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20 October 2017 – paradiddle

20 October 2017

paradiddle

[par-uh-did-l]

noun

1. an exercise or sequence performed typically on the snare drum, marked by four basic beats with alternation of the right hand and left hand on successive strong beats, and begun and ended slowly with a dramatic increase in tempo in the middle.

Origin of paradiddle

1925-1930; staccato syllables partly imitative; cf. diddle2; perhaps with para-1facetiously representing the alternation

Dictionary.com

Anagram

dad lip read
air paddled


Today’s quote

To permit ignorance is to empower it.
Origin
Dan Brown

 

 


On this day

20 October 1949 – Norman Joseph Woodland and Bernard Silver apply for a patent on their new design for capturing product information: the bar code. Woodland and Silver had been considering this since overhearing a supermarket executive asking the Dean of Engineering at Drexel Institute how to solve the problem of capturing product information automatically at the checkout. While sitting on the beach, Woodland drew out dots and dashes based on Morse code. He then dragged his fingers through the sand to convert them into lines: thin lines for the dots and thick lines for the dashes, thus inventing a two dimensional, linear Morse code which he and Silver then adapted optical sound film technology with. The patent for bar codes was issued on 7 October 1952, almost three years after they applied for it.

20 October 1977 – Plane crash in Mississippi kills 3 members of rock band, Lynyrd Skynyrd (Ronnie Van Zant, Steve Gaines, Cassie Gaines, along with their Assistant Road Manager (Dean Kilpatrick), the pilot (Walter McCreary and co-pilot (William Gray).

20 October 2011 – death of Muammar Gaddafi, former leader of Libya. He had been shot to death by rebel fighters following the overthrow of his government. Born 7 June 1942.

19 October 2017 – ulterior

19 October 2017

ulterior

[uhl-teer-ee-er]

adjective

1. being beyond what is seen or avowed; intentionally kept concealed:
ulterior motives.
2. coming at a subsequent time or stage; future; further:
ulterior action.
3. lying beyond or outside of some specified or understood boundary; more remote:
a suggestion ulterior to the purposes of the present discussion.

Origin of ulterior

1640-1650; Latin: farther, akin to ultrā on the far side; cf. ultra-

Related forms

ulteriorly, adverb

Synonyms

1. hidden, covert, undisclosed, undivulged.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ulterior

Contemporary Examples

I think a misconception everybody has is that I had an ulterior motive.
Exclusive: Michael Phelps’s Intersex Self-Proclaimed Girlfriend, Taylor Lianne Chandler, Tells All
Aurora Snow
November 26, 2014

While Baldwin is an unconvincing gay rights activist, he seems to have an ulterior motive in writing this article.
How Likable Is Alec Baldwin After His ‘New York Magazine’ Confessional?
Amy Zimmerman
February 26, 2014

Historical Examples

I must now see Don Alonso, and prepare the way for ulterior plans.
Gomez Arias
Joaqun Telesforo de Trueba y Coso

In addition to the list, I left a statement of the ulterior demands.
The Diplomatic Correspondence of the American Revolution, Vol. IX
Various

Anagram

our tiler
riot rule
truer oil


Today’s quote

There is often talk of human rights, but it is also necessary to talk of the rights of humanity. Why should some people walk barefoot, so that others can travel in luxurious cars? Why should some live for thirty-five years, so that others can live for seventy years? Why should some be miserably poor, so that others can be hugely rich? I speak on behalf of the children in the world who do not have a piece of bread. I speak on the behalf of the sick who have no medicine, of those whose rights to life and human dignity have been denied.

– Fidel Castro


On this day

19 October 1924 – Leon Trotsky, one of the founders of the Soviet Union and founder of the Red Army, is thrown out of the Soviet Politburo and his followers persecuted after he opposed Stalin. Trotsky was eventually expelled from the Communist Party and in 1929 was deported from the Soviet Union. He continued his opposition to Stalinism from his base in Mexico.

19 October 1944 – birth of Peter Tosh, Jamaican reggae singer and musician. From 1963 to 1974, Tosh was a member of Bob Marley and Wailers until going solo. His most famous song is ‘Legalize It’, about legalising marijuana. Tosh’s album, ‘Bush Doctor’, included a duet with Mick Jagger in the song, ‘Don’t Look Back’. Tosh was a Rastafarian. He campaigned against apartheid, which he sang about on his album ‘Equal Rights’. Tosh was murdered on 11 September 1987, after three men broke into his house and tortured him in an effort to extort money. After several hours, one of the men shot Tosh in the head, killing him. Two other friends of Tosh’s were also killed.

19 October 2001 – 353 asylum seekers drown when the boat they are on sinks 70km south of Java. The victims included 146 children, 142 women and 65 men. They were travelling from Indonesia to Australia and were predominantly Iraqi. Australian authorities labelled the boat SIEV-X (SIEV is short for ‘Suspected Illegal Entry Vehicle’). The incident became a major political issue and coupled with other incidents, such as the ‘Tampa crisis’ and the ‘Children Overboard affair’, resulted in major changes to Australia’s migration laws, including excising 4,600 islands from Australia’s migration zone and introduction of the controversial ‘Pacific Solution’.

18 October 2017 – transept

18 October 2017

transept

[tran-sept]

noun, Architecture.

1. any major transverse part of the body of a church, usually crossing the nave, at right angles, at the entrance to the choir.
2. An arm of this, on either side of the central aisle of a church.

Origin of transept

Anglo-Latin

1530-1540 From the Anglo-Latin word trānseptum, dating back to 1530-40. See trans-, septum

Related forms

transeptal, adjective
transeptally, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for transept

Historical Examples

However, it was these portions of the transept and the apse which had the least suffered.
The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete
Emile Zola

Next, Pierre turned into the transept on the left, where stand the confessionals.
The Three Cities Trilogy, Complete
Emile Zola

There is an attractive window in this transept, the gift of Edward IV.
England, Picturesque and Descriptive
Joel Cook

Only the chancel with its flanking chapels and the transept have been built.
Portuguese Architecture
Walter Crum Watson

Its total length is about 265 feet with a transept of about 109 feet long.
Portuguese Architecture
Walter Crum Watson

The dimensions of the transept are 40 feet by 34 feet, and 58 feet in height.
Bell’s Cathedrals: The Abbey Church of Tewkesbury
H. J. L. J. Mass

The other is in the north wall of the transept, and opens into the choir vestry.
Bell’s Cathedrals: The Abbey Church of Tewkesbury
H. J. L. J. Mass

The choir is nearly of the same kind of architecture as the transept.
The New Guide to Peterborough Cathedral
George S. Phillips

On the eastern side of this transept is St. Paul’s Chapel, now used as a vestry.
Exeter
Sidney Heath

It is of five lights, and occupies the entire breadth of the transept.
Bell’s Cathedrals: Southwark Cathedral
George Worley

Anagram

patterns
rant pets
rap tents
spent rat


Today’s quote

To succeed in life, you need three things: a wishbone, a backbone and a funny bone.

– Reba McEntire

 

 


On this day

18 October – Anti-slavery day, created by an act of the U.K. Parliament in 2010. It defines modern day slavery as child trafficking, forced labour, domestic servitude and trafficking for sexual exploitation. It provides an opportunity to draw attention to the subject and to pressure government, local authorities, public institutions and private and public companies to address the scale and scope of human trafficking.

18 October 1776 – the ‘cocktail’ is invented when a customer requests a drink decorated with a bird-tail, in a New York bar.

18 October 1867 – Formal transfer of Alaska from Russia to the United States. Every year, 18 October is celebrated as Alaska Day.

18 October 1926 – birth of Chuck Berry, legendary American musician and pioneer of rock and roll and famous for songs such as ‘Roll Over Beethoven’ and ‘Johnny B. Goode’. Died 18 March 2017.

18 October 1931 – death of Thomas Edison, U.S. inventor. Born 11 February 1847.

17 October 2017 – whiffenpoof

17 October 2017

whiffenpoof

noun

1. an imaginary or indefinite animal; e.g. “the great-horned whiffenpoof;”
“Whiffenpoof” has been used as a joking fictitious name for a member of the upper crust; a 1922 Philadelphia newspaper columnist writes of an opera performance attended by “Mrs. T. Whiffenpoof Oscarbilt, Mr. and Mrs. Dudbadubb Dodo and [their] three dashing daughters who have just finished a term at Mrs. Pettiduck’s School for Incorrigibles at Woodfern-by-the-Sea.”

2. a device used for tracking exercises;
“Whiffenpoof” is also a more obscure name for a tracking device used in the 1940s and 50’s. It is a large, cylinder-shaped log that has several dozen nails driven all the way around the sides of it, sticking out approximately two inches. There are also railroad spikes driven into the ends of the log, which create an effective way to carry it.
For the exercises, a rope would be tied around the log, and it would be dragged throughout various woodlands, creating a trail of sorts. The trackers would then attempt to follow the markings, and eventually locate the Whiffenpoof. They would bring it back as proof that they had successfully tracked it

3. the Whiffenpoof Fish that forms the subject of a piece of comic dialogue in Victor Herbert’s 1908 operetta, Little Nemo;

One reviewer of the 1908 operetta gave a paragraph of praise to the comic hunting tales presented in a scene in which three hunters are trying to outdo each other with hunting stories about the “montimanjack,” the “peninsula,” and the “whiffenpoof.” He calls it “one of the funniest yarns ever spun” and compares it favorably to Lewis Carroll’s The Hunting of the Snark.[6]
One source indicates that the dialogue in fact began as an ad lib by actor Joseph Cawthorn, covering for some kind of backstage problem during a performance.
The Word is also referred in one of the Little Nemo comic strips published in 1909 (April 11). After being held down by nine policemen during a hysteria crisis, Nemo’s father tells the doctor: “Just keep those whiffenpoofs away. Will you?”.

4. The Whiffenpoofs, the Yale University singing group, founded in 1909 and named after the imaginary beast in the operetta;

5. a stereotypic Yale alumnus or Ivy Leaguer

– Wikipedia

Example

I look like a whiffenpoof.
Origin
Dan Brown

Anagram

whine off fop
phew off info


Today’s quote

Whoever drinks beer, he is quick to sleep; whoever sleeps long, does not sin; whoever does not sin, enters Heaven! Thus, let us drink beer!

― Martin Luther


On this day

17 October 1814 – London Beer Flood causes the deaths of 8 people. The flood occurred when a vat containing 610,000 litres (135,000 gallons) of beer ruptured, causing other vats in the building to also rupture, resulting in a total of 1,470,000 litres (323,000 gallons) to flood nearby streets, destroying two homes and the wall of a pub. Those killed were living in the basement of houses which filled with the beer. The brewery was sued, however, the court ruled the event an ‘Act of God’.

17 October 1901 – U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt issues an Executive Order changing name of the ‘Executive Mansion’ to the ‘White House’.

17 October 1938 – birth of U.S. daredevil, Evel Knievel (Robert Craig Knievel). Knievel was best known for his failed attempt to jump over the Grand Canyon on a rocket-propelled motor-bike. He also successfully, and often unsuccessfully, attempted long distance motor-bike jumps, such as jumping 14 buses. Through his career, Knievel broke 35 bones. Died 30 November 2007.

17 October 1989 – Mother Teresa awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.

17 October 2010 – Mary McKillop is canonised by Pope Benedict XVI, becoming Australia’s first saint.

17 October 2011 – Richard Branson, of Virgin Group, opens the world’s first commercial space-port, which he has based in Mexico. Although there have been a number of sub-space test flights, to date there have been no commercial space flights.

16 October 2017 – sprite

16 October 2017

sprite or spright

[sprahyt]

noun

1. an elf, fairy, or goblin.

Origin of sprite

Middle English, Old French, Latin

1250-1300; Middle English sprit < Old French esprit < Latin spīritus spirit

Related forms

spritehood, noun
spriteless, adjective
spritelike, adjective

Can be confused

spirit, sprite.

Synonyms

See fairy.
Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sprite

Contemporary Examples

Prince may have pranced around like a carefree libertine onstage, but in rehearsal he was more drill sergeant than sprite.
Speed Read: The Juiciest Bits From the History of ‘Purple Rain’
Jennie Yabroff
January 1, 2015

They can be ingested sporadically or used as a mixer throughout the night (though a can of sprite seems to be the latest trick).
History’s Craziest Hangover Cures
Justin Jones
December 30, 2014

Many of the ones around today are more like the sprite Generation but there are still some old school left in La Eme.
The Mexican Mafia Is the Daddy of All Street Gangs
Seth Ferranti
December 11, 2014

I tried beer in high school, before discovering Zima, a sweet and bubbly malt-liquor/wine-cooler hybrid that tasted like sprite.
Wine Snobs, There’s a Beer for You
Jordan Salcito
April 5, 2014

Bottles of Gatorade, Coke, and sprite and cans of beer lay crushed on the sidewalk.
Oklahoma Tornado Levels Moore 7-Eleven; Heroes Emerge to Save Injured
Christine Pelisek
May 22, 2013

Historical Examples
She is more futile than a sprite beseems; but she is distinctly ‘nice.’
Sir Walter Scott
George Saintsbury

This was the question for which the sprite had stopped the moth.
The Adventures of Maya the Bee
Waldemar Bonsels

All of her sprite, her mind, forlorn, were evermore hanging.
The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus
Caius Valerius Catullus

Jeanne sped on like a sprite, drawing her cap over her face.
A Little Girl in Old Detroit
Amanda Minnie Douglas

Rose is as tall as I and has a prettier face and dances like a sprite.
A Little Girl in Old Detroit
Amanda Minnie Douglas

Anagram

priest
stripe
ripest
esprit


Today’s quote

Keep love in your heart. A life without it is like a sunless garden when the flowers are dead.

– Oscar Wilde


On this day

16 October – Dictionary Day (in the U.S.A), coinciding with the birth of Noah Webster (born 1758), creator of Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language and known as the ‘Father of American Scholarship and Education’.

16 October 1834 – London’s House of Lords and House of Commons damaged by fire caused by an over-heating chimney flue during the destruction of tally sticks.

16 October 1854 – birth of Oscar Wilde, Irish writer and poet. Wilde wrote a number of plays, poems and epigrams. His only novel was ‘The Picture of Dorian Gray’. His plays included ‘The Importance of Being Ernest’, and ‘Salome’. In addition to English, he was fluent in German and French. In 1895, Wilde was convicted of ‘gross indecency’ which related to some of his homosexual relationships. He received the maximum sentence of two years hard labour. On his release from prison in 1897, Wilde moved to Paris, living in exile and poverty. He died on 30 November 1900 from cerebral meningitis. He was buried at Cimetière de Bagneux, but in 1909 his remains were transferred to Père Lachaise Cemetery, Paris.

16 October 1962 – start of the Cuban Missile Crisis, known in Cuba as the October Crisis and in Russia as Kарибский кризис (Caribbean Crisis), one of the major events of the Cold War as it brought the world to the brink of nuclear conflict. It started when a USAF U-2 plane photographed evidence of Soviet air bases being constructed in Cuba on 14 October 1962. The U.S. considered bombing the bases, but ended up blockading Cuba, preventing Soviet weapons being delivered. Soviet President Nikita Khrushchev wrote to U.S. President John F. Kennedy, stating the blockade constituted an act of war. For 13 days, the Americans and Soviets conducted talks to resolve the crisis. On 28 October 1962, Kennedy and UN Secretary General U. Thant reached a public and secret agreement with Khrushchev. Publicly, the Soviets agreed to dismantle their weapons in Cuba, while the U.S. gave an agreement to never invade Cuba. Secretly, the U.S. agreed to dismantle its ballistic missiles in Turkey.

15 October 2017 – lampoon

15 October 2017

lampoon

[lam-poon]

noun

1. a sharp, often virulent satire directed against an individual or institution; a work of literature, art, or the like, ridiculing severely the character or behavior of a person, society, etc.
verb (used with object)
2. to mock or ridicule in a lampoon:
to lampoon important leaders in the government.

Origin of lampoon

French

1635-1645; < French lampon, said to be noun use of lampons let us guzzle (from a drinking song), imperative of lamper, akin to laper to lap up < Germanic; see lap3

Related forms

lampooner, lampoonist, noun
lampoonery, noun
unlampooned, adjective

Synonyms

1. See satire.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for lampoon

Contemporary Examples

I read that you went to Harvard and wrote for the lampoon there, but how did you break into professional comedy?
The Unheralded Comedy Genius: Nicholas Stoller on ‘Neighbors,’ Zac Efron’s ‘Darkness,’ and Diddy
Marlow Stern
May 8, 2014

His first day back at the lampoon, he showed a copy of it to Beard.
Doug Kenney: The Odd Comic Genius Behind ‘Animal House’ and National Lampoon
Robert Sam Anson
March 1, 2014

“He didn’t respect his talent,” says Michael Gross, the former lampoon art director, who saw him frequently in California.
Doug Kenney: The Odd Comic Genius Behind ‘Animal House’ and National Lampoon
Robert Sam Anson
March 1, 2014

Anagram

moon lap
loan mop


Today’s quote

I was not content at home. . . I wanted to live like a colorful butterfly in the sun.

– Mata Hari


On this day

15 October 1917 – death of Mata Hari, (born Margaretha Geertruida Zelle), Dutch dancer, courtesan and spy. She was charged with espionage and executed by firing squad in France, after being accused of spying for Germany during World War I. Born 7 August 1876.

14 October 2017 – coffer

14 October 2017

coffer

[kaw-fer, kof-er]

noun

1. a box or chest, especially one for valuables.
2. coffers, a treasury; funds:
The coffers of the organization were rapidly filled by the contributions.
3. any of various boxlike enclosures, as a cofferdam.
4. Also called caisson, lacunar. Architecture. one of a number of sunken panels, usually square or octagonal, in a vault, ceiling, or soffit.
verb (used with object)
5. to deposit or lay up in or as in a coffer or chest.
6. to ornament with coffers or sunken panels.

Origin of coffer

Middle English, Old French, Latin

1250-1300; Middle English cofre < Old French ≪ Latin cophinus basket; see coffin

Related forms

cofferlike, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for coffer

Historical Examples

A fourth time he advanced, trembling, and seized the lid of the coffer.
Salvage in Space
John Stewart Williamson

How had her body come to be in the coffer, he wondered, when all the others were—gone?
Salvage in Space
John Stewart Williamson

How shall I be able to get all this great herd into so small a coffer ?
Russian Fairy Tales
W. R. S. Ralston

So that man packed away all his cattle for him in the coffer.
Russian Fairy Tales
W. R. S. Ralston

Thus a coffer dam was formed to receive the concrete as shown in Fig. 34.
Concrete Construction
Halbert P. Gillette

coffer cut with ledges and catch-holes for a lid, like other sarcophagi.
Archaeological Essays, Vol. 1
James Y. Simpson

Then he ordered the coffer to be opened, and told her all that had happened.
Europa’s Fairy Book
Joseph Jacobs

For his own coffer he extracted a fiveweight and slipped it into his boot top.
History Repeats
George Oliver Smith

The old man pressed the little book to his lips and concealed it in his coffer.
The Day of Wrath
Maurus Jkai

Please you, Mistress, there was nought but that in the coffer.
The King’s Daughters
Emily Sarah Holt

 


Today’s quote

It is unfortunately true that our generation and that of your parents have left you with a big mess that will now be yours to clean up: wars, budget challenges, pollution, global warming, battles of health care, natural disasters. They’re all there for you. We’re willing those to you. Are you ready?

– John Morgridge


On this day

14 October 1066 – Battle of Hastings. When King Edward of England died, William the Duke of Normandy felt the throne should go to him. Meanwhile, Earl Harold Godwinson (cousin of King Edward) felt the throne was his. The two went to battle with William decisively defeating Harold. The battle changed history as William brought England under Norman rule and stripping the Saxons of their rights. King William introduced three major changes, firstly, he made himself the principal authority, having executive, judicial and legislative power. (This was replaced centuries later by the Westminster System, which separates these three powers). Secondly, William introduced a new language and culture, by replacing 300 years of Anglo-Saxon culture with a French dialect. Thirdly, he introduced the feudal system in which a plot of land (called a fief) would be given to loyal followers.

14 October 1322 – Scotland forces led by Robert the Bruce defeat England at Byland, forcing King Edward II to grant Scotland’s independence.

14 October 1947 – American pilot, Chuck Yeager, breaks the speed of sound in the experimental jet, Bell X-1, travelling at Mach 1 and at 45,000 feet.

14 October 1959 – death of Errol Flynn, Australian-born American actor. Born 20 June 1909.

14 October 2012 – Felix Baumgarten, Austrian adventurer, becomes the first man to break the speed of sound while in freefall after jumping from a helium balloon at the edge of space, 39km above the surface of the earth. He reached a speed of 1,342 km/hr (1.24 times the speed of sound). He also broke the record for the highest altitude reached in a manned balloon flight.

13 October 2017 – yokel

13 October 2017

yokel

[yoh-kuh l]

noun, Informal

1. an unsophisticated person from a rural area; a country bumpkin.

Origin of yokel

1805-1815 First recorded in 1805-15; origin uncertain

Related forms

yokelish, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for yokel

Historical Examples

I have a notion that I sat there staring and listening like a yokel at a play.
The Arrow of Gold
Joseph Conrad

This man was a yokel of no interest to us, apart from this one episode in his career.
An Old Meerschaum
David Christie Murray

Thebold had been chagrined at learning that Don Cort was not the yokel he had taken him for.
And Then the Town Took Off
Richard Wilson

This yokel from the woods and mountains needed a little coaxing.
The Bright Messenger
Algernon Blackwood

It is the militia-man, the yokel, standing facing the captain and gesticulating at him.
The Human Slaughter-House
Wilhelm Lamszus

McAllister hastily tried to assume the expression and manner of a yokel.
McAllister and His Double
Arthur Train

Tristrem looked at him much as a yokel at a fair might look at a wizard.
The Truth About Tristrem Varick
Edgar Saltus

If that isn’t a Zummerset or Devon yokel, sink me for a landlubber!
The Quest of the ‘Golden Hope’
Percy F. Westerman

They are as unpardonable as the yokel rhetoric of our British friends.Germany and the Germans
Price Collier

The yokel was a year or two older, was taller, and stones heavier.
Acton’s Feud
Frederick Swainson


Today’s quote

You might not write well every day, but you can always edit a bad page. You can’t edit a blank page.

– Jodi Picoult


On this day

13 October 54AD – death of Claudius, Roman Emperor. He was treated as an imbecile because he’d been born with a limp and slight deafness. As a result he was not seen as a threat by others and therefore survived the purges by Caligula and Tiberius. He was the last surviving man in his family following Caligula’s assassination, leading to him being declared emperor by the Praetorian Guard. He proved himself to be an able administrator and constructed many roads, aqueducts and canals across the empire. He successfully invaded Britain, something that previous emperors, including Caligula, had failed to achieve. He was assassinated by poisoning, many believe by his wife. He was succeeded by his grand-nephew, Nero. Born 1 August 10BC.

13 October 1307 – Pope Clement V orders the overthrow, arrest and torture of Knights Templar in France. This is believed to be the origin of Black Friday or Friday the 13th being unlucky.

12 October 2017 – mystique

12 October 2017

mystique

[mi-steek]

noun

1. a framework of doctrines, ideas, beliefs, or the like, constructed around a person or object, endowing the person or object with enhanced value or profound meaning:
the mystique of Poe.
2. an aura of mystery or mystical power surrounding a particular occupation or pursuit:
the mystique of nuclear science.

Origin of mystique

French

1890-1895; < French (adj.); see mystic

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for mystique

Contemporary Examples

“We were raised with this mystique about the accident being the chink in this important legacy,” she says.
The Price of Being a Patton: Wrestling With the Legacy of America’s Most Famous General
Tim Teeman
May 25, 2014

Did Jennifer Lawrence wear a new blue mystique suit in this film?
Simon Kinberg on ‘X-Men: Days of Future Past,’ ‘The Fantastic Four’ Reboot, and Black Superheroes
Marlow Stern
May 24, 2014

For years, Goldman had the greatest cachet and mystique among this crowd.
Bridgewater May Be the Hottest Hedge Fund for Harvard Grads, but It’s Also the Weirdest
Daniel Gross
March 6, 2013

There was no mystique surrounding nuclear waste, just respect for the physical threat it posed.
At the Hanford Nuclear Reservation, a Steady Drip of Toxic Trouble
Eric Nusbaum
February 23, 2013

What once had the mystique aspired to by elite women now seemed just stuff.
Brooke Astor’s Estate Is Auctioned, and a Friend Recalls Her Fondly
Barbara Goldsmith
September 28, 2012

Penn Stater Maureen Seaberg explains the Joe Paterno mystique.
Why Penn State Fans Love Fired Coach Joe Paterno, Despite Child Abuse Scandal
Maureen Seaberg
November 9, 2011

He chalks this up to the lack of mystique in our celebrity culture—and the ownership that people have of their favorite actors.
Can an Action Star Be Gay?
Tricia Romano
October 23, 2011

But he also knows that the spotlight can only add to his mystique down the road, make him a national player, and bring in money.
The Chris Christie Tease
Lois Romano
September 28, 2011

By eluding justice after his first attacks on America in 1998, bin Laden created a mystique of invulnerability.
Who Was Hiding bin Laden?
Bruce Riedel
May 1, 2011

Historical Examples

Gebhards Italie mystique is interesting in connection with Francis.
The Mediaeval Mind (Volume I of II)
Henry Osborn Taylor

Anagram

my I quest


Today’s quote

Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent.

– Isaac Asimov


On this day

12 October 1492 – Christopher Columbus lands on an island in the Bahamas, claiming ‘East Asia’ for King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella of Spain.

12 October 1810 – world’s first Oktoberfest when the people of Munich are invited to celebrate a Bavarian royal wedding.

12 October 1823 – Charles MacIntosh, Scottish inventor, sells his first water-proof ‘rubber raincoat’, which became known as the ‘MacIntosh’ or ‘Mac’.

12 October 1944 – ‘Columbus Day Riot’ in which 35,000 hysterical teenage girls dressed in bobby socks, descend on Times Square, New York City, in anticipation of Frank Sinatra appearing.

12 October 1979 – ‘Hitch-hiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ by Douglas Adams is first published. He eventually wrote a total of 5 books in the series, with a sixth one being written by Eoin Colfer.

12 October 1994 – A 1,200-seat stand at a Pink Floyd concert in Earl’s Court collapses, injuring 90 people.

12 October 2002 – Terrorist bombings of the Sari Club and Paddy’s Bar in Kuta, Bali, kill 202 people and injure 209. Members of Jemaah Islamiyah, a group linked with Al Qaeda, are convicted of the crime and on 9 November 2006, three of them are executed by firing squad.

11 October 2017 – azimuth

11 October 2017

azimuth

[az-uh-muh th]

noun

1. Astronomy, Navigation. the arc of the horizon measured clockwise from the south point, in astronomy, or from the north point, in navigation, to the point where a vertical circle through a given heavenly body intersects the horizon.
2. Surveying, Gunnery. the angle of horizontal deviation, measured clockwise, of a bearing from a standard direction, as from north or south.

Origin of azimuth

Middle English Middle French Arabic

1350-1400; Middle English azimut < Middle French ≪ Arabic as sumūt the ways (i.e., directions)

Related forms

azimuthal [az-uh-muhth-uh l], adjective

azimuthally, adverb

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for azimuth

Contemporary Examples

Variables like weather, azimuth, elevation, crude launchers, and rocket viability quickly add up.
Dodging Rockets in Afghanistan as the Taliban’s Fighting Season Begins
Nick Willard
May 14, 2014

Historical Examples

To find an azimuth of the sun: Note the time of taking the azimuth by chronometer.
Lectures in Navigation
Ernest Gallaudet Draper

At the same time, get your true bearing of the sun from the azimuth Tables.
Lectures in Navigation
Ernest Gallaudet Draper

Anagram

A hum zit


Today’s quote

c- Albert Einstein


On this day

11 October – International Day of the Girl.

11 October 1844 – birth of Henry John Heinz, founder of Heinz Company, responsible for canned baked beans. Died 14 May 1919.

11 October 1935 – death of Steele Rudd, Australian author, (pen-name for Arthur Hoey Davis). Wrote ‘On Our Selection‘, which introduced Australia to ‘Dad and Dave’. Born 14 November 1868.

11 October 1930 – Australian Rules football club, Collingwood, win the VFL premiership for the fourth consecutive year.

11 October 1939 – German theoretical physicist, Albert Einstein explains to the United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the possibility of building an atomic bomb.

11 October 1967 – premier of the childrens’ TV series, ‘Johnny Sokko and his flying robot‘.