Saturday, October 31, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

mangonel
noun historical a military device for throwing stones and other missiles.
origin Middle English: from Old French mangonel(le), from medieval Latin manganellus, diminutive of late Latin manganum, from Greek manganon ‘axis, engine of war’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Friday, October 30, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

pastorale
noun (pl. pastorales or pastorali)
1. Music a slow instrumental composition in compound time, usually with drone notes in the bass.
2. a simple musical play with a rural subject.
origin early 18th cent.: from Italian, literally ‘pastoral’ (adjective used as a noun).

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Thursday, October 29, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

informatory
adjective giving information; informative.
Bridge (of a double) intended to convey information to one's partner rather than to score a penalty.
origin late Middle English (but rare before the late 19th cent.): from Latin informat- ‘shaped, described’ (from the verb informare) + -ory.

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Wednesday, October 28, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

condylarth
noun a fossil herbivorous mammal of the early Tertiary period, ancestral to the ungulates.
Order Condylarthra: several families.
origin late 19th cent.: from modern Latin Condylarthra (plural), from Greek kondulos ‘knuckle’ + arthron ‘joint’.

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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

pronunciation
noun [mass noun] the way in which a word is pronounced: spelling does not determine pronunciation | [count noun] similar pronunciations are heard in Ulster.
origin late Middle English: from Latin pronuntiatio(n-), from the verb pronuntiare (see pronounce).
usage The word pronunciation is often pronounced, by analogy with pronounce, as if the second syllable rhymed with bounce. This is not correct in standard English: the standard pronunciation, , has the second syllable rhyming with dunce! . The correct spelling is pronunciation, never pronounciation.

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Monday, October 26, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

planetesimal
noun a minute planet; a body which could come together with many others under gravitation to form a planet.
adjective denoting or relating to planetesimals.
origin early 20th cent.: from planet, on the pattern of infinitesimal.

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Sunday, October 25, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Valkyrie
noun Scandinavian Mythology each of Odin's twelve handmaids who conducted the slain warriors of their choice from the battlefield to Valhalla.
origin from Old Norse Valkyrja, literally ‘chooser of the slain’, from valr ‘the slain’ + kyrja ‘chooser’.

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Saturday, October 24, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Amidah
noun Judaism a prayer consisting of a varying number of blessings recited while the worshippers stand.
origin late 19th cent.: Hebrew, literally ‘standing’.

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Friday, October 23, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

lasque
noun a flat, ill-formed, or veiny diamond.
origin late 17th cent.: perhaps from Persian lask ‘piece’.

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

rouseabout
noun Austral./NZ an unskilled labourer or odd jobber on a farm, especially in a shearing shed.
origin mid 19th cent.: originally dialect in the sense ‘rough bustling person’, from the verb rouse.

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Wednesday, October 21, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

bondieuserie
noun (pl. bondieuseries) a church ornament or devotional object, especially one of little artistic merit.
• [mass noun] such objects collectively.
origin 1940s: from French, from bon ‘good’ + Dieu ‘God’.

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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

prana
noun [mass noun] Hinduism breath, considered as a life-giving force.
origin Sanskrit.

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Monday, October 19, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

belemnite
noun an extinct cephalopod mollusc with a bullet-shaped internal shell that is typically found as a fossil in marine deposits of the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods.
Order Belemnoidea, class Cephalopoda: many genera.
origin early 17th cent.: from modern Latin belemnites, based on Greek belemnon ‘dart’.

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Sunday, October 18, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

thigmotaxis
noun [mass noun] Biology the motion or orientation of an organism in response to a touch stimulus.
derivatives
thigmotactic adjective.
origin early 20th cent.: from Greek thigma ‘touch’ + taxis.

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Saturday, October 17, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Theotokos
noun (the Theotokos) Mother of God (used in the Eastern Orthodox Church as a title of the Virgin Mary).
origin from ecclesiastical Greek, from theos ‘god’ + -tokos ‘bringing forth’.

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Friday, October 16, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

lamia
noun (pl. lamias or lamiae) a mythical monster supposed to have the body of a woman, and to prey on human beings and suck the blood of children.
origin via Latin from Greek, denoting a carnivorous fish or mythical monster.

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Thursday, October 15, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Brazil
noun
1. (also Brazil nut) a large three-sided nut with an edible kernel, several of which develop inside a large woody capsule borne by a South American forest tree.
The tree is Bertholletia excelsa, family Lecythidaceae.
2. (also Brazil wood) [mass noun] hard red timber from which dye may be obtained.
The timber is obtained from several tropical trees of the genus Caesalpinia, family Leguminosae.
origin Middle English (in sense 2): from medieval Latin brasilium. The South American country Brazil (see Brazil1) takes its name from the wood.

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

riffler
noun a narrow elongated tool with a curved file surface at each end, used in filing concave surfaces.
origin late 18th cent.: from French rifloir, from Old French rifler ‘to scrape’.

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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

appellate
adjective [attrib.] Law (especially of a court) concerned with or dealing with applications for decisions to be reversed.
origin late Middle English (originally in the sense ‘appealed against, accused’): from Latin appellatus ‘appealed against’, from the verb appellare (see appeal). The current sense dates from the mid 18th cent.

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Monday, October 12, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

zapateado
noun (pl. zapateados) a flamenco dance with rhythmic stamping of the feet.
origin mid 19th cent.: Spanish, from zapato ‘shoe’.

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Sunday, October 11, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

redan
noun an arrow-shaped embankment forming part of a fortification.
origin late 17th cent.: from French, from redent ‘notching (of a saw)’, from re- ‘again’ (expressing repetition) + dent ‘tooth’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Saturday, October 10, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

cordillera
noun a system or group of parallel mountain ranges together with the intervening plateaux and other features, especially in the Andes or the Rockies.
origin early 18th cent.: from Spanish, from cordilla, diminutive of cuerda ‘cord’, from Latin chorda (see cord).

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Friday, October 9, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

sardius
noun a red precious stone mentioned in the Bible (e.g. Exodus 28:17) and in classical writings, probably ruby or carnelian.
origin late Middle English: via late Latin from Greek sardios.

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Thursday, October 8, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

ramen
plural noun (in oriental cuisine) quick-cooking noodles, typically served in a broth with meat and vegetables.
origin Japanese, from Chinese la ‘to pull’ + miàn ‘noodles’.

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Wednesday, October 7, 2009

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

introit
noun a psalm or antiphon sung or said while the priest approaches the altar for the Eucharist.
origin late Middle English (denoting an entrance or the action of going in): via Old French from Latin introitus, from introire ‘enter’, from intro- ‘to the inside’ + ire ‘go’.

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