Sunday, January 31, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

puro
noun (pl. puros) (in Spain and Spanish-speaking countries) a cigar.
origin Spanish, literally ‘pure’.

Pronunciation available online: www.askoxford.com

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Saturday, January 30, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Stuka
noun a type of German military aircraft (the Junkers Ju 87) designed for dive-bombing, much used in the Second World War.
origin contraction of German Sturzkampfflugzeug ‘dive-bomber’.

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Friday, January 29, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

scagliola
noun [mass noun] imitation marble or other stone, made of plaster mixed with glue and dyes which is then painted or polished.
origin mid 18th cent.: from Italian scagliuola, diminutive of scaglia ‘a scale’.

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Thursday, January 28, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

mojo
noun (pl. mojos) chiefly US a magic charm, talisman, or spell: someone must have their mojo working over at the record company.
• [mass noun] influence, especially magic power.
origin early 20th cent.: probably of African origin; compare with Gullah moco ‘witchcraft’.

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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

proem
noun formal a preface or preamble to a book or speech.
derivatives
proemial adjective.
origin late Middle English: from Old French proeme, via Latin from Greek prooimion ‘prelude’, from pro ‘before’ + oime ‘song’.

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Tuesday, January 26, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

lector
noun
1. a reader, especially someone who reads lessons in a church service.
2. a lecturer, especially one employed in a foreign university to teach in their native language.
origin late Middle English: from Latin, from lect- ‘read, chosen’, from the verb legere.

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Monday, January 25, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

dubbing
noun [mass noun] material used for the bodies of artificial fishing flies, especially fur or wool on waxed silk.
origin late 17th cent.: from dub + -ing1.

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Sunday, January 24, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

cataphor
noun Grammar a word or phrase that refers to or stands for a later word or phrase (e.g. in when they saw Ruth, the men looked slightly abashed, they is used as a cataphor for the men).
origin late 20th cent.: back-formation from cataphora.

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Saturday, January 23, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Seder
noun a Jewish ritual service and ceremonial dinner for the first night or first two nights of Passover.
origin from Hebrew seder ‘order, procedure’.

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Friday, January 22, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

diwan
noun
1. (in Islamic societies) a central finance department, chief administrative office, or regional governing body.
2. historical a chief treasury official, finance minister, or Prime Minister in some Indian states.
origin Urdu, from Persian diwan ‘fiscal register’; compare with divan.

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Thursday, January 21, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

tostone
noun a Mexican dish of fried plantain, typically served with a dip.
origin Spanish.

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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

solmization
noun [mass noun] Music a system of associating each note of a scale with a particular syllable, especially to teach singing.
The commonest European system, still in use, originally named the notes ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la in groups of six (hexachords) beginning on G, C, or F, using syllables from a Latin hymn for St John the Baptist's Day in which each phrase begins on the next note in the scale: ‘Ut queant laxis resonare fibris Mira gestorum famuli tuorum, Solve polluti labili reatum, Sancte Iohannes’. A seventh note si was added later (from the initials of Sancte Iohannes). Modern systems typically use the sequence as arbitrarily a! dapted in the 19th century: doh, ray, me, fah, soh, la, te, with doh being C in the fixed-doh system and the keynote in the movable-doh or tonic sol-fa system.
derivatives
solmizate verb.
origin mid 18th cent.: from French solmisation, based on sol ‘soh’ + mi (see me).

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Tuesday, January 19, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

metope
noun Architecture a square space between triglyphs in a Doric frieze.
origin mid 16th cent.: via Latin from Greek metope, from meta ‘between’ + ope ‘hole for a beam end’.

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Monday, January 18, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

barathea
noun [mass noun] a fine woollen cloth, sometimes mixed with silk or cotton, used chiefly for coats and suits.
origin mid 19th cent.: of unknown origin.

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Saturday, January 16, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Kakiemon
adjective [attrib.] relating to a style of Japanese porcelain with sparse asymmetrical designs on a white ground, developed in the early 17th century.
origin named after Sakaida Kakiemon (1596–1666), the first Japanese potter to work in this style.

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Friday, January 15, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

chryselephantine
adjective (of ancient Greek sculpture) overlaid with gold and ivory.
origin early 19th cent.: from Greek khruselephantinos, from khrusos ‘gold’ + elephas, elephant- ‘elephant’ or ‘ivory’.

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Thursday, January 14, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

duffel
noun [mass noun]
1. a coarse woollen cloth with a thick nap.
2. N. Amer. sporting or camping equipment.
origin mid 17th cent.: from Duffel, the name of a town in Belgium where the cloth was originally made.

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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

epistrophe
noun [mass noun] the repetition of a word at the end of successive clauses or sentences.
origin late 16th cent.: from Greek epistrophe, from epistrephein ‘to turn around’, from epi ‘in addition’ + strephein ‘to turn’.

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Tuesday, January 12, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

benthos
noun [mass noun] Ecology the flora and fauna found on the bottom, or in the bottom sediments, of a sea or lake.
derivatives
benthic adjective.
origin late 19th cent.: from Greek, ‘depth of the sea’.

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Monday, January 11, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

wabi
noun [mass noun] (in Japanese art) a quality of austere and serene beauty expressing a mood of spiritual solitude recognized in Zen Buddhist philosophy.
origin Japanese, literally ‘solitude’.

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Sunday, January 10, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

mauby
noun [mass noun] a West Indian drink made from the bark of trees of the buckthorn family.
origin from Carib mabi, denoting a drink made from sweet potatoes.

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Saturday, January 9, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

plein-air
adjective denoting or in the manner of a 19th-century style of painting outdoors, which became a central feature of French Impressionism.
origin from French en plein air ‘in the open air’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Friday, January 8, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

Mughlai
adjective (of food or a dish) cooked in an Indian style involving one of a variety of rich, spicy sauces, typically containing butter, yogurt, or cream.
origin Urdu muglai ‘in a Mughal style’.

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Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Thursday, January 7, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

nanoplankton
noun [mass noun] Biology very small unicellular plankton, at the limits of resolution of light microscopy.
origin early 20th cent.: from German, from Greek nanos ‘dwarf’ + plankton.

Source: Oxford Dictionary of English
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Wednesday, January 6, 2010

AskOxford: Word of the Day

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

toyi-toyi
noun (pl. toyi-toyis) a dance step characterized by high-stepping movements, typically performed at protest gatherings or marches.
verb (toyi-toyis, toyi-toying or toyi-toyiing, toyi-toyied) [no obj.] perform such a dance.
origin Ndebele and Shona; probably introduced into South Africa by ANC exiles returning from military training in Zimbabwe.

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