Word Of The Week

schlep

verb (used with object)

to carry; lug: to schlep an umbrella on a sunny day.

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WHAT IS THE ORIGIN OF SCHLEP?

The slang term schlep “to lug, carry” is used mostly in the United States. Schlep is from the Yiddish verb shlepn “to pull, drag” (German schleppen “to draw, tug, haul”). The derivative noun schlepper, “one who schleps,” appears slightly earlier than the verb. Schlepper entered English toward the end of the 19th century; schlep appeared in the early 20th.

HOW IS SCHLEP USED?

She had drawn notice as the doctor who would help mechanics schlep gear, fetch coffee and even massage the overworked massage therapists. NANCY LOFHOLM, “CRESTED BUTTE SURGEON SCORES TOP SPOT AT SOCHI OLYMPICS,” DENVER POST, JANUARY 11, 2014

After a bit of trial and error, you’ll find car-free travel is a liberating choice that forces you to schlep considerably less. LAUREN MATISON, “HOW TO TRAVEL CAR-FREE WITH A FAMILY,” NEW YORK TIMES, DECEMBER 4, 2019

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Word of the Week

Numinous

adjective(part of speech)

Definition-

Spiritual or supernatural

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Word of the week

manqué  
[mahng-key]
adjective
Definition~
having failed, missed, or fallen short, especially because of circumstances or a defect of character; unsuccessful; unfulfilled or frustrated (usually used postpositively): a poet manqué who never produced a single book of verse.
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Word of the Week

eccable

adjective [pekuh-buhl]

liable to sin or error.            

What is the origin of peccable?

Peccable comes from Old French from the Medieval Latin adjective peccābilis “capable of sin, susceptible to sin,” formed from the Latin verb peccāre “to go wrong, make a mistake, act incorrectly, commit a moral or sexual offense.” Peccable was formed on the model of impeccable, which dates from the first half of the 16th century. Peccable entered English in the early 1600s.

How is peccable used?

In his thought at that sharp moment he blasphemed even against all that had been left of his faith in the peccable Master. Henry James, The Lesson of the Master, 1888

And Mrs. Hancock delivers Mrs. Malaprop’s peccable usages with impeccable aplomb. Nothing offends this lady so much as having someone cast ”an aspersion upon my parts of speech.”

Walter Goodman, “A Comedy of Manners by Sheridan,” New York Times, August 10, 1989

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Word of the Week

fecund

[ fee-kuhnd, -kuh nd, fek-uhnd, –uh nd ]


adjective

producing or capable of producing offspring, fruit, vegetation, etc., in abundance; prolific; fruitful: fecund parents; fecund farmland.very productive or creative intellectually: the fecund years of the Italian Renaissance.

RELATED WORDS

breeding, fertile, fruitful, pregnant, prolific, rich, teeming, spawning, fructiferous

Origin of fecund

1375–1425; late Middle English < Latin fēcundus, equivalent to fē- (see fetus) + -cundus adj. suffix; replacing late Middle English fecounde < Anglo-FrenchRelated formsnon·fe·cund, adjectiveun·fe·cund, adjective

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Word of the Week

plu·vi·al

[ˈplo͞ovēəl]

ADJECTIVE —

relating to or characterized by rainfall.” the alternation of pluvial and arid periods in the Quaternary”

NOUN-

pluvial (plural noun) a period marked by increased rainfall.

ORIGIN-

mid 17th century: from Latin pluvialis, from pluvia ‘rain’.

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