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  1. #241
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    chrestomathy

    \ kres-TOM-uh-thee \ , noun;

    1.
    A collection of selected literary passages.



    Quotes:
    I had learned to read Sanscrit and to translate easy passages in the chrestomathy , and devoted myself with special zeal to the study of the Latin grammar and prosody.
    -- Georg Ebers, The Story of My Life from Childhood to Manhood

    This little chrestomathy preserves almost the only words of Atticus to have survived from antiquity.
    -- Peter White, Cicero in Letters



    Origin:
    Chrestomathy literally means "useful to learn" in Greek, from the roots chres- meaning "to use" and math- meaning "to learn."

  2. #242
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    demiurge

    \ DEM-ee-urj \ , noun;
    1.
    Philosophy. A. Platonism. The artificer of the world. B. (In the Gnostic and certain other systems) a supernatural being imagined as creating or fashioning the world in subordination to the Supreme Being, and sometimes regarded as the originator of evil.

    2.
    (In many states of ancient Greece) a public official or magistrate.



    Quotes:
    Larger than a character, the river is a manifest presence, a demiurge to support the man and the boy, a deity to betray them, feed them, all but drown them, fling them apart, float them back together.
    -- Norman Mailer, The Spooky Art

    The gnostics think this world was created by a bad god— a demiurge —who wandered too far from the True God and somehow got perverted.
    -- Derek Swannson, Crash Gordon and the Mysteries of Kingsburg



    Origin:
    Demiurge meant "a worker for the people" in Ancient Greek, from the roots dḗmio- meaning "of the people" and -ergos , "a worker."

  3. #243
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    ingeminate

    \ in-JEM-uh-neyt \ , verb;
    1.
    To repeat; reiterate.



    Quotes:
    Sitting among his friends, often, after a deep silence and frequent sighs, he would with a shrill and sad accent ingeminate the word Peace, Peace...
    -- Christopher Ricks, Essays in Appreciation

    Mr. Dott's spirits were a little dashed, especially as Niven with a fateful countenance continued to ingeminate the word “Hungrygrain.”
    -- Arthur Train, Tutt and Mr. Tutt



    Origin:
    Ingeminate comes from the Latin word ingemināre which meant "to repeat or redouble."

  4. #244
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    betide

    \ bih-TAHYD \ , verb;

    1.
    To happen to; come to; befall.

    2.
    To happen; come to pass.



    Quotes:
    "Ill luck betide thee, poor damsel," said Sancho, "ill luck betide thee!"
    -- Miguel de Cervantes, Don Quixote

    "The girls' skirts are measured each week with a dressmaker's rule," she would say, "to see that they conform to the length prescribed. Woe betide any girl whose skirt does not."
    -- Hilary Mantel, An Experiment in Love



    Origin:
    Betide stems from the Old English word tide meaning "something that happened." As in besot and belabor , the prefix be- turns the noun into a verb.

  5. #245
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    apoplectic

    \ ap-uh-plek-tik \ , adjective;
    1.
    Intense enough to threaten or cause a stroke.

    2.
    Of or pertaining to apoplexy.

    3.
    Having or inclined to apoplexy.

    noun: 1.
    A person having or predisposed to apoplexy.



    Quotes:
    When Abie used to shout, Rebecca always used to make a joke that he was having one of his apoplectic fits.
    -- Alan Grayson, Mile End

    ...four years, one recession and a host of battles — over financial regulation and the nomination of Elizabeth Warren, over Dodd-Frank and the Buffett Rule — have taken their toll. Some on Wall Street are apoplectic . One former supporter, Dan Loeb, compared Obama to Nero; the president’s enemies insinuated worse.
    -- Nicholas Confessore, "Obama’s Not-So-Hot Date With Wall Street", The New York Times Magazine , May 2, 2012



    Origin:
    Apoplectic stems from the Greek word apoplēktikós which meant "pertaining to stroke". It literally meant "struck down".

  6. #246
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    larrup

    \ LAR-uhp \ , verb;
    1.
    To beat or thrash.



    Quotes:
    When a seagoing canoe beached on the stones, or when a neighbor came larruping from around back of the house, Martha Obenchain, peeling potatoes at a table in the sun, rose and put the kettle on, tickled pink.
    -- Annie Dillard, The Living

    A fast white boat comes larruping around the point from the direction of Mercer Island and banks towards him.
    -- Neal Stephenson, Cryptonomicon



    Origin:
    Larrup may derive from the Dutch word larpen meaning "to beat with flails".

  7. #247
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    natch

    \ nach \ , adverb;

    1.
    Of course; naturally.



    Quotes:
    She was even more delighted to hear that you were planning to invest in her health club, and hopes to see you there as a patron as well as an investor. At reduced rates, natch ?
    -- Evelyn E. Smith, Miss Melville Returns

    Yes, well, your father, who has no humanitarian instincts, is already designing a computer program to put the Lever process on automatic. For a small fee, natch .
    -- Dana Stabenow, Second Star



    Origin:
    Natch is a shortening and respelling of the common English word naturally .

  8. #248
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    divulse

    \ dahy-VUHLS \ , verb;

    1.
    To tear away or apart.



    Quotes:
    A perforation having been so made, it is safer to divulse the opening rather than to enlarge it by cutting in order to avoid the possibility of opening a blood vessel in an inaccessible region.
    -- Eugene Fuller, M.D., The Journal of the American Medical Association

    Even if you are the kooper of the winkel over measure never lost a license. Nor a duckindonche divulse from bath and breakfast.
    -- James Joyce, Finnegans Wake



    Origin:
    Divulse comes from the Latin root vellere meaning "plucked". The prefix di- is a variation of dis- before the letter v meaning "apart" or "away", as in disown .

  9. #249
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    pochismo

    \ poh-CHEEZ-moh \ , noun;
    1.
    An English word or expression borrowed into Spanish.

    2.
    A form of speech employing many such words.

    3.
    An adopted U.S. custom, attitude, etc.




    Quotes:
    Along the Texas border, in the towns on both sides of the Rio Grande, they call a similar blending of languages pochismo.
    -- Robert Wilder, Plough the Sea

    The assimilation of English with Spanish speech and of Hispanic with Anglo traits in the mixed culture termed pochismo has brought contrasting values and characteristics into play within families and even within individuals.
    -- Milo Kearney and Manuel Medrano, Medieval Culture and the Mexican American Borderlands



    Origin:
    Pochismo entered English in the 1940s. It is a variation of the word pocho which refers to a person of Mexican heritage who has adopted American customs. The suffix -ismo is usually the Spanish equivalent of the English suffix -ism .

  10. #250
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    mignon

    \ min-YON \ , adjective;
    1.
    Small and pretty; delicately pretty.



    Quotes:
    And here Jasmin caressed his own arm, and made as if it were a baby's, smiling and speaking in a mignon voice, wagging his head roguishly.
    -- William Chambers and Robert Chambers, Chambers's Edinburgh Journal

    As the village princeling and household cosset, the toast of the family, the mignon of the minions, the darling of the staff, my feelings about the proposed adoption would not be hard to divine.
    -- Martin Amis, Success



    Origin:
    Mignon stems from the French word of the same spelling which means "delicate" or "charming". It is also related to the word "minion" through the sense of "small".

  11. #251
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    ravelment

    \ RAV-uhl-muhnt \ , noun;
    1.
    Entanglement; confusion.



    Quotes:
    Hampered as I was by my well-known connection with the Gillespie poisoning case, I could not personally make a move towards the ravelment of its mystery without subjecting myself to the curiosity of the people among whom my attention of the District Attorney's office and the suspicion of the men whose business I was in a measure attempting to usurp.
    -- Anna Katharine Green, One of My Sons

    What I could see clearly, though, was the lower course of the burn: this bisected the small valley and appeared to loop around the far side of the dwelling, partly enfolding it before it broadened out and spread thence through arable to a ravelment of stone and incoming sea.
    -- Clifford Geddes, Edge of the Glen



    Origin:
    Ravelment derives from the word ravel which means "to become tangled". It entered English in the early 1800s.

  12. #252
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    fantast

    \ FAN-tast \ , noun;
    1.
    A visionary or dreamer.



    Quotes:
    I wouldn't allow the unwashed fantast in my house, but, I have to remind myself, it isn't my house he is being admitted to.
    -- Wallace Earle Stegner, All the Little Live Things

    The floor of the shop had been sprinkled with water; it had probably been sprinkled by a great fantast and freethinker, because it was all covered with patterns and cabbalistic signs.
    -- Anton Pavlovich Chekhov, The Steppe



    Origin:
    Fantast entered English from German, though it is based on the Greek word phantastḗs which meant "boaster". It is related to the other English word fantastic .

  13. #253
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    mewl

    \ myool \ , verb;
    1.
    To cry, as a baby, young child, or the like; whimper.



    Quotes:
    When Celia was growing up, her father had taken in a stray kitten, an avid hunter who – by the time Celia had left for college – still had not gotten over a formative, stray-life trauma that compelled it to mewl between mouthfuls of food.
    -- Myla Goldberg, The False Friend

    They have mouths that twitch, and eyes that stare, and they babble and they mewl and they whimper.
    -- Neil Gaiman, Smoke and Mirrors




    Origin:

    Mewl is an imitative word that mimics the sound of a whimper.

  14. #254
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    imponderable

    \ im-PON-der-uh-buhl \ , noun;

    1.
    A thing that cannot be precisely determined or measured.

    adjective: 1.
    Not ponderable; that cannot be precisely determined, measured, or evaluated.



    Quotes:
    Of course he had always been a huge imponderable , if not to say the biggest challenge of her admittedly young life.
    -- Lindsay Armstrong, The Constantin Marriage

    Of course there's always the imponderable , the unpredictable which can't be foreseen...
    -- Leonardo Sciascia, Peter Robb and Sacha Rabinovitch, The Moro Affair



    Origin:
    Imponderable comes directly from the Medieval Latin word imponderābilis which had the same meaning.

  15. #255
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    cunctation

    \ kuhngk-TEY-shuhn \ , noun;
    1.
    Delay; tardiness.



    Quotes:
    Lord Eldon however was personally answerable for unnecessary and culpable cunctation , as he called it in protracting the arguments of counsel, and in deferring judgment from day to day, from term to term, and from year to year after the arguments had closed and he had irrevocably decided in his own mind what the judgment should be.
    -- Baron John Campbell, Lives of Lord Lyndhurst and Lord Brougham

    "What it's about," Goldman said, with tantalizing cunctation , "is a whole lot of things, as a matter of fact."
    -- Philip Kerr, The Shot



    Origin:
    Cunctation stems from the Latin word cunctātiōn- meaning "delay" or "hesitation".

  16. #256
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    volant

    \ VOH-luhnt \ , adjective;

    1.
    Moving lightly; nimble.

    2.
    Engaged in or having the power of flight.

    noun: 1.
    Also called volant piece. Armor. A reinforcing piece for the brow of a helmet.



    Quotes:
    But here in the present case, to carry on the volant metaphor, (for I must either be merry or mad) is a pretty little Miss, just, come out of her hanging-sleeve coat, brought to buy a pretty little fairing; for the world, Jack, is but a great fair thou knowest; and, to give thee serious reflection for serious, all its toys but tinselled hobby horses, gilt gingerbread, squeaking trumpets, painted drums, and so forth.
    -- Samuel Richardson, Clarissa, Or, The History of a Young Lady

    With Rube winging it that spring, the band blared, and the volant baseball team was unbeatable.
    -- Alan Howard Levy, Rube Waddell



    Origin:
    Volant stems from the Latin word volāre which meant "to fly". In English, it acquired the sense of moving nimbly in the early 1600s.

  17. #257
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    pensée

    \ pahn-SEY \ , noun;

    1.
    A reflection or thought.



    Quotes:
    He rose from his deep chair and at his desk entered on the first page of a new notebook a pensee : The penalty of sloth is longevity.
    -- Evelyn Waugh, Unconditional Surrender

    In a pensee that could have been cribbed from Mae West's daybook, she also said, “If you want to sacrifice the admiration of many men for the criticism of one, go ahead, get married!”
    -- Karen Karbo, How to Hepburn



    Origin:
    Pensée comes directly from the French word of the same spelling which means "a thought".

  18. #258
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    noctilucent

    \ nok-tuh-LOO-suhnt \ , adjective;

    1.
    Visible during the short night of the summer.



    Quotes:
    So Sax would sit on the Western sea cliff, rapt through the setting of the sun, then stay through the hour of twilight, watching the sky colors change as the sun's shadow rose up, until all the sky was black; and then sometimes there would appear noctilucent clouds, thirty kilometers above the planet, broad streaks gleaming like abalone shells.
    -- Kim Stanley Robinson, Blue Mars

    The shells of 155-mm howitzers whistled away through the dark air, orange flashes popped like noctilucent flowers on the western ridge of Hon Heo Mountain and disappeared shortly after, and then the sound of explosions rumbled through the ground.
    -- Junghyo Ahn, White Badge



    Origin:
    Noctilucent entered English in the late 1800s. It is a combination of the prefix nocti- (which means "night") and lucent (which means "shining").

  19. #259
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    enchiridion

    \ en-kahy-RID-ee-uhn \ , noun;
    1.
    A handbook; manual.



    Quotes:
    For you offer us the postulation that we can, in the shadow, or rather the radiance, of your own enchiridion , go and do likewise.
    -- Marcel Proust, Swann's Way

    Sarah and Isaac were romping noisily about and under the beds; Rachel was at the table, knitting a scarf for Solomon; grandmother pored over a bulky enchiridion for pious women, written in jargon.
    -- Israel Zangwill, Children of the Ghetto



    Origin:
    Enchiridion stems from the Greek root cheir meaning "hand". The prefix en- means "within", so the noun means "in the hand". The suffix -idion denotes a diminutive form of another word.

  20. #260
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    subitize

    \ SOO-bi-tahyz \ , verb;
    1.
    To perceive at a glance the number of items presented.



    Quotes:
    Below seven the subjects were said to subitize ; above seven they were said to estimate.
    -- H. Gutfreund and G. Toulouse, Biology and Computation: A Physicist's Choice

    I wanted to see if Pedro could subitize , so I asked, “Pedro, how many stars are in the first circle?”
    -- Melissa Conklin, It Makes Sense!



    Origin:
    Subitize comes from the Latin word subitāre which meant "to appear suddenly".

  21. #261
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    chockablock

    \ CHOK-uh-BLOK \ , adjective;
    1.
    Extremely full; crowded; jammed.

    2.
    Nautical. Having the blocks drawn close together, as when the tackle is hauled to the utmost.

    adverb: 1.
    In a crowded manner: books piled chockablock on the narrow shelf.



    Quotes:
    This town is chockablock with restaurants that are just clones of the same old themes.
    -- Amy Tan, The Joy Luck Club

    lf opossum and skunk and raccoon can hide there, survive there, year after year, decade after decade, almost in the middle of a teeming metropolitan chockablock , think how an enterprising monkey might fare.
    -- Tom Robbins, Half Asleep in Frog Pajamas



    Origin:
    Chockablock is of uncertain origin. It is likely related to the word chock-full which means "crammed". The word chock refers to a wooden block that holds something in place.

  22. #262
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    makebate

    \ MEYK-beyt \ , noun;

    1.
    A person who causes contention or discord.



    Quotes:
    The man was a hater of the great Governor and his life-work, the Erie; a makebate , a dawplucker, a malcontent politicaster.
    -- Samuel Hopkins Adams, Grandfather Stories

    But after all he pays well that pays with gold; and Mike Lambourne was never a makebate , or a spoil-sport, or the like.
    -- Sir Walter Scott, Kenilworth



    Origin:
    Makebate stems from the Middle English word bate which meant "contention".

  23. #263
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    agemate

    \ EYJ-meyt \ , noun;
    1.
    A person of about the same age as another.



    Quotes:
    She tolerates the family, especially an agemate named Isabelle, although they kid her about getting letters from a mysterious swain every day.
    -- Faye Moskowitz, Her face in the Mirror

    She had no agemate in that house, no one she could think of as an ally.
    -- Julie Orringer, The Invisible Bridge



    Origin:
    Agemate entered English in the late 1500s when the word mate meant "guest" in Old English

  24. #264
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    Bildungsroman

    \ BIL-doongz-roh-mahn \ , noun;

    1.
    A type of novel concerned with the education, development, and maturing of a young protagonist.



    Quotes:
    Unlike David Copperfield , The Catcher in the Rye is no Bildungsroman , because the narrator/protagonist doesn't want to grow up.
    -- John Sutherland and Stephen Fender, Love, Sex, Death & Words

    With its emphasis squarely on the diversity and latitude of lived experiences, Night Travellers unambiguously demonstrates its unease with the rigid providential scenario that pervades this kind of political Bildungsroman.
    -- Yunzhong Shu, Buglers on the Home Front



    Origin:
    Bildungsroman stems from the German word of the same spelling. The word bildung means "formation," and the word roman means "book."

  25. #265
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    jubilate

    \ JOO-buh-leyt \ , verb;
    1.
    To show or feel great joy; rejoice; exult.

    2.
    To celebrate a jubilee or joyful occasion.



    Quotes:
    Though this sudden setback of the plague was as welcome as it was unlooked-for, our townsfolk were in no hurry to jubilate.
    -- Albert Camus, The Plague

    This would enable me to jubilate like a normal person, knowing why.
    -- Samuel Beckett, The Unnameable



    Origin:
    Jubilate derives from the Latin word jūbil- meaning "to shout."

  26. #266
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    precipitancy

    \ pri-SIP-i-tuhn-see \ , noun;
    1.
    Headlong or rash haste.

    2.
    The quality or state of being precipitant.

    3.
    Precipitancies, hasty or rash acts.



    Quotes:
    There is one thing I think it my duty to caution you against: the precipitancy with which young men frequently rush into matrimonial engagements, and by their thoughtlessness draw many a deserving woman into scenes of poverty and distress.
    -- Susanna Rowson, Charlotte Temple

    The police authorities have acted in this matter with undue precipitancy.
    -- Joseph Smith Fletcher, Green Ink and Other Stories



    Origin:
    Precipitancy comes from the Latin word praecipitāre meaning "to cast down headlong."

  27. #267
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    intrapreneur

    \ in-truh-pruh-NUR \ , noun;
    1.
    An employee of a large corporation who is given freedom and financial support to create new products, services, systems, etc., and does not have to follow the corporation's usual routines or protocols.



    Quotes:
    Furthermore, the distinction between entrepreneur and intrapreneur reflects a difference in both attitude of mind, and ability between individuals.
    -- Michael Rimmington, Clare Williams and Alison Morrison, Entrepreneurship in the Hospitality, Tourism and Leisure Industries

    What is in the interest of the individual intrapreneur may not be in the interest of the shareholder of the corporation.
    -- Arnold Kling and Nick Schulz, Invisible Wealth



    Origin:
    Intrapreneur was coined in the 1970s as a variation of the more common word entrepreneur. The prefix intra- means "within."

  28. #268
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    banausic

    \ buh-NAW-sik \ , adjective;
    1.
    Serving utilitarian purposes only; mechanical; practical: architecture that was more banausic than inspired.



    Quotes:
    Banausic to the point of drudgery? Sometimes. Often tedious? Perhaps.
    -- David Foster Wallace, The Pale King

    To me, the Venetians whom I have met, seem to be merely inadequate, incondite, banausic , and perfectly complacent about it.
    -- Frederick Rolfe, The Armed Hands



    Origin:
    Banausic comes from the Greek word bánaus meaning "artisan, mere mechanical." It entered English in the 1820s.

  29. #269
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    matte

    \ mat \ , adjective;
    1.
    Having a dull or lusterless surface: matte paint; a matte complexion; a photograph with a matte finish.

    noun: 1.
    A dull or dead surface, often slightly roughened, as on metals, paint, paper, or glass.

    2.
    A tool for producing such a surface.



    Quotes:
    The blue, red, and green of the china pattern were matte , but the white background glowed.
    -- James Collins, Beginner's Greek

    In seconds the coals went from matte black to shiny wet and then back to matte black, as the stuff soaked in.
    -- A.M. Homes, Things You Should Know



    Origin:
    Matte comes form the Late Latin word mattus meaning "moist, soft, weak."

  30. #270
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    incondite

    \ in-KON-dit \ , adjective;
    1.
    Ill-constructed; unpolished: incondite prose.

    2.
    Crude; rough; unmannerly.




    Quotes:
    He is no such honest chronicler as R.N., and would have done better perhaps to have consulted that gentleman, before he sent these incondite reminiscences to press.
    -- Charles Lamb, Charles Lamb: Selected Writings

    I wish I might digress and tell you more of the pavor nocturnus that would rack me at night hideously after a chance term had struck me in the random readings of my boyhood, such as peine forte et dure (what a Genius of Pain must have invented that!), or the dreadful, mysterious, insidious words "trauma," "traumatic event," and "transom." But my tale is sufficiently incondite already.
    -- Vladimir Nabokov, Lolita

    To me, the Venetians whom I have met, seem to be merely inadequate, incondite , banausic , and perfectly complacent about it.
    -- Frederick Rolfe, The Armed Hands



    Origin:
    Incondite stems from the Latin root condere meaning "to put in, restore." The prefix in- also corresponds to the prefix un- , as in the word indefensible .

  31. #271
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    cathect

    \ kuh-THEKT \ , verb;
    1.
    To invest emotion or feeling in an idea, object, or another person.



    Quotes:
    Yet such sympathy becomes forceful through mass-cultural stereotypes, visceral and imaginative figures of woman as demon with which readers can easily cathect.
    -- David Bruce Suchoff, Critical Theory and the Novel

    We cathect something whenever we invest emotional energy in it, whether that something be another person, a rose garden, playing golf, or hating lessons.
    -- Morgan Scott Peck, Golf and the Spirit



    Origin:
    Cathect is a backformation that emerged in the 1930s. It comes from the idea of cathexis from Sigmund Freud's term for emotional investment.

  32. #272
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    foible

    \ FOI-buhl \ , noun;
    1.
    A minor weakness or failing of character; slight flaw or defect: an all-too-human foible.

    2.
    The weaker part of a sword blade, between the middle and the point (opposed to forte).



    Quotes:
    Irascibility was his sole foible ; for in fact the obstinacy of which men accused him was anything but his foible , since he justly considered it his forte.
    -- Edgar Allan Poe, "X-ing a Paragrab", Poetry and Tales

    I fear, on the contrary, if they came under your examination, there is not one in whom you would not discern some foible !
    -- Fanny Burney, Camilla



    Origin:

    Related to the word feeble , foible is derived from the Latin word flēbilis which meant "lamentable."

  33. #273
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    billet-doux

    \ BIL-ey-DOO \ , noun; plural billets-doux \bil-ay-DOO(Z)\

    1.
    A love letter.



    Quotes:
    The bouquet struck her full in the chest, and a little billet-doux fell out of it into her lap.
    -- E. M. Forster, Where Angels Fear to Tread

    Or you receive a billet doux in a careless scrawl you can't read. What sort of billet doux is that, I ask you?
    -- William H. Gass, Willie Masters' Lonesome Wife

    “A billet-doux means love letter, in French like.” “Then why didn't you just say love letter?” “Because French is the language of love, my boy. Something you should keep in mind, but will soon forget.”
    -- William W. Johnstone and J. A. Johnstone, The Brother's O'Brien



    Origin:
    Billet-doux literally means "sweet note" in French. It entered English in the 1660s.

  34. #274
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    compeer

    \ kuhm-PEER \ , noun;
    1.

    Close friend; comrade.

    2.
    An equal in rank, ability, accomplishment, etc.; peer; colleague.

    verb: 1.
    Archaic. To be the equal of; match.



    Quotes:
    Whoever eats them outlasts heaven and earth, and is the compeer of sun and moon.
    -- Cheng'en Wu, Monkey

    Aren't you pleased with him, and didn't he arrange things well, eh, my good compeer Lenet?
    -- Alexandre Dumas, The Women's War



    Origin:
    Compeer comes from the Latin word parem which meant "equal." The prefix com- means "with, together or in association."

  35. #275
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    inconspicuous

  36. #276
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    I think inconspicuous is right. :)

  37. #277
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    psychosomatic
    ˌsʌɪkə(ʊ)səˈmatɪk/
    adjective
    adjective: psychosomatic

    1.
    (of a physical illness or other condition) caused or aggravated by a mental factor such as internal conflict or stress.
    "her doctor was convinced that most of Edith's problems were psychosomatic"
    synonyms: (all) in the mind, psychological, irrational, stress-related, stress-induced, subjective, subconscious, unconscious
    "a diagnosis of psychosomatic illness should not be made lightly"
    2.
    relating to the interaction of mind and body.
    "hypnosis involves powerful but little-understood psychosomatic interactions"

  38. #278
    Affiliate/Friend blind-eddie's Avatar

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    Thumbs up

    I thought I may get in trouble for posting this with curse words in so I took the liberty of changing the spelling of a curse word so I wont get an infraction.
    Here go's.....


    Phucktard

    noun,
    A person of unbelieveable, inexcuseable and indescribable stupidity. (Stupidity being defined as "knowing how and doing it wrong anyway")

    NOT A CONTRACTION FOR "****ING RETARD"! Those who are truly "Retarded" are not responsible for their affliction. True ****tards are 100% responsible for their situation and provide vast entertainment as they are usually blissfully unaware of their own ****tardery. Most politicians for example.
    One who would actually piss on a live transformer. One who would use a live .22 round for a fuse in their pickup truck "just cuz it fits" and then complain about it shooting them in the nuts.

    He shot himself in the nuts? Geez, what a ****tard!

  39. The Following User Says Thank You to blind-eddie For This Useful Post:

    sixty seven (10-19-2016)

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    rudeness

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