9 December 2016 – patois

9 December 2016

patois

[pat-wah, pah-twah; French pa-twa]

noun, plural patois [pat-wahz, pah-twahz; French pa-twa]

1. a regional form of a language, especially of French, differing from the standard, literary form of the language.
2. a rural or provincial form of speech.
3. jargon; cant; argot.

Origin of patois

1635-1645; < French: literally clumsy speech; akin to Old French patoier to handle clumsily, derivative of pate paw

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for patois

Historical Examples

His voice was deep, sonorous, and somewhat touched with the true Kerry patois.
Bits of Blarney
R. Shelton Mackenzie

He only spoke in the patois, which Frank understood very well.
The Silver Lining
John Roussel

French was to be no longer a hodgepodge or a patois, but the pure and perfect speech of the king and his court.
A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance
Joel Elias Spingarn

There is no mistaking it; it is peculiar to Pont du Sable, and note, too, her patois !
A Village of Vagabonds
F. Berkeley Smith

“The young patron is mistaken,” interposed the Indian, speaking a patois of the lingoa-geral.
Our Young Folks–Vol. I, No. II, February 1865
Various

Their language was a Spanish patois ; their voices were sharp and disagreeable.
The Scalp Hunters
Mayne Reid

“His Excellency is in there,” said the old man, in his Sicilian patois.
My Strangest Case
Guy Boothby

The man spoke in patois French, the woman in her native Cree language.
The Buffalo Runners
R.M. Ballantyne

patois, a name the French give to a corrupt dialect of a language spoken in a remote province of a country.
The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
Edited by Rev. James Wood

“Lower that spar, my lads,” he added, in the patois the men used.
Rob Harlow’s Adventures
George Manville Fenn

Anagram

so pita


Today’s quote

Don’t waste your time with explanations: people only hear what they want to hear.

– Paulo Coelho


On this day

9 December 1906 – birth 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 died on 4 June 1988.

9 December 1947 – Deputy Prime Minister of India, Sandar Valiabbhai Patel announces that India and Pakistan have reached an agreement on the borders of the two countries following partition … except for the issue of Kashmir, which is unresolved to this day.

9 December 1990 – Polish dissident, Solidarity union leader and 1983 Nobel Peace Prize winner, Lech Walesa wins Polish presidential election in a landslide. Solidarity was the Soviet Bloc’s first independent trade union. Walesa presided over Poland’s transition from a communist state to a post-communist state.

7 December 2016 – daedal

7 December 2016

daedal

[deed-l]

adjective

1. skillful; ingenious.
2. cleverly intricate, e.g. the computer’s daedal circuitry
3. diversified.
4. adorned with many things, e.g.

Origin of daedal

Latin, Greek
1580-1590; < Latin daedalus skillful < Greek daídalos, equivalent to daidál (lein) to work with skill + -os adj. suffix

Dictionary.com
merriam-webster.com

Anagram

ad deal
dad ale


Today’s quote

Friendship improves happiness and abates misery, by the doubling of our joy and the dividing of our grief.

– Marcus Tullius Cicero


On this day

7 December 43BC – death of Marcus Tullius Cicero (sometimes Anglicised as Tully), Roman statesman, politician, philosopher, orator. Tully’s influence on Latin and other European languages was immense and still felt up to the 19th century. The history of prose in Latin and other languages was said to be either a reaction against, or a return to, his style. Born 3 January 106BC .

7 December 1941 – bombing of Pearl Harbor by Imperial Japanese Navy during World War II. The bombing was a major tactical victory for Japan and led to the United States entering World War II. The USA suffered 2403 deaths, including 68 civilians, and 1178 wounded. Japan lost 64 lives.

7 December 1941 – At the same time as Pearl Harbour, Japan attacked British and Australian forces in Malaysia and Singapore, British forces in Hong Kong and US forces in the Philippines. British Prime Minister, Winston Churchill declared war on Japan as a result. Singapore fell to Japan on 15 February 1942. US General Douglas MacArthur escaped the Philippines in March 1942 as the country fell to Japan. He relocated his headquarters to Brisbane, Australia, and became the Supreme Commander of Allied forces in the Pacific, with forces from the United States, Australia, Netherlands, Britain and other countries coming under his command.

7 December 1987 – USSR President Mikael Gorbachev arrives in the USA for an arms control summit with US President Ronald Reagan. The summit resulted in the Intermediate Nuclear Force Treaty (INF) which called for elimination of all cruise and ballistic missiles and launchers in Europe that had a range of 320 to 3,400 miles. This was one of the most significant arms treaties of the Cold War.

7 December 1988 – An earthquake registering 7.2 on the richter scale, completely destroys the Armenian city of Spitak, in the Soviet Union, killing 50,000.

7 December 2001 – the Taliban regime surrenders 61 days after commencement of US-led war in Afghanistan.

6 December 2016 – Mediterranean

6 December 2016

Mediterranean

[med-i-tuh-rey-nee-uh n]

noun

1. Mediterranean Sea.
2. a person whose physical characteristics are considered typical of the peoples native to or inhabiting the Mediterranean area.
3. the, Informal. the islands and countries of the Mediterranean Sea collectively.
adjective
4. pertaining to, situated on or near, or dwelling about the Mediterranean Sea.
5. pertaining to or characteristic of the peoples native to the lands along or near the Mediterranean Sea.
6. surrounded or nearly surrounded by land.

Origin of Mediterranean

Latin

1585-1595; < Latin mediterrāne (us) midland, inland (see medium, terra, -an, -eous ) + -an. Latin: medius (middle), terra (earth) – literally, centre of the earth.

Related forms Expand
non-Mediterranean, noun, adjective
trans-Mediterranean, adjective
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2016.
Cite This Source
Examples from the Web for Mediterranean Expand
Contemporary Examples
But the study is a boon to Mediterranean expats in the U.S., particularly those in the restaurant business.

Eat Like a Greek: The Mediterranean Diet That Could Save Your Life
Lizzie Crocker
February 26, 2013
Mediterranean flavors paired with eggplant and barley make these lamb shanks perfect for winter.

Fresh Picks
Anne Burrell
December 28, 2009
Fruits and veggies are mainstays of the Mediterranean diet, along with legumes and fish.

Eat Like a Greek: The Mediterranean Diet That Could Save Your Life
Lizzie Crocker
February 26, 2013

Anagram

drama internee
manta reindeer
a marine tender


Today’s quote

You gotta be really careful what you bite off. Don’t bite off more than you can chew. It’s a dangerous world.

– Ozzy Osbourne


On this day

6 December 1790 – The United States Capitol is relocated from New York to Philadelphia. Ten years later, the District of Columbia is completed and the capitol permanently relocates there.

6 December 1922 – Creation of the Irish Free State as a dominion under the Anglo-Irish Treaty. Northern Ireland was included in the State, but chose not to join.

6 December 1928 – Chiquita Banana massacre. On 12 November 1928, workers for the American- owned United Fruit Company in Columbia went on strike. To protect UFC’s interests, the United States positioned Naval vessels off the coast of Columbia, threatening to invade if the Columbian government didn’t bring the strike under control. On 6 December, Columbian Army troops opened fire on the strikers, killing up to 3,000 people.

6 December 1956 – birth of Randy Rhoads, American heavy metal guitarist, played with Ozzy Osbourne and Quiet Riot. Rhoads was on tour with Ozzy Osbourne, heading to Orlando, Florida when their bus broke down near an airstrip at Leesburg, Florida. While some of the band continued sleeping in the van, the driver (an ex-commercial pilot) took one of the light planes for joy-rides with some of the band members. He didn’t have permission for the flights. Randy Rhoads and make-up artist, Rachel Youngblood were on the second flight. The pilot thought it would be funny to buzz the tour bus by flying as close as possible to it. On the third pass, the plane’s wing clipped the bus causing the plane to spiral out of control and for Rhoads and Youngblood’s heads to smash through the plane’s windshield. The plane severed the top of a pine tree before crashing into a garage at a nearby mansion. Rhoads, Youngblood and the pilot (Andrew Aycock) died instantly, all burnt beyond recognition. In 1987, Ozzy Osbourne released a live album in memory of Rhoads, called ‘Tribute’, it featured Osbourne and Rhoad’s work together. Died 19 March 1982.

6 December 1962 – a deadly smog, mainly containing sulfur dioxide, kills 90 people in London.

6 December 1969 – The Rolling Stones organise a free concert at the disused Altamont Speedway, Livermore, California, featuring themselves, as well as Jefferson Airplane, Santana, the Flying Burrito Brothers and Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young. Hell’s Angels were used as security, but the concert was marred by the deaths of four people, including one who was stabbed by a member of the Hell’s Angels.

5 December 2016 – asinine

5 December 2016

asinine

[as-uh-nahyn]

adjective

1. foolish, unintelligent, or silly; stupid:
It is surprising that supposedly intelligent people can make such asinine statements.
2. of or like an ass:
asinine obstinacy; asinine features.

Origin of asinine

Latin

1600-1610; < Latin asinīnus, equivalent to asin (us) ass1+ -īnus -ine1

Related forms

asininely, adverb
asininity [as-uh-nin-i-tee]. noun

Synonyms

1. See foolish.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for asinine

Contemporary Examples

Actress Ashley Judd, who campaigned against the aerial slaughter of wolves, is “a perky, pretty celebrity” with “ asinine plans.”
10 Palin Hits the Leakers Missed
Benjamin Sarlin, Samuel P. Jacobs
November 16, 2009

asinine comments like this leave the President looking like the only mature kid in town.
See Ya, Randian Romney!
Justin Green
November 14, 2012

Is Olivia Pope an “Angry Black Woman,” as one asinine TV critic suggests?
‘Scandal’ Review: Olivia Pope Has Lost Her Damn Mind
Kevin Fallon
September 25, 2014

She hypnotized Cory with her free spirit, freer hair, and asinine name, coaxing him out of his shell and into love with her.
‘Boy Meets World’ Turns 20: The Silly Show We Can’t Help but Love
Kevin Fallon
September 23, 2013

Funny how the ones deemed “geniuses” always act the most asinine in relationships.
Lights, Camera, Cocktails
Brody Brown
September 10, 2011

Historical Examples

What an asinine act, this pouring of poison into the stomach to cure a malady of the soul!
The Root of Evil
Thomas Dixon

Why can not you keep quiet, instead of making your asinine remarks?
Among the Humorists and After Dinner Speakers, Vol. I
Various

It was the first time I had presented myself at a strange hotel without my asinine credentials.
On a Donkey’s Hurricane Deck
R. Pitcher Woodward

These equine and asinine glories have passed away, extinguished by the rail.
Lancashire Folk-lore
John Harland

If you had an idea that I am the type of man to use as the butt for a silly, asinine jest, I’ll teach you to think differently.
Mixed Faces
Roy Norton

Anagram

is insane
in anise


Today’s quote

Nevertheless the passions, whether violent or not, should never be so expressed as to reach the point of causing disgust; and music, even in situations of the greatest horror, should never be painful to the ear but should flatter and charm it, and thereby always remain music.

– Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart


5 December – International Volunteer Day

5 December 1791 – death of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, composer. Born 27 January 1756.

5 December 1870 – death of Alexandré Dumas, French author of celebrated works such as ‘Count of Monte Christo‘, ‘The Three Musketeers‘, ‘The Black Tulip‘. Born 24 July 1802.

5 December 1972 – Gough Whitlam appointed Prime Minister of Australia. Whitlam led the Australian Labor Party to its first victory since 1949. The results of some electoral seats had not been finalised, so Whitlam and Deputy Prime Minister, Lance Barnard ran a duumvirate government by taking on all 27 ministerial portfolios between them for two weeks, until Whitlam could select his ministry. Labor had won control of the House of Representatives but failed to gain control of the Senate, which resulted in numerous bills being blocked by the Upper House. With the Senate threatening to block supply (failing to vote in favour of the budget), Whitam introduced a bill that was defeated twice in the Senate, leading to a double dissolution of parliament. Labor was reelected at the subsequent election and continued to control the House of Representatives with a reduced majority. In the Senate, Labor and Liberal both won 29 seats, with the balance of power held by two independents. Even with the almost paralysed government that he led, Whitlam managed a number of crucial achievements including abolition of the White Australia policy, withdrawing Australian troops from Vietnam and ended conscription in 1972, granting independence to Papua New Guinea, Medibank, multi-culturalism, abolition of university tuition fees, establishing a new government department for Aboriginal Affairs and one for Environment, Aboriginal Land Fund Commission, Australian Legal Aid Office, National Employment and Training Scheme, Trade Practices Act 1975, Racial Discrimination Act 1975, National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1975, Family Law Act 1975. In October 1975, opposition leader Malcolm Fraser again threatened to block supply which would have seen the government’s budget run out on 10 November 1975. A compromise couldn’t be reached and on 11 November 1975, Governor-General Kerr sacked the Whitlam government and appointed Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister.

5 December 2013 – death of Nelson Mandela, South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and politician. Born 18 July 1918.

5 December – International Volunteer Day

5 December 1791 – death of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, composer.

5 December 1870 – death of Alexandré Dumas, French author of celebrated works such as ‘Count of Monte Christo‘, ‘The Three Musketeers‘, ‘The Black Tulip‘. Born 24 July 1802.

5 December 1972 – Gough Whitlam appointed Prime Minister of Australia. Whitlam led the Australian Labor Party to its first victory since 1949. The results of some electoral seats had not been finalised, so Whitlam and Deputy Prime Minister, Lance Barnard ran a duumvirate government by taking on all 27 ministerial portfolios between them for two weeks, until Whitlam could select his ministry. Labor had won control of the House of Representatives but failed to gain control of the Senate, which resulted in numerous bills being blocked by the Upper House. With the Senate threatening to block supply (failing to vote in favour of the budget), Whitam introduced a bill that was defeated twice in the Senate, leading to a double dissolution of parliament. Labor was reelected at the subsequent election and continued to control the House of Representatives with a reduced majority. In the Senate, Labor and Liberal both won 29 seats, with the balance of power held by two independents. Even with the almost paralysed government that he led, Whitlam managed a number of crucial achievements including abolition of the White Australia policy, withdrawing Australian troops from Vietnam and ended conscription in 1972, granting independence to Papua New Guinea, Medibank, multi-culturalism, abolition of university tuition fees, establishing a new government department for Aboriginal Affairs and one for Environment, Aboriginal Land Fund Commission, Australian Legal Aid Office, National Employment and Training Scheme, Trade Practices Act 1975, Racial Discrimination Act 1975, National Parks and Wildlife Conservation Act 1975, Family Law Act 1975. In October 1975, opposition leader Malcolm Fraser again threatened to block supply which would have seen the government’s budget run out on 10 November 1975. A compromise couldn’t be reached and on 11 November 1975, Governor-General Kerr sacked the Whitlam government and appointed Malcolm Fraser as Prime Minister.

5 December 2013 – death of Nelson Mandela, South African anti-apartheid revolutionary and politician. Born 18 July 1918.

4 December 2016 – elicit

4 December 2016

elicit

[ih-lis-it]

verb (used with object)

1. to draw or bring out or forth; educe; evoke:
to elicit the truth; to elicit a response with a question.

Origin of elicit

Latin

1635-1645; Latin ēlicitus drawn out (past participle of ēlicere), equivalent to ē- e-1+ lici- draw, lure + -tus past participle suffix

Related forms

elicitation, noun
elicitor, noun

nonelicited, adjective
unelicited, adjective

Can be confused

elicit, illicit.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for elicit

Contemporary Examples

The accusation that Makaburi encouraged young men to kill Americans touched a nerve—and did not elicit a denial.
Death Squads in Kenya’s Shadow War on Shabaab Sympathizers
Margot Kiser
April 5, 2014

The Deport Justin Bieber Petition, has already garnered the necessary number of signatures to elicit a White House response.
Justin Bieber Has Been Drag Racing Down the Road to Recovery
Amy Zimmerman
February 4, 2014

Putman’s funeral will elicit new tributes Wednesday at the Saint-Germain-des-Prés church in Paris.
Andrée Putman, ‘the Grande Dame of Design,’ Revolutionized Interiors
Tracy McNicoll
January 19, 2013

Not bad, if Sediuk’s intentions really were to elicit an authentic response from the original Material Girl.
An Analysis of Vitalii Sediuk’s Pranks (He’s the Guy Who Touched Brad Pitt)
Amy Zimmerman
May 28, 2014

Historical Examples

Possibly, but not one more likely to elicit Wallenstein’s candour.
The Mercenary
W. J. Eccott

With what authority do we elicit respect and obedience from our little people!
Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906
Various

But whenever the teacher fails to elicit both respect and love, his power for good is lost.
Buchanan’s Journal of Man, June 1887
Various

No amount of cross-examination could elicit any further information.
The Light of Scarthey
Egerton Castle

No question was admissible which tended to elicit information or a positive declaration from the respondent.
Aristotle
George Grote

Anagram

lit ice


Today’s quote

We must plan for freedom, and not only for security, if for no other reason than that only freedom can make security secure.

– Karl Popper


On this day

4 December 1952 – A deadly smog in London caused by soot and sulphur dioxide from factories, cars and home coal-fires. It continues for four days and kills at least 4,000 people.

4 December 1954 – the first franchised Burger King store is opened in Miami, Florida by James McLamore and David Edgerton.

4 December 1961 – the birth control contraceptive pill (‘the pill’) available publicly through the National Health Service.

4 December 1969 – 14 police shoot dead two members of the Black Panther Party, Fred Hampton and Mary Clark, who were asleep in their apartment. The Black Panther Party was committed to racial equality and rights for African Americans.

4 December 1971 – Montreux Casino in Switzerland burns to the ground, becoming the inspiration for rock’s most identifiable riff, Smoke on the Water. Savvy listeners will hear the song refer to Montreux, the Gambling House, a flare gun and of course, the brilliant, Frank Zappa & the Mothers. Deep Purple was in Montreux, on Lake Geneva, recording their legendary album, Machine Head, in the Rolling Stones Mobile Recording Studio (or ‘truck thing’ as they call it in the song) and penned arguably the greatest riff of all time after the gambling house went up in flames during a Frank Zappa & the Mothers of Invention concert. The fire began when someone fired a flare gun into the rattan ceiling during the Zappa song, ‘King Kong’. This link is footage of the actual concert that Frank Zappa & the Mothers were playing in the Montreux Casino on the Lake Geneva shoreline when ‘some stupid with a flare gun burned the place to the ground’ causing smoke on the water & fire in the sky … https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lpFeopjJhI

3 December 2016 – cadge

3 December 2016

cadge(1)

[kaj]

verb (used with object), cadged, cadging.

1. to obtain by imposing on another’s generosity or friendship.
2. to borrow without intent to repay.
3. to beg or obtain by begging.
verb (used without object), cadged, cadging.
4. to ask, expect, or encourage another person to pay for or provide one’s drinks, meals, etc.
5. to beg.

Origin of cadge(1)

Middle English

1275-1325; perhaps to be identified with Middle English caggen to tie, of uncertain origin

Related forms

cadger, noun

cadge(2)

[kaj]

noun, Falconry.

1. a frame on which hawks are carried to the field.

Origin

1605-15; apparently variant of cage

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cadge

He might cadge for a bath, but his hands he could look after himself for nothing.
The Story of Louie
Oliver Onions

Anagram

caged


Today’s quote

It isn’t necessary to imagine the world ending in fire or ice. There are two other possibilities: one is paperwork, and the other is nostalgia.

– Frank Zappa


On this day

3 December – International Day of Persons with Disabilities.

3 December 1854 – the Eureka Rebellion (Battle of the Eureka Stockade) in Ballarat, Victoria, Australia. Gold miners, led by Peter Lalor and Henry Ross, revolted against the oppression of the British colonial powers as well as the excessive charges for miners licences. Between 22 and 60 people were killed in the rebellion and around 120 were arrested. The rebellion resulted in the right to vote for men and so is often seen as the birth of democracy in Australia.

3 December 1944 – Civil war breaks out in Greece following its liberation during World War II, when communist rebels fight democratic forces for control.

3 December 1948 – birth of Ozzy Osbourne, legendary British rocker, former lead singer of Black Sabbath, who has also had a successful solo career. He was born as John Michael Osbourne.

3 December 1984 – Bhopal Union Carbide accident in India in which thousands of people die from toxic gases that leaked from the factory when safety systems failed.

3 December 1992 – the world’s first SMS is sent. This monumental event occurred in the United Kingdom when Neil Papworth of the SEMA Group used a PC to send the message over a Vodafone GSM network to Richard Jarvis of Vodafone, who was using an Orbitel 901 phone. The message was ‘Merry Christmas’.

3 December 1993 – death of Frank Zappa, American revolutionary musician. Born 21 December 1940.

2 December 2016 – sepia

2 December 2016

sepia

[see-pee-uh]

noun

1. a brown pigment obtained from the inklike secretion of various cuttlefish and used with brush or pen in drawing.
2. a drawing made with this pigment.
3. a dark brown.
4. Photography. a print or photograph made in this color.
5. any of several cuttlefish of the genus Sepia, producing a dark fluid used naturally for defense and, by humans, in ink.
adjective
6. of a brown, grayish brown, or olive brown similar to that of sepia ink.

Origin of sepia

Latin, Greek
1560-1570; < Latin sēpia cuttlefish, its secretion < Greek sēpía; akin to sêpsis sepsis

Related forms

sepialike, adjective
sepic [see-pik, sep-ik], adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sepia

Contemporary Examples

With a book about Jane Franklin and her life of letters to her brother Benjamin, sepia yellow connotes yellowing papers.
You Can Indeed Judge a Book By Its Cover
Brian Gresko
November 19, 2013

Each of those women had a sepia photograph on the mantelpiece, of a young man in uniform.
The Tragic, Heroic Women of World War I
Jacqueline Winspear
June 28, 2014

A sepia photo shows him as a young boy, head in his hands, with a large book open at a bar table.
The Bars That Made America Great
Nina Strochlic
December 27, 2014

Filmed in Riga, Latvia, in monochromatic, sepia tones, the film evokes a world drained of life and color.
The Female ‘Schindler’
Kati Marton
April 17, 2009

Both play within a relatively constrained color palette rich in sepia yellow, with strategic daubs of sky blue and red.
You Can Indeed Judge a Book By Its Cover
Brian Gresko
November 19, 2013

Historical Examples

Its flavour is most rich, and its texture most delicate when the gills show the pink colour with sepia margins.
Mushroom Culture
W. Robinson

All derived from cuttle-fish varieties of sepia used for baits.
The Sailor’s Word-Book
William Henry Smyth

The picture is a copy in sepia tones of Murillo’s Saint Anthony, 16 inches in height by 20 inches horizontally.
The Library of Work and Play: Home Decoration
Charles Franklin Warner

This food is chiefly the Squid or sepia octopus, known also by the name of the cuttle-fish.
Old Jack
W.H.G. Kingston

In other cases they extend laterally along a greater length of the body, as in sepia (fig. 15).
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 5, Slice 6
Various

Anagram

as pie


Today’s quote

Let everyone regulate his conduct… by the golden rule of doing to others as in similar circumstances we would have them do to us, and the path of duty will be clear before him.

– William Wilberforce


On this day

2 December – International Day for the Abolition of Slavery.

2 December 1972 – death of Yip Man, Wing Chun Kung Fu grand-master. Immortalised in the movie, Ip Man. Born 1 October 1893.

December 2016 – WOTDs

December 2016


31 December 2016

glebe

[gleeb]

noun

1. Also called glebe land. Chiefly British. the cultivable land owned by a parish church or ecclesiastical benefice.
2. Archaic. soil; field.

Origin of glebe

Middle English, Latin

1275-1325; Middle English < Latin glēba, glaeba clod of earth

Related forms

glebeless, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for glebe

Historical Examples

It had never occurred to me that a parson has no fee-simple in the house and glebe he occupies.
The Works of William Cowper
William Cowper

A terrier of glebe lands, with any exchange noted, should be made.
Churchwardens’ Manual
George Henry

One could almost make an accurate restoration drawing of this glebe house from the description.
Virginia Architecture in the Seventeenth Century
Henry Chandlee Forman

Anagram

be leg


30 December 2016

poseur

[poh-zur; French paw-zœr]

noun, plural poseurs [poh-zurz; French paw-zœr]

1. a person who attempts to impress others by assuming or affecting a manner, degree of elegance, sentiment, etc., other than his or her true one.

Origin of poseur

French

1880-1885; < French; see pose1, -eur

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for poseur

Historical Examples

It is the poseur who is soft—soft at the very top, where Henry Ford is hard.
Abroad at Home
Julian Street

Poet and poseur he was, the strangest combination ever seen in man.
The Daffodil Mystery
Edgar Wallace

They were inclined to think he was somewhat of a poseur at first, but later they came to like him—all of them.
The “Genius”
Theodore Dreiser

He may be named only to be cursed as wanton and mocker, poseur, trifler and vagrant.
Ezra Pound: His Metric and Poetry
T. S. Eliot

He was not a poseur ; he was merely sensitively conscious of himself and of life as an art.
The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson – Swanston Edition
Robert Louis Stevenson

He’s not a bit like an actor; he’s natural and not a bit of a poseur.
My Actor-Husband
Anonymous

As to his personality, it seems to be that of the poseur —almost of the snob.
The Key to Yesterday
Charles Neville Buck

Even in “De Profundis” the poseur supplemented the artist, and the truth was not in him.
Oscar Wilde
Leonard Cresswell Ingleby

Mr. Bellton was at heart the poseur, but he was also the fighter.
The Key to Yesterday
Charles Neville Buck

Many consider Tolstoy a poseur, but he sincerely believes in himself.
Abroad with the Jimmies
Lilian Bell

Anagram

rope us
so pure


29 December 2016

raillery

[rey-luh-ree]

noun, plural railleries.

1. good-humored ridicule; banter.
2. a bantering remark.

Origin of raillery

French

1645-1655; < French raillerie, equivalent to Middle French raill (er) to rail2+ -erie -ery

Synonyms

1. jesting, joking, badinage, chaff, pleasantry.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for raillery

Historical Examples

For my own part, I thought pride in his case an improper subject for raillery.
Clarissa, Volume 1 (of 9)
Samuel Richardson

Poussin studied nature with a minuteness that often exposed him to raillery.
Chambers’s Edinburgh Journal, No. 462
Various

His powers of wit and raillery never failed him, even to the Deathbed wit last.
A History of the Nineteenth Century, Year by Year
Edwin Emerson

Her raillery, like the raillery of princes, was without fear of retort.
Tales And Novels, Volume 4 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

He had disdained to reply further than by shaking his wise old head, but had omitted no precaution because of her raillery.
Dorothy’s House Party
Evelyn Raymond

I was a little afraid of his raillery, and of the quickness of his observation.
Tales And Novels, Volume 9 (of 10)
Maria Edgeworth

He, he, I swear though, your raillery provokes me to a smile.
The Comedies of William Congreve
William Congreve

Notwithstanding this raillery, all that was said did take place.
The Memoirs of Count Grammont, Complete
Anthony Hamilton

He ignored her raillery, and told her what he thought of a courage so fine and ready.
A Daughter of the Dons
William MacLeod Raine

If your mood incline to raillery you’ll find your match in some lad of the stables.
The Shame of Motley
Raphael Sabatini

Anagram

rare lily
rely rail


28 December 2016

cisgender or cis-gender

[sis-jen-der]

adjective

1. Also, cisgendered. noting or relating to a person whose gender identity corresponds with that person’s biological sex assigned at birth.
noun
2. a person who is cisgender.

Not transgender.

Origin of cisgender

1990-1995; cis- ( def 3 ) + gender1; modeled on transgender

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cisgender

Contemporary Examples

Cis Male (see also Cis Man, cisgender Male, cisgender Man); a male who identifies as a man/has a masculine gender identity.
If gender isn’t binary, if it is fluid and can transgress boundaries, than a binary between cisgender and transgender cannot exist.
I am NOT cisgendered
J. Nelson Aviance
18 July 2014
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/j-nelson-aviance/i-am-not-cisgendered_b_5598113.html

Anagram

cede grins
creed sign
green disc


27 December 2016

whist drive

noun

1. a social gathering where whist is played; the winners of each hand move to different tables to play the losers of the previous hand.

Example

Every Friday night, for years they attended a whist drive.

Anagram

diver whits
TV whirs die


26 December 2016

taciturn

[tas-i-turn]

adjective

1. inclined to silence; reserved in speech; reluctant to join in conversation.
2. dour, stern, and silent in expression and manner.

Origin of taciturn

Latin

1765-1775; Latin taciturnus, quiet, maintaining silence, equivalent to tacit (us) silent (see tacit ) + -urnus adj. suffix of time

Related forms

taciturnly, adverb
untaciturn, adjective
untaciturnly, adverb

Synonyms

1. silent, uncommunicative, reticent, quiet.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for taciturn

Contemporary Examples

Tall and taciturn, he exuded the easy authority of a young man used to money and the deference that came with it.
Doug Kenney: The Odd Comic Genius Behind ‘Animal House’ and National Lampoon
Robert Sam Anson
February 28, 2014

No one would confuse him the taciturn, forgetful and vengeful Senate Majority Leader.
Nevada Guv Faces Fans and Foes in Reelection
Lloyd Green
March 17, 2014

The exuberant, indefatigable Democrat from Oregon and the dour, taciturn Republican from New Hampshire made an odd couple.
The Senate’s New Taxman Won’t Be Controlled By His Own Party
Linda Killian
February 17, 2014

But he was also taciturn, rarely betraying his inner thoughts, his friends have said.
Moon Men: The Private Lives of Neil Armstrong and Pals in “Togethersville”
Lily Koppel
August 31, 2012

Historical Examples

Sometimes Master Tommy is obstinate, as well as taciturn, and his “won’t” is as strong as his will.
Manners and Rules of Good Society
Anonymous

Don Saturnino was taciturn and of violent temper, but very industrious.
An Eagle Flight
Jos Rizal

This was the hope which had produced his taciturn resignation and brought that savage smile on his lips.
The Collection of Antiquities
Honore de Balzac

A loquacious advocate is more likely to gain his case than a taciturn one.
The Proverbs of Scotland
Alexander Hislop

Little by little, one word at a time, he gained from the taciturn negro an idea of what had taken place while he slept.
“Forward, March”
Kirk Munroe

Anagram

attic urn
tacit run


25 December 2016

pied-à-terre

[pee-ey-duh-tair, -dah-, pyey-]

noun, plural pieds-à-terre [pee-ey-duh-tair, -dah-, pyey-]

1. a residence, as an apartment, for part-time or temporary use.

Origin of pied-à-terre

1820-1830; < French: literally, foot on ground

Dictionary.com

Example

The pied-à-terre was a secret from his wife, to be used with his mistress.

Anagram

tired peer


24 December 2016

kybosh or kibosh

[kahy-bosh, ki-bosh]

noun

1. a variant spelling of kibosh

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

Examples from the Web for kybosh

Contemporary Examples

For all intents and purposes Australia now has two federal governments. Government number one appears to front the people, attend official functions, promise things then backtrack. Government number two seems to call the shots and kybosh the other’s policy.Government number two seems to call the shots and kybosh the other’s policy.
Comment: Malcolm Turnbull buckles on effective climate action
Sydney Morning Herald
12 December 2016
http://www.msn.com/en-au/news/australia/comment-malcolm-turnbull-buckles-on-effective-climate-action/ar-AAlqAh3

This definitely puts the kybosh on the make-up rumors, as there is no way Harry could marry a movie star.
Cressida Bonas Cast In New Weinstein Movie
Tom Sykes
June 10, 2014

Historical Examples

That put the kybosh on one bit, but it didn’t ‘urt the general scheme not a bit.
Twelve Stories and a Dream
H. G. Wells

kybosh ; some sort of difficulty or ‘fix’:—’He put the kybosh on him: he defeated him.’
English As We Speak It in Ireland
P. W. Joyce

There’ll be a dickens of a kybosh if they find we’ve broken parole, and I don’t want you hauled into the beastly thing.
The Riddle of the Spinning Wheel
Mary E. Hanshew

Anagram

hob sky


23 December 2016

Ponzi

[pon-zee]

noun

1. a swindle in which a quick return, made up of money from new investors, on an initial investment lures the victim into much bigger risks.

Also called Ponzi game, Ponzi scheme.

Origin of Ponzi

after Charles Ponzi (died 1949), the organizer of such a scheme in the U.S., 1919-20

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Ponzi

Contemporary Examples

De la Villehuchet’s suicide adds yet another gruesome chapter to the Bernie Madoff Ponzi scheme.
Suicides on Wall Street
Charlie Gasparino
December 30, 2008

Through Vennes, religious investors poured money into what turned out to be a multibillion-dollar Ponzi scheme.
Bachmann and Pawlenty’s Ponzi Pal
Michelle Goldberg
April 27, 2011

Many of the victims of the Ponzi scheme are actually not victims at all but people who got out more than they put in.
Madoff Victims’ Gibraltar Money Grab
Lucinda Franks
March 17, 2009

I don’t think he ever even slipped—you know, dropped some hint—about his Ponzi scheme to any of his mistresses.
Madoff’s Other Girlfriends
Lucinda Franks
August 14, 2009

Perry called Social Security a Ponzi scheme and “a monstrous lie.”
Paul Begala to Rick Perry: Adios, Mofo
Paul Begala
January 18, 2012

When the Ponzi scheme collapsed, the couple was forced to sell the two-bedroom apartment at the distressed price of $1.2 million.
Meet Madoff’s Mistress
Allan Dodds Frank
August 13, 2009

Prosecutors said the Ponzi scheme, run over decades, moved more than $170 billion in and out of more than 4,000 customer accounts.
Feds Want 150 Years for Bernie
Allan Dodds Frank
June 25, 2009

Now that would be a neat trick: the alleged Ponzi artist bringing his victims down to his own level.
Sticking It to Madoff Victims
Benjamin Sarlin
January 27, 2009

Anagram

zip on


22 December 2016

ex parte

[eks pahr-tee]

adjective, adverb

1. from or on one side only of a dispute, as a divorce suit; without notice to or the presence of the other party.

Origin of ex parte

Latin

1665-1675; < Latin

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ex parte

Contemporary Examples

The unusual procedure by Swain of reviewing documents ” ex parte ” amounted to the judge going an extra mile to be fair.
Madoff Secretary Annette Bongiorno Jailed Over Ponzi Millions
Allan Dodds Frank
December 20, 2010

Historical Examples

It was an ex parte judgment which a look at the other fellow might have modified.
From the Bottom Up
Alexander Irvine

ex parte : on one side; an ex parte statement is a statement on one side only.
The Verbalist
Thomas Embly Osmun, (AKA Alfred Ayres)

Anagram

a expert
pert axe
peer tax
peter ax


21 December 2016

apiary

[ey-pee-er-ee]

noun, plural apiaries.

1. a place in which a colony or colonies of bees are kept, as a stand or shed for beehives or a bee house containing a number of beehives.

Origin of apiary

Latin

1645-1655; < Latin apiārium beehive, equivalent to api (s) bee + -ārium -ary

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for apiary

Contemporary Examples

He came to the Waldorf two years ago from a hotel in Toronto, where he ran a similar rooftop garden and apiary.
Honey Harvest at the Waldorf Astoria’s Beehives
Josh Dzieza
August 2, 2013

Historical Examples

It could, however, be recommended as an integral part of a windbreak, or woodlot where the land owner has an apiary.
Trees of Indiana
Charles Clemon Deam

Proper condition of an apiary at close of honey season, 321.
Langstroth on the Hive and the Honey-Bee
L. L. Langstroth

There is nothing about the apiary more difficult to determine, nothing more likely than to be deceived.
Mysteries of Bee-keeping Explained
M. Quinby

In the apiary of one of his parishioners, five swarms lit in one mass.
Langstroth on the Hive and the Honey-Bee
L. L. Langstroth

The señora, guided by a quicker sense than that of her husband, had gone straight to the apiary.
The Ape, the Idiot & Other People
W. C. Morrow

Never did apiary have a finer outlook or more rugged surroundings.
Expository Writing
Mervin James Curl

This they remember, and retaliate, as occasion offers; and it may be when quietly walking in the apiary.
Mysteries of Bee-keeping Explained
M. Quinby

Before you get the first colony decide where your apiary is to be located.
The Library of Work and Play: Outdoor Work
Mary Rogers Miller

I have not yet forgotten the first apiary I saw, where I learned to love the bees.
The Life of the Bee
Maurice Maeterlinck

Anagram

air pay


20 December 2016

piffle

[pif-uh l] Informal.

noun

1. nonsense, as trivial or senseless talk.
verb (used without object), piffled, piffling.
2. to talk nonsense.

Origin of piffle

1840-1850; perhaps akin to puff

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for piffle

Contemporary Examples

Of course, the book market suffers from being saturated by piffle and filth, but has this not always been the case?
In Defense of Martin Amis’ ‘Lionel Asbo’
Liam Hoare
August 20, 2012

Despite the best efforts of the Gowers family, the towers of piffle have continued to climb ever higher.
Will Jargon Be the Death of the English Language?
The Telegraph
March 29, 2014

Historical Examples

But she did not intend to write a love story—that was piffle.
Etheldreda the Ready
Mrs. George de Horne Vaizey

Anagram

if pelf


19 December 2016

omnishambles

[om-nuh-sham-buh lz]

noun, plural omnishambles. (used with a singular verb)

1. Chiefly British Informal. a situation, especially in politics, in which poor judgment results in disorder or chaos with potentially disastrous consequences.

Origin of omnishambles

2009; omni- + shamble(s)1( def 1 ); first used in the BBC TV series “The Thick of It,” a political satire

Dictionary.com

Anagram

balm hominess
Mason blemish
Hmm abseils on


18 December 2016

thane or thegn

[theyn]

noun

1. Early English History. a member of any of several aristocratic classes of men ranking between earls and ordinary freemen, and granted lands by the king or by lords for military service.
2. Scottish History. a person, ranking with an earl’s son, holding lands of the king; the chief of a clan, who became one of the king’s barons.

Origin of thane

Scots, Middle English, Old English

900 before 900; late Middle English, spelling variant ( Scots) of Middle English thain, thein, Old English thegn; cognate with Old Norse thegn subject, German Degen warrior, hero, Greek téknon child

Related forms

underthane, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for thane

Contemporary Examples

In August 2001, a politician in thane, the sprawling city northeast of Mumbai, died in the Singhania hospital there.
Mumbai on Edge With Shiv Sena Founder Bal Thackeray Ill
Dilip D’Souza
November 15, 2012

thane Creech, too, has his doubts that President Obama can deliver.
How It Played in the Gulf
Rick Outzen
June 15, 2010

Historical Examples

As he walked across the court thane looked carefully at his opponent, appraising him.
Evil Out of Onzar
Mark Ganes

“Drink and sing, thou beast, and cease prating,” the thane said.
Burlesques
William Makepeace Thackeray

As thane lined up the pirate again, the intercom said, “Five seconds to warp-line!”
Evil Out of Onzar
Mark Ganes

How, then, was a thane to plant new settlers on his ‘gesettes-land’?
The English Village Community
Frederic Seebohm

The rank of a priest as equal to that of a thane is frequently recognized.
Parish Priests and Their People in the Middle Ages in England
Edward L. Cutts

We must remember that the overlord might be the king, or a bishop; a monastery, or a thane.
Our English Towns and Villages
H. R. Wilton Hall

I am content to be a thane, as my father was before me, and seek no greater change than that of a stay for a month at court.
Wulf the Saxon
G. A. Henty

There is not a thane of them but in his house I have a servant feed.
Early English Dramatists–Recently Recovered “Lost” Tudor Plays with some others
Various

Anagram

neath
he tan


17 December 2016

teleology

[tel-ee-ol-uh-jee, tee-lee-]

noun, Philosophy.

1. the doctrine that final causes exist.
2. the study of the evidences of design or purpose in nature.
3. such design or purpose.
4. the belief that purpose and design are a part of or are apparent in nature.
5. (in vitalist philosophy) the doctrine that phenomena are guided not only by mechanical forces but that they also move toward certain goals of self-realization.

Origin of teleology

1730-1740; < New Latin teleologia. See teleo-, -logy

Related forms

teleological [tel-ee-uh-loj-i-kuh l, tee-lee-], teleologic, adjective
teleologism, noun
teleologist, noun

Dictionary.com

Anagram

tell gooey
to yell ego


16 December 2016

verso

[vur-soh]

noun, plural versos. Printing.

1. a left-hand page of an open book or manuscript (opposed to recto ).

Origin of verso

Latin

1830-1840; short for Latin in versō foliō on the turned leaf

pollice verso

[pohl-li-ke wer-soh; English pol-uh-see vur-soh]

adverb, Latin.

1. with thumbs turned downward: the sign made by spectators calling for the death of a defeated gladiator in the ancient Roman circus.

folio verso

[foh-lee-oh vur-soh; Latin foh-lee-oh wer-soh]

noun

1. the back of the page; verso (opposed to folio recto ).

Origin
Latin

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for verso

Historical Examples

There is a woodcut of the royal arms on verso of titlepage, which occurs again on K3vv at the beginning of the ‘Confessions’.
Catalogue of the Books Presented by Edward Capell to the Library of Trinity College in Cambridge
W. W. Greg

The modern title page and verso have been relocated to the end of the text.
Chronicles of Border Warfare
Alexander Scott Withers

Transcriptions of ads from the verso of the cover and the verso of the half-title page follow.
Paper-bag Cookery
Vera Serkoff

A Table of Contents has been added below the verso to aid in navigation.
Mystery at Geneva
Rose Macaulay

Anagram

roves
overs
servo


15 December 2016

recto

[rek-toh]

noun, plural rectos. Printing.

1. a right-hand page of an open book or manuscript; the front of a leaf (opposed to verso ).

Origin of recto

Late Latin, Latin
1815-1825; < Late Latin rēctō (foliō) on the right-hand (leaf or page), ablative of Latin rēctus right

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for recto

Historical Examples

On the recto of the first leaf there is a large woodcut of Pynson’s arms, or device No.
The Ship of Fools, Volume 1
Sebastian Brandt

(recto) “Here begynneth the prologue of this present treatyse.”
The Ship of Fools, Volume 1
Sebastian Brandt

The Latin text is on the verso of the page, the English on the recto, facing each other.
A Catalogue of Books in English Later than 1700 (Vol 2 of 3)
Various

The text ends on the recto of l 6, the last page being blank.
Game and Playe of the Chesse
Caxton

(folio 11 recto) The socket of the eye is not over-depressed, for it has to receive the images (spetie) of visible things.
Studies in the History and Method of Science
Various

Both the recto and the verso of the leaf have the full complement of 23 lines but there is a hiatus in the text.
Catalogue of the William Loring Andrews Collection of Early Books in the Library of Yale University
Anonymous

In addition to the ordinary page numbers, each text labeled the recto (odd) pages of the first half of each signature.
Reflections on Dr. Swift’s Letter to Harley (1712) and The British Academy (1712)
John Oldmixon

Stamp date of bill and cost in book on first recto after title page: “27 June 1914 Binding 75.”
Library Bookbinding
Arthur Low Bailey

Instead, it labeled the recto (odd) pages of the first few leaves of each 8-page signature.
The Path-Way to Knowledg
Robert Record

Term indicating that the print on the verso falls exactly over that on the recto.
Library Bookbinding
Arthur Low Bailey

Anagram

cot re


14 December 2016

calescent

[kuh-les-uh nt]

adjective

1. growing warm; increasing in heat.

Origin of calescent

Latin

1795-1805; < Latin calēscent- (stem of calēscēns becoming warm, present participle of calēscere), equivalent to cal- (stem of calēre to be warm) + -ēscent- -escent

Related forms

calescence, noun

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for calescent

Historical Examples

This calescent mode of proceeding was adopted with the idea of exciting a counter-irritation in the diseased part.
The Great Events by Famous Historians, Volume 14
Various

Anagram

lace cents
scan elect


13 December 2016

dotard

[doh-terd]

noun

1. a person, especially an old person, exhibiting a decline in mental faculties; a weak-minded or foolish old person.
2. doater(2).

Origin of dotard

Middle English

1350-1400; Middle English; see dote, -ard

Related forms

dotardly, adverb

Dictionary.com

Anagram

add rot
do dart


12 December 2016

orrery

[awr-uh-ree, or-]

noun, plural orreries.

1. an apparatus for representing the positions, motions, and phases of the planets, satellites, etc., in the solar system.
2. any of certain similar machines, as a planetarium.

Origin of orrery

1705-1715; named after Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery (1676-1731), for whom it was first made

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for orrery

Historical Examples

His countenance, says orrery, could be terribly expressive of the sterner passions.
Swift
Leslie Stephen

He was the improver of that noble instrument the orrery, which, in honour of him, was called after his name.
Chelsea
George Bryan

And they constructed a government as they would have constructed an orrery,—to display the laws of nature.
The New Freedom
Woodrow Wilson


11 December 2016

brandish

[bran-dish]

verb (used with object)

1. to shake or wave, as a weapon; flourish:
Brandishing his sword, he rode into battle.

noun

2. a flourish or waving, as of a weapon.

Origin of brandish

Middle English, Middle French
1275-1325; Middle English bra (u) ndisshen < Anglo-French, Middle French brandiss- (long stem of brandir, derivative of brand sword < Gmc). See brand, -ish2

Related forms

brandisher, noun

Synonyms

1. swing, flaunt, wield, display.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for brandish

Contemporary Examples

Those who do nothing to end the slaughter are as complicit as those who brandish their weapons.
The Coalition of the Unwilling
Christopher Dickey
September 6, 2013

It does not give you license to brandish a gun and wave it around.
American Gun Law 5
David Frum
December 17, 2012

Both Cameron and Sarkozy will now brandish their cojones, claiming to have had “a good war.”
Libya War’s Unsung Heroes
Clive Irving
August 21, 2011

As with his Harvard degree, Obama did not hesitate to brandish his pretty white wife with the Boston accent.
The Tragic Life of Barack Obama’s Father
Sally H. Jacobs
July 9, 2011

Historical Examples

No, he could not brandish it, he could not so much as even lift it.
Tales from the Fjeld
P. Chr. Asbjrnsen

Why brandish in that hand of thine a javelin of pointed steel?
The $30,000 Bequest and Other Stories
Mark Twain

When he began to dance and to brandish the silver sword, everybody applauded.
Folk-Tales of the Khasis
K. U. Rafy

What is your stick good for that you brandish it so proudly?
Sagas from the Far East
Various

Suddenly he was startled by seeing his mother snatch a stump of a fire-shovel from the hearth and brandish it over his head.
All He Knew
John Habberton

This the ape at once laid hold of, and began to brandish like a hammer.
Animal Intelligence
George J. Romanes

Anagram

his brand
hinds bar
bash rind


10 December 2016

exonym

[ek-soh-nim]

noun

1. a name used by foreigners for a place, as Florence for Firenze.
2. a name used by foreigners to refer to a people or social group that the group itself does not use, as Germans for Deutsche.

Dictionary.com

Example

But upon closer examination, “political correctness” becomes an impossibly slippery concept. The term is what Ancient Greek rhetoricians would have called an “exonym”: a term for another group, which signals that the speaker does not belong to it. Nobody ever describes themselves as “politically correct”. The phrase is only ever an accusation.
Political correctness: how the right invented a phantom enemy
Moira Wiegel
30 November 2016

Anagram

me onyx
my oxen


9 December 2016

patois

[pat-wah, pah-twah; French pa-twa]

noun, plural patois [pat-wahz, pah-twahz; French pa-twa]

1. a regional form of a language, especially of French, differing from the standard, literary form of the language.
2. a rural or provincial form of speech.
3. jargon; cant; argot.

Origin of patois

1635-1645; < French: literally clumsy speech; akin to Old French patoier to handle clumsily, derivative of pate paw

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for patois

Historical Examples

His voice was deep, sonorous, and somewhat touched with the true Kerry patois.
Bits of Blarney
R. Shelton Mackenzie

He only spoke in the patois, which Frank understood very well.
The Silver Lining
John Roussel

French was to be no longer a hodgepodge or a patois, but the pure and perfect speech of the king and his court.
A History of Literary Criticism in the Renaissance
Joel Elias Spingarn

There is no mistaking it; it is peculiar to Pont du Sable, and note, too, her patois !
A Village of Vagabonds
F. Berkeley Smith

“The young patron is mistaken,” interposed the Indian, speaking a patois of the lingoa-geral.
Our Young Folks–Vol. I, No. II, February 1865
Various

Their language was a Spanish patois ; their voices were sharp and disagreeable.
The Scalp Hunters
Mayne Reid

“His Excellency is in there,” said the old man, in his Sicilian patois.
My Strangest Case
Guy Boothby

The man spoke in patois French, the woman in her native Cree language.
The Buffalo Runners
R.M. Ballantyne

patois, a name the French give to a corrupt dialect of a language spoken in a remote province of a country.
The Nuttall Encyclopaedia
Edited by Rev. James Wood

“Lower that spar, my lads,” he added, in the patois the men used.
Rob Harlow’s Adventures
George Manville Fenn

Anagram

so pita


8 December 2016

wazzock

[wuhz-ek]

noun

1. (English, dialect) a foolish or annoying person

Word Origin

possibly from wiseacre, influenced by pillock, or possibly wazz +‎ -ock. First attested in the 1984 novel When the Martians Land in Huddersfield by Mike Harding.

Collins English Dictionary

Contemporary definitions for wazzock

noun

– an idiot; an annoyingly stupid person

Usage Note
slang

Dictionary.com


7 December 2016

daedal

[deed-l]

adjective

1. skillful; ingenious.
2. cleverly intricate, e.g. the computer’s daedal circuitry
3. diversified.
4. adorned with many things, e.g.

Origin of daedal

Latin, Greek
1580-1590; < Latin daedalus skillful < Greek daídalos, equivalent to daidál (lein) to work with skill + -os adj. suffix

Dictionary.com
merriam-webster.com

Anagram

ad deal
dad ale


6 December 2016

Mediterranean

[med-i-tuh-rey-nee-uh n]

noun

1. Mediterranean Sea.
2. a person whose physical characteristics are considered typical of the peoples native to or inhabiting the Mediterranean area.
3. the, Informal. the islands and countries of the Mediterranean Sea collectively.
adjective
4. pertaining to, situated on or near, or dwelling about the Mediterranean Sea.
5. pertaining to or characteristic of the peoples native to the lands along or near the Mediterranean Sea.
6. surrounded or nearly surrounded by land.

Origin of Mediterranean

Latin

1585-1595; < Latin mediterrāne (us) midland, inland (see medium, terra, -an, -eous ) + -an. Latin: medius (middle), terra (earth) – literally, centre of the earth.

Related forms

non-Mediterranean, noun, adjective
trans-Mediterranean, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for Mediterranean

Contemporary Examples

But the study is a boon to Mediterranean expats in the U.S., particularly those in the restaurant business.
Eat Like a Greek: The Mediterranean Diet That Could Save Your Life
Lizzie Crocker
February 26, 2013

Mediterranean flavors paired with eggplant and barley make these lamb shanks perfect for winter.
Fresh Picks
Anne Burrell
December 28, 2009

Fruits and veggies are mainstays of the Mediterranean diet, along with legumes and fish.
Eat Like a Greek: The Mediterranean Diet That Could Save Your Life
Lizzie Crocker
February 26, 2013

Anagram

drama internee
manta reindeer
a marine tender


5 December 2016

asinine

[as-uh-nahyn]

adjective

1. foolish, unintelligent, or silly; stupid:
It is surprising that supposedly intelligent people can make such asinine statements.
2. of or like an ass:
asinine obstinacy; asinine features.

Origin of asinine

Latin

1600-1610; < Latin asinīnus, equivalent to asin (us) ass1+ -īnus -ine1

Related forms

asininely, adverb
asininity [as-uh-nin-i-tee]. noun

Synonyms

1. See foolish.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for asinine

Contemporary Examples

Actress Ashley Judd, who campaigned against the aerial slaughter of wolves, is “a perky, pretty celebrity” with “ asinine plans.”
10 Palin Hits the Leakers Missed
Benjamin Sarlin, Samuel P. Jacobs
November 16, 2009

asinine comments like this leave the President looking like the only mature kid in town.
See Ya, Randian Romney!
Justin Green
November 14, 2012

Is Olivia Pope an “Angry Black Woman,” as one asinine TV critic suggests?
‘Scandal’ Review: Olivia Pope Has Lost Her Damn Mind
Kevin Fallon
September 25, 2014

She hypnotized Cory with her free spirit, freer hair, and asinine name, coaxing him out of his shell and into love with her.
‘Boy Meets World’ Turns 20: The Silly Show We Can’t Help but Love
Kevin Fallon
September 23, 2013

Funny how the ones deemed “geniuses” always act the most asinine in relationships.
Lights, Camera, Cocktails
Brody Brown
September 10, 2011

Historical Examples

What an asinine act, this pouring of poison into the stomach to cure a malady of the soul!
The Root of Evil
Thomas Dixon

Why can not you keep quiet, instead of making your asinine remarks?
Among the Humorists and After Dinner Speakers, Vol. I
Various

It was the first time I had presented myself at a strange hotel without my asinine credentials.
On a Donkey’s Hurricane Deck
R. Pitcher Woodward

These equine and asinine glories have passed away, extinguished by the rail.
Lancashire Folk-lore
John Harland

If you had an idea that I am the type of man to use as the butt for a silly, asinine jest, I’ll teach you to think differently.
Mixed Faces
Roy Norton

Anagram

is insane
in anise


4 December 2016

elicit

[ih-lis-it]

verb (used with object)

1. to draw or bring out or forth; educe; evoke:
to elicit the truth; to elicit a response with a question.

Origin of elicit

Latin

1635-1645; Latin ēlicitus drawn out (past participle of ēlicere), equivalent to ē- e-1+ lici- draw, lure + -tus past participle suffix

Related forms

elicitation, noun
elicitor, noun

nonelicited, adjective
unelicited, adjective

Can be confused

elicit, illicit.

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for elicit

Contemporary Examples

The accusation that Makaburi encouraged young men to kill Americans touched a nerve—and did not elicit a denial.
Death Squads in Kenya’s Shadow War on Shabaab Sympathizers
Margot Kiser
April 5, 2014

The Deport Justin Bieber Petition, has already garnered the necessary number of signatures to elicit a White House response.
Justin Bieber Has Been Drag Racing Down the Road to Recovery
Amy Zimmerman
February 4, 2014

Putman’s funeral will elicit new tributes Wednesday at the Saint-Germain-des-Prés church in Paris.
Andrée Putman, ‘the Grande Dame of Design,’ Revolutionized Interiors
Tracy McNicoll
January 19, 2013

Not bad, if Sediuk’s intentions really were to elicit an authentic response from the original Material Girl.
An Analysis of Vitalii Sediuk’s Pranks (He’s the Guy Who Touched Brad Pitt)
Amy Zimmerman
May 28, 2014

Historical Examples

Possibly, but not one more likely to elicit Wallenstein’s candour.
The Mercenary
W. J. Eccott

With what authority do we elicit respect and obedience from our little people!
Mother Earth, Vol. 1 No. 4, June 1906
Various

But whenever the teacher fails to elicit both respect and love, his power for good is lost.
Buchanan’s Journal of Man, June 1887
Various

No amount of cross-examination could elicit any further information.
The Light of Scarthey
Egerton Castle

No question was admissible which tended to elicit information or a positive declaration from the respondent.
Aristotle
George Grote

Anagram

lit ice


3 December 2016

cadge(1)

[kaj]

verb (used with object), cadged, cadging.

1. to obtain by imposing on another’s generosity or friendship.
2. to borrow without intent to repay.
3. to beg or obtain by begging.
verb (used without object), cadged, cadging.
4. to ask, expect, or encourage another person to pay for or provide one’s drinks, meals, etc.
5. to beg.

Origin of cadge(1)

Middle English

1275-1325; perhaps to be identified with Middle English caggen to tie, of uncertain origin

Related forms

cadger, noun

cadge(2)

[kaj]

noun, Falconry.

1. a frame on which hawks are carried to the field.

Origin

1605-15; apparently variant of cage

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for cadge

He might cadge for a bath, but his hands he could look after himself for nothing.
The Story of Louie
Oliver Onions

Anagram

caged


2 December 2016

sepia

[see-pee-uh]

noun

1. a brown pigment obtained from the inklike secretion of various cuttlefish and used with brush or pen in drawing.
2. a drawing made with this pigment.
3. a dark brown.
4. Photography. a print or photograph made in this color.
5. any of several cuttlefish of the genus Sepia, producing a dark fluid used naturally for defense and, by humans, in ink.
adjective
6. of a brown, grayish brown, or olive brown similar to that of sepia ink.

Origin of sepia

Latin, Greek
1560-1570; < Latin sēpia cuttlefish, its secretion < Greek sēpía; akin to sêpsis sepsis

Related forms

sepialike, adjective
sepic [see-pik, sep-ik], adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for sepia

Contemporary Examples

With a book about Jane Franklin and her life of letters to her brother Benjamin, sepia yellow connotes yellowing papers.
You Can Indeed Judge a Book By Its Cover
Brian Gresko
November 19, 2013

Each of those women had a sepia photograph on the mantelpiece, of a young man in uniform.
The Tragic, Heroic Women of World War I
Jacqueline Winspear
June 28, 2014

A sepia photo shows him as a young boy, head in his hands, with a large book open at a bar table.
The Bars That Made America Great
Nina Strochlic
December 27, 2014

Filmed in Riga, Latvia, in monochromatic, sepia tones, the film evokes a world drained of life and color.
The Female ‘Schindler’
Kati Marton
April 17, 2009

Both play within a relatively constrained color palette rich in sepia yellow, with strategic daubs of sky blue and red.
You Can Indeed Judge a Book By Its Cover
Brian Gresko
November 19, 2013

Historical Examples

Its flavour is most rich, and its texture most delicate when the gills show the pink colour with sepia margins.
Mushroom Culture
W. Robinson

All derived from cuttle-fish varieties of sepia used for baits.
The Sailor’s Word-Book
William Henry Smyth

The picture is a copy in sepia tones of Murillo’s Saint Anthony, 16 inches in height by 20 inches horizontally.
The Library of Work and Play: Home Decoration
Charles Franklin Warner

This food is chiefly the Squid or sepia octopus, known also by the name of the cuttle-fish.
Old Jack
W.H.G. Kingston

In other cases they extend laterally along a greater length of the body, as in sepia (fig. 15).
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 5, Slice 6
Various

Anagram

as pie


1 December 2016

gillie or gilly

[gil-ee]

noun

1. Scot.
a hunting or fishing guide.
a male attendant or personal servant to a Highland chieftain.
2. ghillie.

Origin of gillie

Scots Gaelic

1590-1600; < Scots Gaelic gille lad, servant

ghillie or gillie

[gil-ee]

Spell Syllables

noun

1. a low-cut, tongueless shoe with loops instead of eyelets for the laces, which cross the instep and are sometimes tied around the ankle.

Origin

1590-1600; see gillie; apparently a type of shoe orig. worn by Scottish hunting guides

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for gillie

Historical Examples

“I think it is time to go back,” suggested the gillie in a dull, uninterested voice.
A Prince of Good Fellows
Robert Barr

The gem referred to was no other than our friend gillie White.
Rivers of Ice
R.M. Ballantyne

I accordingly, whilst holding on for all I was worth, sent the gillie ahead to stone him up.
Chats on Angling
H. V. Hart-Davis

30 November 2016 – ungulate

30 November 2016

ungulate

[uhng-gyuh-lit, -leyt]

adjective

1. having hoofs.
2. belonging or pertaining to the Ungulata, a former order of all hoofed mammals, now divided into the odd-toed perissodactyls and even-toed artiodactyls.
3. hooflike.
noun
4. a hoofed mammal.

Origin of ungulate

Late Latin

1795-1805; < Late Latin ungulātus having claws or hoofs. See ungula, -ate1

Related forms

interungulate, adjective

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for ungulate

Historical Examples

Their structure proclaims these two divisions to be of ancient descent, and not to be modern twigs of the ungulate stem.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia
Frank Evers Beddard

The humerus resembles that of a Carnivore rather than that of an ungulate.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia
Frank Evers Beddard

The existence of the three horns covered with unaltered skin is the main characteristic of this ungulate.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia
Frank Evers Beddard

But this suggestion of an ungulate affinity can hardly be accepted.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia
Frank Evers Beddard

The only skull of a fossil lemuroid which he described (namely, Adapis) he declared to be that of an ungulate.
The Last Link
Ernst Haeckel

An ungulate is essentially a running animal, and has no need of a grasping finger.
The Cambridge Natural History, Vol X., Mammalia
Frank Evers Beddard

This species is the most conspicuous (and possibly the most abundant) ungulate in Harding County.
Mammals of Northwestern South Dakota
Kenneth W. Andersen

They are described as combining the head and claws of a bear with the teeth of a rodent and the general characters of an ungulate.
The Story of Evolution
Joseph McCabe

No one will deny that the Hipparion is intermediate between the existing horse and certain other ungulate forms.
On the Origin of Species
Charles Darwin

Quadrupeds he was the first to divide into ungulate and unguiculate, hoofed and clawed, having himself invented the Latin words.
Introduction to the Literature of Europe in the Fifteenth, Sixteenth, and Seventeenth Centuries, Vol. 2
Henry Hallam

Anagram

aunt glue
tune a lug


Today’s quote

Consistency is the last refuge of the unimaginative.

– Oscar Wilde


On this day

30 November 1835 – birth of Mark Twain, U.S. novellist, author of ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’ and ‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’. Died 21 April 1910.

30 November 1874 – birth of U.K. Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill. Died 24 January 1965.

30 November 1900 – death 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. He was born on 16 October 1854.

30 November 1936 – Crystal Palace in Britain is destroyed by fire. The Crystal Palace had been constructed for the Great Exhibition in 1851 and featured the first public toilets in England. During the Exhibition, visitors were able to pay 1 penny to use the conveniences. It was from this that the term ‘spend a penny’ came into use as a euphemism for visiting the loo.

30 November 1950 – U.S. President Harry S. Truman announces that he is willing to use atomic bombs to bring peace to Korea.

30 November 1979 – Pink Floyd releases their cult album ‘The Wall’, which was later made into a movie and one of the greatest stage-shows of all time. The songs were written by Rogers Waters and Dave Gilmour. Roger Waters performed ‘The Wall’ stage-show with other celebrities on 21 July 1990 in Berlin, to celebrate the tearing down of the Berlin Wall.

30 November 2007 – death of U.S. daredevil, Evel Knievel from breathing difficulties. 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. Born on 17 October 1938 as Robert Craig Knievel.

29 November 2016 – roc

29 November 2016

roc

[rok]

noun, Arabian Mythology.

1. a bird of enormous size and strength.

Origin of roc

Persian, Arabic

1570-1580; < Arabic rukhkh, probably < Persian rukh; see rook2

Dictionary.com

Examples from the Web for roc

Contemporary Examples

Watch Jay-Z’s ” roc Boys (And The Winner Is)…” music video.
A Baby Boomer’s Guide to Jay-Z
Peter Lauria
November 13, 2010

roc Nation did not respond to multiple requests to confirm that they had signed the rapper to their label.
Politician Scores Rapper Endorsement, Prostitution Problems Follow
Ben Jacobs
June 11, 2014

A roc hester ( roc) passenger approached a ticket counter to check in and stated to the ticket agent that he had a bomb in his bag.
The TSA’s Insane Instagram Feed
Nina Strochlic
July 13, 2014

Anagram

orc


Today’s quote

The task of the modern educator is not to cut down jungles, but to irrigate deserts.

– C. S. Lewis


On this day

29 November – International Day of Solidarity with Palestine.

29 November 1898 – birth of C.S. Lewis, Irish novellist, author of ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’ and ‘The Screwtape Letters’. Died 22 November 1963.

29 November 1922 – Federal authorities are engaged to assist in the enforcement of prohibition laws in the United States.

29 November 1947 – the United Nations votes in favour of Resolution 181 for the partitioning of the land of Palestine in order to create both a Jewish state, named Israel, and an Arab state named Palestine. Arab nations refused to accept the resolution and the state of Palestine was not created, while the state of Israel was.

29 November 1948 – the first Holden car is manufactured in Australia by General Motors Holden Automotive (GMH). The first model is a Holden FX.

29 November 1963 – The Warren Commission is established to investigate the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. After 10 months, the Chief Justice Earl Warren hands down his findings that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone in the assassination.

29 November 1986 – death of Cary Grant, born Archibald Alexander Leach, actor (‘North by Northwest‘, ‘To Catch a Thief‘, ‘An Affair to Remember‘, ‘Gunga Din‘). Born 18 January 1904.

29 November 2012 – The United Nations votes to recognise Palestine as a ‘non-member state’, implicitly acknowledging Palestinian statehood.