I will be really bloody floriferous come Saturday teatime if we beat West Brom!
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I will be really bloody floriferous come Saturday teatime if we beat West Brom!
DOX verb (doks)
verb
1. Slang. to publish the private personal information of (another person) or reveal the identity of (an online poster) without the consent of that individual: The professor was doxed by a bitter student who failed her class. Several players doxed the programmer because the final version of the game disappointed them.
Quotes
Hackers and online vigilantes routinely "dox" both public and private figures who provoke their ire, by publishing social security numbers, home addresses, and credit card numbers. --*Sam Gustin,*"The Internet Doesn't Hurt People--People Do: 'The New Digital Age,'" Time, April 26, 2013 Apparently, one of his online enemies had doxed him. --*Jason Fagone,*"The Serial Swatter," New York Times, November 24, 2015
Origin
Dox is an alteration of docs, which is short for documents. It’s been used since around 2000.
MINATORY adjective (min-uh-tawr-ee)
adjective
1. menacing; threatening.
Quotes
His features had lost their delicately benevolent aspect; his words were minatory. --*E. Phillips Oppenheim,*The Vanished Messenger, 1914 The latest of the desperate devices of Mr. Oxnard is now bearing its fruit in the minatory letters that are coming to members of Congress who have beet-raisers among their constituents, warning them that they will fail of re-election if they prefer the behests of public duty to those of Oxnard. --*James Kaplan,*"Mr. Oxnard's Clients," New York Times, January 18, 1902
Origin
The English adjective minatory has always stuck pretty closely to its Latin source, minārī “to threaten,” a derivative of the noun minae “threats, menaces.” Another derivative in Latin is the Late Latin noun minātor, “one who drives cattle with threats, drover.” This “country” usage persisted in French, in which the verb mener, a direct descendant of Latin minārī, means “to lead.” Minatory entered English in the 16th century.
CORUSCANT adjective (kuh-ruhs-kuh nt)
adjective
1. sparkling or gleaming; scintillating; coruscating.
Quotes
Halley's comet was visible here early to-day in the southeastern horizon. Its light was brilliant and coruscant. --*"Comet Is Getting Near," New York Times, April 20, 1910 Meanwhile, social media is a bon mot factory where you go to flaunt your coruscant wit, impeccable taste, and airbrushed confidence ... --*Katy Waldman,*"Please, Like My Shame," Slate, June 29, 2016
Origin
The Latin adjective coruscus “flashing, gleaming” and its derivative coruscāre, come from the same Proto-Indo-European root (s)ker-, (s)krē- (with other variants) “to jump around, leap.” In Langobardic (the Germanic language of the Lombards) skerzan “to leap with pleasure” (in Middle High German scherzen “to jump for joy,” modern German scherzen "to joke, jest") was adopted into Italian as the verb scherzare “to joke, jest” and the noun scherzo. Coruscant entered English in the 15th century.
Sounds a lot like old TEC to me! Proper coruscating is that old chap!![]()
ABRAZO noun (ah-brah-thaw,-saw)
noun
1. Spanish. an embrace, used in greeting someone.
Quotes
Sonny had seen her embrace Rita, as a greeting or in parting; the abrazo was part of the warmth of friendship. --*Rudolfo Anaya,*Rio Grande Fall, 1996 He and Charlie clutch in an abrazo and say it's good to see each other. --*James Carlos Blake,*The House of Wolfe, 2015
Origin
Spanish abrazo and Italian abbraccio, both meaning “a hug, an embrace” come from the Latin prefix (and preposition) ad- “to, at, near” and Spanish brazo and Italian braccio “arm” both come from Latin brachium. Abrazo entered English in the 17th century.
Last edited by Altobelli; 05-05-2017 at 03:14 PM.
MILLINER noun (mill-uh-ner)
noun
1. a person who designs, makes, or sells hats for women.
Quotes
Mrs. Gruby, our best milliner, does not believe in slavishly following Paris fashions; she originates her own styles. --*Jean Webster,*"Dear Enemy, Part II " The Century, May 1915 There is an exquisite thoroughness in the way a milliner's or a dressmaker's work is done,--a work such as clumsy man cannot rival, and can hardly estimate. --*Thomas Wentworth Higginson,*"Thorough," Women and the Alphabet, 1881
Origin
Milan, the name of the chief city of Lombardy, was formerly accented on the first syllable and the second syllable was unstressed. This accounts for the pronunciation of milliner, which meant originally, in the 15th century, “an inhabitant of Milan” and, a century later, “a designer, maker, and merchant of fine garments and accessories for ladies, especially of ladies’ hats.”
OLEAGINOUS adjective (oh-lee-aj-uh-nuh s)
adjective
1. having the nature or qualities of oil.
2. containing oil.
3. producing oil.
4. unctuous; fawning; smarmy.
Quotes
He filled the wheelbarrow with provisions and two five-gallon cans that had once held olive oil and now contained water--albeit an oleaginous and tinny-tasting variant of what he knew water to be. --*T. Coraghessan Boyle,*"The Underground Gardens," The New Yorker, May 25, 1998 Nearly 50 years later, the oleaginous excess and two-handed indulgence that once made the Big Mac such a culinary icon is now associated with its undoing. --*Adam Chandler,*"The Genius Behind the Big Mac," The Atlantic, December 7, 2016
Origin
Oleaginous has always meant “oily, fatty, greasy” to describe plants, fruits, vegetables, fish, and stones. Oleaginous acquired its uncomplimentary sense “smarmy, unctuous” in the 19th century. Oleaginous entered English in the 17th century.
Last edited by Altobelli; 07-05-2017 at 06:37 PM.
Two words for me today...
Phookin' elated!