Friday, October 31, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

postilion
noun a person who rides the leading nearside (left-hand side) horse of a team or pair drawing a coach or carriage, especially when there is no coachman.
origin mid 16th cent. (in the sense ‘forerunner acting as guide to the post-horse rider’): from French postillon, from Italian postiglione ‘post-boy’, from posta (see post).

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Thursday, October 30, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

terai
noun
1. a wide-brimmed felt hat, typically with a double crown, worn chiefly by travellers in subtropical regions.
2. a belt of marshy jungle lying between the lower foothills of the Himalayas and the plains.
origin late 19th cent.: from Hindi tarai ‘marshy lowlands’.

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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

frazil
noun [mass noun] N. Amer. soft or amorphous ice formed by the accumulation of ice crystals in water that is too turbulent to freeze solid.
origin late 19th cent.: from Canadian French frasil ‘snow floating in the water’, from French fraisil ‘cinders’.

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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

transubstantiate
verb [with obj.] Christian Theology convert (the substance of the Eucharistic elements) into the body and blood of Christ.
literary change the form or substance of (something) into something different.
origin late Middle English: from medieval Latin transubstantiat- ‘changed in substance’, from the verb transubstantiare, from Latin trans- ‘across’ + substantia ‘substance’.

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Monday, October 27, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

tachism
noun [mass noun] a style of painting adopted by some French artists from the 1940s, involving the use of dabs or splotches of colour, similar in aims to abstract expressionism.
origin 1950s: from French tachisme, from tache ‘a stain’.

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Saturday, October 25, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

pochette
noun a woman's small handbag shaped like an envelope.
origin late 19th cent.: from French, literally ‘small pocket’, diminutive of poche.

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Friday, October 24, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

zazen
noun [mass noun] Zen meditation, usually conducted in the lotus position.
origin Japanese, from za ‘sitting’ + zen (see Zen).

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Thursday, October 23, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

boudin
noun
1. (pl. same) a French type of black pudding.
2. (boudins) Geology a series of elongated parallel sections formed by the fracturing of a sedimentary rock stratum during folding.
origin French.

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Wednesday, October 22, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

mikva
noun a bath in which certain Jewish ritual purifications are performed.
origin mid 19th cent.: from Yiddish mikve, from Hebrew miqweh, literally ‘collection (usually of water)’.

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Tuesday, October 21, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

traghetto
noun (pl. traghetti) (in Venice) a landing place or jetty for gondolas.
a gondola ferry.
origin Italian.

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Friday, October 17, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

verset
noun Music a short prelude or interlude for organ.
origin Middle English (denoting a versicle): from Old French, diminutive of vers ‘verse’.

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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

kirtan
noun Hinduism a devotional song, typically about the life of Krishna, in which a group repeats lines sung by a leader.
origin from Sanskrit kirtana.

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Tuesday, October 14, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

bulgar
noun [mass noun] a cereal food made from whole wheat partially boiled then dried, eaten especially in Turkey.
origin 1930s: from Turkish bulgur ‘bruised grain’.

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Monday, October 13, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

terce
noun a service forming part of the Divine Office of the Western Christian Church, traditionally said (or chanted) at the third hour of the day (i.e. 9 a.m.).
origin late Middle English: from Old French, from Latin tertia, feminine of tertius ‘third’. Compare with tierce.

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Sunday, October 12, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

taj
noun
1. a tall conical cap worn by a dervish.
2. historical a crown worn by an Indian prince of high rank.
origin mid 19th cent.: from Persian taj ‘crown’.

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Saturday, October 11, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

jointure
noun Law an estate settled on a wife for the period during which she survives her husband, in lien of a dower.
origin Middle English (in the sense ‘junction, joint’): from Old French, from Latin junctura (see juncture). In late Middle English the term denoted the joint holding of property by a husband and wife for life, whence the current sense.

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Friday, October 10, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

grimoire
noun a book of magic spells and invocations.
origin mid 19th cent.: French, alteration of grammaire ‘grammar’.

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Thursday, October 9, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

monocline
noun Geology a bend in rock strata that are otherwise uniformly dipping or horizontal.
derivatives
monoclinal adjective.
origin late 19th cent.: from mono- ‘single’ + Greek klinein ‘to lean’.

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Wednesday, October 8, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

skeuomorph
noun an object or feature which imitates the design of a similar artefact in another material.
derivatives
skeuomorphic adjective.
origin late 19th cent.: from Greek skeuos ‘container, implement’ + morphe ‘form’.

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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

sitzkrieg
noun a war, or a phase of a war, in which there is little or no active warfare.
origin 1940s: suggested by blitzkrieg, from German sitzen ‘sit’.

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Monday, October 6, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

tontine
noun an annuity shared by subscribers to a loan or common fund, the shares increasing as subscribers die until the last survivor enjoys the whole income.
origin mid 18th cent.: from French, named after Lorenzo Tonti (1630–95), a Neapolitan banker who started such a scheme to raise government loans in France (c.1653).

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Sunday, October 5, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

reflet
noun [mass noun] lustre or iridescence, especially on ceramics.
origin French, literally ‘reflection’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Saturday, October 4, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

tourtière
noun (pl. pronounced same) a kind of meat pie traditionally eaten at Christmas in Canada.
a tin or round baking sheet for tarts and pies.
origin French.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Friday, October 3, 2008

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

fouetté
noun Ballet a pirouette performed with a circular whipping movement of the raised leg to the side.
a quick shift of direction of the upper body, performed with one leg extended.
origin French, past participle of fouetter ‘to whip’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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