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9 June 2017 – trice

9 June 2017

trice(1)

[trahys]

noun

1. a very short time; an instant:
in a trice.

Origin of trice1 Expand
late Middle English
1400-1450; late Middle English tryse; probably special use of *trise a pull, tug, derivative of trisen, to pull; see trice2

trice(2)

[trahys]

verb (used with object), triced, tricing. Nautical.

1. to pull or haul with a rope.
2. to haul up and fasten with a rope (usually followed by up).

Origin

1350-1400; Middle English trisen < Middle Dutch trīsen to hoist, derivative of trīse pulley

Related forms

untriced, adjective
-trice

1. variant of -trix.

Origin

French or Italian -trice < Latin -trīcem, accusative of -trīx -trix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for trice

Historical Examples

So, in a trice, a third appeared, and met with exactly the same fate.
Harley Greenoak’s Charge
Bertram Mitford

You’re cold and tired—I’ll have a nice cup of tea for you in a trice.
Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1909 to 1922
Lucy Maud Montgomery

That work was performed in a trice, as the materials were at hand and all the neighbors took part in it.
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 – Volume 40 of 55
Francisco Colin


Today’s quote

Subdue your appetites, my dears, and you’ve conquered human nature.

– Charles Dickens


On this day

9 June 1870 – death of Charles Dickens, English writer and social critic. Author of numerous works, including The Pickwick Papers, David Copperfield, A Christmas Carol, A Tale of Two Cities, Great Expectations, Oliver Twist. Born 7 February 1812.

9 June 1915 – birthday of Les Paul, (born Lester William Polsfuss) American musician and inventor of the solid body electric guitar. The popular Gibson Les Paul was designed in collaboration with him. Died 12 August 2009.

9 June 1934 – Donald Duck makes his film debut in the Disney short film, the Wise Little Hen.

9 June 1961 – birth of Michael J. Fox, Canadian-American actor, producer and author.

9 June 1963 – birth of Johnny Depp, American actor, singer, producer and director.

9 June 1967 – During the Six Day War, Israel captures the Golan Heights from Syria.

9 Jun 1979 – The ‘Ghost Train Fire’ at Luna Park, Sydney (Australia) kills seven.

9 June 2014 – death of Rik Mayall, British comedian and actor. Starred in The Young Ones, Bottom, Black Adder and Drop Dead Fred. Born 7 March 1958.

8 June 2017 – iterative

8 June 2017

iterative

[it-uh-rey-tiv, -er-uh-tiv]

adjective

1. repeating; making repetition; repetitious.
2. Grammar. frequentative.

Origin of iterative

Late Latin

1480-1490 From the Late Latin word iterātīvus, dating back to 1480-90. See iterate, -ive

Related forms

iteratively, adverb
iterativeness, noun
uniterative, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for iterative

Contemporary Examples

He prefers a conversation, and conversations aren’t etched in stone, they’re iterative.
Paul Begala on Why Bill Clinton’s Still Got the Magic
Paul Begala
October 9, 2012

Historical Examples

He knows his own mind, and hammers his doctrines out with a hard and iterative stroke that hits its mark.
Diderot and the Encyclopdists
John Morley

The style is that of the pulpit, iterative, florid, and full of amplifications; but that was natural.
The Contemporary Review, Volume 36, October 1879
Various

Anagram

vie attire
trivia tee


Today’s quote

A part of kindness consists in loving people more than they deserve.

– Joseph Joubert


On this day

8 June 1921 – birth of Ivan Southall AM, DFC, Australian writer of young-adult fiction and non-fiction. Books include ‘Ash Road’, ‘Let the Balloon Go’, ‘Hill’s End’, ‘Fly West’ and ‘Josh. Died 15 November 2008.

8 June 1967 – During the Six Day War, Israel launched a naval and air assault on the USS Liberty as it sits in international waters near Egypt’s Gaza Strip. The attack left 34 US crewmen dead and injured 171 others. Israel claimed the attack was an accident, while some witnesses claimed it was deliberate.

7 June 2017 – shufti

7 June 2017

shufti

[shoo-ph-tee]

noun

– a brief glance

plural: shuftis

Origin

From Egyptian Arabic شُفْتِي (šufti, “have you seen?”), from شَاف (šāf, “to see”).

Example

He sneaked a shufti before cautiously entering the darkened corridor.

Anagram

if huts


Today’s quote

A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.

– Mahatma Gandhi


On this day

7 June 1099 – the First Crusade: Siege of Jerusalem begins.

7 June 1893 – Mohandas Gandhi commits his first act of civil disobedience.

7 June 1929 – The Lateran Treaty is ratified by the Italian Parliament, allowing Vatican City to become an independent sovereign state.

7 June 1942 – Birth of Muammar Gaddafi, Libyan revolutionary, politician and political theorist. Often known as Colonel Gaddafi, leader of Libya. Died 20 October 2011.

7 June 1954 – death 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. Born 23 June 1912.

7 June 1975 – the inaugural World Cup cricket match is held in London.

7 June 2015 – death of Christopher Lee, CBE, English actor and singer. Lee starred in hammer horror movies, including Dracula (in which he played the title character), Dracula has risen from the grave, Taste the Blood of Dracula, and Scars of Dracula. Fearing that he would become type-cast in horror roles as had happened to Vincent Price and Peter Cushing, he went in search of other roles. Lee starred in the 1974 James Bond film, The Man with the Golden Gun. He played Saruman in Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit trilogies, and Count Dooku in two of the Star Wars prequel films, Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith. Born 27 May 1922.

6 June 2017 – gubbins

6 June 2017

gubbins

/ˈɡʌbɪnz/
noun (informal)

1. (functioning as sing) an object of little or no value
2. (functioning as sing) a small device or gadget
3. (functioning as pl) odds and ends; litter or rubbish
4. (functioning as sing) a silly person

Word Origin

(meaning: fragments): from obsolete gobbon, probably related to gobbet

Collins English Dictionary

Examples from the Web for gubbins

Historical Examples

There’s a lot like gubbins, an’ one has to try an’ sweeten ’em a bit once a week or so.
The Record of Nicholas Freydon
A. J. (Alec John) Dawson

The sergeant called for assistance, and gubbins was hauled up.
For Fortune and Glory
Lewis Hough

For Green would not think of him as dead, and no more for that matter did gubbins, though Davis had given up all hope long ago.
For Fortune and Glory
Lewis Hough

Anagram

bub sign
snug bib


Today’s quote

Moral maxims are surprisingly useful on occasions when we can invent little else to justify our actions.

― Alexander Pushkin


On this day

6 June – Queensland Day, which celebrates the establishment of the colony of Queensland. On 6 June 1859, Queen Victoria gave her approval for the new colony by signing the Letters Patent. On the same day, an Order-in-Council gave Queensland its own Constitution.

6 June – Russian Language Day (UN) – coincides with the birthday of Aleksandr Pushkin, Russian poet who is considered the father of modern Russian literature.

6 June 1799 – birth of Aleksandr Pushkin, Russian poet and author of the romantic era. Considered the father of modern Russian literature. He was born into Russian nobility. His matrilineal great grandfather, Abram Gannibal, was brought over as a slave from Africa and had risen to the aristocracy. Died during a duel on 10 February 1837.

6 June 1808 – Napoleon’s brother, Joseph Bonaparte, is crowned King of Spain.

6 June 1844 – The Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) is founded in London.

6 June 1939 – Judge Joseph Force Crater, known as the ‘Missingest man in New York’ is declared legally dead after going missing nine years earlier. His body has never been found, but his disappearance fueled allegations of corruption in the City government and lead to the downfall of political organisation, Tammany Hall.

6 June 1944 – D-day (Operation Overlord), when the Allies launch a massive invasion of Europe to combat the German war machine. Over a million Allied troops storm the beaches of Normandy.

6 June 1961 – death of Carl Jung, Swiss psychiatrist and founder of analytical psychology. He developed the concepts of extraversion and introversion; archetypes and collective unconscious. Born 26 July 1875.

6 June 1982 – the Lebanon War begins when Israeli forces under the command of the Defence Minister, Ariel Sharon, invade southern Lebanon, eventually pushing into Beirut. It lasted until June 1985. Israel suffered 657 dead and 3,887 wounded. Syrian and Palestinian casualties were 19,085 civilian and combatant deaths.

6 June 1984 – Tetris, one of the world’s biggest selling games, is released.

5 June 2017 – funicular

5 June 2017

funicular

[fyoo-nik-yuh-ler]

adjective

1. of or relating to a rope or cord, or its tension.
2. worked by a rope or the like.
noun
3. funicular railway.

Origin of funicular

Latin
1655-1665; Latin fūnicul(us) (see funiculus ) + -ar1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for funicular

Contemporary Examples

What was the thinking behind using models for the funicular that runs up to the hotel—and for the first shots of the hotel itself?
The Look of ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’
Andrew Romano
March 6, 2014

Historical Examples

These were the days before the funicular from Stresa, when one trudged up a rude path through the chestnuts and walnuts.
Marriage
H. G. Wells

They start along the terrace toward the station of the funicular railway.
A Book of Burlesques
H. L. Mencken

Anagram

incur a flu
a runic flu


Today’s quote

The frog in the well knows not of the great ocean.

– Japanese proverb


On this day

5 June 1967 – start of the Six Day War, when Israel attacked Egypt and Syria. During the six days of the War, Israel occupied the Gaza Strip, Sinai Peninsula, Golan Heights, West Bank and East Jerusalem, effectively doubling its size. Although Israel eventually withdrew from the Golan Heights and Sinai Peninsula, it continues to controversially occupy Gaza, West Bank and East Jerusalem.

5 June 1968 – Robert F. Kennedy, Presidential candidate and brother of JFK, shot by Sirhan Sirhan, a Palestinian-born, Jordanian citizen. Kennedy died the following day. In an interview with David Frost in 1989, Sirhan stated that he opposed Kennedy’s support of Israel and plan to send 50 bombers to Israel to ‘obviously do harm to the Palestinians’. Sirhan was initially sentenced to death, but the sentence was later commuted to life in prison.

5 June 1989 – the ‘Tank Man’ halts a column of Chinese tanks in Beijing for more than half an hour, following protests in Tiananmen Square.

5 June 2000 – start of the Six Day War in Kisangani, Democratic Republic of the Congo, between Ugandan and Rwandan forces, destroying a large part of the city.

5 June 2012 – death of Ray Bradbury, American fantasy, science-fiction, horror and mystery fiction writer. Author of Fahrenheit 451, The Martian Chronicles, The Illustratred Man, Something Wicked This Way Comes. The movie Butterfly Effect uses a similar theory to that described in Bradbury’s short-story A Sound of Thunder. In one scene, a Sound of Thunder pennant is hanging on the dormitory door of the main character, Evan. Michael Moore’s movie Fahrenheit 9/11 was named after Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451. Bradbury was not happy with this and pressured Moore to change the title, which Moore refused to do. Born 22 August 1920.

4 June 2017 – nacre

4 June 2017

nacre

[ney-ker]

noun

1. mother-of-pearl.

Origin of nacre

Medieval Latin, Old Italian, Arabic

1590-1600; Medieval Latin nacrum, nacer, variant of nacara < Old Italian naccara kind of drum, nacre; Arabic naqqārah drum

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for nacre

Historical Examples

He lifted a small hammer and struck a velvet-voiced bell that stood on the Arabian table of cedar inlaid with nacre and ivory.
The Decadent
Ralph Adams Cram

The value of the pearl is based on the brilliancy of the nacre, the size, and the form.
The Sea-beach at Ebb-tide
Augusta Foote Arnold

nacre is the hard and brilliant substance with which the valves of certain shells are lined in the interior.
The Ocean World:
Louis Figuier

Anagram

crane


Today’s quote

The words that enlighten the soul are more precious than jewels.

– Hazrat Inayat Khan


On this day

4 June 1988 – death of Sir Douglas Nichols KCVO, OBE. Aboriginal activist, raising awareness of aboriginal issues, including treating aborigines with dignity and as people. He played for Carlton football club in the A-grade Victorian Football League (VFL), leaving after racist treatment and joining the Northcote football club in the Victorian Football Association (VFA). Nicholls became a minister and social worker. In 1957, he was awarded an Order of the British Empire (OBE). In 1972 he was the first aborigine to be knighted. In 1976, he became the 28th governor of South Australia, the first aborigine to be appointed to a vice-regal position. He was born on 9 December 1906.

4 June 1989 – Tiananmen Square massacre, Beijing, China. Around a million people had flooded into Tiananmen Square over the past few days, protesting for democracy. On 4 June, the Chinese Army stormed the Square with tanks and armoured cars, killing hundreds of protestors, while arresting thousands of others.

3 June 2017 – covfefe

3 June 2017

covfefe

noun / adjective / verb (unknown)

1. (noun) When you want to say “coverage” but your hands are too small to hit all the letters on your keyboard.

2. (noun) When you want to type “kerfuffle” but can’t spell it.

3. Covfefe is the Joker in the grammatical pack of the English language. Covfefe can mean whatever you want it to mean.

Origin

Originated from US President Donald Trump’s tweet of 30 May 2017: “Despite the constant negative press covfefe”.

Strong contender for word of the year, 2017.


Today’s quote

A stair not worn hollow by footsteps is, regarded from its own point of view, only a boring something made of wood.

– Franz Kafka


On this day

3 June 1924 – Death of Franz Kafka, Austrian novelist, who wrote in German. Two of his books (‘The Trial’ and ‘The Castle’) were published posthumously against his wishes. He wrote of a dehumanised world in which he explored paranoia, isolation, fear and bewilderment, from which the term ‘Kafka-esque’ has been coined. Born 3 July 1883.

3 June 1926 – birth of Allen Ginsberg, leading American beat-generation writer and poet. Died 5 April 1997.

3 June 1937 – Following his abdication in December 1936, former King Edward VIII of Britain, marries American divorcee, Wallis Simpson.

3 June 1968 – Andy Warhol, pop-artist, is shot by feminist Valerie Solanas, founder of the Society for Cutting Up Men (S.C.U.M.) because she felt that Warhol had too much control over her life. Warhol was seriously injured in the shooting. Doctors had to cut his chest open and massage his heart to keep him alive. Warhol survived the shooting, but suffered permanent physical effects. The shooting had a profound effect on the direction his life and art took.

3 June 1992 – Mabo Day: The High Court of Australia found in favour of Eddie Koiki Mabo who had challenged the principle of ‘terra nullius’ (or ‘uninhabited land’). Terra nullius had allowed the Commonwealth Government of Australia to legally take over and own land that had previously belonged to the indigenous people. Unfortunately, Eddie Mabo had died 3 months before the decision was handed down. The ‘Mabo Decision’ was a significant turning point in the history of Australia’s indigenous people, giving legal recognition of indigenous rights to native land title.

3 June 2016 – death of Muhammad Ali (born Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr), American professional boxer (former world heavy-weight champion), philanthropist, social activist. Born 17 January 1942.

2 June 2017 – glacis

2 June 2017

glacis

[gley-sis, glas-is]

noun, plural glacis [gley-seez, -siz, glas-eez, -iz] (Show IPA), glacises.

1. a gentle slope.
2. Fortification. a bank of earth in front of the counterscarp or covered way of a fort, having an easy slope toward the field or open country.

Origin of glacis

Middle French

1665-1675; Middle French; akin to Old French glacier to slide; compare Latin glaciāre to make into ice; see glacé

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for glacis

Historical Examples

We have two mitrailleuses above the terre-plein to sweep at once the moat and the glacis.
History of the Commune of 1871
P. Lissagary

In six days they completed the parapet, with a glacis on the opposite side.
The Battle of New Orleans
Zachary F. Smith

I found them drawn off from the glacis a few hundred yards; but, oh!
Twenty-Five Years in the Rifle Brigade
William Surtees

They crossed the street and went down the glacis of the cobblestoned wharf.
Edith and John
Franklin S. Farquhar

Neither ditch nor glacis exist on the eastern face, where the rapids of the Nile render them unnecessary.
A History of Art in Ancient Egypt, Vol. II (of 2)
Georges Perrot

There was the sound of a gentle chuckle from the glacis where Learoyd lay.
Soldiers Three
Rudyard Kipling

Gourgues was now on the glacis, when he heard Cazenove shouting from the gate that the Spaniards were escaping on that side.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 85, November, 1864
Various

The masonry was concealed from view by the ditch and glacis.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 10, Slice 6
Various

Its bastions, ramparts, and glacis are a marvel of engineering.
French and English
Evelyn Everett-Green

The storm passed over, covering the glacis with snow and sleet.
Beethoven: the Man and the Artist
Ludwig van Beethoven

Anagram

gal sic


Today’s quote

It is better to debate a question without settling it than to settle a question without debating it.

– Joseph Joubert


On this day

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

2 June 1953 – Coronation of Queen Elizabeth II at Westminster Abbey, England.

2 June 1965 – the first contingent of Australian combat troops arrives in Saigon to assist the American military in the Vietnam War.

2 June 1966 – The ‘Surveyor 1’ space probe lands on the moon. It is the first US space probe to do so. The Soviet Union had successfully landed a space probe, the Lunix 9, on the moon 5 months earlier, on 3 February 1966.

1 June 2017 – imprecate

1 June 2017

imprecate

[im-pri-keyt]

verb (used with object), imprecated, imprecating.

1. to invoke or call down (evil or curses), as upon a person.

Origin of imprecate

Latin

1605-1615; Latin imprecātus past participle of imprecārī to invoke, pray to or for, equivalent to im- im-1+ prec- pray + -ātus -ate1

Related forms

imprecator, noun
imprecatory, adjective
unimprecated, adjective

Synonyms

curse, execrate, anathematize, accurse, denunciate.

Antonyms

bless.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for imprecate

Historical Examples

To imprecate evil on any living being seems to them unchristian, barbarous, a relic of dark ages and dark superstitions.
Town and Country Sermons
Charles Kingsley

Bowing my head to think—to pray—to imprecate, I lost all sense of time and place.
Heralds of Empire
Agnes C. Laut

I know not what I ought to imprecate on the wretches who had spread a report of your death.
Letters of John Calvin, Volume II (of 4)
Jules Bonnet

But now there is scarcely a tongue in all New England that does not imprecate curses on his name.
Grandfather’s Chair
Nathaniel Hawthorne

There was nothing for him to resent, nothing for him to imprecate but his own folly.
The Alaskan
James Oliver Curwood

He ceased to imprecate only when, by repetition, his oaths became too inexpressive to be worth while.
The Eagle’s Heart
Hamlin Garland


Today’s quote

The world perishes not from bandits and fires, but from hatred, hostility, and all these petty squabbles.

– Anton Chekhov


On this day

1 June 1926 – Birth of Marilyn Monroe, iconic movie star. Died 5 August 1962.

1 June 1935 – DC Comics publishes the first Superman comic, created by Jerry Siegel.

1 June 1968 – death of Helen Keller, inspirational American author, lecturer and political activist. First deaf-blind person to achieve a Bachelor of Arts degree. Born 27 June 1880.

1 June 2012 – The inaugural ‘Panda’s Word of the Day’ published at www.shaneduran.com. The word was ‘pleonasm‘.

June 2017 WOTDs

June 2017 WOTDs


30 June 2017

belabour

[bih-ley-ber]

verb (used with object)

1. to explain, worry about, or work at (something) repeatedly or more than is necessary:
He kept belaboring the point long after we had agreed.
2. to assail persistently, as with scorn or ridicule:
a book that belabors the provincialism of his contemporaries.
3. to beat vigorously; ply with heavy blows.
4. Obsolete. to labor at.

Also, especially British, belabour.

Origin of belabor
1590-1600 First recorded in 1590-1600; be- + labor

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for belabor

Historical Examples

It is exhausting to belabour a thick-skinned and obstinate animal with a stick.
Blue Lights
R.M. Ballantyne

Have you any particular spite at my door, that you belabour it in that style?
Macaria
Augusta Jane Evans Wilson

He made himself greatly dreaded by his orchestra, whom he used to belabour over the head with his fiddle.
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, No. CCCLXXVI. February, 1847. Vol. LXI.
Various

He said he would track him out and belabour him as he deserved.’
Penshurst Castle
Emma Marshall

At one time some worthy fellow entreats us to take up the public cudgel and belabour a blatant Economist.
Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 68, No. 417, July, 1850
Various

belabour thy brains, as to whom it would be well to question.
Scribner’s Magazine, Volume 26, July 1899
Various

He chased the sheep into a corner of the enclosure, and proceeded to belabour them with a heavy stick.
The Pilots of Pomona
Robert Leighton

He seized a stick that was lying on the ground, and began to belabour the hag with all his might.
The Mantle and Other Stories
Nicholas Gogol

So saying she snatched up the ladle from the dripping-pan, and threatened to belabour him with it.
Boscobel: or, the royal oak
William Harrison Ainsworth

He may hit me on the head and they may belabour me from behind.
White Nights and Other Stories
Fyodor Dostoevsky

Anagram

a blue orb


29 June 2017

sexton

[sek-stuh n]

noun

1. an official of a church charged with taking care of the edifice and its contents, ringing the bell, etc., and sometimes with burying the dead.
2. an official who maintains a synagogue and its religious articles, chants the designated portion of the Torah on prescribed days, and assists the cantor in conducting services on festivals.

Origin of sexton

Middle English, Anglo-French
1275-1325; Middle English sexteyn, sekesteyn, syncopated variant of segerstane, secristeyn < Anglo-French segerstaine sacristan

Related forms

sextonship, noun
undersexton, noun

Can be confused
sextant, sextet, sexton.

Examples from the Web for sexton

Contemporary Examples

Last September, sexton pleaded guilty in New York state court to money laundering and agreed to forfeit $600,000.
Las Vegas Betting Scandal Earns $5.5 Million Fine but the Boss Walks
John L. Smith
January 20, 2014

Historical Examples

“No, old chap,” cried North, slapping the sexton on the shoulder in a jocular way.
The Man with a Shadow
George Manville Fenn

Why, here in Denmark: I have been sexton here, man and boy, thirty years.
Hamlet
William Shakespeare

Anagram

ox tens


28 June 2017

Huguenot

[hyoo-guh-not or, often, yoo-]

noun

1. a member of the Reformed or Calvinistic communion of France in the 16th and 17th centuries; a French Protestant.

Origin of Huguenot

German

1555-1565; French, perhaps blend of Hugues (name of a political leader in Geneva) and eidgenot, back formation from eidgenots, Swiss variant of German Eidgenoss confederate, literally, oath comrade

Related forms

Huguenotic, adjective
Huguenotism, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Huguenot

Contemporary Examples

The du Pont family descended from Huguenot nobility in Burgundy, emigrating to the United States in 1800.
Foxcatcher’s Real-Life Psycho Killer
Marlow Stern
November 17, 2014

Historical Examples

This induces him to cross the Channel in order to take a share in the Huguenot wars.
A Roving Commission
G. A. Henty

He was of Huguenot ancestry, and learned the goldsmith’s trade of his father.
Tea Leaves
Various

This seems strange considering that all the merchants of the new company were Huguenot Protestants.
Montreal 1535-1914 under the French Rgime
William Henry Atherton

“I would rather see him hanged, but saved, than alive and a Huguenot,” was the gloomy reply.
The Works of Honor de Balzac
Honor de Balzac

He escaped in 1576, and put himself at the head of the Huguenot party.
Great Men and Famous Women. Vol. 1 of 8
Various

Armadas, though born in Hull, was the son of a Huguenot refugee.
Days of the Discoverers
L. Lamprey

Anagram

into huge
tongue uh
he outgun


27 June 2017

brio

[bree-oh; Italian bree-aw]

noun

1. vigor; vivacity.

Origin of brio

Italian, Spanish, Celtic, Old Irish

1725-1735, Italian < Spanish brío energy, determination < Celtic *brīgos; compare Old Irish bríg (feminine) power, strength, force, Middle Welsh bri (masculine) honor, dignity, authority

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for brio

Contemporary Examples

The New Yorker critic Pauline Kael dismissed the film as “journalism presented with the brio of drama.”
Goodfellas Turns 20
Sean Macaulay
September 20, 2010

Historical Examples

Certainly Gurickx played magnificently, and with a brio I have rarely heard equalled.
Music-Study in Germany
Amy Fay

Gozzi gave him brio and bonarietà , with cordiality and humor.
Folkways
William Graham Sumner


26 June 2017

forgo

[fawr-goh]

verb (used with object), forwent, forgone, forgoing.

1. to abstain or refrain from; do without.
2. to give up, renounce, or resign.
3. Archaic. to neglect or overlook.
4. Archaic. to quit or leave.
5. Obsolete. to go or pass by.

Also, forego.

Origin of forgo

Middle English, Old English

950 before 950; Middle English forgon, Old English forgān. See for-, go1

Related forms

forgoer, noun
unforgone, adjective

Synonyms

1. forbear, sacrifice, forsake.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for forgo

Contemporary Examples

He forced her, along with her older sisters, to forgo any semblance of a normal childhood.
Why My Mother Would Save Aurora Shooter James Holmes
Anna Klassen
April 2, 2013

Bulgaria recently announced they will forgo adopting the single Euro currency.
The Euro Misses A Victim
Justin Green
September 4, 2012

We had decided to forgo a rainy Parisian night of hailing cabs and falling prey to more tourist traps.
For the Love of Pâté
Molly Hannon
January 4, 2011

And if he does lose, the political pressure on him to forgo a Syria strike will likely prove overwhelming.
Obama Decision on Syria Good for U.S Democracy, but His Case Is Weak
Peter Beinart
September 2, 2013

Historical Examples

He finally agreed to forgo the pleasure of possessing it for a suitable reward.
The River and I
John G. Neihardt

The freshmen who had been so favored did not wish to forgo these joys.
Hester’s Counterpart
Jean K. Baird

It is extremely good of you to forgo any engagement you may have had merely to return this to me with your own hands.
The Silver Butterfly
Mrs. Wilson Woodrow

It was a mere piece of theatricality, such as it was not in Scaramouche’s nature to forgo.
Scaramouche
Rafael Sabatini

Most had agreed to forgo rents and to help with artificial manure for next year.
The Foundations of Japan
J.W. Robertson Scott

Anagram

or fog


25 June 2017

je ne sais quoi

[zhuh nuh se kwa]

noun, French.

1. an indefinable, elusive quality, especially a pleasing one:
She has a certain je ne sais quoi that charms everybody.

Origin of je ne sais quoi

literally, I don’t know what

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for je ne sais quoi

Contemporary Examples

She never finishes her soup and she wears a toweling robe with a certain je ne sais quoi.
Polanski’s Brilliant Comeback
Simon Schama
February 17, 2010

Just in time for Paris Fashion Week, a new book, Paris Street Style, offers tips on how to acheive that certain je ne sais quoi.
A New Guide to Parisian Style
Rebecca Benhamou
March 2, 2013

Historical Examples

I don’t know what that means, but I love that sort of—of—of— je ne sais quoi, in short!
Trilby
George Du Maurier

Tout le reste a je ne sais quoi de chimrique et souvent de trs-funeste.
The Life of Albert Gallatin
Henry Adams

There is something about you, Tweeny, there is a je ne sais quoi about you.
The Admirable Crichton
J. M. Barrie

A raven hopping about the casks gives a je ne sais quoi, a cachet, to the premises.
Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, March 3rd, 1920
Various

And not one has the beginnings of the polished charm of manner, the fire of glance, the je ne sais quoi of Mrs. Hunt Maclean.
The Californians
Gertrude Franklin Horn Atherton

But there was a je ne sais quoi in their behaviour to-day, which begins to alarm my suspicion.
The Adventures of Ferdinand Count Fathom, Complete
Tobias Smollett

But there was a je ne sais quoi in the whole cut of your jib as familiar to me as rolls and coffee.
Grey Roses
Henry Harland

“A ‘ je ne sais quoi young man,'” quotes the younger Miss Beresford, with a sneer.
Rossmoyne
Unknown

Anagram


24 June 2017

workaday

[wur-kuh-dey]

adjective

1. of or befitting working days; characteristic of a workday and its occupations.
2. ordinary; commonplace; everyday; prosaic.

Origin of workaday

Middle English

1150-1200; alteration (probably after nowadays ) of earlier worky-day workday, alteration (by association with holiday ) of Middle English werkeday, obscurely derived from work and day

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for workaday

Contemporary Examples

And it divides an audience’s attention from the quotidian, workaday world, whether at the Globe or the Delacorte.
Anne Hathaway’s Magical “Night”
Daniel Menaker
June 27, 2009

But unlike most workaday reporters, Lepore is steeped in the history of the city and the American Revolution.
Great New Reads
The Daily Beast
October 14, 2010

Even typically Teflon partners will melt if you apply too much heat in workaday dealings.
What the Stars Hold for Your Week
Starsky + Cox
July 7, 2011

Historical Examples

There was just one thing in all the room that looked poor, workaday.
Aurora the Magnificent
Gertrude Hall

But in the workaday world one never knows the ending till it comes.
Tommy and Co.
Jerome K. Jerome

The summer ought not to be an entirely frivolous season, neither ought it to be too workaday.
A Girl’s Student Days and After
Jeannette Marks

At noon, however, its workaday aspect was on; it was no more than a lunching place.
The Readjustment
Will Irwin

I put away even the rings I wore habitually, keeping out only an inferior cat’s-eye for workaday wear.
Masterpieces of Mystery
Various

Margot discovered she could not disturb the little girl’s workaday life.
Little Jeanne of France
Madeline Brandeis

The Ghetto was all astir, for it was half-past eight of a workaday morning.
The Grandchildren of the Ghetto
Israel Zangwill

Anagram

away dork
a yard wok


23 June 2017

ducal

[doo-kuh l, dyoo-]

adjective

1. of or relating to a duke or dukedom.

Origin of ducal

Late Latin

1485-1495 First recorded in 1485-95, ducal is from the Late Latin word ducālis of a leader. See duke, -al1

Related forms

unducal, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ducal

Historical Examples

It is as if he had stripped off the stately robe and the ducal cap, and shown the soul of Venice in the bare child of the lagoons.
Stray Studies from England and Italy
John Richard Greene

But it was not until the year 1443 that the Montefeltri acquired their ducal title.
New Italian sketches
John Addington Symonds

Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Bright would doubtless have gone much further in the path of reform if unfettered by ducal retainers.
The Galaxy
Various

Black velvet slippers are on his feet, and his ducal cap is of black velvet.
New Italian sketches
John Addington Symonds

Then followed the names of his rival lovers, and a list of the vast sums she had filched from the ducal treasury.
A German Pompadour
Marie Hay

“You had better take his place,” said the ducal proprietor to Harold.
Happy Days
Alan Alexander Milne

Francesco Sforza, the last and childless heir of the ducal house, was left in Milan till his death, which happened in 1535.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 15, Slice 1
Various

He took careful aim in the direction of the ducal tent, and loosed the quarrel.
Love-at-Arms
Raphael Sabatini

The ducal museum contains a rich collection of antique and medieval curiosities, engravings and pictures.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 3
Various

And the colored marbles of the ducal palace fairly palpitate.
The Lure of the Mask
Harold MacGrath


22 June 2017

envoi

(or envoy)

[en-voi, ahn-]

noun

1. a short stanza concluding a poem in certain archaic metrical forms, as a ballade, and serving as a dedication, or a similar postscript to a prose composition.

Origin of envoi

Middle English

1350-1400; Middle English envoye < Old French, derivative of envoyer to send; see envoy1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for envoy

Historical Examples

In Middle English poetry the envoi mostly serves the same purposes.
A History of English Versification
Jakob Schipper

The poem might also conclude with a half stanza or tornada, (French envoi).
The Troubadours
H.J. Chaytor

“I will try to remember the last stanza and the envoi as we go along,” added Victor.
The Grey Cloak
Harold MacGrath

Even in Modern English poetry the envoi has not quite gone out of use.
A History of English Versification
Jakob Schipper

Followed the beat of lessening footfalls, while the nightingale improvised an envoi.
Chivalry
James Branch Cabell

But as a writer reviews his own words, it is inevitable that some sort of envoi should present itself to his mind.
To My Younger Brethren
Handley C. G. Moule

At the end of nearly every section he adds an envoi of his own to drive home the moral more surely.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 3
Various

The scheme is a b a b c c d d e d E in the stanzas and d d e d E in the envoi.
A History of English Versification
Jakob Schipper

Guynemer’s biography is of such a nature that it must seem like a poem: why not, then, conclude it with an envoi ?
Georges Guynemer
Henry Bordeaux

It is composed of five strophes, identical in arrangement, of eleven verses each, and of an envoi of five verses.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 5, Slice 7
Various

Anagram

I oven
vie on


21 June 2017

heimweh

[haym-vee]

noun

– homesickness

Origin

German: heim (“home”) +‎ Weh (“pain”). Literally “homesickness”

Antonym

fernweh

Anagram

whee him
he we him


20 June 2017

fernweh

[fee-uhn-vee]

noun

– wanderlust, a desire to travel, a longing for far-off places

Etymology

German: fern (“far”) +‎ Weh (“pain”). Literally “farsickness” or “longing for far-off places”

Antonym

heimweh

Anagram

when ref


19 June 2017

glut

[gluht]

verb (used with object), glutted, glutting.

1. to feed or fill to satiety; sate:
to glut the appetite.
2. to feed or fill to excess; cloy.
3. to flood (the market) with a particular item or service so that the supply greatly exceeds the demand.
4. to choke up:
to glut a channel.
verb (used without object), glutted, glutting.
5. to eat to satiety or to excess.
noun
6. a full supply.
7. an excessive supply or amount; surfeit.
8. an act of glutting or the state of being glutted.

Origin of glut

Middle English

1275-1325; Middle English gluten, back formation from glutun glutton1

Related forms

gluttingly, adverb
overglut, verb (used with object), overglutted, overglutting.
unglutted, adjective

Synonyms

1. surfeit, stuff, satiate. 5. gorge, cram. 7. surplus, excess, superabundance.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for glut

Contemporary Examples

But should you lack the energy to sift through the glut of options yourself, we can at least helpfully endorse this one.
WGN’s ‘Manhattan’ Is Summer’s Best New Show. But Will Anyone Watch?
Kevin Fallon
July 26, 2014

But if Democrats are faced with the reality of a glut of qualified candidates, Republicans are assembling more of a fantasy team.
The Golden State Preps for the ‘Red Wedding’ of Senate Races
David Freedlander
January 8, 2015

Despite the glut of vampire-centric entertainment, Let Me In offers a novel, haunting take on the genre.
Let Me In Is the Anti-Twilight
Jace Lacob
September 28, 2010

Surpluses set in motion a process that ends the glut : Just watch the last half hour of a garage sale.
When the Economy Is Bad, Debt Gets Worse
Megan McArdle
September 11, 2012

Tallinn feels palpably Scandinavian with its polished old-town brick, seaside positioning and glut of cool cafes.
Next Stop, Quito: Our Top Cities for 2015
Brandon Presser
December 18, 2014

Historical Examples

The supreme moment had arrived when Mr. Hugh Price was to glut his vengeance.
The Real America in Romance, Volume 6;
John R. Musick

When there is a glut in the market, Jonathan, you know what happens.
The Common Sense of Socialism
John Spargo

He determined, therefore, to put on the bravado, and glut that revenge upon his still surviving victim.
All-Hallow Eve; or, The Test of Futurity.
Robert Curtis

You may glut yourself with his suffering and feed fat your revenge.
Sir Henry Morgan, Buccaneer
Cyrus Townsend Brady

They may come upon him when he sleeps and glut their revenge; but you will be safe.
The Adventures of Captain Bonneville
Washington Irving


18 June 2017

rostrum

[ros-truh m]

noun, plural rostra [ros-truh], rostrums.

1. any platform, stage, or the like, for public speaking.
2. a pulpit.
3. a beaklike projection from the prow of a ship, especially one on an ancient warship for ramming an enemy ship; beak; ram.
4. Roman Antiquity. (in the forum) the raised platform, adorned with the beaks of captured warships, from which orations, pleadings, etc., were delivered.
5. Biology. a beaklike process or extension of some part; rostellum.
6. British Theater. a raised platform or dais, especially one with hinged sides that can be folded and stored within a relatively small space.

Origin of rostrum

Latin

1570-1580; Latin rōstrum snout, bill, beak of a bird, ship’s prow (in plural, speaker’s platform), equivalent to rōd(ere) to gnaw, bite (cf. rodent ) + -trum instrumental suffix, with dt > st

Synonyms

1. stand, dais, podium, lectern.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for rostrum Expand
Contemporary Examples
It was hard not to get mixed messages from the rostrum, too.

Fear and Loathing at the Republican Leadership Conference
David Freedlander
June 2, 2014

That nominee had three challenges as he took the rostrum in Tampa.
Romney’s Lame Speech Might Have Gone Better Had He Learned From Bush 1 and Al Gore
Robert Shrum
August 31, 2012

Historical Examples

Presently they were all assembled, and the Head appeared upon his rostrum.
The Lighter Side of School Life
Ian Hay

Anagram

Mrs Tour
Mr Tours
sort rum


17 June 2017

paucity

[paw-si-tee]

noun

1. smallness of quantity; scarcity; scantiness:
a country with a paucity of resources.
2. smallness or insufficiency of number; fewness.

Origin of paucity

late Middle English Latin

1375-1425; late Middle English paucite < Latin paucitās fewness, derivative of paucus few; see -ity

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for paucity

Contemporary Examples

Poor health care, a paucity of jobs, and a sense of instability is now taking its toll.
One Year Later, Libya’s Long Road Continues
Jamie Dettmer
October 21, 2012

The paucity of women in STEM is not just a problem for New York.
Twitter Invests in Young Women with ‘Girls Who Code’
Allison Yarrow
June 25, 2012

A former studio chief agrees that the paucity of stars under 30 is a serious problem for the studios.
Is He Sabotaging His Career?
Kim Masters
March 8, 2010

Anagram

up a city
put a icy


16 June 2017

withers

[with -erz]

noun, ( used with a plural verb)

1. the highest part of the back at the base of the neck of a horse, cow, sheep, etc.
Idioms
2. wring one’s withers, to cause one anxiety or trouble:
The long involved lawsuit is wringing his withers.

Origin of withers

1535-1545 First recorded in 1535-45; origin uncertain

Anagram

writhes
her wits
he wrist
whet sir


15 June 2017

catharsis

[kuh-thahr-sis]

noun, plural catharses [kuh-thahr-seez] (Show IPA)

1. the purging of the emotions or relieving of emotional tensions, especially through certain kinds of art, as tragedy or music.
2. Medicine/Medical. purgation.
3. Psychiatry.
psychotherapy that encourages or permits the discharge of pent-up, socially unacceptable affects.
discharge of pent-up emotions so as to result in the alleviation of symptoms or the permanent relief of the condition.

Origin of catharsis

Greek

1795-1805; New Latin; Greek kátharsis a cleansing, equivalent to kathar- (variant stem of kathaírein to cleanse, derivative of katharós pure) + -sis -sis

Related forms

hypercatharsis, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for catharsis

Contemporary Examples

Sharon Begley reveals why scary flicks give us a powerful feeling of catharsis and reinforce old-fashioned beliefs about morality.
Why Our Brains Love Horror Movies
Sharon Begley
October 25, 2011

Encountering such exaggerations on the page serves as a kind of catharsis, and provides a kind of perspective.
Lifetime’s ‘Flowers in the Attic’ Review: The Incest Is There, The Strange Magic Is Not
Andrew Romano
January 15, 2014

“The word ‘Katrina’ is so close to the word ‘ catharsis,'” he says.
The Katrina Divorces
Nicole LaPorte
August 21, 2010

He suggests that the appeal to teenagers also goes beyond thrill-seeking and catharsis.
Why Our Brains Love Horror Movies
Sharon Begley
October 25, 2011

But I always feel that making the film is the catharsis that stops the nightmares, if you will.
James Cameron on How to Find Flight MH370, Climate Change, Leonardo DiCaprio, and More
Marlow Stern
April 11, 2014

Historical Examples

He however refers only to the catharsis upon the spectator, but not to that of the author’s work upon himself.
The Literature of Ecstasy
Albert Mordell

Evacuations by venesection and catharsis, and then by the exhibition of opium.
Zoonomia, Vol. II
Erasmus Darwin

He had no sympathy with the poetry that had a social message and he did not understand its effect as a catharsis.
The Literature of Ecstasy
Albert Mordell

There are certainly times when catharsis is necessary but “one thing is certain, the day for routine purgation is past.”
Outwitting Our Nerves
Josephine A. Jackson and Helen M. Salisbury

It does not touch the ‘ catharsis ’ of tragedy, which is another matter.
The Comedies of William Congreve
William Congreve

Anagram

archaists
sat chairs
cash stair


14 June 2017

ave

[ah-vey, ey-vee]

interjection

1. hail; welcome.
2. farewell; goodbye.
noun
3. the salutation “ave.”.
4. (initial capital letter) Ave Maria.

Origin of ave

Middle English

1200-1250 Middle English < Latin: imperative 2nd singular of avēre to be well, fare well

Ave.or ave

1. avenue.

ave atque vale

[ah-we aht-kwe wah-le; English ey-vee at-kwee vey-lee, ah-vey aht-kwey vah-ley]

interjection, Latin.

1. hail and farewell.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ave

Contemporary Examples

For all her face betrayed, the organ might have been singing an ave Maria.
Read ‘The King in Yellow,’ the ‘True Detective’ Reference That’s the Key to the Show
Robert W. Chambers
February 19, 2014

A soaring “ ave Maria” and a tender “Danny Boy” marked the passing of two more brothers.
Boston and New York’s Bravest Are Brothers Bonded by Tragedy
Michael Daly
April 14, 2014

June 24, 2014

ave Atque Vale I’m gonna hang out With these two smoking hotties And fly privately Around the world.
The Poetry of Charlie Sheen
Michael Solomon
February 28, 2011

Angram

Eva


13 June 2017

axis mundi

noun

The axis mundi (also cosmic axis, world axis, world pillar, center of the world, world tree), in certain beliefs and philosophies, is the world center, or the connection between Heaven and Earth. As the celestial pole and geographic pole, it expresses a point of connection between sky and earth where the four compass directions meet. At this point travel and correspondence is made between higher and lower realms. Communication from lower realms may ascend to higher ones and blessings from higher realms may descend to lower ones and be disseminated to all. The spot functions as the omphalos (navel), the world’s point of beginning.

Anagram

unsaid mix
Saudi minx
I mix Sudan
mix USA din


12 June 2017

Ubuntu

[oo-buhn-too]

/ʊˈbuːntʊ/

noun

1. (South African) humanity or fellow feeling; kindness
a quality that includes the essential human virtues; compassion and humanity.
“there is a need for understanding not vengeance, ubuntu not victimization”

Word Origin

Nguni

Collins English Dictionary

Contemporary Examples

Additionally, Jeremy Fox, who helmed ubuntu in Napa Valley, is planning a series of pop-up dinners around the Bay Area.
The Buzziest Pop-Up Restaurants
Tien Nguyen
February 15, 2011

He not only embodied ubuntu ; he taught millions to find that truth within themselves.
Full Text of President Obama’s Eulogy for Nelson Mandela
The Daily Beast
December 9, 2013


11 June 2017

tenet

[ten-it; British also tee-nit]

noun

1. any opinion, principle, doctrine, dogma, etc., especially one held as true by members of a profession, group, or movement.

Origin of tenet

1590-1600; < Latin: he holds

Can be confused

tenant, tenet.

Synonyms

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

belief, position.

Examples from the Web for tenet

Contemporary Examples

Asked who would have made the order, Clarke replies, “I would think it would have been made by the director,” referring to tenet.
An Explosive New 9/11 Charge
Philip Shenon
August 10, 2011

When tenet was asked whether it was appropriate to describe Ciralsky that way, tenet answered, “No.”
Ex-Chief: CIA Investigation Could Be Construed as Anti-Semitic
Eli Lake
April 22, 2012

“Thou shalt not overspend” is rapidly becoming a tenet of the evangelical belief system, rivaling social issues like gay marriage.
Evangelicals Preach the Gospel of Getting Out of Debt
Lisa Miller
February 25, 2011

“Well, they could die,” tenet remembers telling Black about his staff.
Meet Mitt Romney’s Trusted Envoy to the Dark Side, Cofer Black
Eli Lake
April 10, 2012

By late Jan. 2003, tenet had signed the first formal guidelines for interrogation and confinement.
Inside the CIA’s Sadistic Dungeon
Tim Mak
December 8, 2014

Historical Examples

The splendid creature felt the warmth of tenet ‘s breath upon her neck, and her skin tingled under that burning contact.
Mayflower (Flor de mayo)
Vicente Blasco Ibez

He was as unconscious, almost, as he had been back there in tenet ‘s cabin after his fall.
Mayflower (Flor de mayo)
Vicente Blasco Ibez

A notable contrast is afforded by the entry: ‘In villa que vocatur Blot tenet ipse R. iiii.
Feudal England — Historical Studies On The Eleventh And Twelfth Centuries
J.H. Round

Was it something in a cast of character or a tenet of a creed, or was it what any one could emulate?
The Letter of the Contract
Basil King

Dogma, dog′ma, n. a settled opinion: a principle or tenet : a doctrine laid down with authority.
Chambers’s Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 1 of 4: A-D)
Various


10 June 2017

emollient

[ih-mol-yuh nt]

adjective

1. having the power of softening or relaxing, as a medicinal substance; soothing, especially to the skin:
emollient lotions for the face.

Synonyms: relieving, palliative, healing, assuasive.
noun

2. an emollient medicine, lotion, salve, etc.

Origin of emollient

Latin

1635-1645; Latin ēmollient- (stem of ēmolliēns) softening up (present participle of ēmollīre), equivalent to ē- e-1+ molli(s) soft + -ent- -ent

Related forms

emollience, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for emollient

Contemporary Examples

Rubenstein listened and as an emollient agreed to an in-house investigation.
The Latino Fight to Be Included in the Kennedy Center Honors
Sandra McElwaine
November 28, 2012

Historical Examples

emollient poultices and drinks were prescribed, and a low diet enjoined.
North American Medical and Surgical Journal, Vol. 2, No. 3, July, 1826
Various

They eulogised, at the same time, the emollient properties of the dog’s-tooth.
Everyday Objects
W. H. Davenport Adams

Anagram

nil omelet
molten lie
motel line
lemon tile


9 June 2017

trice(1)

[trahys]

noun

1. a very short time; an instant:
in a trice.

Origin of trice1 Expand
late Middle English
1400-1450; late Middle English tryse; probably special use of *trise a pull, tug, derivative of trisen, to pull; see trice2

trice(2)

[trahys]

verb (used with object), triced, tricing. Nautical.

1. to pull or haul with a rope.
2. to haul up and fasten with a rope (usually followed by up).

Origin

1350-1400; Middle English trisen < Middle Dutch trīsen to hoist, derivative of trīse pulley

Related forms

untriced, adjective
-trice

1. variant of -trix.

Origin

French or Italian -trice < Latin -trīcem, accusative of -trīx -trix

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for trice

Historical Examples

So, in a trice, a third appeared, and met with exactly the same fate.
Harley Greenoak’s Charge
Bertram Mitford

You’re cold and tired—I’ll have a nice cup of tea for you in a trice.
Lucy Maud Montgomery Short Stories, 1909 to 1922
Lucy Maud Montgomery

That work was performed in a trice, as the materials were at hand and all the neighbors took part in it.
The Philippine Islands, 1493-1898 – Volume 40 of 55
Francisco Colin


8 June 2017

iterative

[it-uh-rey-tiv, -er-uh-tiv]

adjective

1. repeating; making repetition; repetitious.
2. Grammar. frequentative.

Origin of iterative

Late Latin

1480-1490 From the Late Latin word iterātīvus, dating back to 1480-90. See iterate, -ive

Related forms

iteratively, adverb
iterativeness, noun
uniterative, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for iterative

Contemporary Examples

He prefers a conversation, and conversations aren’t etched in stone, they’re iterative.
Paul Begala on Why Bill Clinton’s Still Got the Magic
Paul Begala
October 9, 2012

Historical Examples

He knows his own mind, and hammers his doctrines out with a hard and iterative stroke that hits its mark.
Diderot and the Encyclopdists
John Morley

The style is that of the pulpit, iterative, florid, and full of amplifications; but that was natural.
The Contemporary Review, Volume 36, October 1879
Various

Anagram

vie attire
trivia tee


7 June 2017

shufti

[shoo-ph-tee]

noun

– a brief glance

plural: shuftis

Origin

From Egyptian Arabic شُفْتِي (šufti, “have you seen?”), from شَاف (šāf, “to see”).

Example

He sneaked a shufti before cautiously entering the darkened corridor.

Anagram

if huts


6 June 2017

gubbins

/ˈɡʌbɪnz/
noun (informal)

1. (functioning as sing) an object of little or no value
2. (functioning as sing) a small device or gadget
3. (functioning as pl) odds and ends; litter or rubbish
4. (functioning as sing) a silly person

Word Origin

(meaning: fragments): from obsolete gobbon, probably related to gobbet

Collins English Dictionary

Examples from the Web for gubbins

Historical Examples

There’s a lot like gubbins, an’ one has to try an’ sweeten ’em a bit once a week or so.
The Record of Nicholas Freydon
A. J. (Alec John) Dawson

The sergeant called for assistance, and gubbins was hauled up.
For Fortune and Glory
Lewis Hough

For Green would not think of him as dead, and no more for that matter did gubbins, though Davis had given up all hope long ago.
For Fortune and Glory
Lewis Hough

Anagram

bub sign
snug bib


5 June 2017

funicular

[fyoo-nik-yuh-ler]

adjective

1. of or relating to a rope or cord, or its tension.
2. worked by a rope or the like.
noun
3. funicular railway.

Origin of funicular

Latin
1655-1665; Latin fūnicul(us) (see funiculus ) + -ar1

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for funicular

Contemporary Examples

What was the thinking behind using models for the funicular that runs up to the hotel—and for the first shots of the hotel itself?
The Look of ‘The Grand Budapest Hotel’
Andrew Romano
March 6, 2014

Historical Examples

These were the days before the funicular from Stresa, when one trudged up a rude path through the chestnuts and walnuts.
Marriage
H. G. Wells

They start along the terrace toward the station of the funicular railway.
A Book of Burlesques
H. L. Mencken

Anagram

incur a flu
a runic flu


4 June 2017

nacre

[ney-ker]

noun

1. mother-of-pearl.

Origin of nacre

Medieval Latin, Old Italian, Arabic

1590-1600; Medieval Latin nacrum, nacer, variant of nacara < Old Italian naccara kind of drum, nacre; Arabic naqqārah drum

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for nacre

Historical Examples

He lifted a small hammer and struck a velvet-voiced bell that stood on the Arabian table of cedar inlaid with nacre and ivory.
The Decadent
Ralph Adams Cram

The value of the pearl is based on the brilliancy of the nacre, the size, and the form.
The Sea-beach at Ebb-tide
Augusta Foote Arnold

nacre is the hard and brilliant substance with which the valves of certain shells are lined in the interior.
The Ocean World:
Louis Figuier

Anagram

crane


3 June 2017

covfefe

noun / adjective / verb (unknown)

1. (noun) When you want to say “coverage” but your hands are too small to hit all the letters on your keyboard.

2. (noun) When you want to type “kerfuffle” but can’t spell it.

3. Covfefe is the Joker in the grammatical pack of the English language. Covfefe can mean whatever you want it to mean.

Origin

Originated from US President Donald Trump’s tweet of 30 May 2017: “Despite the constant negative press covfefe”.

Strong contender for word of the year, 2017.


2 June 2017

glacis

[gley-sis, glas-is]

noun, plural glacis [gley-seez, -siz, glas-eez, -iz] (Show IPA), glacises.

1. a gentle slope.
2. Fortification. a bank of earth in front of the counterscarp or covered way of a fort, having an easy slope toward the field or open country.

Origin of glacis

Middle French

1665-1675; Middle French; akin to Old French glacier to slide; compare Latin glaciāre to make into ice; see glacé

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for glacis

Historical Examples

We have two mitrailleuses above the terre-plein to sweep at once the moat and the glacis.
History of the Commune of 1871
P. Lissagary

In six days they completed the parapet, with a glacis on the opposite side.
The Battle of New Orleans
Zachary F. Smith

I found them drawn off from the glacis a few hundred yards; but, oh!
Twenty-Five Years in the Rifle Brigade
William Surtees

They crossed the street and went down the glacis of the cobblestoned wharf.
Edith and John
Franklin S. Farquhar

Neither ditch nor glacis exist on the eastern face, where the rapids of the Nile render them unnecessary.
A History of Art in Ancient Egypt, Vol. II (of 2)
Georges Perrot

There was the sound of a gentle chuckle from the glacis where Learoyd lay.
Soldiers Three
Rudyard Kipling

Gourgues was now on the glacis, when he heard Cazenove shouting from the gate that the Spaniards were escaping on that side.
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 85, November, 1864
Various

The masonry was concealed from view by the ditch and glacis.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 10, Slice 6
Various

Its bastions, ramparts, and glacis are a marvel of engineering.
French and English
Evelyn Everett-Green

The storm passed over, covering the glacis with snow and sleet.
Beethoven: the Man and the Artist
Ludwig van Beethoven

Anagram

gal sic


1 June 2017

imprecate

[im-pri-keyt]

verb (used with object), imprecated, imprecating.

1. to invoke or call down (evil or curses), as upon a person.

Origin of imprecate

Latin

1605-1615; Latin imprecātus past participle of imprecārī to invoke, pray to or for, equivalent to im- im-1+ prec- pray + -ātus -ate1

Related forms

imprecator, noun
imprecatory, adjective
unimprecated, adjective

Synonyms

curse, execrate, anathematize, accurse, denunciate.

Antonyms

bless.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for imprecate

Historical Examples

To imprecate evil on any living being seems to them unchristian, barbarous, a relic of dark ages and dark superstitions.
Town and Country Sermons
Charles Kingsley

Bowing my head to think—to pray—to imprecate, I lost all sense of time and place.
Heralds of Empire
Agnes C. Laut

I know not what I ought to imprecate on the wretches who had spread a report of your death.
Letters of John Calvin, Volume II (of 4)
Jules Bonnet

But now there is scarcely a tongue in all New England that does not imprecate curses on his name.
Grandfather’s Chair
Nathaniel Hawthorne

There was nothing for him to resent, nothing for him to imprecate but his own folly.
The Alaskan
James Oliver Curwood

He ceased to imprecate only when, by repetition, his oaths became too inexpressive to be worth while.
The Eagle’s Heart
Hamlin Garland