That does it Turfy, Im giving up my mod status on Footymad/Tykesmad.
YEAHH RIGHT, LIKE HECK I AM!! ;D
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DORP noun (dawrp)
noun
1. a village; hamlet.
Quotes
Hanover is bare and at times very cold in the winter; but, in the summer, when the willow trees along the water furrows that line the streets, and the fruit trees in the gardens about the white houses, are green, the little dorp is, of all small towns I have seen, by far the most beautiful. --*S. C. Cronwright Schreiner,*"Some Arachnids at Hanover, Cape Colony," The Popular Science Monthly, December 1902 After miles and miles of sienna-red ploughed earth ... we reached the dorp where the cousin lived in a small white house with sides that were dust-stained in a wavering wash ... --*Nadine Gordimer,*"A South African Childhood: Allusions in a Landscape," Telling Times: Writing and Living 1950–2008, 2010
Origin
Dorp means “village” in Dutch and is closely related to Old Norse, Old English, and English thorp “farmstead, hamlet, village,” and German Dorf (which may bring a smile of amusement to or elicit a snort of contempt from former GIs). Dorp occurs in the name New Dorp, a neighborhood on Staten Island (one of the boroughs of New York City), a derivation of Dutch Nieuw Dorp “New Village.” Dorp entered English in the 16th century.
PALADIN noun (pal-uh-din)
noun
1. any determined advocate or defender of a noble cause.
2. any one of the 12 legendary peers or knightly champions in attendance on Charlemagne.
3. any knightly or heroic champion.
Quotes
Sweden’s center-left government is keen to underscore its role as a paladin of the welfare state and to make the most of the current boom as it prepares to fight for a new mandate in elections next year. --*Love Liman and Nicholas Rigillo,*"Sweden Squirrels Away Cash Ahead of Demographic Time Bomb," Bloomberg, June 28, 2017 Because he is bamboozled by Dodson and Fogg, he will enter the prison house like a paladin, and rescue the man and the woman who have wronged him most. --*G. K. Chesterton,*Charles Dickens: A Critical Study, 1906
Origin
Paladin nowadays usually means “defender or advocate of a noble cause,” but it still retains its original meaning “any of the twelve peers of Charlemagne’s court or of his vassals.” One of the earliest applications of the word, if not the earliest, is to Roland of Brittany, who died in 778 a.d. at the Battle of Roncevaux Pass (or Roncesvalles) in the Pyrenees in the Basque region of Spain, and was immortalized in the “Chanson de Roland” (“Song of Roland”), which was composed c1100. Paladin ultimately derives from the Latin proper noun Palātium, the name of the chief hill of the seven hills of Rome and the site of the earliest Roman settlements. The Latin adjective and noun Palātīnus derives from the noun Palātium and means “pertaining to the Palatine hill, pertaining to the imperial palace; an officer of the imperial palace, chamberlain.” The post-Augustan Latin usage passed into Italian as paladino, which was adopted in Middle French as palladin, and through French into English. Paladin entered English in the late 16th century.
HOBBYHORSE noun (hob-ee-hawrs)
noun
1. a pet idea or project.
2. a stick with a horse's head, or a rocking horse, ridden by children.
3. a figure of a horse, attached at the waist of a performer in a morris dance, pantomime, etc.
Quotes
His face kindled as it only did when the subject of electricity came up. His hobbyhorse, Claire would have said. My dad would have called it his obsession. --*Stephen King,*Revival, 2014 If he had a hobbyhorse, it was that. He loved a garden. --*Jane Austen,*Northanger Abbey, 1817
Origin
In Middle English one of the meanings of hobby was “small horse, pony” (obsolete except in dialect). By the early 19th century hobby acquired the sense “favorite occupation or amusement,” the current meaning of the word. This last sense of hobby was borrowed from the earlier hobbyhorse, which in the 16th century meant several things, e.g., a figure of a horse made of wicker worn in morris dances, pantomimes, and burlesques; a child’s toy consisting of horse’s head on the end of a stick or a rocking horse; a horse on a merry-go-round or a carousel. By the 17th century hobbyhorse developed the meaning “pet project, favorite pastime.” Hobbyhorse entered English in the 16th century.
I'm going with...
socio|path
[ˈsəʊʃɪə(ʊ)paθ, ˈsəʊsɪə(ʊ)paθ]
NOUN
a person with a personality disorder manifesting itself in extreme antisocial attitudes and behaviour.
synonyms: madman/madwoman · mad person · deranged person · maniac · lunatic · psychotic · sociopath · loony · fruitcake · nutcase · nut · nutter · nutjob · cuckoo · psycho · schizo · [
Seems a good job your wife called you away or you would have probably still been writing :)
CONSUETUDE noun (kon-swi-tood)
noun
1. custom, especially as having legal force.
Quotes
They must stand idly by, and in silence watch their ancient consuetude be tossed summarily into the limbo of forgotten things. --*Richard C. Baker,*"The Supreme Court and the Freedom of Religion Mélange," American Bar Association Journal, May 1963 "Yet bethink thee, reverend father," said Mont-Fitchet, "the stain hath become engrained by time and consuetude; let thy reformation be cautious, as it is just and wise." --*Sir Walter Scott,*Ivanhoe: A Romance, 1819
Origin
Consuetude comes from Old French consuetude, in Old French a learned borrowing or Latinism from Latin consuētūdō “custom, usage, habit; idiom or usage (in language); customary right or usage in law (its usual modern sense); companionship, familiarity, social intercourse, ***ual intercourse, illicit love affair.” Consuetude entered English in the 14th century.
PALSY-WALSY adjective (pal-zee-wal-zee)
adjective
1. Slang. friendly or appearing to be friendly in a very intimate or hearty way: The police kept their eye on him because he was trying to get palsy-walsy with the security guard.
Quotes
For musical history I give you this duo-portrait of Frank Sinatra and Bing Crosby who became very palsy-walsy recently in Los Angeles. --*Harold Trudeau,*"Pictures to the Editors," Life, February 21, 1944 Well, don't expect me to be palsy-walsy. I'll shoot the breeze, okay. But I'm not about to be your pal just because you're Bijou's cousin from Hollywood and radio land. --*Ron Hansen,*"Playland," She Loves Me Not: New and Selected Stories, 2012
Origin
Palsy-walsy came to English in the 1930s. It’s a rhyming compound based on the slang term palsy, which was first recorded in the 1920s.
FRUCTIFY verb (fruhk-tuh-fahy)
verb
1. to bear fruit; become fruitful: With careful tending the plant will fructify.
2. to make fruitful or productive; fertilize: warm spring rains fructifying the earth.
Quotes
... his intellect is not replenished; he is only an animal, only sensible in the duller parts: And such barren plants are set before us that we thankful should be (Which we of taste and feeling are) for those parts that do fructify in us more than he. --*William Shakespeare,*Love's Labour's Lost, 1598 To plant the good seed in the waiting ground one must not only know all about the seed itself, but must be acquainted with the properties of the ground in which it is destined to fructify. --*Guy Thorne,*The Angel, 1908
Origin
Fructify comes from Middle English fructifien from Old French fructifier. It ultimately derives from Latin frūctificāre. It entered English in the late 13th century or early 14th century.
MUSSITATION noun (muhs-i-tey-shuh n)
noun
1. muttering; mumbling; murmuring.
2. silent movement of the lips in simulation of the movements made in audible speech.
Quotes
Not conversation by any civilized standard, but a kind of mussitation, the prisoner's half-mime half-whisper, under the nodding eye of an orderly. --*Jamie O'Neill,*At Swim, Two Boys, 2001 Then they said, "Let us take it by stratagem; let us send one who is skilled in mussitation*, who can make black white and white black, and can give to any object whatever colour he pleases." ... *It may be proper to inform the unlearned reader, that mussitation means the same as muttering, or whispering, and is therefore a term suited to denote an art which consist in speaking obscurely and perplexedly on all subjects, and thereby darkening the clearness and plainness of genuine truth. --*Emanuel Swedenborg,*The Apocalypse Revealed, Wherein Are Disclosed the Arcana There Foretold, Which Have Hitherto Remained Concealed, Volume II, translated from the Latin, 1791
Origin
Mussitation, a very rare noun, derives from Late Latin mussitātiō (stem mussitātiōn-) “suppression of the voice, silence.” The sense of “moving the lips in silence but as if speaking” is a modern medical sense dating from the late 19th century. Late Latin mussitātiō derives from the Latin verb mussitāre “to speak in a low tone, grumble, take no notice of, bear silently.” Mussitation entered English in the mid-17th century.