Word of the day

white paper
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

https://www.merriam-webster.com/word-of-the-day/manifesto-2018-10-01

Word of the Day : October 1, 2018

manifesto 

noun man-uh-FESS-toh

Definition
: a written statement declaring publicly the intentions, motives, or views of its issuer

Did You Know?
Manifesto is related to manifest, which occurs in English as a noun, verb, and adjective. Of these, the adjective, which means “readily perceived by the senses,” is oldest, dating to the 14th century. Both manifest and manifesto derive ultimately from the Latin noun manus (“hand”) and -festus, a combining form of uncertain meaning that is also found in the Latin adjective infestus (“hostile”), an ancestor of the English infest. Something that is manifest is easy to perceive or recognize, and a manifesto is a statement in which someone makes his or her intentions or views easy for people to ascertain. Perhaps the most well-known statement of this sort is the Communist Manifesto, written in 1848 by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to outline the platform of the Communist League.

Build your vocabulary! Get Word of the Day in your inbox every day.
Examples
“Mr. Eddie Lampert, the chairman of Sears Holdings and mastermind of the Kmart/Sears merger … famously published a 15-page manifesto in 2009 which covered everything from the economic meltdown to civil liberties, and contained a suggested reading list that included free-market Austrian economist Friedrich Hayek.” — Mary Jane Quirk, Consumerist, 8 Jan. 2013
“American Audacity is the rare example of a collection that coheres into a manifesto. Its essays were published during the last seven years, many in The New Republic and The Daily Beast, on topics as various as the art of hate mail, Herman Melville’s life and the Boston Marathon bombing….” — Nathaniel Rich, The New York Times, 19 Aug. 2018

Quote of the day/Word of the day Share

Quote of the day!

“Freedom has its life in the hearts, the actions, the spirit of men and so it must be daily earned and refreshed — else like a flower cut from its life-giving roots, it will wither and die.”

― Dwight D. Eisenhower

photo of pink rose on white surface


Word of the day!

prov·e·nance
[ˈprävənəns]

NOUN
the place of origin or earliest known history of something.
“an orange rug of Iranian provenance”
synonyms: origin · source · place of origin · birthplace · spring · wellspring · fount · roots · history · pedigree · derivation · root · etymology · provenience · radix
the beginning of something’s existence; something’s origin.
“they try to understand the whole universe, its provenance and fate”
a record of ownership of a work of art or an antique, used as a guide to authenticity or quality.
“the manuscript has a distinguished provenance”

ORIGIN
late 18th century: from French, from the verb provenir ‘come or stem from’, from Latin provenire, from pro- ‘forth’ + venire ‘come’.

Word of The Day

lode·stone
[ˈlōdˌstōn]

NOUN
loadstone (noun)
a piece of magnetite or other naturally magnetized mineral, able to be used as a magnet.
synonyms: lodestone · magnetite · field magnet · bar magnet · horseshoe magnet · transverse magnet · electromagnet · electret · solenoid · diamagnet · antiferromagnet · magnetoid · wiggler
a naturally magnetized mineral; magnetite.
a thing that is the focus of attention or attraction.
“the revolution in eastern Europe has robbed the state of its ideological lodestone”