Sunday 30 April 2017

fey - Word of the Day - 01/05/17

fey


adjective

Pronunciation


 FAY

Definition


1 : marked by a foreboding of death or calamity
2 a : marked by an otherworldly air or attitude
   b : crazy, touched
3 a : excessively refined : precious
   b : quaintly unconventional : campy

Examples


"Often I slipped into one of a few personas I had invented to make myself feel more authentically magical. Sometimes I was Cassandra, a husky-voiced Southern belle who called everyone 'honey child.' Other times I became Gabriel, a fey mystic with an accent that I imagined to be French-ish." — Bennett Madison, The New York Times, 5 Sept. 2016

"What children get is something even better. They get a Batman who isn't invulnerable and who needs his friends. They get a fey, effeminate hero who is every bit as brave and talented as his mentor…." — Louis McEvoy, Cherwell (Oxford University), 25 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


Fey is a word that defies its own (original) meaning, since it has yet to even come close to the brink of death after being in our language for well over 800 years. In Old and Middle English it meant "feeble" or "sickly." Those meanings turned out to be fey themselves, but the word lived on in senses related to death, and because a wild or elated state of mind was once believed to portend death, other senses arose from these. The word fay, meaning "fairy" or "elf," may also have had an influence on some senses of fey. Not until the 20th century did the word's most recent meanings, "precious" and "campy," find their way into the dictionary.

Name That Synonym


Unscramble the letters to create a synonym of fey that refers to an otherworldly quality: FNEIL.

Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/

Saturday 29 April 2017

orientate- Word of the Day - 30/04/17


orientate


verb

Pronunciation


 OR-ee-un-tayt

Definition


1 : to set or arrange in a definite position especially in relation to the points of the compass
2 : to acquaint with the existing situation or environment
3 : to direct (as a book or film) toward the interests of a particular group

Examples


The program is designed to orientate new students to the college and community.

"… the conference's focus was orientated toward the production side of organic farming, which is most beneficial to individual farmers." — Nathan J. Tohtsoni, The Gallup (New Mexico) Independent, 28 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


Orientate is a synonym of orient, and it has attracted criticism as a consequence. Orient, which dates from the early 18th century, is in fact the older of the two verbs—orientate joined the language in the mid-19th century. Both can mean "to cause to face toward the east" and, not surprisingly, they are related to the noun Orient, meaning "the East." Both also have broader meanings that relate to setting or determining direction or position, either literally or figuratively. Some critics dislike orientate because it is one syllable longer than orient, but you can decide for yourself how important that consideration is to you. Personal choice is the primary deciding factor, although orientate tends to be used more often in British English than it is in American English.

Test Your Memory


What is the meaning of brachiate, our April 3rd Word of the Day?

Merriam-Webster

http://writingforchildrenstage.blogspot.com.au/

Friday 28 April 2017

lethargic - Word of the Day - 29/04/17

lethargic


adjective

Pronunciation


luh-THAHR-jik

Definition


1 : of, relating to, or characterized by laziness or lack of energy : feeling or affected by lethargy : sluggish
2 : indifferent, apathetic

Examples


After eating a large plate of spaghetti and meatballs I often feel lethargic and sleepy.

"The cold water temperatures slow down the metabolism of the fish, and they become very lethargic." — Jim Hutchinson, Asbury Park (New Jersey) Press, 9 Mar. 2017

Did You Know?


In Greek mythology, Lethe was the name of a river in the underworld that was also called "the River of Unmindfulness" or "the River of Forgetfulness." Legend held that when someone died, he or she was given a drink of water from the river Lethe to forget all about his or her past life. Eventually this act of forgetting came to be associated with feelings of sluggishness, inactivity, or indifference. The name of the river and the word lethargic, as well as the related noun lethargy, all derive from lēthē, Greek for "forgetfulness."

Name That Synonym

Unscramble the letters to create a synonym of lethargic: RITDPO.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/

slough - Word of the Day - 28/04/17

slough


verb

Pronunciation


 SLUFF


Definition


1 : to cast off or become cast off
2 : to crumble slowly and fall away
3 : to get rid of or discard as irksome, objectionable, or disadvantageous

Examples


"The glue [that affixes the tiling to the hull] is exposed to a wide variety of environmental conditions, including big temperature swings as well as the pressures of operating at 1,000 feet beneath the surface. The friction of moving underwater tugs at the coating, and running into objects contributes to it gradually sloughing off." — Kyle Mizokami, Popular Mechanics, 7 Mar. 2017

"After Monday’s [landslide], the Department of Public Works cut down two trees on the hillside, removed a loose mass of dirt that was unstable and reopened the road. But a significant chunk of the hillside sloughed off in the wee hours of Wednesday morning, with a valley resident alerting people that it had closed as early as 12:30 a.m." — Samantha Kimmey, Point Reyes Light (Marin County, California), 9 Mar. 2017

Did You Know?


There are two verbs spelled slough in English, as well as two nouns, and both sets have different pronunciations. The first noun, referring to a swamp or a discouraged state of mind, is pronounced to rhyme with either blue or cow; it derives from Old English slōh, which is akin to a Middle High German slouche, meaning "ditch." Its related verb, which can mean "to plod through mud," has the same pronunciation. The second noun, pronounced to rhyme with cuff, refers to the shed skin of a snake (as well as anything else that has been cast off). Its related verb describes the action of shedding or eliminating something, just like a snake sheds its skin. This slough derives from Middle English slughe and is distantly related to slūch, a Middle High German word meaning "snakeskin."

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a verb that means "to cast off in thin scales or layers": _ _ f _ li _ te.


Merriam-Webster

http://writingthestorypruthpunton.blogspot.com.au/

Wednesday 26 April 2017

junket - Word of the Day - 27/04/17

junket


noun

Pronunciation


 JUNK-ut

Definition


1 : a dessert of sweetened flavored milk set with rennet
2 a : a festive social affair
   b : trip, journey: such as (1) : a trip made by an official at public expense (2) : a promotional trip made at another's expense

Examples


The senator is under fire for going on a weeklong lavish junket.

"When I was young, … our family often made junkets after church on Sunday, to Cook's, a massive arrangement of barns and sheds near New London. Purveyors of everything from household items to car parts, it … had such buyer appeal that it seemed to be swarming with shoppers every time we stopped in." — The Litchfield (Minnesota) Independent Review, 9 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


The road junket has traveled has been a long one, with frequent stops for food along the way. Since at least the 15th century, the word has named various comestibles, ranging from curds and cream to sweet confections. By the 16th century, junket had also come to mean "banquet." Apparently, traveling must have been involved to reach some junkets because eventually the term was also applied to pleasure outings or trips (whether or not food was the focus). Today, the word usually refers either to a trip made by a government official and paid for by the public, or to a free trip by a member of the press to a place where something, such as a new movie, is being promoted.

Test Your Vocabulary


What 5-letter word begins with "j" and refers to a brief trip taken for pleasure?

Merriam-Webster

http://plotsandtension.blogspot.com.au/

upbraid - Word of the Day - 26/04/17

upbraid


verb

Pronunciation


up-BRAYD

Definition


1 : to criticize severely : find fault with
2 : to reproach severely : scold vehemently

Examples


"A helpful neighbor was able to contact the owner in Dorset and upbraided her for having her house stand empty while a young couple could find no place to live." — Kitty Ferguson, Stephen Hawking: An Unfettered Mind, 2012

"There was a steady stream of customers, mostly for takeout, and the experience was marred only by a guy we took to be the proprietor upbraiding one of his employees in front of the customers. Bad form, sir." — Heidi Knapp Rinella, The Las Vegas Review-Journal, 1 Apr. 2016

Did You Know?


Upbraid, scold, and berate all mean to reproach angrily, but with slight differences in emphasis. Scold usually implies rebuking in irritation or ill temper, either justly or unjustly. Upbraid tends to suggest censuring on definite and usually justifiable grounds, while berate implies scolding that is prolonged and even abusive. If you're looking for a more colorful term for telling someone off, try tongue-lash, bawl out, chew out, or wig—all of which are fairly close synonyms of berate. Among these synonyms, upbraid is the senior member in English, being older than the others by at least 100 years. Upbraid derives via Middle English from the Old English ūpbregdan, believed to be formed from a prefix meaning "up" and the verb bregdan, meaning "to snatch" or "to move suddenly."

Name That Synonym


Fill in the blanks to complete a synonym of upbraid, meaning "to criticize severely": f _ s _ i _ a _ e.

Merriam-Webster

http://creatingcharactersforfictionwriters.blogspot.com.au/

Monday 24 April 2017

hummock - Word of the Day - 25/04/17

hummock


noun

Pronunciation


 HUM-uk

Definition


1 : a rounded knoll or hillock
2 : a ridge of ice
3 : a fertile area in the southern United States and especially Florida that is usually higher than its surroundings and that is characterized by hardwood vegetation and deep humus-rich soil

Examples


"Ah! I have penetrated to those meadows on the morning of many a first spring day, jumping from hummock to hummock, from willow root to willow root, when the wild river valley and the woods were bathed in so pure and bright a light as would have waked the dead, if they had been slumbering in their graves, as some suppose." — Henry David Thoreau, Walden, 1854

"Relying on a surveying device … Reeder set about measuring minute elevation changes across the land, searching for subtle gradations and anomalies. He zeroed in on a hummock that looked like the earthen side of a bunker, long since overgrown with moss and foliage, and roughly 100 feet away, a telltale dip in the earth." — Matthew Shaer, Smithsonian Magazine, March 2017

Did You Know?


Hummock first appeared in English in the mid-1500s as an alteration of hammock, another word which can be used for a small hill. This hammock is not related to the hammock we use to refer to a swinging bed made of netting or canvas. That hammock comes from the Spanish hamaca, and ultimately from Taino, a language spoken by the original inhabitants of the Greater Antilles and the Bahamas. The origins of the other hammock and the related hummock are still obscure, though we know they share an ancestor with Middle Low German hummel ("small height") and hump ("bump"). The latter of those is also a cousin of the English word hump, another word which can refer to a small hill or hummock.

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a word for an artificial hillock or mound over a grave: t _ m _ l _ s.

Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/

Sunday 23 April 2017

ambiguous - Word of the Day - 24/04/17

ambiguous


adjective

Pronunciation


am-BIG-yuh-wus

Definition


1 a : doubtful or uncertain especially from obscurity or indistinctness
   b : incapable of being explained, interpreted, or accounted for : inexplicable
2 : capable of being understood in two or more possible senses or ways


Examples


"In the app, numbers and symbols are included by default, and ambiguous characters like the digit 0 and capital O are suppressed." — Neil J. Rubenking, PCMag.com, 24 Feb. 2017

"The setting for this story is ambiguous—a girl and her mother leave one country for another to escape an unspecified conflict. The only clue given to the location is the vast ocean separating the two countries, which the refugees must travel by boat." — Anna Fitzpatrick, The Globe and Mail (Canada), 4 Mar. 2017

Did You Know?


Ambiguous, obscure, vague, equivocal, and cryptic are used to describe writing or speech that is not clearly understandable. Ambiguous applies to language capable of more than one interpretation ("an ambiguous suggestion") and derives from the Latin verb ambigere, meaning "to be undecided." Obscure suggests a hiding or veiling of meaning through some inadequacy of expression or withholding of full knowledge ("obscure poems"). Vague, on the other hand, describes a lack of clear formulation due to inadequate conception or consideration ("a vague sense of obligation"). Equivocal is the best choice for language that creates a wrong or false impression, allowing for uncertainty or promoting mistaken interpretations ("the politician gave an equivocal answer"), and when there is a deliberate attempt to confuse, cryptic can be used ("cryptic clues about the location of the buried treasure").

Name That Synonym


Fill in the blanks to complete a synonym of ambiguous: h _ _on _ mo _ _.

Merriam-Webster

factoid - Word of the Day - 23/04/17

factoid


noun


Pronunciation


 FAK-toyd

Definition


1 : an invented fact believed to be true because of its appearance in print
2 : a briefly stated and usually trivial fact

Examples


Printed on the back of each baseball card is a chart showing the player's statistics along with one or two interesting factoids about his career.

"Diana, the manager, took us through the intricacies of coffee roasting, providing us with interesting factoids such as that lava from the volcanoes results in excellent soil for coffee growing, and the darker the coffee bean, the less caffeine it has." — Patti Nickell, The Lexington (Kentucky) Herald Leader, 17 Feb. 2017


Did You Know?


We can thank Norman Mailer for the word factoid; he coined the term in his 1973 book Marilyn, about Marilyn Monroe. In the book, Mailer explains that factoids are "facts which have no existence before appearing in a magazine or newspaper, creations which are not so much lies as a product to manipulate emotion in the Silent Majority." Mailer's use of the -oid suffix (which traces back to the ancient Greek word eidos, meaning "appearance" or "form") follows in the pattern of humanoid: just as a humanoid appears to be human but is not, so a factoid appears to be factual but is not. Mailer likely did not appreciate the word's evolution. As current evidence demonstrates, it now most often refers to things that decidedly are facts, just not ones we tend to pay much attention to.

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a word for something that is falsely believed or propagated: _ e _ us _ _ n.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/

Saturday 22 April 2017

cartographer - Word of the Day - 22/04/17

cartographer


noun

Pronunciation


 kahr-TAH-gruh-fer

Definition


: one that makes maps


Examples


A cartographer was brought in to create new graphical representations of the shoreline that had been reshaped by erosion.

"A multi-media interactive website that celebrates the life and times of 16th-century cartographer Martin Waldseemüller—who created the 1507 World Map … —has been unveiled by the Geography and Map Division of the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., and the Galileo Museum, Florence, Italy." — USA Today, 1 Jan. 2017

Did You Know?


Up until the 18th century, maps were often decorated with fanciful beasts and monsters, at the expense of accurate details about places. French mapmakers of the 1700s and 1800s encouraged the use of more scientific methods in the art they called cartographie. The French word cartographie (the science of making maps), from which we get our English word cartography, was created from carte, meaning "map," and -graphie, meaning "representation by." Around the same time we adopted cartography in the mid-19th century, we also created our word for a mapmaker, cartographer.

Test Your Vocabulary


Unscramble the letters to create the name for the lines that go from the North Pole to the South Pole on maps of the world: RDENMIAI.

Merriam-Webster

http://writingthestorypruthpunton.blogspot.com.au/

Friday 21 April 2017

bucolic- Word of the Day - 21/04/17

bucolic


adjective

Pronunciation


 byoo-KAH-lik

Definition


1 : of or relating to shepherds or herdsmen : pastoral
2 a : relating to or typical of rural life
   b : pleasing or picturesque in natural simplicity : idyllic

Examples


"My husband, Toby, and I … live on a remote sheep farm in the Cotswold Hills.… Our house perches on the edge of a bucolic valley, its pastures divided by ancient dry-stone walls and hawthorn hedges." — Plum Sykes, Vogue, November 2016

"With acres of tree-shaded paths, outdoor cafés, a lake with rowboats, and several exhibition spaces, the city's grandest park offers a bucolic escape." — Andrew Ferren, Traveler, November 2016


Did You Know?


We get bucolic from the Latin word bucolicus, which is ultimately from the Greek word boukolos, meaning "cowherd." When bucolic was first used in English as an adjective in the early 17th century, it meant "pastoral" in a narrow sense—that is, it referred to things related to shepherds or herdsmen and in particular to pastoral poetry. Later in the 19th century, it was applied more broadly to things rural or rustic. Bucolic has also been occasionally used as a noun meaning "a pastoral poem" or "a bucolic person."

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete the name for a poem in which shepherds converse: e _ _ og _ e.

Merriam-Webster

http://plotsandtension.blogspot.com.au/

Wednesday 19 April 2017

eighty-six - Word of the Day - 20/04/17

eighty-six


verb

Pronunciation


 ay-tee-SIKS

Definition


: (slang) to refuse to serve (a customer); also : to get rid of : throw out

Examples


The bar's policy is that bartenders have both the authority and responsibility to eighty-six customers who disrupt other patrons.

"He eighty-sixed the last reform once he was safely re-elected, saying he wanted to give municipalities more time to get ready for the change." — Brian O'Neill, The Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania) Post-Gazette, 14 June 2007

Did You Know?


If you work in a restaurant or bar, you might eighty-six (or "eliminate") a menu item when you run out of it, or you might eighty-six (or "cut off") a customer who should no longer be served. Eighty-six is still used in this specific context, but it has also entered the general language. These days, you don't have to be a worker in a restaurant or bar to eighty-six something—you just have to be someone with something to get rid of or discard. There are many popular but unsubstantiated theories about the origin of eighty-six. The explanation judged most probable by Merriam-Webster etymologists is that the word was created as a rhyming slang word for nix, which means "to veto" or "to reject."

Name That Synonym


What hyphenated word ending in six is synonymous with eighty-six?

Merriam-Webster


http://creatingcharactersforfictionwriters.blogspot.com.au/

tatterdemalion - Word of the Day - 08/03/17

tatterdemalion


adjective


Pronunciation


tatt-er-dih-MAIL-yun

Definition


1 : ragged or disreputable in appearance
2 : being in a decayed state or condition : dilapidated

Examples


"ThreadBanger features episodes about making clothes and other D.I.Y. endeavors that will make you wish you could live life all over again and be a tatterdemalion steampunk kid from San Francisco." — Virginia Hefferman, The New York Times, 21 June 2009

"Layoffs in the refinery, paper mills and brewery that anchored the economy after its shipbuilding and merchant trading days ended have left many striking 19th century buildings of the compact, hilly downtown in a tatterdemalion state but have not torn its welcoming, small-town atmosphere." — Philip Hersh, The Chicago Tribune, 21 Nov. 2014


Did You Know?


The exact origin of tatterdemalion is uncertain, but it's probably connected to either the noun tatter ("a torn scrap or shred") or the adjective tattered ("ragged" or "wearing ragged clothes"). We do know that tatterdemalion has been used in print since the 1600s. In its first documented use, it was a noun referring to a person in ragged clothing—the type of person we might also call a ragamuffin. (Ragamuffin, incidentally, predates tatterdemalion in this sense. Like tatterdemalion, it may have been formed by combining a known word, rag, with a fanciful ending.) Soon after the first appearance of tatterdemalion, it came to be used as an adjective to describe anything or anyone ragged or disreputable.

Name That Synonym


Fill in the blanks to complete a synonym of tatterdemalion, meaning "dilapidated": b _ dr _ _ g _ _ d

Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/

Monday 17 April 2017

grimalkin - Word of the Day - 18/04/17

grimalkin


noun

Pronunciation


grih-MAWL-kin

Definition


: a domestic cat; especially : an old female cat

Examples


The family grimalkin, dreaming, perhaps, of mousing days long past, twitched her tail as she dozed contentedly on the windowsill.

"The security-evading feline was caught on camera … on a confectionery shelf, back in November. Now, the grumpy grimalkin has been pictured glaring down at shoppers from above a fridge full of pizzas, garlic bread and ready meals." — Hatty Collier, News Shopper, 7 Jan. 2016

Did You Know?


In the opening scene of William Shakespeare's Macbeth, one of the three witches planning to meet with Macbeth suddenly announces, "I come, Graymalkin." The witch is responding to the summons of her familiar, or guardian spirit, which is embodied in the form of a cat. Shakespeare's graymalkin literally means "gray cat." The gray is of course the color; the malkin was a nickname for Matilda or Maud that came to be used in dialect as a general name for a cat—and sometimes a hare—and for an untidy woman as well. By the 1630s, graymalkin had been altered to the modern spelling grimalkin.

Test Your Vocabulary


What 3-letter word can refer to an inferior dog or a surly fellow?

Merriam-Webster

http://writingforchildrenstage.blogspot.com.au/

reciprocate - Word of the Day - 17/04/17

reciprocate


verb

Pronunciation


 rih-SIP-ruh-kayt

Definition


1 : to give and take mutually
2 : to return in kind or degree
3 : to make a return for something done or given
4 : to move backward and forward alternately

Examples


It was kind of Jake to give us a ride to the airport, and we'd like to find a way to reciprocate the favour.

"The covenant only works if each partner, as best as possible, puts the other's needs above his or her own, with the understanding that the other will reciprocate." — David Brooks, The New York Times, 7 Mar. 2017

Did You Know?


Reciprocate, retaliate, requite, and return all mean "to give back," usually in kind or in quantity. Reciprocate implies a mutual or equivalent exchange or a paying back of what one has received ("We reciprocated their hospitality by inviting them to our beach house"). Retaliate usually implies a paying back of an injury or offense in exact kind, often vengefully ("She retaliated by spreading equally nasty rumors about them"). Requite implies a paying back according to one's preference, and often not in an equivalent fashion ("He requited her love with cold indifference"). Return implies simply a paying or giving back ("returned their call" or "return good for evil").

Name That Synonym


Fill in the blanks to complete a synonym of reciprocate: re _ _ m _ _ n _ e.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/

Saturday 15 April 2017

interminable- Word of the Day - 16/04/17

interminable


adjective

Pronunciation


in-TER-muh-nuh-bul


Definition


: having or seeming to have no end; especially : wearisomely protracted

Examples


Hayley didn't think she would have the patience to sit through another interminable radio pledge drive without changing the station at least once.

"Garrett Richards' first thought when he found out about his torn elbow ligament in May was to schedule Tommy John surgery as soon as possible.… Richards knew how to handle the seemingly interminable months of rehab, and he wanted to get the clock started on his return." — Jorge L. Ortiz, USA Today, 28 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


We promise not to ramble on endlessly about the origins of interminable. The word was borrowed into English in the 15th century and descends from a Latin combination of the prefix in- ("not") and the verb terminare, meaning "to terminate" or "to limit." The word describes not only something without an actual end (or no end in sight, such as "interminable oceans"), but also events, such as tedious lectures, that drag on in such a way that they give no clear indication of ever wrapping up. Other relatives of interminable in English include terminate, determine, terminal, and exterminate.

Name That Synonym


What 6-letter word beginning with "p" is a synonym of interminable but can also mean "wordy"?

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/


pittance - Word of the Day - 15/04/17

pittance


noun


Pronunciation


PIT-unss

Definition


: a small portion, amount, or allowance; also : a meager wage or remuneration

Examples


"… chances are good that any snow that might fall in coming days could be like the pittance of flakes that fell Thursday—and then almost immediately melted." — Neil Johnson, The Janesville (Wisconsin) Gazette, 11 Mar. 2017

"It's a setup worthy of Sherlock Holmes: a museum acquires a work of art for a pittance, not quite realizing what it has on its hands, only to discover, quite casually, that the piece in question is a long-lost work by a canonical artist." — Kirkus Reviews, 24 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


It's a pity when you haven't anything but a pittance. And in fact, pity and pittance share etymological roots. The Middle English word pittance came from Anglo-French pitance, meaning "pity" or "piety." Originally, a pittance was a gift or bequest to a religious community, or a small charitable gift. Ultimately, the word comes from the Latin pietas, meaning "piety" or "compassion." Our words pity and piety come from pietas as well.

Name That Antonym


Fill in the blanks to complete an antonym of pittance: b _ o _ le.

Merriam-Webster

http://writingthestorypruthpunton.blogspot.com.au/

Friday 14 April 2017

magnanimous - Word of the Day - 14/04/17

magnanimous


adjective

Pronunciation


mag-NAN-uh-mus

Definition


1 : showing or suggesting a lofty and courageous spirit
2 : showing or suggesting nobility of feeling and generosity of mind

Examples


Rather than gloat about her victory in the race, Michelle chose to be magnanimous and congratulated her opponents on their strong showings.

"Of course, all TV shows will one day end, and cancellation is part of the business. But similar to its streaming rival Netflix, Amazon has been unusually magnanimous with renewals, granting second and even third seasons to series that haven't exactly captured the cultural conversation…." — Meredith Blake, The Los Angeles Times, 17 Dec. 2016

Did You Know?


When you see anima, animus, or a similar formation in a word, it's an indicator of something alive, lively, or spirited. Something described as animated is full of life, for example, and the word animal names a living, breathing thing. The Latin word animus means "soul" or "spirit." In magnanimous, that animus is joined by Latin magnus, meaning "great." Basically meaning "greatness of spirit," magnanimity is the opposite of pettiness. A truly magnanimous person can lose without complaining and win without gloating. Angry disputes can sometimes be resolved when one side makes a magnanimous gesture toward another.

Word Family Quiz


Fill in the blanks to complete a word derived from Latin animus that refers to a disposition to bear injuries patiently: _ on _ a _ i _ _ ty.

Merriam-Webster

http://writingthestorypruthpunton.blogspot.com.au/

Wednesday 12 April 2017

napery - Word of the Day - 13/04/17

napery


noun

Pronunciation


 NAY-puh-ree

Definition


: household linen; especially : table linen


Examples


The napery was laundered and starched and folded crisply for the next day's brunch guests.

"Once upstairs, the sense of a solid, proper steakhouse, with low lighting, a busy bar, tufted chairs and banquettes, and snow-white napery on the tables, is clear and obvious." — Merrill Shindler, The Los Angeles Daily News, 28 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


Napery has been used as a fancy word for our household linens, especially those used to cover a table, since the 14th century. The word derives via Middle English from Anglo-French nape, meaning "tablecloth," and ultimately from Latin mappa, "napkin." You can see part of the word napkin in that root; another, much less obvious relative is apron, which was once spelled as napron in Middle English but gradually evolved to its current spelling by way of English speakers habitually misdividing the phrase a napron as an apron.

Test Your Vocabulary


Unscramble the letters to create a word that can refer to a linen fabric or to high-flown or affected writing or speech: TUASNFI.


Merriam-Webster

http://plotsandtension.blogspot.com.au/



Tuesday 11 April 2017

snaffle - Word of the Day - 12/04/17

snaffle


verb

Pronunciation


 SNAFF-ul

Definition


: to obtain especially by devious or irregular means

Examples


A malicious code discovered in the computer system was designed to snaffle user names and passwords.

"A quick-thinking and quick-catching baseball player has avoided a potential disaster in the dugout for his team, as he snaffled a bat careering towards his team." — Wide World of Sports (www.wwos.nine.com.au), 3 Mar. 2017

Did You Know?


The origins of snaffle are shrouded in mystery. What we know of its story begins in the 16th century. At that time, snaffle existed as both a noun referring to a simple bit for a horse's bridle and a verb meaning "to fit or equip with a snaffle" or "to restrain or check with or as if with a snaffle." The noun could be from an old German word for "mouth," snavel, but the connection has not been confirmed. The "obtain" meaning of the verb appeared in the early 18th century, and its origins are similarly elusive. Not so mysterious is what happened next to the verb: it developed a meaning of "to steal or rob," at least in British dialects.

Test Your Memory


What is the meaning of chaffer, our March 19th Word of the Day?

Merriam-Webster

http://creatingcharactersforfictionwriters.blogspot.com.au/

Monday 10 April 2017

livelong - Word of the Day - 11/04/17

livelong


adjective

Pronunciation


 LIV-lawng


Definition


: whole, entire

Examples


The farmhands worked hard all the livelong day and finally fell into their beds, exhausted, well past sundown.

"They were part of a research study that showed how standing in the classroom (and not sitting all the livelong day) can help reduce body mass index…." — Leslie Barker, The Dallas Morning News, 30 Aug. 2016

Did You Know?


"I've been workin' on the railroad, all the livelong day." So goes the American folk standard, and nowadays when we encounter the word livelong, it is typically in the phrase "all the livelong day" or something similar. Although we don't see livelong much in prose anymore, poets still love the word, possibly for its two distinct, alliterative syllables. Despite the resemblance, livelong does not mean the same thing as lifelong (as in "a lifelong friend"). In fact, the words are not closely related: the live in livelong derives from lef, a Middle English word meaning "dear or beloved."


Test Your Vocabulary


What is the meaning of the term staff of life?

Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/


widdershins - Word of the Day - 10/04/17

widdershins


adverb

Pronunciation


WID-er-shinz

Definition


: in a left-handed, wrong, or contrary direction : counterclockwise

Examples


"Who could fail to be charmed by Korda's account of how he met his wife, Margaret, in Central Park, where they both rode their horses early in the morning, one going clockwise, the other widdershins, until the fateful day when they found themselves going in the same direction …?" — Maxine Kumin, The New York Times Book Review, 22 Apr. 2001

"… I know, however, that you are lying, and nothing can turn me widdershins against the power of my own will." — Elinor Wylie, Mortal Image, 1927

Did You Know?


English speakers today are most likely to encounter widdershins as a synonym of counterclockwise. But in earliest known uses, found in texts from the early 1500s, widdershins was used more broadly in the sense of "in the wrong way or opposite direction." To say that one's hair "stood widdershins" was, in essence, to say that one was having a bad hair day. By the mid-1500s, English speakers had adopted widdershins to specifically describe movement opposite to the apparent clockwise direction (as seen from the northern hemisphere) of the sun traveling across the sky, which, at the time, could be considered evil or unlucky. The word originates from the Old High German widar, meaning "back" or "against," and sinnen, meaning "to travel."

Name That Antonym


Unscramble the letters to create an antonym of widdershins: AIEDSL.

Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/

Saturday 8 April 2017

hyperbole - Word of the Day - 09/04/17

hyperbole


noun

Pronunciation


hye-PER-buh-lee

Definition


: extravagant exaggeration


Examples


"There are those in the organization who believe Bryant might not only be the best receiver on the team, he could be the best in the league. Whether it's true or mere hyperbole is not the point. What it indicates is the immense ability Bryant possesses." — Gerry Dulac, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 19 Feb. 2017

"It's not hyperbole to speculate that there is no director who has had a greater influence on the shape of cinema than Japanese filmmaker [Akira] Kurosawa. He directed 30 films, most of them good to great. 'Seven Samurai,' 'Yojimbo' and 'Rashomon' have been remade and borrowed from more times than can be counted…." — Barbara VanDenburgh, The Arizona Republic, 24 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


In the 5th century B.C. there was a rabble-rousing Athenian, a politician named Hyperbolus, who often made exaggerated promises and claims that whipped people into a frenzy. But even though it sounds appropriate, Hyperbolus' name did not play a role in the development of the modern English word hyperbole. That noun does come to us from Greek (by way of Latin), but from the Greek verb hyperballein, meaning "to exceed," not from the name of the Athenian demagogue. Hyperballein itself was formed from hyper-, meaning "beyond," and ballein, "to throw."

Quiz


What word beginning with "p" is derived from Greek ballein and refers to a short story that teaches a moral or spiritual lesson?

Merriam-Webster

http://writingforchildrenstage.blogspot.com.au/

alow - Word of the Day - 08/04/17

alow


adverb

Pronunciation


 uh-LOH

Definition


: below

Examples


"She had studding-sails out alow and aloft, with a light but steady breeze, and her captain said he could not get more than four knots out of her and thought he should have a long passage." — Richard Henry Dana, Two Years Before the Mast, 1840

"Mr. Blunt remained seated, assessed them alow and aloft and came to settle upon James, looking him right in the eye." — James Spurr, One Sloop and Slow Match, 2008

Did You Know?


In nautical use, alow means "in or to a lower part of the vessel," indicating the deck or the area of the rigging closest to the deck, or below-deck as opposed to above-deck. The opposite of alow in this sense is aloft, used to indicate a higher part of the vessel especially around the mastheads or the higher rigging. Yet, while we are still likely to encounter aloft, in both nautical and non-nautical use, alow has become something of a rarity. When encountered, it is usually found in the combination "alow and aloft." This phrase literally refers to the upper and lower parts of a ship or its rigging, but it can also be used, as in our second example sentence, to mean "completely" or "thoroughly."

Name That Synonym


Unscramble the letters to create a synonym of alow: RNIFA.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/

Friday 7 April 2017

flack - Word of the Day - 07/04/17

flack


verb

Pronunciation


 FLACK

Definition


: to provide publicity : engage in press-agentry


Examples


The singer spent two weeks on the talk-show circuit, flacking for her new memoir.

"Celebrity endorsements for soda have been around for years.… More recently, Taylor Swift (Diet Coke), Beyonce (Pepsi) and Steve Harvey (Coke again) have flacked for soda." — Michael Roizen and Mehmet Oz, The Telegraph Herald (Dubuque, IA), 18 Sept. 2015

Did You Know?


The verb flack comes from a noun flack: during the late 1930s, flack came to be used as a name for a press agent. According to one rumor, the word was coined in tribute to a well-known movie publicist of the time, Gene Flack. Another rumor holds that it derives from a similar-sounding Yiddish word for someone who talks about someone else's affairs. The editors of Merriam-Webster dictionaries remain skeptical about these claims and have listed the etymology of flack as "unknown." You may also be familiar with another flack—a noun meaning "criticism" or "opposition." This unrelated homograph stems from a misspelling of flak, a German acronym and English word for antiaircraft guns.

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a verb that can mean "to favor strongly" or "to drop suddenly or heavily": _ l _ m _.

Merriam-Webster

http://writingthestorypruthpunton.blogspot.com.au/

Thursday 6 April 2017

cloying - Word of the Day - 06/04/17

cloying


adjective

Pronunciation


 KLOY-ing


Definition


: disgusting or distasteful by reason of excess; also : excessively sweet or sentimental

Examples


"In Raymond Chandler's first novel The Big Sleep (1939), Philip Marlowe visits a client in his orchid house, where the air was thick, wet, steamy and larded with the cloying smell of tropical orchids in bloom." — Amy Henderson, The Weekly Standard, 20 Feb. 2017

"A snap of the Eiffel Tower using only the #ParisLove hashtag requires no elaboration—been there, done that—while a photo of the Taj Mahal, simply tagged #EternalLove, can feel more cloying than compelling." — Adam Bisby, The Globe and Mail (Canada), 25 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


"Can one desire too much of a good thing?" asks Rosalind in William Shakespeare's play As You Like It. Cloying suggests that you can because it implies a repugnant excess of something that might be pleasing in smaller doses. An exploration into the history of cloying, however, leads us eventually to roots that are neither sweet nor excessive, but rather tough as nails. Cloying derives from the verb cloy, which now means "to supply or indulge to excess," but which once meant "to clog" and earlier "to prick a horse with a nail in shoeing." Cloy itself traces via Middle English to Anglo-French encloer (which also meant "to prick a horse with a nail in shoeing") and ultimately to Latin clavus, meaning "nail."

Name That Synonym


Unscramble the letters to create a synonym of cloying: WIHAMSK.

Merriam-Webster

http://plotsandtension.blogspot.com.au/

Wednesday 5 April 2017

defile - Word of the Day - 05/04/17

defile


verb

Pronunciation


dih-FYLE

Definition


: to march off in a line

Examples


The generals gazed on impassively as the troops defiled past.

"He watched as the troops defiled across the bridge; their thinned ranks made a noticeable impression on the monarch." — Michael V. Leggiere, Napoleon and the Struggle for Germany, 2015

Did You Know?


It's likely that when you hear the verb defile, what comes to mind is not troop movements but, rather, something being contaminated or desecrated. That more commonly encountered homograph of defile, meaning "to make unclean or impure," dates back to the 15th century and is derived from the Anglo-French verb defoiller, meaning "to trample." Today's word, on the other hand, arrived in English in the early 18th century. It is also from French but is derived from the verb défiler, formed by combining dé- with filer ("to move in a column"). Défiler is also the source of the English noun defile, which means "narrow passage or gorge."

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a French-derived English verb meaning "to march out into open ground": d _ b _ _ ch.

Merriam-Webster

http://creatingcharactersforfictionwriters.blogspot.com.au/

Monday 3 April 2017

gimcrack - Word of the Day - 04/04/17

gimcrack


noun

Pronunciation


JIM-krak

Definition


: a showy object of little use or value : gewgaw

Examples


The harmonica that Carrie kept in her desk drawer was a gimcrack that she had won as a carnival prize many years ago.

"He painted his office a deep crimson …, and then added period sconces, arrangements of pheasant feathers and various other gimcracks all meant to resemble, get this, the Red Room of the PBS show 'Downton Abbey.'" — Margaret Carlson, The Morning Call, 19 Mar. 2015

Did You Know?


Gimcrack is one of many peculiar-sounding words that have pervaded our language to refer to something ornamental and of little value. Others include bauble, trinket, knickknack, gewgaw, kickshaw and tchotchke. Bauble appears to be the oldest among the group, with known evidence of usage dating back to the 14th century. The earliest available evidence of gewgaw and kickshaw is from the 16th century, whereas gimcrack and knickknack established themselves in the 17th century. Tchotchke, borrowed from Yiddish, is by far the most recent addition to our language, first appearing as an English word in the 20th century.

Name That Synonym


Unscramble the letters to create a synonym of gimcrack: LRETFI.


Merriam-Webster

http://writinghaikup.blogspot.com.au/

brachiate - Word of the Day - 03/04/17

brachiate


verb

Pronunciation


BRAY-kee-ayt


Definition


: to progress by swinging from hold to hold by the arms

Examples


Sarah sat on the park bench and watched as her five-year-old son confidently brachiated along the monkey bars.

"Designed to replicate the natural forest environment, Gibbon Forest encourages its animals to display their natural behaviours, which include loud calling, rarely descending to the ground and brachiating…." — Nick Reid, The Tamworth (UK) Herald Series, 16 Feb. 2017

Did You Know?


Certain members of the ape family, such as the gibbon, have the ability to propel themselves by grasping hold of an overhead tree branch (or other projection) and swinging the body forward. (Chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans are less likely to travel in this manner, due to the weight of their bodies; when they do, it is only for very short distances.) The word for this action, brachiate, derives from bracchium, the Latin word for "arm." Brachiate shares etymological ancestors with such words as bracelet (an ornamental band or chain worn around the wrist) and brachiopod (a category of marine organisms with armlike feeding organs called lophophores). Another relative is pretzel. That word's German root, Brezel, is related to the Latin brachiatus, meaning "having branches like arms."

Test Your Vocabulary


What word means "adapted for seizing or grasping by wrapping around" and describes the tail of some monkeys?

Merriam-Webster

http://writingforchildrenstage.blogspot.com.au/

Saturday 1 April 2017

ignoble - Word of the Day - 02/04/17

ignoble


adjective

Pronunciation


 ig-NOH-bul

Definition


1 : of low birth or common origin : plebeian
2 : characterized by baseness, lowness, or meanness

Examples


"Luthor has been hanging around Superman's arctic fortress … devising plans for world dictatorship and other ignoble acts." — Kevin Canfield, The Journal News, 27 Jun. 2006

"Suburbs are sometimes portrayed as ignoble compared to cities, and media centers like New York and Washington attract young, pro-urban writers who trumpet their hometown virtues." — Tyler Cowen, The Bay City (Michigan) Times, 17 Oct. 2016

Did You Know?


The word noble, in addition to referring to someone born to aristocratic ranks, can also be used to describe someone of outstanding character. That word first appeared in English in the 13th century, and its antonym, ignoble, came about two centuries later. Ignoble derives via Middle English and Middle French from the Latin prefix in- ("not") and the Old Latin gnobilis ("noble"). Originally, ignoble described someone born to common or plebeian origins, but by the late 16th century it had come to describe people of dishonorable character, or the actions performed by such people.

Name That Antonym


Fill in the blanks to complete an antonym of ignoble: hi _ _ _ or _.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/

vaticination - Word of the Day - 01/04/17

vaticination


noun

Pronunciation


vuh-tiss-uh-NAY-shun

Definition


1 : something foretold : prediction
2 : the act of prophesying

Examples


"In fact, origin stories are not about the past at all: they are not eyewitness reportage, they are not history, they are not diary entries detailing actual bygone events. Similarly, end-time stories are not about the future at all: they are not predictions, they are not vaticinations, they are not crystal-ball visions.… The stories are fictive efforts offered as instructions for the present moment." — J. H. McKenna, The Huffington Post, 5 Dec. 2016

"Imagined futures that are really thinly disguised commentaries on current affairs are not chiefly concerned with reliable prediction. Yet look in the periphery of such allegorical tales and you can find some surprisingly accurate vaticination." — The Economist, 10 June 2006

Did You Know?


When George Orwell's novel 1984 was published in 1949, a displeased critic said it broke "all records for gloomy vaticination." (In Orwell's favor, another critic asserted, "It is impossible to put the book down.") While it's about as difficult to predict the future of a word as the future of the world, hindsight reveals that vaticination has endured better than other words based on Latin vates, meaning "prophet." Vaticinian ("prophetic"), vaticinar ("prophet"), vaticinatress ("prophetess"), and vaticiny ("prophesy") have all faded into obscurity (although two synonyms of prophetic, vatic and vaticinal, also keep the vates lineage alive today).

Test Your Vocabulary


Fill in the blanks to complete a word for mischievous or playful activity: m _ n _ e _ s _ i _ es.

Merriam-Webster

http://grammarandpunctuationmodule4.blogspot.com.au/