NEW VOCABULARY WORDS
Started by Hobbit99


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Hobbit99
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3,094 posts 576 threads Joined: Dec 2019
06-26-2024, 02:44 AM -
#41
WORD(S) OF THE DAY...

Three new words today. All of these are from my reading. A couple of them look to be 'everyday' words, but beware, everything may not be exactly as it appears...


rode = This is the first of the 'strange' words. Common usage is as a past-tense form of the verb ride. As in: He rode his bike to school. However, rode can also be a Noun: Nautical term. A cable, chain, rope or line which serves as the attachment point from an anchor to a boat. Also used to describe a boats location while stationary. As in: The boat was at rode. (anchored; at anchorage).; 
Etymology: From Middle English. at rode; at an anchorage



plane = The second of our 'strange' words. Common usage is as an airplane; a straight, flat uniform surface; a tool used to straighten or flatten wood surfaces, one of the natural faces or facets of a crystal, a boat under power having risen above the surface of the water is said to be "on plane". However, plane can also be a tree. Quite common in western Europe. Plane = Noun: (Botanical) Any tree of the genus platanus
Etymology: All over the place... Latin; Ancient Greek; Old French; Middle English.  Depending on the usage, this word has been around for a LONG time.



petard =  something explosive; firecracker; intent to disable or breach a wall, gate, or door: idiomatic = hoisted by one's own petard (be undone by one's own schemes..); anything potentially explosive (in a non-literal sense.....) falling on your sword; shooting yourself in the foot; 
Etymology: Middle French, petarder (from petard..).  [French pétard, from Old French, from peter, to break wind, from pet, a breaking of wind, from Latin pēditum, from neuter past participle of pēdere, to break wind; see pezd- in Indo-European roots.]
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Hobbit99
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10-04-2024, 06:33 PM -
#42
Have to get back to my "word of the day" thread. My lexicon or thesaurus is running over.!!  So, here are a couple of interesting words that are not as casual as some others I have posted.... not as recognizable perhaps.


copse = Noun: A thicket of small trees or shrubs; A woody glen of small growth; A thicket of brushwood; A dense growth of bushes. See also  var. coppice.  Verb (transitive): To trim or cut - as said of small trees or shrubs. Verb (intransitive): To plant and preserve.
Etymology: Middle English copys, fr. Old French copelz (thicket form cutting) from coper. couper (to cut)
1578: From coppice by contraction (originally "small wood grown for periodic cutting")


pollex = Noun (anatomical): The innermost digit if the hand or foot. If there are five, the thumb or Great toe, especially the thumb. Noun (zoological): The innermost digit of the fore limb only, corresponding to the human thumb. The thumb of a bird; the short digit bearing the alula or bastard wing. The moveable joint of the forceps of the lobster, crab, or crawfish.
Etymology: Latin (thumb, big toe)
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