8 September 2015
fustilarian
PRONUNCIATION:
(fuhs-tuh-LAR-ee-uhn)
MEANING:
noun: A fat and slovenly person.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Middle English fusty (smelly, moldy). Earliest documented use: 1600.
NOTES:
The first recorded use of the word is from Shakespeare’s Henry IV in which Falstaff exclaims, “Away, you scullion! You rampallion! You fustilarian! I’ll tickle your catastrophe.”
USAGE:
“I’ve no fancy to be guzzled up by a wolf or spitted on the tusks of one of the fustilarian wild boars.”
Joan Aiken; Whispering Mountain; Starscape; 2002.
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Today’s quote
To see the earth as it truly is, small and blue in that eternal silence where it floats, is to see riders on the earth together, brothers on that bright loveliness in the eternal cold – brothers who know now they are truly brothers.
– Archibald MacLeish
On this day
8 September – International Day of Literacy.
8 September 1504 – Michelangelo unveils his iconic sculpture, ‘David‘.
8 September 1930 – Richard Drew invents ‘scotch’ tape, the world’s first transparent, adhesive tape … otherwise known as ‘sticky tape’.
8 September 1966 – Star Trek premiers on NBC TV in the U.S.
8 September 2006 – death of Peter Brock, Australian car racing legend. Born 26 February 1945.