Tag: etymology
Word of the Day: Crèche
Today’s Word of the Day is crèche, courtesy of the The Dictionary Project. Crèche can refer to According to www.etymonline.com, the meaning of Christmas manger scene first appears in 1792, […]
Word of the Day: Indolent
Today’s Word of the Day, courtesy of the Word of the Day app, is indolent. According to the app, indolent is an adjective meaning “showing a tendency to avoid hard […]
Word of the Day: Garrulous
Originally named Shibe Stadium, was the home of the Athletics from 1909 through 1954, then the Phillies from 1938 to 1970, sharing it with the A’s from 1938 to 1954.
The Eagles shared the park as well from 1940 through 1957.
The Athletics were in 7 World Series during their tenure at the stadium: 1910, 1911, 1913, 1914, 1929, 1930 and 1931. Winning in 1911, 1929 and 1930.
The Phillies were in 1 World Series during their tenure at the stadium, the 1950 World Series.They lost that series to the Yankees.–from ballpark junkie
Word of the Day: Facinorous
Today’s word of the day is facinorous, courtesy of a Reader’s Digest webpage called “10 Old-Fashioned Words That Make You Sound Smart,” updated March 7, 2022 (https://www.rd.com/list/old-fashioned-words-sound-smart/). It is an […]
Word of the Day: Gloaming
Today’s Word of the Day, courtesy of Webster’s, is gloaming. Gloaming is a noun that means twilight or dusk. Webster’s describes it as a literary term referring to the darker […]
Word of the Day: Sandbag
Today’s word of the day, thanks to Webster’s Dictionary, is sandbag. I’m going to skip the formal definitions, which you can probably figure out, and just right to the informal […]
Word of the Day: Luminary
Today’s word of the day, thanks to the New York Times, is luminary. Luminary, according to dictionary.com, is a noun that means It can also be used as an adjective […]
Word of the Day: Temerity
Today’s word of the day is temerity, which means rash boldness or recklessness. According to etymonline.com, the word entered the language in the late fourteenth century “from Latin temeritatem (nominative […]
Word of the Day: Promulgate
Todays’ word of the day is promulgate, thanks to the New York Times. To promulgate is “to make known by public statement or announcement” or “to put a law into […]
Word of the Day: Augur
Today’s word of the day, courtesy of Merriam-Webster, is augur. The verb means to “show or suggest, especially from omens, that something might happen in the future” (https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day). It is […]