of meat. Some people took offense to this and the cover was withdrawn and replaced with something a little more savoury.

20 June 2001 – General Pervez Musharraf establishes himself as both President and Chief Executive of Pakistan. He had come to power as Chief Executive following a coup d’état in 1999.