+ Visit Burnley FC Mad for Latest News, Transfer Gossip, Fixtures and Match Results
Page 18 of 119 FirstFirst ... 816171819202868118 ... LastLast
Results 171 to 180 of 1189

Thread: Word Of The Day

  1. #171
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    Quote Originally Posted by alfinyalcabo View Post
    Winnet

    Top Definition. Winnet picker. A person who picks small dried peices of poo from their anal beard. Oh, no! I have winnets tied up in my bum fluff, I will have to look in the yellow pages for a winnet picker.
    Where do you get these strange/odd/off the wall but unique words alf ?

  2. #172
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    SHRIVE verb (shrahyv)

    verb
    1. to grant absolution to (a penitent).
    2. to impose penance on (a sinner).
    3. to hear the confession of (a person).
    4. Archaic. to hear confessions.
    5. Archaic. to go to or make confession; confess one's sins, as to a priest.

    Quotes
    Father Hugo says that in time of war, even if there is no priest to shrive you, your sins can be forgiven this way.
--*Diana Gabaldon,*Dragonfly in Amber, 1992

"Shrive me quickly, then," she said, laughing. "Now, without confession? Would you have me read your thoughts and give penance?"
--*H. Bedford-Jones,*"The Mardi Gras Mystery," Short Stories, August 1920


    Origin
    Shrive is a borrowing from Latin scrībere “to write, draw” and occurs in all the Germanic languages except Gothic, e.g., Old Norse skrifa “to write, draw,” Old High German scrîban, German schreiben. Old English scrīfan and Middle English shriven, schrifen mean “to impose a penance on (a penitent)” and by extension “to hear (someone’s) confession, absolve (someone).” Shrive entered English before 900.

  3. #173
    BILBOES
    PLURAL NOUN

    An iron bar with sliding shackles, formerly used for confining a prisoner's ankles.

  4. #174
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    Quote Originally Posted by SERVERNOTRESPONDING View Post
    BILBOES
    PLURAL NOUN

    An iron bar with sliding shackles, formerly used for confining a prisoner's ankles.
    I'm sure Turfmoorspirit knows about the above

  5. #175
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    DUDGEON noun (duhj-uh n)

    noun
    1. a feeling of offense or resentment; anger: We left in high dudgeon.

    Quotes
    We had only been married three weeks and she had already walked out in high dudgeon five or six times. I could never understand what I did to put her in high dudgeon, but whatever it was I always felt utterly to blame.
--*Larry McMurtry,*All My Friends Are Going to Be Strangers, 1972

Carson bent, showing patches on the back of faded clothes, clawed the air at one side of him without turning his head, and spoke with injured tones of imperial dudgeon.
--*Raymond Knister,*White Narcissus, 1929


    Origin
    Dudgeon entered English in the 1560s and is of uncertain origin.

  6. #176
    DORYPHORE
    NOUN

    rare
    A pedantic and annoyingly persistent critic.

    Theres a few on this forum at times !!

  7. #177
    Quote Originally Posted by Altobelli View Post
    Where do you get these strange/odd/off the wall but unique words alf ?
    Alto, it's because Alf lives in a world of strange/odd/off the wall dudes and dudesses.

  8. #178
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    Quote Originally Posted by The Bedlington Terrier View Post
    Alto, it's because Alf lives in a world of strange/odd/off the wall dudes and dudesses.
    I'm sure Mrs Alf has a lot to do with it Terrier.

  9. #179
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    EXCORIATE verb (ik-skawr-ee-eyt)


    verb
    1. to denounce or berate severely; flay verbally: He was excoriated for his mistakes.
    2. to strip off or remove the skin from: Her palms were excoriated by the hard labor of shoveling.

    Quotes
    Jonathan Swift once observed, “Satire is a sort of glass, wherein beholders do generally discover everybody’s face but their own,” and so it might be charged, too, of satirists who excoriate others while exempting themselves from blame.
--*Joyce Carol Oates,*"Showtime," The New Yorker, October 27, 2003

The accompanying editorial went on to excoriate him and those who served under him.
--*Leighton Gage,*Dying Gasp, 2010


    Origin
    In Latin the verb excoriāre meant only “to strip the skin, bark, shell” (it also had an obscene sense). The modern sense “to denounce, upbraid” arose in English in the late 19th century. Excoriate in its Latin senses entered English in the late 15th century.

  10. #180
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Posts
    34,432
    MALFEASANCE noun (mal-fee-zuh-ns)


    noun
    1. Law. the performance by a public official of an act that is legally unjustified, harmful, or contrary to law; wrongdoing (used especially of an act in violation of a public trust).

    Quotes
    The mid-nineteen-seventies was a revolutionary moment in investigative reporting—the perhaps inevitable aftermath of Woodward and Bernstein, with stories on C.I.A. operations, military cover-ups, and Congressional malfeasance all over the front pages.
--*Seymour M. Hersh,*"Scooped by Mike Wallace," The New Yorker, April 8, 2012

All reports in Tahiti declared her husband to have been precisely the man he'd always seemed: a gentle virtuous soul, incapable of malfeasance, too good for this world.
--*Elizabeth Gilbert,*The Signature of All Things, 2013


    Origin
    Tracing the history of the word malfeasance (with an earlier spelling male-feasance) “illegal act, official misconduct” is as disorienting as getting lost in a hall of mirrors. The phrase Male-feasance and Mis-feasance is first recorded in 1663. Misfeasance (spelled misfeasance) “wrongful use of lawful authority” is first recorded in Sir Francis Bacon’s The Elements of the Common Lawes of England (1630). Male-feasance may be a reworking of misfeasance with replacement of the combining form mis- with mal-. The law being very traditional in its terminology, the change of prefix may have been influenced by malfeasor (variously spelled) “malefactor,” which had a very brief history in print—less than a century—and was obsolete by the late 15th century.

Page 18 of 119 FirstFirst ... 816171819202868118 ... LastLast

Forum Info

Footymad Forums offer you the chance to interact and discuss all things football with fellow fans from around the world, and share your views on footballing issues from the latest, breaking transfer rumours to the state of the game at international level and everything in between.

Whether your team is battling it out for the Premier League title or struggling for League survival, there's a forum for you!

Gooners, Mackems, Tractor Boys - you're all welcome, please just remember to respect the opinions of others.

Click here for a full list of the hundreds of forums available to you

The forums are free to join, although you must play fair and abide by the rules explained here, otherwise your ability to post may be temporarily or permanently revoked.

So what are you waiting for? Register now and join the debate!

(these forums are not actively moderated, so if you wish to report any comment made by another member please report it.)



Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •