Sunday, August 31, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

armoire
noun a cupboard or wardrobe, typically one that is ornate or antique.
origin late 16th cent.: from French, from Old French armarie (see aumbry).

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Saturday, August 30, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

vaquero
noun (pl. vaqueros) (in Spanish-speaking parts of the US) a cowboy; a cattle driver.
origin Spanish, from vaca ‘cow’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Friday, August 29, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

etrier
noun Climbing a short rope ladder with a few rungs of wood or metal.
origin 1950s: from French étrier ‘stirrup’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Thursday, August 28, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

conductus
noun (pl. conducti) a musical setting of a metrical Latin text, of the 12th or 13th century.
origin from medieval Latin, from Latin conducere ‘bring together’ (see conduct).

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

rowel
noun a spiked revolving disc at the end of a spur.
verb (rowels, rowelling, rowelled; US rowels, roweling, roweled) [with obj.] use a rowel to urge on (a horse): he rowelled his horse on as fast as he could.
origin Middle English: from Old French roel(e), from late Latin rotella, diminutive of Latin rota ‘wheel’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

ogham
noun [mass noun] an ancient British and Irish alphabet, consisting of twenty characters formed by parallel strokes on either side of or across a continuous line.
• [count noun] an inscription in or character from the ogham alphabet.
origin early 18th cent.: from Irish ogam, connected with Ogma, the name of its mythical inventor.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Monday, August 25, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

primavera
noun [mass noun] the hard, light-coloured timber of a Central American tree.
The tree is Cybistax donnellsmithii, family Bignoniaceae.
adjective [postpositive] (of a pasta dish) made with lightly sautéed spring vegetables: linguine primavera.
origin late 19th cent.: from Spanish, denoting the season of spring, from Latin primus ‘first, earliest’ + ver ‘spring’ (alluding to the tree's early flowering).

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxf! ord.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Sunday, August 24, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

dos-à-dos
adjective (of two books) bound together with a shared central board and facing in opposite directions.
noun (pl. same) a seat or carriage in which the occupants sit back to back.
origin French, ‘back to back’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

roc
noun a gigantic mythological bird described in the Arabian Nights.
origin late 16th cent.: ultimately from Persian ruk.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Friday, August 22, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

protonotary
noun (pl. protonotaries) chiefly historical a chief clerk in some law courts, originally in the Byzantine court.
origin late Middle English: via medieval Latin from late Greek protonotarios, from protos ‘first’ + notarios ‘notary’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Thursday, August 21, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

apocope
noun [mass noun] Linguistics omission of the final sound of a word, as when cup of tea is pronounced as cuppa tea.
origin mid 16th cent.: from late Latin, from Greek apokoptein ‘cut off’, from apo- ‘from’ + koptein ‘to cut’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

raster
noun a rectangular pattern of parallel scanning lines followed by the electron beam on a television screen or computer monitor.
origin 1930s: from German Raster, literally ‘screen’, from Latin rastrum ‘rake’, from ras- ‘scraped’, from the verb radere.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

jean
noun [mass noun] heavy twilled cotton cloth, especially denim: [as modifier] a jean jacket.
• [count noun] (in commercial use) a pair of jeans: a button-fly jean.
origin late 15th cent. (as an adjective): from Old French Janne (now Gênes), from medieval Latin Janua ‘Genoa’, the place of original production. The noun sense comes from jean fustian, literally ‘fustian from Genoa’, used in the 16th cent. to denote a heavy twilled cotton cloth.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Monday, August 18, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

piaffe
noun (also piaffer) a movement performed in advanced dressage and classical riding, in which the horse executes a slow elevated trot without moving forward.
verb [no obj.] (of a horse) perform a piaffe.
origin mid 18th cent.: from French piaffer ‘to strut’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Sunday, August 17, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

syrtaki
noun (pl. syrtakis) a Greek folk dance in which dancers form a line or chain.
origin modern Greek, from Greek surtos ‘drawn, led’ + the diminutive suffix -aki.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

artesian
adjective relating to or denoting a well bored perpendicularly into water-bearing strata lying at an angle, so that natural pressure produces a constant supply of water with little or no pumping.
origin mid 19th cent.: from French artésien ‘from Artois’ (see Artois), where such wells were first made.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Friday, August 15, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

hackamore
noun a bitless bridle which operates by exerting pressure on the horse's nose.
origin mid 19th cent.: perhaps from Spanish jaquima, earlier xaquima ‘halter’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Thursday, August 14, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

capo
noun (pl. capos) chiefly N. Amer. the head of a crime syndicate, especially the Mafia, or a branch of one.
origin 1950s: from Italian, from Latin caput ‘head’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

seif
noun a sand dune in the form of a long, narrow ridge.
origin early 20th cent.: from Arabic sayf ‘sword’ (because of the shape).

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

stovies
plural noun Scottish a dish of potatoes stewed in a pot.
origin late 19th cent.: from Scots stove ‘stew meat or vegetables’, perhaps partly from Dutch stoven.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Monday, August 11, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

coparcener
noun English Law a person who shares equally with others in the inheritance of an undivided estate or in the rights to it (in the UK now as equitable interests).
origin late Middle English: from co- ‘together’ + parcener, legal term in the same sense (see partner).

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

pongee
noun [mass noun] a soft, unbleached type of Chinese fabric, originally made from threads of raw silk and now also other fibres such as cotton which are usually mercerized.
origin early 18th cent.: from Chinese (Mandarin dialect) benji literally ‘own loom’ or benzhì literally ‘home-woven’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

ingrain
verb (also engrain) [with obj.] firmly fix or establish (a habit, belief, or attitude) in a person.
adjective (of a textile) composed of fibres which have been dyed different colours before being woven.
origin late Middle English (originally as engrain in the sense ‘dye with cochineal or in fast colours’): from en-, in-2 (as an intensifier) + the verb grain. The adjective is from in grain ‘fast-dyed’, from the old use of grain meaning ‘kermes, cochineal’.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.

Friday, August 8, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

Word of the Day from AskOxford: www.askoxford.com

telemark
noun (also telemark turn) a turn, performed on skis to which only the toe of each boot is fixed, with the outer ski advanced and the knee bent: [as modifier] telemark skiing.
verb [no obj., with adverbial] perform a telemark turn while skiing: they went telemarking silently through the trees.
origin early 20th cent.: named after Telemark, a district in Norway, where it originated.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780198610571


Useful links from around OUP

Celebrating the new edition of the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary

Find out about OUP's Online Products:
www.oup.com/online

Launching September 2007

Oxford Language Dictionaries Online:
www.oxfordlanguagedictionaries.com

Special offer

disgo and busbi USB keys - preloaded with a 30 day trial of the Concise Oxford English Dictionary:
www.clever-stuff.ie


We hope you have enjoyed your word of the day.

However, if you wish to be removed from the mailing list please visit:
www.askoxford.com/contactus/email

Copyright © Oxford University Press 2008

Oxford University Press (UK) Disclaimer

This message is confidential. You should not copy it or disclose its contents to anyone. You may use and apply the information for the intended purpose only. OUP does not accept legal responsibility for the contents of this message. Any views or opinions presented are those of the author only and not of OUP. If this email has come to you in error, please delete it, along with any attachments. Please note that OUP may intercept incoming and outgoing email communications.