Monday, August 31, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

frequentative
adjective (of a verb or verbal form) expressing frequent repetition or intensity of action.
noun a frequentative verb or verbal form (for example chatter in English).
origin mid 16th cent.: from French fréquentatif, -ive or Latin frequentativus, from frequens, frequent- ‘crowded, frequent’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Sunday, August 30, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

kachori
noun (pl. kachoris) (in Indian cookery) a puri stuffed with spiced lentils, potato, or beans.
origin Hindi kacauri.

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Saturday, August 29, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

coelurosaur
noun a small, slender bipedal carnivorous dinosaur with long forelimbs, believed to be an evolutionary ancestor of birds.
Infraorder Coelurosauria, suborder Theropoda, order Saurischia: many genera.
origin 1950s: from Greek koilos ‘hollow’ + oura ‘tail’ + sauros ‘lizard’.

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Friday, August 28, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Heptateuch
noun the first seven books of the Bible (Genesis to Judges) collectively.
origin late 17th cent.: via late Latin from Greek heptateukhos, from hepta ‘seven’ + teukhos ‘book, volume’.

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Thursday, August 27, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

coulibiac
noun a Russian pie of fish or meat, cabbage or other vegetables, and herbs.
origin from Russian kulebyaka.

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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

secco
noun [mass noun] the technique of painting on dry plaster with pigments mixed in water.
origin mid 19th cent.: from Italian, literally ‘dry’, from Latin siccus.

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Tuesday, August 25, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Marist
noun
1. (also Marist Father) a member of the Society of Mary, a Roman Catholic missionary and teaching order.
2. (also Marist Brother) a member of the Little Brothers of Mary, a Roman Catholic teaching order.
origin late 19th cent.: from French Mariste, from the given name Marie, equivalent of Mary.

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Monday, August 24, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

meunière
adjective [usu. postpositive] (especially of fish) cooked or served in lightly browned butter with lemon juice and parsley: sole meunière.
origin from French (à la) meunière ‘(in the manner of) a miller's wife’.

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Sunday, August 23, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

neume
noun Music (in plainsong) a note or group of notes to be sung to a single syllable.
a sign indicating a neume.
origin late Middle English: from Old French neume, from medieval Latin neu(p)ma, from Greek pneuma ‘breath’.

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Saturday, August 22, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

rochet
noun Christian Church a vestment resembling a surplice, used chiefly by bishops and abbots.
origin Middle English: from Old French, a diminutive from a Germanic base shared by German Rock ‘coat’.

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Friday, August 21, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

anthropomorphous
adjective (of a god, animal, or object) human in form or nature.
origin mid 18th cent.: from Greek anthropomorphos (from anthropos ‘human being’ + morphe ‘form’) + -ous.

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Thursday, August 20, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

gley
noun Soil Science a sticky waterlogged soil lacking in oxygen, typically grey to blue in colour.
origin 1920s: from Ukrainian, ‘sticky blue clay’; related to clay.

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

peau-de-soie
noun [mass noun] a smooth, finely ribbed satin fabric of silk or rayon.
origin mid 19th cent.: French, literally ‘skin of silk’.

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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

dalmatic
noun a wide-sleeved long, loose vestment open at the sides, worn by deacons and bishops, and by monarchs at their coronation.
origin late Middle English: from Old French dalmatique or late Latin dalmatica, from dalmatica (vestis) ‘(robe) of (white) Dalmatian wool’, from Dalmaticus ‘of Dalmatia’.

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Monday, August 17, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

alethic
adjective Philosophy denoting modalities of truth, such as necessity, contingency, or impossibility.
origin 1950s: from Greek aletheia ‘truth’ + -ic.

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Sunday, August 16, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

campylobacter
noun a bacterium which may cause abortion in animals and food poisoning in humans.
Genus Campylobacter: several species; curved or spiral Gram-negative bacteria.
origin 1970s: modern Latin, from Greek kampulos ‘bent’ + bacterium.

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Saturday, August 15, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Demos
noun (pl. Demoi) the common people of an ancient Greek state.
the populace of a democracy as a political unit.
origin from Greek demos.

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Friday, August 14, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

paraph
noun a flourish after a signature, originally as a precaution against forgery.
origin late Middle English (denoting a paragraph): from French paraphe, from medieval Latin paraphus (contraction of paragraphus ‘short horizontal stroke’).

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Indiaman
noun (pl. Indiamen) historical a ship engaged in trade with India or the East or West Indies, especially an East Indiaman.
origin early 18th cent.: from India + -man from man-of-war.

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Wednesday, August 12, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

corposant
noun archaic an appearance of St Elmo's fire on a mast, rigging, or other structure.
origin mid 16th cent.: from Old Spanish, Portuguese, and Italian corpo santo ‘holy body’.

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Tuesday, August 11, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

mutch
noun chiefly historical a linen cap, especially one worn by older women or children.
origin late Middle English (denoting a nightcap): from Middle Dutch mutse, from medieval Latin almucia ‘amice’.

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Monday, August 10, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

bocce
noun [mass noun] an Italian game similar to bowls but played on a shorter, narrower green.
origin Italian, ‘bowls’, plural of boccia ‘ball’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Sunday, August 9, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

murage
noun [mass noun] Brit. historical tax levied for building or repairing the walls of a town.
origin late Middle English: from Old French from mur ‘wall’, from Latin murus.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Saturday, August 8, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

sortilege
noun [mass noun] chiefly historical the practice of foretelling the future from a card or other item drawn at random from a collection.
origin late Middle English: via Old French from medieval Latin sortilegium ‘sorcery’, from Latin sortilegus ‘sorcerer’, from Latin sors, sort- ‘lot, chance’ + legere ‘choose’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Friday, August 7, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

droog
noun informal a young man belonging to a street gang.
origin 1962: coined by Anthony Burgess in A Clockwork Orange; alteration of Russian drug ‘friend’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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