Start each day with the Word of the Day in your inbox!

Word of the Day

Word of the day

补辫别谤莽耻

[ a-per-sy ]

noun

French.

an immediate estimate or judgment; understanding; insight.

learn about the english language

More about 补辫别谤莽耻

础辫别谤莽耻, 鈥渁 hasty glance or glimpse; an insight; an outline or summary,鈥 is not at all naturalized in English, even retaining its French spelling (the cedilla under the c). 础辫别谤莽耻 is the past participle of the verb apercevoir 鈥渢o perceive, see, catch sight of,鈥 a compound of the prefix a– (from Latin ad– 鈥渢o,鈥 here indicating direction or tendency) and the Old French verb 辫别谤莽辞颈惫谤别 (Middle French, French percevoir), from Latin percipere 鈥渢o obtain, seize, gather (crops), collect (taxes).鈥 Percipere is a compound verb composed of the preposition and prefix per, per– 鈥渢hrough,鈥 here with an intensive meaning, and the simple verb capere 鈥渢o take, take hold of, seize, capture.鈥 础辫别谤莽耻 entered English in the first half of the 19th century.

how is 补辫别谤莽耻 used?

I once heard an author of young adult fiction being asked what her novel was about, and instead of explaining its adventure plot or sophisticated science- fiction premise, she said: 鈥淜issing鈥. This was clearly self-deprecation, but it was also an聽补辫别谤莽耻 about the pleasure that draws readers to a huge array of books ….

Sandra Newman, "The Binding by Bridget Collins review 鈥 magical tale of supernatural books," The Guardian, January 4, 2019

Kottke has been an engaging, likable omnipresence on the scene for as long as it has existed, serving up a daily blend of clean-crafted personal 补辫别谤莽耻s and fresh, literate links to tech, pop, and political news that is as brisk and cozy as Folgers in your cup.

Julian Dibbell, "Pay You, Pay Me," Village Voice, February 22, 2005

Listen to the podcast

补辫别谤莽耻

Play Podcast Stop Podcast
00:00/00:00
quiz icon
WHAT'S YOUR WORD IQ?
Think you're a word wizard? Try our word quiz, and prove it!
TAKE THE QUIZ
arrows pointing up and down
SYNONYM OF THE DAY
Double your word knowledge with the Synonym of the Day!
Word of the Day Calendar

Word of the day

credulous

[ krej-uh-luhs ]

adjective

willing to believe or trust too readily, especially without proper or adequate evidence; gullible.

learn about the english language

More about credulous

Credulous comes from the Latin adjective 肠谤脓诲耻濒耻蝉 鈥渋nclined to believe or trust, trustful, credulous, rash.鈥 The first part of 肠谤脓诲耻濒耻蝉 comes from the verb 肠谤脓诲别谤别 鈥渢o believe, trust, entrust,鈥 most likely a compound of Proto-Indo-European kerd-, kred- (and other variants) 鈥渉eart鈥 and -dere, a combining form meaning 鈥渢o put, place,鈥 from the root 诲丑脓-, 诲丑艒-, with the same meaning. Latin 肠谤脓诲别谤别 鈥渢o place my heart鈥 is a very ancient religious term that has an exact correspondence with Sanskrit 艣谤补诲-诲补诲丑腻迟颈 鈥渉e trusts,鈥 and Old Irish cretim 鈥淚 trust.鈥 The second part of 肠谤脓诲耻濒耻蝉 is the diminutive noun and adjective suffix –ulus, which frequently has a pejorative sense, as in 谤脓驳耻濒耻蝉 鈥減etty king, chieftain.鈥 Credulous entered English in the mid-16th century.

how is credulous used?

When the British news network aired a three-minute segment about Swiss spaghetti farmers plucking long strands of pasta straight from tree branches, hundreds of credulous viewers wrote in asking how they could cultivate their own spaghetti tree.

Sarah Kaplan, "A brief, totally sincere history of April Fools' Day," Washington Post, March 31, 2016

I did not believe half of what she told me: I pretended to laugh at it all; but I was far more credulous than I myself supposed.

Anne Bront毛, Agnes Grey, 1847

Listen to the podcast

credulous

Play Podcast Stop Podcast
00:00/00:00
Word of the Day Calendar

Word of the day

felicific

[ fee-luh-sif-ik ]

adjective

causing or tending to cause happiness.

learn about the english language

More about felicific

The adjective felicific 鈥渢ending to cause happiness,鈥 is a term used in ethics, a branch of philosophy. The word is formed from the Latin adjective 蹿脓濒颈虫 (stem 蹿脓濒墨肠颈-) 鈥渉appy, lucky鈥 and the English combining form -fic 鈥渕aking, producing,鈥 from Latin -ficus. Felicific entered English in the 19th century.

how is felicific used?

Bentham was advancing his felicific calculus (though without much actual mathematics to back it up) as the scientific solution to the problems of morality and legislation.

Bruce Mazlish, The Uncertain Sciences, 1998

The problem is that as more humans run their felicific calculations and decide to live in pleasant places, their presence changes the balance.

John Yemma, "The greening of the West," Christian Science Monitor, June 17, 2013

Listen to the podcast

felicific

Play Podcast Stop Podcast
00:00/00:00
Word of the Day Calendar
Word of the Day Calendar