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new inventions in english words...

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Jun 14 06 9:19 PM

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Dear friends,
I thought i could share this information with you of newest english words which are invented everyday. Reply me either i have to continue or not...

NOTE: These are the new inventions in english words. But invented by a great indian called Anu garg...


--debark

: less-known synonyms of everyday words.

debark (di-BARK) verb tr., intr.

To disembark.

[From French debarquer, de- from + barque ship.]

debark (dee-BARK) verb tr.

To remove the bark from a log or a dog.

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Jun 14 06 9:21 PM

sartorial

less-known synonyms of everyday words.

sartorial (sar-TOR-ee-uhl) adjective

Related to a tailor or tailored clothes.

[From Late Latin sartor, tailor.]

Today's word has a cousin, sartorius, a long narrow muscle in the leg,
the
longest muscle in humans. What would tailored clothes have in common
with
a muscle of the leg? Sartorius is so named since it is concerned with
producing the cross-legged position of tailors at work.

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 14 06 9:22 PM

cancrine

cancrine (KANG-krin) adjective

1. Reading the same backwards as forwards, palindromic. For example,
"A man, a plan, a canal: Panama." (letter cancrine)
"So patient a doctor to doctor a patient so!" (word cancrine)

2. Crab-like.

[From Latin cancr- (stem of cancer) cancer + -ine.]

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Jun 14 06 9:24 PM

dharma (DHAR-muh) noun(sanskrit)

1. Duty; right behavior.

2. Law, especially the eternal law of the cosmos.

3. Religion.

[From Sanskrit dharma (law, custom, duty). Ultimately from
Indo-European
root dher- (to hold firmly or support) that is also the source of firm,
affirm, confirm, farm, fermata, and firmament.]

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Jun 14 06 9:26 PM

eustasy (YOO-stuh-see) noun

A uniform global change in sea level.

[From eustatic, from German eustatisch, coined by Austrian geologist
Edward
Suess.]

"She wasn't asking for trouble... she demanded it. Not the trouble
eustasy
would cause her ex shacked up in his beachfront bachelor pad, but
trouble
still."

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Jun 14 06 9:28 PM

pangaea

Pangaea (pan-JEE-uh) noun

A hypothetical supercontinent that existed when all the major
landmasses
of the earth were joined.

[From Green pan (all) + gaia (earth), supposedly coined by German
meteorologist Alfred Wegener (1880-1930).]

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Jun 14 06 9:29 PM

McJob

McJob (muhk-JOB) noun

A low-paying, non-challenging job with few benefits or
opportunities,
typically in the service sector.

[Coined by Douglas Coupland, in his novel Generation X, after
McDonald's
fast-food chain.]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 14 06 9:30 PM

locust years

locust years (LO-kuhst yeerz) noun

A period of economic hardship.

[Coined by British Prime Minister Winston Churchill to refer to the mid
1930s
in Britain, after "the years that the locust hath eaten" from the
Bible, Joel
2:25.]

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Jun 14 06 9:33 PM

prehensile

This week's theme: coined words.

prehensile (pri-HEN-sil, -syl) adjective

1. Capable of seizing or grasping, especially by wrapping around.

2. Skilled at keen perception or mental grasp of an idea or concept.

3. Greedy.

[From French prehensile, coined by French naturalist Georges Louis
Leclerc
De Buffon, from Latin prehensus.]

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Jun 18 06 10:56 AM

sextet (seks-TET) noun

1. A group of six.

2. A group of six singers or musicians, or a piece of music composed
for them.

[Alteration of sestet, influenced by Latin sex (six).]

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Jun 18 06 10:59 AM

potatory (POH-tuh-tor-ee) adjective

Pertaining to or given to drinking.

[From Latin potatorius, from Latin potatus, past participle of potare
(to drink).]

The word potatory has little to do with potatoes, unless the drink
in question happens to be aquavit (a dry spirit made from potatoes).
Two more familiar cousins of today's word are potion and potable.

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Jun 18 06 10:59 AM

gyrovague (JYE-ro-vayg) noun

A monk who travels from one place to another.

[From French, from Late Latin gyrovagus gyro- (circle) + vagus
(wandering).]

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Jun 18 06 11:01 AM

discommode (dis-kuh-MOD) verb tr.

To put to inconvenience.

[From French discommoder, from dis- + commode (convenient). Ultimately
from Indo-European root med- (to take appropriate measures) that is
also the source of medicine, modern, modify, modest, and modulate.]

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Jun 18 06 11:03 AM

obsequy (OB-se-kwee) noun

A funeral rite or ceremony.

[From Middle English obsequie, from Middle French, from Medieval
Latin obsequiae, alteration (after Latin exsequiae, funeral rites)
of Latin obsequia, plural of obsequium (compliance).]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:06 AM

volitant (VOL-i-tuhnt) adjective

1. Flying or capable of flight.

2. Active; moving about rapidly.

[From Latin volitare (to flutter), from volare (to fly). Volatile and
volley
descended from the same source.]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:07 AM

adit (AD-it) noun

1. Access; entrance; admission.

2. A nearly horizontal passage leading into a mine.

[From Latin aditus (approach, entrance), from adire (to approach), from
ire
(to go). Ultimately from Indo-European root ei- (to go) that is also
the
ancestor of words such as exit, transit, circuit, itinerary, and
obituary.]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:08 AM

palisade (pal-uh-SADE) noun

1. A fence of stakes forming a defense.

2. A line of steep cliffs, especially along a river.

verb tr.

To fortify with palisades.

[From French palissade, Latin palus (stake). Ultimately from
Indo-European
root pag- (to fasten) that is also the source of peace, pacify, pact,
travel, compact, pagan, and peasant.]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:10 AM

bagatelle (bag-uh-TEL) noun

1. Something unimportant.

2. A kind of pinball game in which balls are struck with a cue to
send
them to holes at the other end.

3. A short, light piece of verse of music.

[From French bagatelle (trifle), from Italian bagattella (trifle),
possibly
from Latin baca (berry).]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:11 AM

mulligrubs (MUL-i-grubz) noun

1. Grumpiness; colic; low spirits.

2. An ill-tempered person.

[From mulliegrums, apparently from megrims (low spirits).]

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:12 AM

clerisy (KLER-i-see) noun

The well-educated class; the literati; the intelligentsia.

[From German Klerisei (clergy), from Medieval Latin clericia,
from Late Latin clericus (cleric), from Greek klerikos
(belonging to the clergy), from Greek kleros (inheritance).]

Ironically, clerisy and clerk have branched out from the same root,
that is also the source for clergy and cleric.

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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Jun 18 06 11:13 AM

putsch (pooch) noun

A secretly plotted, sudden attempt to overthrow a government.

[From Swiss German Putsch (thrust, blow).]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=putsch

An infamous example was the Beer Hall Putsch of 1923. Hitler and his
cohorts stormed a beer hall in Munich where a meeting of the Bavarian
government was taking place. The putsch failed and they were sentenced
to prison. This attempt gave Hitler national attention and he decided
to gain power by legal means. It was during this imprisonment that he
wrote Mein Kampf (My Struggle).

ವಂದೇ ಮಾತರಂ...

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