Set 2 Flashcards

1
Q

glean

A

glean
/ɡliːn/

1 to gather (something, such as information) bit by bit; If you glean something such as information or knowledge, you learn or collect it slowly and patiently, and perhaps indirectly: OBTAIN, get, take, draw, derive, extract, cull, garner, gather, reap; select, choose, pick; learn, find out

→ glean sth from sb/sth
… She gleaned her data from various studies.
…10,000 pages of evidence were gleaned from hundreds and hundreds of interviews.
…They spent days gleaning the files for information.
…Tyler Loudon, 42, pleaded guilty Thursday to securities fraud for buying and selling stocks based on details gleaned from his wife’s business conversations while both were working from home.
CBS News, 26 Feb. 2024
…An extra step incubated each target with T-cells gleaned from each patient’s blood.
—Paul Sisson, San Diego Union-Tribune, 6 Mar. 2024
…After that, look for a series of recipes gleaned from some of our top restaurants, tested and curated by Free Press food writer Susan Selasky.
Detroit Free Press, 5 Mar. 2024

2 to collect grain that has been left behind after the crops have been cut
…They spent hours gleaning in the wheat fields.

> early 14c., “to gather by acquisition, scrape together,” especially grains left in the field after harvesting, but the earliest use in English is figurative, from Old French glener “to glean” (14c., Modern French glaner) “to glean,” from Late Latin glennare “make a collection,” of unknown origin. Perhaps from Gaulish (compare Old Irish do-glinn “he collects, gathers,” Celtic glan “clean, pure”). Figurative sense was earlier in English than the literal one of “gather grain left by the reapers” (late 14c.). Related: Gleaned; gleaning.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

gestation

A

ges‧ta‧tion
/dʒeˈsteɪʃən/

1 MEDICAL
the process by which a child or young animal develops inside its mother’s body before birth, or the period of time when this happens: PREGNANCY, development, incubation, maturation /ˌmaCHəˈrāSH(ə)n/, ripening /ˈrīpəniNG/
…The gestation period of a horse is about 11 months.

2 the process by which a new idea, piece of work etc is developed, or the period of time when this happens: DEVELOPMENT, origination, drafting, formation, evolution

→ in gestation
…The report was a very long time in gestation.

> mid 16th century (denoting an excursion on horseback, in a carriage, etc., considered as exercise): from Latin gestatio(n- ), from gestare ‘carry, carry in the womb’, frequentative of gerō (“carry, bear”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Oxford Dictionary of English, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

beleaguer

A

be·lea·guer

1 to cause problems or difficulties for
…We have issues in our community that continue to plague and beleaguer us.

2 ARCHAIC
to lay siege to (a place); besiege.

be‧lea‧guered
/bɪˈliːɡəd $ -ərd/

1 A beleaguered person, organization, or project is experiencing a lot of difficulties, opposition, or criticism: HARD-PRESSED, troubled, in difficulties, under pressure
…the country’s beleaguered steel industry
…an economically beleaguered city

2 ARCHAIC
surrounded by an army: BESIEGED, under siege, blockaded
…Supplies are being brought into the beleaguered city.
…The rebels continue their push towards the beleaguered capital.

> 1580s, “besiege, surround, blockade,” literal and figurative, from Dutch or Low German belegeren “to besiege,” from be- “around” (from Proto-Germanic *bi- “around, about;” see by) + legeren “to camp,” from leger “bed, camp, army, lair,” from Proto-Germanic *legraz- (from PIE *legh-ro-, suffixed form of root *legh- “to lie down, lay”). A word from the Flemish Wars (cognates: Swedish belägra, Dutch belegeren “besiege,” German Belagerung “siege”). The spelling influenced by unrelated league. Related: Beleaguered; beleaguering.
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

simmer

A

simmer

1 to boil gently, or to cook something slowly by boiling it gently.

2 if you are simmering with anger, or if anger is simmering in you, you feel very angry but do not show your feelings.
simmer with
…He was left simmering with rage.

3 if an argument is simmering, people feel angry with each other but only show it slightly.

> mid 17th century: alteration of dialect simper (in the same sense), perhaps imitative.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

nascent

A

nas‧cent
/nay·snt/

coming into existence or starting to develop; Nascent things or processes are just beginning, and are expected to become stronger or to grow bigger: JUST BEGINNING, budding, developing, growing, embryonic /ˌembrēˈänik/
…Kenya’s nascent democracy
…The actress is now focusing on her nascent singing career.
…one of the leading figures in the nascent civil-rights movement
…the nascent space industry
…the still nascent science of psychology
…The Ripple case is one of the major battles in the nascent blockchain industry.
—Byleo Schwartz, Fortune Crypto, 9 Aug. 2023

> 1620s, “in the act of being born;” 1706 in the figurative sense of “beginning to exist or grow, coming into being,” from Latin nascentem (nominative nascens) “arising young, immature,” present participle of nasci “to be born” (Old Latin gnasci), from PIE root *gene- “give birth, beget.” Related: Nascence (1560s); nascency.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

scourge

A

scourge
/skərj/

noun

1 A scourge is something that causes a lot of trouble or suffering to a group of people: AFFLICTION /əˈflɪkʃən/, bane, curse, plague

scourge of
…Union chiefs demanded more urgent action to stop the scourge of unemployment.

2 a whip used to punish people in the past.

verb

1 If something scourges a place or group of people, it causes great pain and suffering to people: AFFLICT /əˈflɪkt/, plague, torment, torture, curse
…Economic anarchy scourged the post-war world.

2 to hit someone with a whip as punishment in the past.

> Middle English: shortening of Old French escorge (noun), escorgier (verb), from Latin ex- ‘thoroughly’ + corrigia ‘thong, whip’.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

extol

A

ex·tol
/ikˈstōl/

If you extol something or someone, you praise them enthusiastically: PRAISE ENTHUSIASTICALLY, acclaim, applaud
…The health benefits of exercise are widely extolled.

→ extol the virtues/benefits etc of something
…a speech extolling the merits of free enterprise

…campaign literature extolling the candidate’s military record
…The transition team for Pamela Price, Alameda County’s first Black district attorney, held a news conference Thursday afternoon to extol her accomplishments during her first 75 days in office and try to shift the conversation away from the unsteady start of her tenure.
—Justin Phillips, San Francisco Chronicle, 2 Apr. 2023

> also extoll, c. 1400, “to lift up,” from Latin extollere “to place on high, raise, elevate,” figuratively “to exalt, praise,” from ex “up” (see ex-) + tollere “to raise,” from PIE *tele- “to bear, carry,” “with derivatives referring to measured weights and thence money and payment” [Watkins].
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

take a break; get some rest

A

take a break; get some rest

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

go for sth

A

go for sth

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

mayhem

A

may‧hem
/ˈmeɪhem/

noun [uncountable]

You use mayhem to refer to a situation that is not controlled or ordered, when people are behaving in a disorganized, confused, and often violent way: CHAOS, disorder, confusion, havoc, bedlam, pandemonium
…Their arrival caused mayhem as crowds of people rushed towards them.
…There was complete mayhem after the explosion.
…the economic mayhem that this country’s going through now

→ cause/create/wreak mayhem
…For some children, the first fall of snow is an opportunity to create mayhem.

> late 15c., “the violent doing of a bodily hurt to another person,” from Anglo-French maihem (13c.), from Old French mahaigne “injury, wrong, a hurt, harm, damage;” related to mahaignier “to injure, wound, mutilate, cripple” (see maim), from Proto-Indo-European *mey- (“to change”). The original meaning referred to the crime of maiming, the other senses derived from this.
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus Wiktionary, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

moat

A

moat

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

fair enough

A

fair enough

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

quintuple

A

quin·tu·ple
/kwinˈt(y)o͞opəl,kwinˈtəpəl/

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

posthumous

A

post‧hu‧mous
/ˈpɒstjəməs $ ˈpɑːstʃə-/

happening, printed etc after someone’s death
…a posthumous collection of his articles

—posthumously adverb
…He was posthumously awarded the Military Cross.

> From Latin posthumus, a variant spelling of postumus, superlative form of posterus (“coming after”), the ⟨h⟩ added by association with humus (“ground, earth”) referring to burial.
> mid-15c., posthumus, “born after the death of the originator” (author or father), from Late Latin posthumus, from Latin postumus “last,” especially “last-born,” superlative of posterus “coming after, subsequent” (see posterior). Altered in Late Latin by association with Latin humare “to bury,” suggesting death; the one born after the father is in the ground obviously being his last. An Old English word for this was æfterboren, literally “after-born.” Related: Posthumously.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

hairy

A

hairy

1 a hairy person or animal has a lot of hair on their body

2 INFORMAL
alarming and difficult; If you describe a situation as hairy, you mean that it is exciting, worrying, and rather frightening: RISKY, unsafe, dangerous, perilous, hazardous, high-risk, touch-and-go, fraught with danger; tricky, ticklish, difficult, unpredictable
…We drove up yet another hairy mountain road.
…It got very hairy when we ran into some troops guarding the border.
…It was pretty hairy climbing down the cliff.
…His driving was a bit hairy.
…a few hairy moments

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

yen

A

yen

noun

a strong desire; If you have a yen to do something, you have a strong desire to do it: HANKERING, yearning, longing, urge, desire
→ yen for
…a yen for foreign travel

→ yen to do sth
…She’d always had a yen to write a book.

verb

to feel a longing or yearning
…It’s no use yenning for the old simplicities.

> “sharp desire, hunger,” 1906, earlier yen-yen (1900), yin (1876) “intense craving for opium,” from Chinese (Cantonese) yan “craving,” or from a Beijing dialect word for “smoke.” Reinforced in English by influence of yearn.
> Although yen suggests no more than a strong desire these days (as in “a yen for a beach vacation”), at one time someone with a yen was in deep trouble: the first meaning of yen was an intense craving for opium. The word comes from Cantonese yīn-yáhn, a combination of yīn, meaning “opium,” and yáhn, “craving.” In English, the Chinese syllables were translated as yen-yen.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

leery

A

leer‧y
/ˈlɪəri $ ˈlɪri/

cautious, suspicious, wary, hesitant, or nervous about something; having reservations or concerns: WARY, cautious, careful, guarded, chary, suspicious

→ leery of
leery of strangers
…I was very leery of him after I found out he had lied to Jennifer.
…She seemed a little leery of the proposal.

> “knowing, wide-awake, untrusting, suspicious, alert,” 1718, originally slang, with -y (2), but otherwise of unknown origin. Perhaps from dialectal lere “learning, knowledge” (see lore), or from leer (v.) in a now-obscure sense “walk stealthily with averted looks, sneak away” (1580s). OED suggests connection with archaic leer (adj.) “empty, useless,” a general Germanic word (cognate with German leer, Dutch laar), of unknown origin.
> Wiktionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

demagogue

A

dem‧a‧gogue
/ˈdeməɡɒɡ $ -ɡɑːɡ/

a leader who makes use of popular prejudices and false claims and promises in order to gain power; If you say that someone such as a politician is a demagogue you are criticizing them because you think they try to win people’s support by appealing to their emotions rather than using reasonable arguments: RABBLE-ROUSER, POLITICAL AGITATOR, agitator, soapbox orator, firebrand
…a gifted demagogue with particular skill in manipulating the press
…Though a cult figure for his supporters, Khan was seen by critics as a demagogue and would-be authoritarian, who demonized political opponents and mismanaged the country’s affairs.
—Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 8 Aug. 2023
…During an interview with USA TODAY in May, Kennedy described Trump as a demagogue, which is defined as a political leader who manipulates voters by playing on their prejudices and exploiting them.
—Rachel Looker, USA TODAY, 29 June 2023

> 1640s, “an unprincipled popular orator or leader; one who seeks to obtain political power by pandering to the prejudices, wishes, ignorance, and passions of the people or a part of them,” ultimately from Greek dēmagōgos “popular leader,” also “leader of the mob,” from dēmos “people, common people” (originally “district,” from PIE *da-mo- “division,” from root *da- “to divide”) + agōgos “leader,” from agein “to lead” (from PIE root *ag- “to drive, draw out or forth, move”). When the ancient Greeks used dēmagōgos (from dēmos, meaning “people,” and agein, “to lead”) they meant someone good—a leader who used outstanding oratorical skills to further the interests of the common people. But alas, the word took a negative turn, suggesting one who uses powers of persuasion to sway and mislead.
> ag-: Proto-Indo-European root meaning “to drive, draw out or forth, move.”
It forms all or part of: act; action; active; actor; actual; actuary; actuate; agency; agenda; agent; agile; agitation; agony; ambagious; ambassador; ambiguous; anagogical; antagonize; apagoge; assay; Auriga; auto-da-fe; axiom; cache; castigate; coagulate; cogent; cogitation; counteract; demagogue; embassy; epact; essay; exact; exacta; examine; exigency; exiguous; fumigation; glucagon; hypnagogic; interact; intransigent; isagoge; litigate; litigation; mitigate; mystagogue; navigate; objurgate; pedagogue; plutogogue; prodigal; protagonist; purge; react; redact; retroactive; squat; strategy; synagogue; transact; transaction; variegate.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

sobriety

A

so‧bri‧e‧ty
/səˈbraɪəti/

noun [uncountable]

1 FORMAL
Sobriety is the state of being sober rather than drunk: SOBERNESS, clear-headedness; ABSTINENCE, teetotalism, nonindulgence
…He hated her more in his sobriety than when he was drunk.

2 FORMAL
Sobriety is serious and thoughtful behavior: SERIOUSNESS, solemnness, solemnity, thoughtfulness, gravity, graveness, somberness, severity, earnestness, sedateness, staidness, dignity, dignified demeanor, steadiness, self-restraint
…His daughter had always been a model of sobriety.

> sober (adj.): mid-14c., sobre, “moderate in desires or actions, habitually temperate, restrained,” especially “abstaining from strong drink,” also “calm, quiet, not overcome by emotion,” from Old French sobre “decent; sober” (12c.), from Latin sobrius “not drunk, temperate, moderate, sensible,” from a variant of se- “without” (see se-) + ebrius “drunk,” which is of unknown origin. The meaning “free from the influence of intoxicating liquors; not drunk at the moment” is from late 14c.; also “appropriately solemn, serious, not giddy.” As “plain or simple in color” by 1590s. Jocular sobersides “sedate, serious-minded person” is recorded from 1705.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

tantamount

A

tan‧ta‧mount
/ˈtæntəmaʊnt/

be tantamount to sth
equivalent in seriousness to; virtually the same as: EQUIVALENT TO, equal to, amounting to, as good as, more or less, synonymous with, virtually the same as, much the same as, comparable to, on a par with, commensurate with, along the lines of, as serious as, identical to
…To leave a dog home alone is tantamount to cruelty.
…The resignations were tantamount to an admission of guilt.
…They see any criticism of the President as tantamount to treason.

> 1640s, from verbal phrase tant amount “be equivalent” (1620s), from Anglo-French tant amunter “amount to as much” (late 13c.), from Old French tant “as much” (11c., from Latin tantus, from tam “so;” see tandem) + amonter “amount to, go up” (see amount (v.)).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

stratify

A

stratify

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

#conditionals

A

#conditionals

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

furlough

A

fur‧lough
/ˈfɜːləʊ $ ˈfɜːrloʊ/

noun

1 When soldiers are given furlough, they are given official permission to leave the area where they are based or are fighting, for a certain period: LEAVE
…a young soldier home on furlough

2 NORTH AMERICAN
a period of time when workers are told not to work, especially because there is not enough money to pay them
…workers forced to take a long, unpaid furlough
…This could mean a massive furlough of government workers.

3 NORTH AMERICAN
a short period of time during which a prisoner is allowed to leave prison before returning
…Morton stabbed the man while on furlough.

verb

If people who work for a particular organization are furloughed, they are given a furlough.
…280,000 federal workers have been furloughed.

> 1620s, vorloffe, “leave of absence,” especially in military use, “leave or license given by a commanding officer to an officer or a soldier to be absent from service for a certain time,” from Dutch verlof, literally “permission,” from Middle Dutch ver- “completely, for” + laf, lof “permission,” from Proto-Germanic *laubo-, from PIE root *leubh- “to care, desire, love.” In English, the elements of it are for- + leave. The -gh spelling predominated from 1770s and represents the “f” that had been pronounced at the end of the word but later disappeared in English.
> By 1946 in reference to temporary layoffs of workers (originally of civilian employees in the U.S. military); by 1975 applied to conditional temporary releases of prisoners for the purpose of going to jobs (work-release).
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

find

A

find

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
Q

cringeworthy

A

cringe·wor·thy
/ˈkrin(d)ZHˌwərT͟Hē/

so embarrassing, awkward, or upsetting as to cause one to cringe
…The play’s cast was excellent, but the dialogue was unforgivably cringeworthy.

> cringe (v.): 1570s, “to bend or crouch, especially with servility or fear,” variant of crenge, crenche “to bend” (c. 1200), from causative of Old English cringan “yield, give way, fall (in battle); become bent,” from Proto-Germanic *krank- “bend, curl up” (source also of Old Norse kringr, Dutch kring, German Kring “circle, ring”). Related: Cringed; cringing. As a noun from 1590s. Cringe-worthy (adj.) is attested by 1990.
> Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
26
Q

pass over

A

pass over

1 → pass sb over
If someone is passed over for a job or position, they do not get the job or position and someone younger or less experienced is chosen instead.
…This is the second time I’ve been passed over for promotion (=someone else has been given a higher job instead of me).

GRAMMAR
Pass over is usually passive in this meaning.

2 → pass over sth
to skip, ignore, or disregard (someone or something).
…I’m sorry, but the board passed your idea over in favor of something more traditional.
…I think we’d better pass over that last remark.

> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, The Free Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
27
Q

pare

A

pare

1 to cut off the outer layer of something, using a sharp knife; When you pare something, or pare part of it off or away, you cut off its skin or its outer layer: CUT (OFF), trim (off), peel (off), shave (off), strip (off), clip (off), skin
pare apples
paring his nails
pared the stray branches on the tree
Pare the rind from the fruit.

2 to diminish or reduce by or as if by paring; If you pare something down or back, or if you pare it, you reduce it: REDUCE, diminish, decrease, cut, cut back/down, make cutbacks in, whittle away/down, salami-slice, trim, slim down, prune, lower, lessen, retrench, curtail
…The company has to find a way to pare expenses.
…The novel was pared down to 200 pages.
…The number of Ministries has been pared down by a third.
…The firm has not been able to pare costs fast enough to match competitors.
…Instead, merchants from big-box retailers like Walmart and Target to more specialized sellers like Best Buy and Dick’s Sporting Goods have pared back their inventories while trying to focus their supply chains more tightly on products that shoppers want.
—Liz Young, WSJ, 27 Nov. 2023
…But the two worked together to pare down her ideas, landing on a tight collection that combines her aesthetic with the jeweler’s heritage.
—Tori Latham, Robb Report, 14 Nov. 2023

> Middle English: from Old French parer ‘adorn, prepare’, also ‘peel, trim’, from Latin parare ‘prepare’. ~ Oxford Dictionary of English
> c. 1300, paren, “peel (fruit), cut off the crust (of bread),” from Old French parer “arrange, prepare; trim, adorn,” and directly from Latin parare “make ready, prepare, furnish, provide, arrange, order; contrive, design, intend, resolve; procure, acquire, obtain, get; get with money, buy, purchase” (related to parire “produce, bring forth, give birth to”), from PIE *par-a-, suffixed form of root *pere- (1) “to produce, procure.” From late 14c. in the more general sense of “trim by cutting or scraping off an outer layer;” meaning “to reduce something little by little” is from 1520s. Pare down “reduce by cutting or striking off” is from late 15c. Related: Pared; paring. ~ Etymonline
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus , Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
28
Q

in the clutch

A

in the clutch

INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN
in a very important or critical situation especially during a sports competition.
…He is known for his ability to come through in the clutch.
…She scored a basket in the clutch.
…Why are some athletes able to perform in the clutch while others choke?

> The slang modifier clutch, for “done well in a crucial situation,” appears to originate in sports, particularly baseball. A sports clutch, in noun form, is a high-pressure moment that can determine the outcome of a game. This dates back to at least the 1920s and is metaphorical, i.e., the moment at which something has or is in something’s clutch, or “grip” or “control.” https://www.dictionary.com/e/slang/clutch/
> Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Dictionary.com

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
29
Q

@coffee-shop

A

@coffee-shop

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
30
Q

ditto

A

ditto

as before or aforesaid : in the same manner —used to indicate that a previous statement also applies to something or someone else
…‘I hated school.’ ‘Ditto.’

> 1620s, “in the month of the same name,” Tuscan dialectal ditto “(in) the said (month or year),” literary Italian detto, past participle of dire “to say,” from Latin dicere “speak, tell, say” (from PIE root *deik- “to show,” also “pronounce solemnly”). Italian used the word to avoid repetition of month names in a series of dates, and in this sense it was picked up in English. Its generalized meaning of “the aforesaid, the same thing, same as above” is attested in English by 1670s. In early 19c. a suit of men’s clothes of the same color and material through was ditto or dittoes (1755). Dittohead, self-description of followers of U.S. radio personality Rush Limbaugh, attested by 1995. dittoship is from 1869.
> Merriam-Webster, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
31
Q

svelte

A

svelte

Someone who is svelte is slim and looks attractive and elegant: SLENDER, slim, graceful, elegant, willowy
svelte swimsuit models
…She has a svelte figure.
…the svelte dancer seemed to float across the stage

> “slender, lithe,” 1817, svelt, from French svelte “slim, slender” (17c.), from French svelte, from Italian svelto (“stretched out”), past participle of svellere (“to pluck out, root out”), from Vulgar Latin *exvellere, from ex + vellere (“to pluck, stretch”).
> Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
32
Q

on the shelf

A

on the shelf

1 if something is left on the shelf, it is not used or considered
…first-rate plans which sit on the shelf
…The album stayed on the shelf for several years, until it was finally released.

2 DATED•INFORMAL
past an age when one might expect to have the opportunity to marry (typically used of a woman).
…In those days, if you hadn’t married by the time you were 30, you were definitely on the shelf.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
33
Q

snag

A

snag

noun

1 INFORMAL
a problem or disadvantage, especially one that is not very serious, which you had not expected; A snag is a small problem or disadvantage: OBSTACLE, DIFFICULTY, complication, catch, hitch, stumbling block, pitfall, unseen problem, problem
…There’s a snag – I don’t have his number.
…It’s an interesting job. The only snag is that it’s not very well paid.

→ hit/run into a snag
to encounter an unexpected problem or delay.
…The grand opening hit a snag when no one could find the key.
…A police clampdown on car thieves hit a snag when villains stole one of their cars.

2 a part of a dead tree that sticks out, especially one that is under water and can be dangerous

3 a sharp part of something that sticks out and holds or cuts things that touch it

verb

1 to damage something by getting it stuck on something sharp; If you snag part of your clothing on a sharp or rough object or if it snags, it gets caught on the object and tears: CATCH, TEAR, rip, hole
…Oh no! I’ve snagged my stockings.
…She snagged a heel on a root and tumbled to the ground.
…Local fishermen’s nets kept snagging on underwater objects.

2 INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN
to succeed in getting something, especially something difficult to get
…I snagged a parking space in the last row.

> From earlier snag (“stump or branch of a tree”), from Middle English *snagge, *snage, from Old Norse snagi (“clothes peg”) (compare Old Norse snag-hyrndr (“snag-horned, having jagged corners”)), perhaps ultimately from a derivative of Proto-Germanic *snakk-, *snēgg, variations of *snakaną (“to crawl, creep, wind about”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
34
Q

tumble

A

tumble

> c. 1300, “to perform as an acrobat,” also “to fall down,” from Middle English tumben (“to fall, leap, dance”), from a frequentative form of Old English tumbian “dance about, tumble, leap.” This is of unknown origin but apparently related to Middle Low German tummelen “to turn, dance,” Dutch tuimelen “to tumble,” Old High German tumon, German taumeln “to turn, reel.” Transitive sense from late 14c. Related: Tumbled; tumbling.
> Wiktionary, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
35
Q

litany

A

lit‧a‧ny
/ˈlɪtəni/

1 a long list of problems, excuses etc – used to show disapproval: RECITAL, recitation, repetition, enumeration

1a a resonant or repetitive chant
…a litany of cheering phrases ~ Herman Wouk

1b a usually lengthy recitation or enumeration
…a familiar litany of complaints

1c a sizable series or set
…a litany of problems
…The drug has a litany of possible side effects.

2 A litany is part of a church service in which the priest says a set group of words and the people reply, also using a set group of words: PRAYER, invocation, petition, supplication

> c. 1200, “solemn prayer of supplication,” from Old French letanie (13c., Modern French litanie) and directly from Medieval Latin letania, Late Latin litania (source also of Spanish letania, Italian litania), from Greek litaneia “prayer, an entreating,” from lite “prayer, supplication, entreaty,” a word of unknown origin. From the notion of monotonous enumeration of petitions in Christian prayer services came the generalized sense of “repeated series” (early 19c.), which originated in French.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
36
Q

off-putting

A

off-putting

provoking uneasiness, dislike, annoyance, or repugnance; disturbing or disagreeable: UNPLEASANT, unappealing, uninviting, unattractive, disagreeable, offensive, distasteful, unsavory, unpalatable, unappetizing, objectionable, nasty, disgusting, obnoxious, repellent; DISCOURAGING, disheartening, demoralizing, dispiriting, daunting, dismaying, forbidding, intimidating, frightening, formidable; informal horrid, horrible

> Dictionary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
37
Q

bear down

A

bear/bore/borne down

1 → bear down on sb/sth
When used with on or upon, as in to bear down on, this can also mean to quickly move towards something; If someone or something bears down on you, they move quickly towards you in a threatening way: ADVANCE ON, close in on, move in on, converge on
…A group of half a dozen men entered the pub and bore down on the bar.
…a storm bearing down on the island
…I could see a police car bearing down on us.

2 → bear down on sb/sth
to take strict measures to deal with; to behave in a threatening or controlling way towards a person or group
…Federal regulators have been bearing down on campaign contributors.

3 → bear down (on sth)
To bear down on something means to push or press downwards with steady pressure.
…The roof support structure had collapsed and the entire weight was bearing down on the ceiling.

> This first meaning comes from nautical origins, as in a ship bearing down upon a smaller ship, or a storm bearing down upon the sailors. ~ Writing Explained
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Macmillan Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
38
Q

erstwhile

A

erst‧while
/ˈɜːstwaɪl $ ˈɜːrst-/

former or in the past: FORMER, old, past, one-time, sometime, as was, ex-, late, then; previous, prior, foregoing
Erstwhile workers may have become managers.
…She found herself ostracized by erstwhile friends.
…My erstwhile friend ignored me when I ran into her at the reunion.

> 1560s, “formerly,” from erst “first, at first; once, long ago; till now” (13c.), earlier erest from Old English ærest “soonest, earliest,” superlative of ær (see ere) + while (adv.). As an adjective, “former,” from 1903. Cognate with Old Saxon and Old High German erist, German erst.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
39
Q

salutary

A

sal‧u‧ta‧ry
/ˈsæljətəri $ -teri/
/sa·lyuh·teh·ree/

FORMAL
producing a beneficial effect; a salutary experience or warning is one that has a good effect although it is unpleasant; A salutary experience is good for you, even though it may seem difficult or unpleasant at first: BENEFICIAL, good, good for one, advantageous, profitable, productive, helpful, useful, of use, of service, valuable

→ salutary experience/lesson/reminder etc
…a salutary warning that resulted in increased production
…The low interest rates should have a salutary effect on business.
…The accident should be a salutary lesson to be more careful.
…It was a salutary lesson to see the whole team so easily defeated.
…Losing money in this way taught young Jones a salutary lesson.
…On that front, expanding accessibility and workforce diversity initiatives should play a salutary role, creating new opportunities for skilled and promising practitioners.
—Ben Croll, Variety, 23 Nov. 2023

USAGE NOTES:

  • Salutary describes something corrective or beneficially effective, even though it may in itself be unpleasant.
    • a salutary warning that resulted in increased production

> “wholesome, healthful, healing,” late 15c. (Caxton), from Old French salutaire “beneficial,” or directly from Latin salutaris “healthful,” from salus (genitive salutis) “good health” (from PIE root *sol- “whole, well-kept”). By 19c. also in a general sense, “contributing to some beneficial purpose.” Earlier as a noun, salutari, “a remedy,” (early 15c.), from Latin salutaris (n.).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
40
Q

inextricable

A

in‧ex‧tric‧a‧ble
/ˌɪnɪkˈstrɪkəbəl◂, ɪnˈekstrɪk-/

1 impossible to disentangle or separate; If there is an inextricable link between things, they cannot be considered separately: INSEPARABLE, impossible to separate, indivisible, entangled, tangled, ravelled, mixed up, confused
…The past and the present are inextricable.
…Meetings are an inextricable part of business.

2 impossible to escape from: INESCAPABLE, impossible to escape from, unavoidable, unpreventable
…an inextricable situation

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
41
Q

put off

A

put off

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
42
Q

sizzling

A

sizzling

1 very hot: EXTREMELY HOT, red-hot
…a sizzling afternoon

2 very exciting, especially in a sexual way: PASSIONATE, torrid, amorous, ardent, sexy, lustful, erotic, steamy, hot, red-hot
…a sizzling sex scene

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Collins English Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
43
Q

divvy

A

div‧vy
/ˈdɪvi/

verb

→ divvy sth up
to divide up and share; to share something between several people
…We can divvy up the profits between us.
…We divvied up the chores.
…Money is easier to divvy up than property, …
—Susan E. Kuhn
…Since then, Canada has divvied up C$30 billion in initial funding amongst its provinces with the goal of creating 250,000 new childcare spaces that will cost parents only C$10 a day by March 2026.
—Gretchen Cuda Kroen, cleveland, 7 May 2023

noun

1 short for dividend, esp (formerly) one paid by a cooperative society

2 INFORMAL•BRITISH
If you call someone a divvy, you are saying in a humorous way that you think they are rather foolish.

> “to divide (up),” 1877, American English, originally a noun (1865), a slang shortening of dividend. The verb is primary now (the noun is not in “Webster’s New World Dictionary”), leading some (such as “Webster’s”) to think the word is a slang alteration of divide. Related: Divvying. In early 20c. British slang the same word was a shortening of divine (adj.).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
44
Q

duplicity

A

du‧plic‧i‧ty
doo·pli·suh·tee
/djuːˈplɪsəti $ duː-/

deceitfulness; double-dealing; dishonest behavior that is intended to deceive someone: DECEITFULNESS, deceit, deception, deviousness, two-facedness, double-dealing, underhandedness, dishonesty
…She accused him of duplicity in the negotiations.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
45
Q

rift

A

rift

1 A rift between people or countries is a serious quarrel or disagreement that stops them having a good relationship: BREACH, division, split; quarrel, squabble, disagreement, difference of opinion, falling-out, fight, row, altercation, argument; ESTRANGEMENT, alienation, schism

→ rift between/with
…The interview reflected a growing rift between the President and the government.
…The fight will only widen the rift with his brother.
…They hope to heal the rift with their father.

→ rift over
…Today’s announcement could lead to a further rift over public spending.

2 a crack or narrow opening in a large mass of rock, cloud etc: CRACK, fault, flaw, split
…a deep rift in the Antarctic ice
…We could see some stars through the rifts in the clouds.

> early 14c., “a split, a breaking, an act of tearing or rending,” from a Scandinavian source (compare Danish and Norwegian rift “a cleft,” Old Icelandic ript (pronounced “rift”) “breach;” related to Old Norse ripa, rifa “to tear apart, break a contract” (see riven). Probably influenced in Middle English by rive (v.).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
46
Q

confound

A

confound

1 to confuse and surprise people by being unexpected; If someone or something confounds you, they make you feel surprised or confused, often by showing you that your opinions or expectations of them were wrong: AMAZE, astonish, dumbfound, stagger, surprise, startle, stun, stupefy, daze, nonplus; throw, shake, unnerve, disconcert, discompose, dismay, bewilder, set someone thinking, baffle, mystify, bemuse, perplex, puzzle, confuse
…The choice of Governor may confound us all.
…The tragic news confounded us all.

USAGE NOTES:
Confound implies temporary mental paralysis caused by astonishment or profound abasement.

2 to prove (a theory, expectation, or prediction) wrong: INVALIDATE, negate, contradict, counter, go against, discredit, give the lie to, drive a coach and horses through; quash, explode, demolish, shoot down, destroy; disprove, prove wrong, prove false, falsify
…The rise in prices confounded expectations.
…This new evidence confounds your theory.

> c. 1300, “to condemn, curse,” also “to destroy utterly;” from Anglo-French confoundre, Old French confondre (12c.) “crush, ruin, disgrace, throw into disorder,” from Latin confundere “to confuse, jumble together, bring into disorder,” especially of the mind or senses, “disconcert, perplex,” properly “to pour, mingle, or mix together,” from assimilated form of com “together” (see con-) + fundere “to pour” (from nasalized form of PIE root *gheu- “to pour”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Macmillan Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
47
Q

make bank

A

make bank

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
48
Q

inextricably

A

in‧ex‧tric‧a‧ble
/ˌɪnɪkˈstrɪkəbəl◂, ɪnˈekstrɪk-/

1 impossible to disentangle or separate; If there is an inextricable link between things, they cannot be considered separately: INSEPARABLE, impossible to separate, indivisible, entangled, tangled, ravelled, mixed up, confused
…The past and the present are inextricable.
…Meetings are an inextricable part of business.

2 impossible to escape from: INESCAPABLE, impossible to escape from, unavoidable, unpreventable
…an inextricable situation

in‧ex‧tric‧a‧bly
/ˌɪnɪkˈstrɪkəbli, ɪnˈekstrɪk-/

If two or more things are inextricably linked, they cannot be considered separately: INSEPARABLY, totally, intricately, irretrievably

→ be inextricably linked/bound up/mixed etc
…For many top executives, golf and business are inextricably linked.
…Physical health is inextricably linked to mental health.

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
49
Q

flip out

A

flip out

to lose one’s reason or composure or become very angry.
…She’s going to flip out when she sees the great present I got her!
…She would have flipped out if someone had done this to her.
…I nearly flipped out when she told me she and David were getting married.
…He flipped out on the server when they messed up his wife’s order.
—Ajani Bazile

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
50
Q

gripping

A

gripping

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
51
Q

foray

A

for‧ay
/ˈfɒreɪ $ ˈfɔː-, ˈfɑː-/

1 an initial and often tentative attempt to do something in a new or different field or area of activity

→ foray into
…It will be my first foray into local government.
…Wright is about to make his first foray into the music business.

2 a short sudden attack by a group of soldiers, especially in order to get food or supplies: RAID, attack, assault, incursion, swoop, strike

→ foray into
…their nightly forays into enemy territory

3 a short journey somewhere in order to get something or do something: TRIP

→ foray into/to
…We make regular forays to France to buy wine.

verb

1 to make a raid or brief invasion
forayed into enemy territory

2 to do or attempt something outside one’s accustomed sphere; to enter into a new or different field or area of activity
…Tesla, known for its high-end electric cars, has forayed into the trucking industry with a Nov. 16 reveal of its latest prototype, the Tesla Semi.
—Meagan Nichols

> late 14c., “predatory incursion,” Scottish, from the verb (14c.), perhaps a back-formation of Middle English forreyer “raider, forager” (mid-14c.), from Old French forrier, from forrer “to forage,” from forrage “fodder; foraging; pillaging, looting” (see forage (n.)). Disused by 18c.; revived by Scott. As a verb from 14c.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
52
Q

conjure

A

con‧jure
/ˈkʌndʒə $ ˈkɑːndʒər, ˈkʌn-/

If you conjure something out of nothing, you make it appear as if by magic: MAKE SOMETHING APPEAR, produce, materialize, magic, summon, generate, whip up
…The magician conjured a rabbit out of his hat.
…Thirteen years ago she found herself having to conjure a career from thin air.
…They managed to conjure a victory.

conjure sth up

1 to bring a thought, picture, idea, or memory to someone’s mind

→ conjure up images/pictures/thoughts etc (of something)
…She had forgotten how to conjure up the image of her mother’s face.

2 to make something appear when it is not expected, as if by magic
…Somehow we have to conjure up another $10,000.

> Middle English (also in the sense ‘oblige by oath’): from Old French conjurer ‘to plot or exorcise’, from Latin conjurare ‘band together by an oath, conspire’ (in medieval Latin ‘invoke’), from con- ‘together’ + jurare ‘swear’.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
53
Q

flair

A

flair

USAGE NOTES:
skill for doing something, especially something that needs imagination and creativity

1 [singular] a natural ability to do something very well; If you have a flair for a particular thing, you have a natural ability to do it well: APTITUDE, talent, gift, knack, instinct, natural ability, ability, capability, capacity, faculty, facility, skill, bent, feel, genius
…She has a flair for languages.

2 [uncountable] stylishness and originality; If you have flair, you do things in an original, interesting, and stylish way: STYLE, stylishness, panache, verve, dash, elan, finesse, poise, elegance, sparkle, brio; inventiveness, creativity; taste, good taste, discernment, discrimination

→ artistic/creative flair
…a job for which artistic flair is essential
…Irwin has real entrepreneurial flair.

> mid-14c., “an odor,” from Old French flaire “odor or scent,” especially in hunting, “fragrance, sense of smell,” from flairier “to give off an odor; stink; smell sweetly” (Modern French flairer), from Vulgar Latin *flagrare, a dissimilation of Latin fragrare “emit (a sweet) odor” (see fragrant). Sense of “special aptitude” is American English, 1925, probably from hunting and the notion of a hound’s ability to track scent.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
54
Q

absolutely

A

absolutely

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
55
Q

mythology

A

mythology

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
56
Q

flout

A

flout
/flaʊt/

to treat with contemptuous disregard; to deliberately disobey a law, rule etc, without trying to hide what you are doing; If you flout something such as a law, an order, or an accepted way of behaving, you deliberately do not obey it or follow it: DEFY, refuse to obey, go against, rebel against, scorn, spurn, scoff at

…illegal campers who persist in flouting the law
…Building regulations have been habitually flouted.
…Some companies flout the rules and employ children as young as seven.
…The union had openly flouted the law.
…Despite repeated warnings, they have continued to flout the law.
…an able-bodied motorist openly flouting the law and parking in a space reserved for the disabled
…Uber has often flouted local laws in its drive for growth.
—Newley Purnell, WSJ, 3 Aug. 2017
…The state is slow to discipline doctors even when they are accused of flouting board rules.
—Stephen Hobbs, Sun-Sentinel.com, 27 Oct. 2017
…Donald Trump flouts norms and ignores conventions and tells lies all the time.
—Jay Willis, GQ, 18 Oct. 2017
…When one side regularly flouts norms, the other side pays the price for striving to uphold them.
—Alex Shephard, New Republic, 24 Jan. 2018
…The rapid pace of the trial reflected, in part, the fact that the case turned on a straightforward question, whether Mr. Navarro had willfully defied lawmakers in flouting a subpoena.
—Zach Montague, New York Times, 8 Sep. 2023
…At recent state party conventions, right-leaning delegates have begun flouting the wishes of the party by going against the governor’s picks for key statewide offices.
—Kayla Dwyer, The Indianapolis Star, 18 Aug. 2023

USAGE NOTES:
If you flout a rule or societal norm, you ignore it without hiding what you’re doing, or showing fear or shame. The similar-sounding word flaunt is sometimes used in the same way, though that word’s older and more common meaning is “to display ostentatiously.” Critics have been complaining about the confusion of these two words since the early 1900s, but use of flaunt with the meaning “to treat with contemptuous disregard” is found in even polished, edited writing, and so that meaning is included in our and other dictionaries as an established use of the word. Nonetheless, you may want to avoid it: there are still many who judge harshly those who fail to keep these two words distinct.

  • Flout stresses contempt shown by refusal to heed.
    • flouted the conventions of polite society

> “treat with disdain or contempt” (transitive), 1550s, intransitive sense “mock, jeer, scoff” is from 1570s; of uncertain origin; perhaps a special use of Middle English flowten “to play the flute” (compare Middle Dutch fluyten “to play the flute,” also “to jeer”). Related: Flouted; flouting.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
57
Q

mull

A

mull

usually mull sth over
to think about (a fact, proposal, or request) deeply and at length; If you mull something, you think about it for a long time before deciding what to do: PONDER, consider, think over/about, reflect on, contemplate, deliberate, turn over in one’s mind, chew over, weigh up, cogitate on, meditate on, muse on, ruminate over/on, brood on, have one’s mind on, give some thought to
…Last month, a federal grand jury began mulling evidence in the case.
…She began to mull over the various possibilities.
…He’s mulling over the proposals before making any changes.
…McLaren had been mulling over an idea to make a movie.
…I’ll leave you alone here so you can mull it over.
…Barney sat there for a while, mulling things over.
…The Commerce Department has issued extensive trade restrictions on sales of chips, software and machinery to China’s semiconductor industry and is mulling an expansion of those rules that could be issued soon after Ms. Raimondo returns to Washington.
—Ana Swanson, New York Times, 26 Aug. 2023
…The Fed is still mulling one last rate hike this year, even though the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the Personal Consumption Expenditures price index — rose 3% in June from a year earlier.
—Bryan Mena, CNN, 6 Aug. 2023

> “ponder, turn over in one’s mind,” 1873, perhaps from a figurative use of mull (v.) “grind to powder” (which survived into 19c. in dialect), from Middle English mullyn, mollen “grind to powder, soften by pulverizing,” also “to fondle or pet” (late 14c.), from Old French moillier and directly from Medieval Latin molliare,mulliare, from Latin molere “to grind,” from PIE root *mele- “to crush, grind.”
> melə-: Proto-Indo-European root meaning “to crush, grind,” with derivatives referring to ground or crumbling substances and crushing or grinding instruments. It forms all or part of: amyl; amyloid; blintz; emmer; emolument; immolate; maelstrom; mall; malleable; malleolus; mallet; malleus; maul; meal (n.2) “edible ground grain;” mill (n.1) “building fitted to grind grain;” millet; mola; molar (n.); mold (n.3) “loose earth;” molder; ormolu; pall-mall.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
58
Q

bum sb out

A

bum sb out

INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN
to disappoint, annoy, or upset someone; to depress, sadden, dispirit
…He’s been really bummed out since his girlfriend moved to California.
…It really bummed me out that she could have helped and didn’t.

> From bum (“unpleasant, depressing”).
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Collins English Dictionary, Dictionary.com, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
59
Q

bereave

A

bereave

1 to deprive and make desolate, especially by death (usually followed by of): DEPRIVE, dispossess, rob, divest, strip.
…Illness bereaved them of their mother.

2 to deprive ruthlessly or by force (usually followed by of)
…The war bereaved them of their home.

> From Middle English bireven, from Old English berēafian (“to bereave, deprive of, take away, seize, rob, despoil”), from Proto-Germanic *biraubōną, and Old English berēofan (“to bereave, deprive, rob of”); both equivalent to be- +‎ reave. Cognate with Dutch beroven (“to rob, deprive, bereave”), German berauben (“to deprive, rob, bereave”), Danish berøve (“to deprive of”), Norwegian berøve (“to deprive”), Swedish beröva (“to rob”), Gothic 𐌱𐌹𐍂𐌰𐌿𐌱𐍉𐌽 (biraubōn).
> Middle English bireven, from Old English bereafian “to deprive of, take away by violence, seize, rob,” from be- + reafian “rob, plunder,” from Proto-Germanic *raubōjanan, from PIE *runp- “to break” (see corrupt (adj.)). A common Germanic formation; compare Old Frisian biravia “despoil, rob, deprive (someone of something),” Old Saxon biroban, Dutch berooven, Old High German biroubon, German berauben, Gothic biraubon.
> Dictionary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
60
Q

skirt

A

skirt

noun

verb

1 Something that skirts an area is situated around the edge of it: BORDER, edge, lie alongside, line
…We raced across a large field that skirted the slope of a hill.

2 If you skirt something, you go around the edge of it: GO ROUND, bypass, walk round, circumvent
…We shall be skirting the island on our way.
…She skirted round the edge of the room to the door.

3 to attempt to ignore; to avoid dealing with; If you skirt a problem or question, you avoid dealing with it.
…He skirted the hardest issues, concentrating on areas of possible agreement.
…He skirted round his main differences with her.
…a disappointing speech that skirted around all the main issues

> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
61
Q

defraud

A

de‧fraud
/dɪˈfrɔːd $ -ˈfrɒːd/

to deprive of something by deception or fraud; to trick a person or organization in order to get money from them; If someone defrauds you, they take something away from you or stop you from getting what belongs to you by means of tricks and lies: SWINDLE, CHEAT, ROB, deceive, dupe, hoodwink, double-cross, fool, trick; informal CON, bamboozle, do, sting, diddle, rip off, shaft, bilk, rook, take for a ride, pull a fast one on, pull the wool over someone’s eyes, put one over on, take to the cleaners, gull, finagle, milk; British informal fiddle, swizzle, sell a pup to
…He faces charges of theft and conspiracy to defraud(=a secret plan to cheat someone, made by two or more people).

→ defraud sb of sth
…She defrauded her employers of thousands of pounds.
…Investors in the scheme were defrauded of their life savings.
…allegations that he defrauded taxpayers of thousands of dollars

> late 14c., defrauden, “deprive of right, by deception or breech of trust or withholding,” from Old French defrauder, from Latin defraudare “to defraud, cheat,” from de- “thoroughly” + fraudare “to cheat, swindle” (see fraud). Related: Defrauded; defrauding.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
62
Q

relish

A

rel‧ish
/ˈrelɪʃ/

verb

1 to enjoy greatly; If you relish something, you get a lot of enjoyment from it: ENJOY, delight in, love, like, adore, be pleased by, take pleasure in, rejoice in, appreciate, savor, revel in, luxuriate in, glory in; GLOAT OVER, feel self-satisfied about, crow about; informal get a kick out of, get a thrill out of
…I relish the challenge of doing jobs that others turn down.
…He ate quietly, relishing his meal.
…He took particular relish in pointing out my error.

2 relish the prospect/thought/idea
If you relish the idea, thought, or prospect of something, you are looking forward to it very much: LOOK FORWARD TO, fancy, long for, hope for
…He relished the idea of getting some cash.

noun

1 [uncountable] great enjoyment of something: ENJOYMENT, gusto, delight, pleasure, glee, rapture, satisfaction, contentment, contentedness, gratification, happiness, exhilaration, excitement, titillation, appreciation, liking, fondness, enthusiasm, appetite, zest

→ with relish
…I ate with great relish, enjoying every bite.

2 [countable, uncountable] a thick spicy sauce made from fruits or vegetables, and usually eaten with meat: CONDIMENT /ˈkɒndəmənt $ ˈkɑːn-/, accompaniment, sauce, dressing, flavoring, seasoning, dip.

> relish (n.): 1520s, “a sensation of taste, a flavor distinctive of anything,” alteration of reles “scent, taste, aftertaste,” (c. 1300), from Old French relais, reles, “something remaining, that which is left behind,” from relaisser “to leave behind,” from Latin relaxare “loosen, stretch out,” from re- “back” (see re-) + laxare “loosen” (from PIE root *sleg- “be slack, be languid”). Especially “a pleasing taste,” hence “pleasing quality” in general. The meaning “enjoyment of the taste or flavor of something” is attested from 1640s. The sense of “condiment, that which is used to impart a flavor to plain food to increase the pleasure of eating it” is recorded by 1797, especially a piquant sauce or pickle: The modern stuff you put on hot dogs (or don’t) is a sweet green pickle relish.
> relish (v.): 1560s (implied in relished), “give flavor to, give an agreeable taste to,” from relish (n.). The sense of “to enjoy, like the taste or flavor of, take pleasure in” is from 1590s (compare sense reversals in other similar “taste” verbs: like, please, disgust, etc.). Related: Relishing.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
63
Q

slip sb’s mind

A

slip sb’s mind

If something slips your mind, you forget it:
…I’m sorry I forgot your birthday - it just slipped my mind.
…Her birthday completely slipped my mind.
…I meant to pick up the wine but it slipped my mind.
…I’m sorry I didn’t call you back sooner, it totally slipped my mind.

> Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Dictionary.com, The Free Dictionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
64
Q

commiserate

A

com‧mis‧e‧rate
/kəˈmɪzəreɪt/

to feel or express sympathy; If you commiserate with someone, you show them pity or sympathy when something unpleasant has happened to them: OFFER SYMPATHY TO, be sympathetic to, express sympathy for
…After the layoffs, we all went to the bar to commiserate.
…She went over to commiserate with Rose on her unfortunate circumstances.
…They commiserated with him over the loss of his job.

commiseration

UNCOUNTABLE NOUN [also NOUN in plural]
…After half an hour’s commiseration, we turned to more practical matters.
…We have sent the team our commiserations.

> late 16th century: from Latin commiserat- ‘commiserated’, from the verb commiserari, from com- ‘with’ + miserari ‘to lament’ (from miser ‘wretched’).
> Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Dictionary.com, Vocabulary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
65
Q

snarl

A

snarl

1 When an animal snarls, it makes a fierce, rough sound in its throat while showing its teeth.

snarl at
…The dog growled and snarled at me.

2 If you snarl something, you say it in a fierce, angry way.

…‘Shut up,’ he snarled.
…‘Aubrey.’ Hyde seemed almost to snarl the name.

snarl at
…I vaguely remember snarling at someone who stepped on my foot.

> “growl and bare the teeth,” as an angry dog or wolf, 1580s, perhaps from Dutch or Low German snarren “to rattle,” which are probably of imitative origin (compare German schnarren “to rattle,” schnurren “to hum, buzz”). The meaning “speak in a harsh, quarrelsome manner” is recorded by 1690s. Related: Snarled; snarling.

snarl sth up

1 to entangle or impede (something): TANGLE, entangle, entwine, enmesh, ravel, knot, twist, intertwine, jumble, muddle, foul
…The bus got snarled up in the downtown traffic.
…Recurring wildcat labor actions by union members snarled freight traffic at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, which handle nearly 40% of the U.S. imports from Asia and together make up the nation’s largest cargo container complex.
—Ronald D. White, Los Angeles Times, 1 Sep. 2023
…Heavy rains in the California desert collapsed a bridge on Interstate 10 eight years ago, snarling traffic for about five days on the key route linking Southern California and Arizona.
—Russ Wiles, The Arizona Republic, 19 Aug. 2023

2 to make excessively complicated: COMPLICATE, confuse, muddle, jumble, throw into disorder, embroil, make difficult; informal mess up
…A heavy backlog of cases has snarled up the court process.

> late 14c., snarlen, “tangle, catch in a snare or noose” (transitive; literal and figurative), from the obsolete noun snarl “a snare, a noose” (late 14c.), which is probably a diminutive of snare (n.1). The intransitive sense of “become twisted or entangled” is from c. 1600. Related: Snarled; snarling.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
66
Q

recourse

A

re‧course
/rɪˈkɔːs $ ˈriːkɔːrs/

FORMAL
If you achieve something without recourse to a particular course of action, you succeed without carrying out that action. To have recourse to a particular course of action means to have to do that action in order to achieve something.

1a : a turning to someone or something for help or protection
…settled the matter without recourse to law
…It enabled its members to settle their differences without recourse to war.

1b : a source of help or strength : RESORT
…The public believes its only recourse is to take to the streets.
…If the company won’t pay me, the only recourse left to me is to sue them.

> “act of relying on someone or something,” late 14c., recours, from Old French recours (13c.), from Latin recursus “a return, a retreat,” literally “a running back, a going back,” from past-participle stem of recurrere “run back, return,” from re- “back, again” (see re-) + currere “to run” (from PIE root kers- “to run”). Especially in have recourse (late 14c.) “apply for help, rely on for aid.” As the word for the thing applied to for help, by late 15c. Sometimes in Middle English it also was used in an etymological sense of “a returning” from one state or place to another; “a flowing back,” but these are obsolete.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
67
Q

deal breaker

A

deal breaker

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
68
Q

trinket

A

trin‧ket
/ˈtrɪŋkɪt/

a small decorative object, or a piece of jewellery that is cheap or of low quality: KNICKKNACK, BAUBLE, ORNAMENT, piece of bric-a-brac, bibelot, curio, trifle, toy, novelty, gimcrack, gewgaw
…She always returns from vacation with a few souvenirs, mostly just cheap trinkets.

> Old English trenket (“a sort of knife”), hence, probably, a toy knife worn as an ornament; probably from an Old French dialectal form of trenchier (“to cut”). Compare trench.
> Cambridge Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
69
Q

skulduggery

A

skul‧dug‧ge‧ry, skullduggery
/ˌskʌlˈdʌɡəri/

secretly dishonest or illegal activity – also used humorously; underhanded or unscrupulous behavior; Skulduggery is behavior in which someone acts in a dishonest way in order to achieve their aim: TRICKERY, swindling, machinations, duplicity, fraudulence, double-dealing, sharp practice, unscrupulousness, underhandedness, chicanery; informal shenanigans, funny business, hanky-panky, monkey business; British informal monkey tricks, jiggery-pokery; North American informal monkeyshines.
…a firm that investigates commercial skulduggery
…He is serving a prison sentence for financial skulduggery.
…The company’s apparently healthy bottom line was merely an illusion, the result of years of accounting skulduggery.

> “underhanded dealings, roguish intrigue,” 1856, apparently an alteration of Scottish sculdudrie “adultery” (1713), via sculduddery “bawdry, obscenity, grossness, unchastity” (1821), a euphemism of uncertain origin but probably popularized in English via Scott.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
70
Q

idiosyncrasy

A

id‧i‧o‧syn‧cra‧sy
/ˌɪdiəˈsɪŋkrəsi/

a peculiarity of constitution or temperament; If you talk about the idiosyncrasies of someone or something, you are referring to their rather unusual habits or characteristics: PECULIARITY, individual/personal trait, oddity, eccentricity, foible, crotchet, habit, characteristic, speciality, quality, feature; individuality; unconventionality, unorthodoxy
…Her habit of using “like” in every sentence was just one of her idiosyncrasies.
…one of the many idiosyncrasies of English spelling
…The book is a gem of Victorian idiosyncrasy.

> c. 1600, from French idiosyncrasie, from Latinized form of Greek idiosynkrasia “a peculiar temperament,” from idios “one’s own” (see idiom) + synkrasis “temperament, mixture of personal characteristics,” from syn “together” (see syn-) + krasis “mixture,” from PIE root *kere- “to mix, confuse; cook”. Originally in English a medical term meaning “physical constitution of an individual;” mental sense “peculiar mixture” of the elements in one person that makes up his character and personality first attested 1660s. In modern use, loosely, one’s whims, habits, fads, or tastes. Sometimes confused in spelling with words in -cracy, but it is from krasis not kratos.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
71
Q

awry

A

a‧wry
/əˈraɪ/

1 away from the appropriate, planned, or expected course: AMISS, wrong, not right

→ go awry
If something goes awry, it does not happen in the way it was planned.
…She was in a fury over a plan that had gone awry.
…My carefully laid plans had already gone awry.

2 out of the normal or correct position: ASKEW, crooked /ˈkro͝okəd/, lopsided
…He rushed out, hat awry.
…His dark hair was all awry.

> late 14c., “crooked, askew, turned or twisted to one side,” from a- (1) “on” + wry (adj.).
also from late 14c.
> wry (adj.): 1520s, “distorted, somewhat twisted to one side,” from obsolete verb wry “to contort, to twist or turn,” from Old English wrigian “to turn, bend, move, go,” from Proto-Germanic *wrig- (source also of Old Frisian wrigia “to bend,” Middle Low German wrich “turned, twisted”), from PIE *wreik- “to turn” (source also of Greek rhoikos “crooked,” Lithuanian raišas “lame, limping”), from root *wer- (2) “to turn, bend.” Of words, thoughts, etc., from 1590s. The original sense is preserved in awry.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
72
Q

eligible

A

el‧i‧gi‧ble
/ˈelɪdʒəbəl/

1 qualified to participate or be chosen; Someone who is eligible to do something is qualified or able to do it, for example because they are old enough: ENTITLED, permitted, allowed, qualified; ACCEPTABLE, suitable, appropriate, fit, fitting

→ eligible for
…Students on a part-time course are not eligible for a loan.

→ eligible to do sth
…Over 500,000 18-year-olds will become eligible to vote this year.

2 [only before noun] an eligible man or woman would be good to marry because they are rich, attractive, and not married

> early 15c., “fit or proper to be chosen,” from Old French eligible “fit to be chosen” (14c.), from Late Latin eligibilis “that may be chosen,” from Latin eligere “choose” (see election). Related: Eligibly.
> election (n.): c. 1300, eleccioun, “act of choosing” someone to occupy a position, elevation to office” (whether by one person or a body of electors); also “the holding of a vote by a body of electors by established procedure; the time and place of such a vote,” from Anglo-French eleccioun, Old French elecion “choice, election, selection” (12c.), from Latin electionem (nominative electio) “a choice, selection,” noun of action from past-participle stem of eligere “pick out, select,” from ex “out” (see ex-) + -ligere, combining form of legere “to choose,” from PIE root *leg- (1) “to collect, gather.”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
73
Q

rapture

A

noun

1 Rapture is a feeling of extreme happiness or pleasure: ECSTASY, bliss, euphoria, elation, exaltation, joy, joyfulness, joyousness, cloud nine, seventh heaven, transport, rhapsody, enchantment, delight, exhilaration, happiness, pleasure, ravishment; informal the top of the world
…His speech was received with rapture by his supporters.
…The boys gazed up at him in rapture.

2 → be in raptures/go into raptures
to express or feel great pleasure and happiness about something; If you are in raptures or go into raptures about something, you are extremely impressed by it and enthusiastic about it: ENTHUSE, rhapsodize, rave, gush, wax lyrical, express intense pleasure/enthusiasm; heap praise on, praise to the skies, make much of; informal go wild/mad/crazy.
…The critics went into raptures about her performance.
…His goal sent the crowd into raptures.

> late 16th century (in the sense ‘seizing and carrying off’): borrowed from Middle French rapture, from Latin raptūra, future active participle of rapiō (“snatch, carry off”).
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
74
Q

hunker down

A

hunker down

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
75
Q

get your shit together

A

get your shit together

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
76
Q

amass

A

amass

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
77
Q

on the cusp

A

on the cusp

at the point when something is about to change to something else
…The country was on the cusp of economic expansion.
…She is on the cusp of being a star.
on the cusp between childhood and adolescence
…Lloyd’s students are seventeen years old, high-school students on the cusp of adulthood.
— Merve Emre, The New Yorker, 11 July 2023

> Merriam-Webster, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary

78
Q

foil

A

foil

verb

to prevent something bad that someone is planning to do; If you foil someone’s plan or attempt to do something, for example to commit a crime, you succeed in stopping them from doing what they want: THWART, frustrate, counter; stop, check, block, prevent, defeat, nip in the bud; informal mess up, screw up, stymie, cook someone’s goose
…A massive arms-smuggling plan has been foiled by the CIA.
…A brave police chief foiled an armed robbery on a jeweler’s by grabbing the raider’s shotgun.

GRAMMAR
Foil is often used in the passive.

noun

1 very thin sheet metal

2 → be a foil to/for sb/sth
a person or thing that contrasts with and so emphasizes and enhances the qualities of another; If you refer to one thing or person as a foil for another, you approve of the fact that they contrast with each other and go well together, often in a way that makes the second thing or person seem better or less harmful: CONTRAST, background, setting, relief, antithesis; COMPLEMENT
…He thought of her serenity as a foil for his intemperance.
…The simple stone floor is the perfect foil for the brightly colored furnishings.

> foil (v.):
From Middle English foilen (“spoil a scent trail by running over it”), from Old French fouler (“tread on, trample”), ultimately from Latin fullō (“I trample, I full”). Compare full (v.). Hence, “to overthrow, defeat” (1540s; as a noun in this sense from late 15c.); “frustrate the efforts of” (1560s). Related: Foiled; foiling. Foiled again! as a cry of defeat and dismay is from at least 1847.
> foil (n.1): “very thin sheet of metal,” early 14c., foile, from Old French foil, fueill, fueille “leaf; foliage; sheet of paper; sheet of metal” (12c., Modern French feuille), from Latin folia, plural (mistaken for fem. singular) of folium “leaf” (from PIE root *bhel- (3) “to thrive, bloom”).
> foil (n.2): The sense of “one who enhances another by contrast” (1580s) is from the practice of backing a gem with metal foil to make it shine more brilliantly. The meaning “light sword used in fencing” (1590s) could be from this sense, or from foil (v.). The sense of “metallic food wrap” is from 1897.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

79
Q

what makes somebody tick

A

what makes somebody tick

If you talk about what makes someone tick, you are talking about the beliefs, wishes, and feelings that make them behave in the way that they do.
…He wanted to find out what made them tick.
…I’m interested in how people tick.

> Collins English Dictionary

80
Q

get hold of

A

get hold of

81
Q

home and dry

A

home and dry

INFORMAL•BRITISH
: sure of succeeding, winning, etc. : no longer in danger of failing; having successfully achieved or being within sight of achieving one’s objective; If you say that someone is, in British English home and dry, or in American English home free, you mean that they have been successful or that they are certain to be successful.
…If we can meet this next deadline, we’ll be home and dry.
…We just have to finish this section, then we’re home and dry.
…We’re not home and dry yet.

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Dictionary, Macmillan Dictionary

82
Q

qualm

A

qualm
/kwɑːm $ kwɑːm, kwɑːlm/

noun [countable usually plural]

an uneasy feeling of doubt, worry, or fear, especially about one’s own conduct; a misgiving; If you have no qualms about doing something, you are not worried that it may be wrong in some way: MISGIVING, doubt, reservation, second thought, worry, concern, anxiety; (qualms) hesitation, hesitance, hesitancy, demur, reluctance, disinclination, apprehension, trepidation, disquiet, disquietude, unease, uneasiness
…Military regimes generally have no qualms about controlling the press.
…The manager has no qualms about dropping players who do not perform well.
…Did she see him as capable of murder? She had used the word without a qualm.

> Perhaps from Middle English qualm, cwalm (“death, sickness, plague”), which is from Old English cwealm (West Saxon: “death, disaster, plague”), ūtcwalm (Anglian: “utter destruction”), from Proto-West Germanic *kwalm (“killing, death, destruction”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷelH- (“to stick, pierce; pain, injury, death”), whence also quell. Although the sense development is possible, this has the problem that there are no attestations in intermediate senses before the appearance of “pang of apprehension, etc.” in the 16th century. The alternative etymology is from Dutch kwalm or German Qualm (“steam, vapor, mist”) earlier “daze, stupefaction”, which is from the root of German quellen (“to stream, well up”). The sense “feeling of faintness” is from 1530; “uneasiness, doubt” from 1553; “scruple of conscience” from 1649.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

83
Q

impinge on

A

impinge on/upon sb/sth

1 to affect (something) in a way that is unwanted : to have a bad effect on (something); Something that impinges on you affects you to some extent: AFFECT, have an effect on, have a bearing on, touch, influence, exert influence on, make an impression on
…Her work is impinging on her social life.
…Personal problems experienced by students may impinge on their work.
…The government’s spending limits will seriously impinge on the education budget.
…the cuts in defense spending that have impinged on two of the region’s largest employers
…Given their short career expectancy, NFL players inevitably feel anxiety when injuries or coaching decisions impinge on their financial outlook.
—Childs Walker, Baltimore Sun, 20 July 2023

2 to advance over an area belonging to someone or something else; encroach: ENCROACH ON, intrude on, infringe, invade, trespass on, obtrude into, make inroads into; violate; informal muscle in on.
…The site impinges on a greenbelt area.

> mid 16th century: from Latin impingere ‘to drive something in or at; to dash against; to impinge’, from in- ‘into’ + pangere ‘to fix, drive’. The word originally meant ‘thrust at forcibly’, then ‘come into forcible contact’; hence ‘encroach’ (mid 18th century).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Meirram-Webster, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

84
Q

temper sth with sth
or temper sth by sth

A

temper sth with sth
or temper sth by sth

to make something less severe or extreme.
…The heat in this coastal town is tempered by cool sea breezes.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English

85
Q

forestall

A

fore‧stall
/fɔːˈstɔːl $ fɔːrˈstɒːl/

to prevent something from happening or prevent someone from doing something by doing something first: PREVENT, stop, frustrate, anticipate, preempt, get in before, get ahead of
…Large numbers of police were in the square to forestall any demonstrations.
…Many doctors prescribe aspirin to forestall second heart attacks.

USAGE NOTES:
Forestall implies a getting ahead so as to stop or interrupt something in its course.

> late 14c. (implied in forestalling), “to lie in wait for;” also “to intercept goods before they reach public markets and buy them privately,” which formerly was a crime (mid-14c. in this sense in Anglo-French), from Old English noun foresteall “intervention, hindrance (of justice); an ambush, a waylaying,” literally “a standing before (someone),” from fore- “before” + steall “standing position” (see stall (n.1)). Modern sense of “to anticipate and delay” is from 1580s. Related: Forestalled; forestalling.
> stall (n.1): The word stall comes from Old English steall, meaning “standing place, stable, fishing ground”. It is related to other Germanic words with similar meanings, such as Old Norse stallr and German Stall. The word may have been influenced by French estal, which also means “station, position, stall”. The sense of “booth or bench for selling merchandise, money-changing, etc.” is by late 14c. The meaning “partially enclosed fixed seat in a choir” is attested from c. 1400; that of “urinal or divided compartment in a series in a lavatory” is by 1967.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

86
Q

cobble together

A

cobble together
(also cobble up)

to make or put together roughly or hastily; to quickly produce or make something that is useful but not perfect; If you say that someone has cobbled something together, you mean that they have made or produced it roughly or quickly: PREPARE ROUGHLY/HASTILY, make roughly/hastily, put together roughly/hastily, scribble, improvise, devise, contrive, rig (up), patch together, jerry-build, throw together, whip up
cobble together an agreement
cobble up a temporary solution
…The diplomats cobbled an agreement together.
…She cobbled together a tent from a few pieces of string and a sheet.
…The group had cobbled together a few decent songs.

> late 15th century: back-formation from cobbler(=a person who mends shoes as a job).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Oxford Dictionary of English

87
Q

vile

A

vile

adjective: vile; comparative adjective: viler; superlative adjective: vilest

1 INFORMAL
extremely unpleasant or bad: FOUL, nasty, unpleasant, bad, disageeable, horrid, horrible
…This coffee tastes really vile.
…The weather was consistently vile.
…She was in too vile a mood to work.

2 evil or immoral
…a vile act of betrayal
…Nothing is so vile as intellectual dishonesty.

> late 13c., “morally repugnant; morally flawed, corrupt, wicked; of no value; of inferior quality; disgusting, foul, ugly; degrading, humiliating; of low estate, without worldly honor or esteem,” from Anglo-French ville, Old French vil “shameful, dishonorable; low-born; cheap; ugly, hideous,” from Latin vilis “cheap, worthless, base, common,” of uncertain origin, perhaps from PIE root *wes- (1) “to buy, sell” (see venal). Related: Vilely; vileness; vilety (early 13c.).
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

88
Q

touché

A

touché

→ used to acknowledge a hit in fencing or the success or appropriateness of an argument, an accusation, or a witty point; You say ‘touché’ when you want to admit that the other person in an argument has won a point, usually with a short and witty remark.
…“You say we should support British industries, but you always drink French wines.” “Touché.

> exclamation acknowledging a hit in fencing, 1902, from French touché, past participle of toucher “to hit,” from Old French touchier “to hit” (see touch (v.)). Extended (non-fencing) use by 1907.
> Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

89
Q

usurp

A

u‧surp
/juːˈzɜːp $ -ˈsɜːrp/

to take control of a position of power, especially without having the right to; If you say that someone usurps a job, role, title, or position, they take it from someone when they have no right to do this: SEIZE, take over, expropriate, take possession of, take, appropriate, steal, wrest, arrogate, commandeer, annex, assume, lay claim to
…There were a couple of attempts to usurp the young king.
…Some senators fear the organization will usurp congressional power.
…Some people have accused city council members of trying to usurp the mayor’s power.
…The Congress wants to reverse the reforms and usurp the power of the presidency.
…Competitors have jockeyed to usurp Twitter’s fading influence since Musk’s takeover.
WIRED, 6 Nov. 2023
…Beijing, however, wants to usurp both spiritual and temporal authority in Tibet.
—Lobsang Sangay, Foreign Affairs, 6 Nov. 2023

> early 14c., from Old French usurper “to (wrongfully) appropriate” (14c.), from Latin usurpare “make use of, seize for use,” in later Latin “to assume unlawfully, trespass on,” from usus “a use” (see use (v.)) + rapere “to seize” (see rapid (adj.)). Related: Usurped; usurping.
> Other descendants of rapere in English include rapacious /rəˈpeɪʃəs/ (“always wanting more money, goods etc than you need or have a right to”), rapine /ˈrapɪn $ ˈræpən/ (“the seizing and carrying away of things by force”), rapt (the earliest sense of which is “lifted up and carried away”), and ravish (one meaning of which is “to seize and take away by violence”).
> Usurp was borrowed into English in the 14th century from the Anglo-French word usorper, which in turn derives from the Latin verb usurpare, meaning “to take possession of without a legal claim.” Usurpare itself was formed by combining usu (a form of usus, meaning “use”) and rapere (“to seize”). Other descendants of rapere in English include rapacious (“given to seizing or extorting what is coveted”), rapine (“the seizing and carrying away of things by force”), rapt (the earliest sense of which is “lifted up and carried away”), and ravish (one meaning of which is “to seize and take away by violence”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

90
Q

trenchant

A

tren‧chant
/ˈtrentʃənt/

1 FORMAL
severe, expressing strong criticism or forceful opinions; expressed very strongly, effectively, and directly without worrying about offending people: INCISIVE, cutting, pointed, piercing, penetrating, sharp, keen, acute, razor-sharp, razor-edged, rapierlike; vigorous, forceful, strong
…He was shattered and bewildered by this trenchant criticism.
…His most trenchant criticism is reserved for the party leader, whom he describes as “the most incompetent and ineffectual the party has known”.

2 vigorously effective and articulate
…a trenchant analysis

> early 14c., “cutting, sharp,” from Old French trenchant “cutting, sharp” (literal and figurative), present participle of trenchier “to cut” (see trench). Figurative sense in English is from c. 1600.
> There’s much to know about the word trenchant, but we’ll cut to the chase. The word trenchant comes from the Anglo-French verb trencher, meaning “to cut.” Hence, a trenchant sword is one with a keen edge. Nowadays, trenchant mostly describes things that don’t cut deep literally, but that are still felt: a trenchant remark is one that cuts close to the bone, and a trenchant observation is one that cuts to the heart of the matter. In addition to meaning “caustic” and “sharply perceptive,” trenchant also carries a sense meaning “very strong, clear, and effective” that may be used, for instance, to describe a persuasive essay written with intellectual rigor.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

91
Q

ridiculous

A

ridiculous

92
Q

solvent

A

solvent

1 If a person or a company is solvent, they have enough money to pay all their debts: FINANCIALLY SOUND, secure, in the black, solid
…They’re going to have to show that the company is now solvent.

2 A solvent is a liquid that can dissolve other substances: resolvent, dissolvent [rare]
…a small amount of cleaning solvent
…industrial solvents

> mid 17th century: from Latin solvent- ‘loosening, unfastening, paying’, from the verb solvere .
> Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English

93
Q

the lion’s share

A

the lion’s share

the largest part or most of something:
…Reputable charities spend the lion’s share of donations on aid and a tiny fraction on administration.
…Military and nuclear research have received the lion’s share of public funding.
…William was appointed editor, which meant that he did the lion’s share of the work.

> From Aesop’s fable The Lion’s Share, in which a lion claims the full amount of the spoil after hunting with a number of other beasts. In one version of the fable, the lion claims three-quarters of the kill rather than the whole, leaving the three other animals to fight over the remainder.
> Cambridge Dictionary, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Wiktionary

94
Q

ratify

A

rat‧i‧fy
/ˈrætɪfaɪ/

to approve and sanction formally; to make a written agreement official by signing it; When national leaders or organizations ratify a treaty or written agreement, they make it official by giving their formal approval to it, usually by signing it or voting for it: CONFIRM, approve, sanction, endorse, agree to, accept, consent to, assent to, affirm, uphold
…We hope that the republics will be willing to ratify the treaty.
…Many countries have now ratified the UN convention on the rights of the child.
…The decision will have to be ratified (= approved) by the executive board.
…Voters in the two districts must ratify the commission’s decision in an election.
—Deborah Sullivan Brennan, San Diego Union-Tribune, 11 July 2023

> mid-14c., ratifien, “confirm, approve, sanction, validate by formal act of approval,” from Old French ratifier (13c.), from Medieval Latin ratificare “confirm, approve,” literally “fix by reckoning,” from Latin ratus “fixed by calculation; determined; approved; certain, sure; valid” (past-participle adjective from reri “to reckon, think;” from PIE root *re- “to reason, count”) + combining form of facere “to make” (from PIE root *dhe- “to set, put”). Related: Ratified; ratifying.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

95
Q

behemoth

A

be‧he‧moth
/bəˈhiːmɒθ $ -mɑːθ/

1 a huge or monstrous creature

2 something of monstrous size, power, or appearance; If you refer to something as a behemoth, you mean that it is extremely large, and often that it is unpleasant, inefficient, or difficult to manage: GIANT, monster, mammoth, titan
…a behemoth truck
…Shoppers are now more loyal to their local stores than to faceless behemoths.
…In addition, a federal judge in the U.S. recently refused to block the deal to create a video game behemoth on grounds Microsoft’s ownership of Activision won’t suppress competition in the video game library subscription and cloud gaming markets.
—Etan Vlessing, The Hollywood Reporter, 19 July 2023

> late 14c., huge biblical beast (Job xl.15), from Latin behemoth, from Hebrew b’hemoth, usually taken as plural of intensity of b’hemah “beast.” But the Hebrew word is perhaps a folk etymology of Egyptian pehemau, literally “water-ox,” the name for the hippopotamus. Used in modern English for any huge beast.
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

96
Q

faze

A

faze
/feɪz/

INFORMAL
to disturb the composure of; If a new or difficult situation fazes you, it makes you feel confused or shocked, so that you do not know what to do: DISCONCERT, DAUNT
…John was embarrassed, but it didn’t faze Mike a bit.
…No one is fazed by the sight of guns here any more.

USAGE NOTES:
Faze is generally used only as a verb, and means “to daunt or disconcert.” It often appears in negative expressions such as “it didn’t faze her a bit” or “nothing fazes him.”

> 1830, American English, said to be a variant of Kentish dialect feeze “to alarm, discomfit, frighten” (mid-15c.), from Old English fesian, fysian “to chase, drive away; put to flight; discomfit, frighten, terrify,” from Proto-Germanic *fausjan (source also of Swedish fösa “drive away,” Norwegian föysa). Related: Fazed; fazing. Bartlett (1848) has it as to be in a feeze “in a state of excitement.” There also is a nautical verb feaze “to unravel” (a rope), from 1560s.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Dictionary, Wiktionary, Etymonline

97
Q

scuttle

A

scut‧tle
/ˈskʌtl/

1 When people or small animals scuttle somewhere, they run there with short quick steps: SCAMPER, scurry, scramble, bustle, skip, trot, hurry, hasten, make haste, rush, race, dash, run, sprint
…A mouse scuttled across the floor.

> “run hurriedly, scamper, scurry,” mid-15c. (implied in scuttling), probably related to or a frequentative form of scud (v.).

2 to ruin or end someone’s plans or chance of being successful – used especially in news reports: WRECK /rek/, destroy, ruin, overwhelm
…Such threats could scuttle the peace conference.

3 to sink a ship by making holes in the bottom, especially in order to prevent it being used by an enemy
…He personally had received orders from the commander to scuttle the ship.

> scuttle (v.1): “run hurriedly, scamper, scurry,” mid-15c. (implied in scuttling), probably related to or a frequentative form of scud (v.). Also compare scut (n.1). Related: Scuttled.
> scuttle (v.3): “cut a hole in the bottom or sides of a ship,” especially to sink it, 1640s, from skottell (n.) “small, square hatchway or opening in a ship’s deck” (late 15c.), from French escoutille (Modern French écoutille) or directly from Spanish escotilla “hatchway,” diminutive of escota “opening in a garment,” from escotar “cut (clothes to fit), cut out.” This is perhaps from e- “out” (see ex-) + a word borrowed from a Germanic language (ultimately from PIE root *sker- (1) “to cut”). Figurative sense of “deliberately sink or destroy one’s own effort or project” is by 1888. Related: Scuttled; scuttling.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

98
Q

quaint

A

quaint
/kweɪnt/

1 unusual and attractive, especially in an old-fashioned way
…a small, quaint town with narrow streets

2 Quaint can also be used to show that you do not approve of something, especially an opinion, belief, or way of behaving, because it is strange or old-fashioned
…“What a quaint idea!” she said, laughing at him.

USAGE NOTES:
Quaint suggests an old-fashioned but pleasant oddness:
a quaint fishing village

> c. 1200, cointe, cwointe, “cunning, artful, ingenious; proud,” in both good and bad senses, from Old French cointe, queinte “knowledgeable, well-informed; clever; arrogant, proud; elegant, gracious,” from Latin cognitus “known, approved,” past participle of cognoscere “get or come to know well” (see cognizance). Modern spelling is from early 14c. (see Q).
> Later in English, quaint came to mean “elaborate, skillfully made” (c. 1300); “strange and clever, fanciful, odd whimsical” (mid-14c.). The sense of “unusual or old-fashioned but charming or agreeable” is attested by 1782, and at that time could describe the word itself, which had become rare after c. 1700 (though it soon recovered popularity in this secondary sense). Related: Quaintly; quaintness.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

99
Q

fend off

A

fend off

100
Q

aghast

A

a‧ghast
/əˈɡɑːst $ əˈɡæst/

FORMAL
struck with terror, amazement, or horror; If you are aghast, you are filled with horror and surprise: HORRIFIED, appalled, astounded, shocked, stunned
…The news left her aghast.
…Tania stared at him aghast, unable to speak.

→ aghast at
…Everyone was aghast at the verdict.

> c. 1300, agast, “terrified, suddenly filled with frightened amazement,” past participle of Middle English agasten “to frighten” (c. 1200), from a- intensive prefix (see a- (1)) + Old English gæstan “to terrify,” from gæst “spirit, ghost” (see ghost (n.)). The unetymological -gh- is perhaps a Flemish influence, or after ghost, etc., and became general after 1700.
> If you are aghast, you might look like you’ve just seen a ghost, or something similarly shocking.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

101
Q

slander

A

slan‧der
/ˈslɑːndə $ ˈslændər/

verb

To slander someone means to say untrue things about them in order to damage their reputation: DEFAME, smear, libel, slur
…She was accused of slandering her former boss.

noun

Slander is an untrue spoken statement about someone which is intended to damage their reputation.
….She is being sued for slander.
…He was a target of slander.
…We’ve heard countless unsupported slanders about her.

USAGE NOTES:
Slander stresses the suffering of the victim.
…Town gossips slandered their good name.

> slander (v.): late 13c., sclaundren, “defame, caluminate, accuse falsely and maliciously,” from Anglo-French esclaundrer, Old French esclandrer, from Old French esclandre “scandalous statement”. Related: Slandered; slandering; slanderer. In early biblical translations also sometimes closer to the Latin literal sense, or with a notion of “stumbling block to faith, grace, etc.”
> slander (n.): late 13c., sclaundre, “state of impaired reputation; disgrace or dishonor;” c. 1300, “a false tale or report spread maliciously; the fabrication and dissemination of false tales to discredit someone,” from Anglo-French esclaundre, Old French esclandre “scandalous statement,” alteration (“with interloping l” [Century Dictionary]) of escandle, escandre “scandal,” from Latin scandalum “cause of offense, stumbling block, temptation” (see scandal).
> Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

102
Q

annals

A

an‧nals
/ˈænlz/

noun [plural]

1 : a record of events arranged in yearly sequence
…the annals of the twentieth century

1a → in the annals of something
in the whole history of something
…one of the most unusual cases in the annals of crime
…There really hadn’t been anything like it in the annals of modern art before.
Los Angeles Times, 7 Feb. 2023
…The bank also insisted that the Justice Department’s prosecution of the bank was without precedent in the annals of American history.
—Matt Ford, The New Republic, 17 Jan. 2023

2 used in the titles of official records of events or activities
…It was published in the ‘Annals of Internal Medicine’.

> “chronicle of events year-by-year,” 1560s, from Latin annales libri “chronicles, yearlies,” literally “yearly books,” plural of noun use of annalis “pertaining to a year,” from annus “year” (see annual (adj.)). In the early Roman republic, the Pontifex Maximus each year would record public events on tablets called Annales Maximi, hence Latin historical works were called annales.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

103
Q

intriguing

A

intriguing

104
Q

indelible

A

in‧del‧i‧ble
/ɪnˈdeləbəl/

1 If you say that something leaves an indelible impression, you mean that it is very unlikely to be forgotten: PERMANENT, lasting, enduring, ingrained
…My visit to India in 1986 left an indelible impression on me.

2 → indelible ink/pencil/marker etc
ink etc that makes a permanent mark which cannot be removed

—indelibly adverb
…The horrors he experienced are imprinted, perhaps indelibly, in his brain.

> late 15th century (as indeleble ): from French, or from Latin indelebilis, from in- ‘not’ + delebilis (from delere ‘efface, delete’). The ending was altered under the influence of -ible.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English

105
Q

peter out

A

peter out

If something peters out, it gradually comes to an end: FIZZLE OUT, fade (away), die away/out, dwindle, diminish, taper off, tail off, trail away/off, wane, ebb, melt away, evaporate, disappear, come to nothing, fail, fall through, come to a halt, come to an end, run out, give out; decrease, subside
…The six-month strike seemed to be petering out.
…The road petered out into a rutted track.

> Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

106
Q

tarnish

A

tar‧nish
/ˈtɑːnɪʃ $ ˈtɑːr-/

> mid-15c. ternishen, “become tarnished; discolor,” from Old French terniss-, present-participle stem of ternir “dull the luster or brightness of, make dim” (15c.), probably from terne (adj.) “dull, dark,” which according to Diez is from a Germanic source cognate with Old High German tarnjan “to conceal, hide,” Old English dyrnan “to hide, darken,” from Proto-Germanic *darnjaz (see dern), but there are difficulties of form, sense, and date. Figurative sense is from 1690s. Related: Tarnished; tarnishing.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

107
Q

laureate

A

lau‧re‧ate
/ˈlɔːriət/

someone who has been given an important prize or honour, especially the Nobel prize

> “crowned with laurels” (as a mark of distinction), late 14c., earliest reference is to poetic distinction, from Latin laureatus “crowned with laurels,” from laurea “laurel crown” (emblematic of victory or distinction in poetry), from fem. of laureus “of laurel,” from laurus “laurel” (see laurel (n.)).

laur‧el
/ˈlɒrəl $ ˈlɔː-, ˈlɑː-/

1 월계수
2 a tree or shrub that resembles the true laurel
especially : MOUNTAIN LAUREL
3a a crown of laurel awarded as an honor
3b a recognition of achievement : HONOR —usually used in plural

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

108
Q

Hail Mary

A

Hail Mary

1 A prayer calling for the intercession of the Virgin Mary.

2 A risky last-ditch effort with great benefit but little chance of success; one whose success would require divine intervention
…The only potential cure is a stem-cell transplant, when you take somebody else’s immune system and put it into yours. But right now that’s kind of a Hail Mary pass.

> Wiktionary, Merriam-Webster

109
Q

eschew

A

es‧chew
/ɪsˈtʃuː/

to deliberately avoid doing or using something; If you eschew something, you deliberately avoid doing it or becoming involved in it: ABSTAIN FROM /əbˈsteɪn/, refrain from, give up, forgo, forswear, shun, renounce, swear off, abjure, steer clear of, have nothing to do with, give a wide berth to
…He firmly eschewed political involvement.
…We won’t have discussions with this group unless they eschew violence.
…The leaders of the organization eschewed the term “union,” preferring “guild.”

USAGE NOTES:
Eschew implies an avoiding or abstaining from as unwise or distasteful.
…a playwright who eschews melodrama

> Eschew derives from the Anglo-French verb eschiver and is akin to the Old High German verb sciuhen (“to avoid, escape”), an ancestor of our word shy.
> “to refuse to use or participate in; stand aloof from; shun; avoid,” mid-14c., from Old French eschiver “shun, eschew, avoid, dispense with,” from Frankish *skiuhan “dread, avoid, shun,” from Proto-Germanic *skeukhwaz (source also of Old High German sciuhen “to avoid, escape,” German scheuen “to fear, shun, shrink from,” scheu “shy, timid”); see shy (adj.). Related: Eschewed; eschewing; eschewal; eschewance. Italian schivare “to avoid, shun, protect from,” schivo “shy, bashful” are related loan words from Germanic. For e-, see e-.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

110
Q

parabolic

A

par·a·bol·ic
/ˌper-ə-ˈbä-lik/

1 of, having the form of, or relating to a parabola
…motion in a parabolic curve

2 of or expressed in parables.
parabolic teaching

> parabolic (a.2): mid-15c., parabolik, “figurative, allegorical, of or pertaining to a parable or a parabole,” from Medieval Latin parabolicus, from late Greek parabolikos “figurative,” from parabolē “comparison” (see ‌parable).
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

111
Q

snare

A

snare

112
Q

crimp

A

crimp

verb

1 If you crimp something such as a piece of fabric or pastry, you make small folds in it: FLUTE, pleat, corrugate, ruffle, furrow, groove, ridge, crease, wrinkle, crinkle, crumple
Crimp the edges to seal them tightly.

2 to make your hair slightly curly by using a special heated tool: CURL, CRINKLE, kink, frizz, frizzle, coil, corkscrew, wave
crimped blonde hair

3 to be an inhibiting or restraining influence on; to prevent (something) from happening or proceeding in the usual or desired way
…economic problems that have been crimping(=putting a crimp in) sales in the computer industry
…Farmers complain that the drought could crimp their income potential.

noun

1 a curl, wave, or folded or compressed edge
…This cascade of delicate crimps depends on a perm.
…The wool had too much crimp to be used in weaving.

2 something that cramps or inhibits: RESTRAINT, CURB

put a crimp in

INFORMAL•NORTH AMERICAN
to have an adverse effect on; to prevent (something) from happening or proceeding in the usual or desired way : to affect (something) badly
…The storm put a crimp in our travel plans.
…The extra expenses put a crimp in the company’s budget.
…Well, that puts a crimp in my theory.

> crimp (v.): late 14c., “cause to contract or be wrinkled or wavy.” Old English had gecrympan “to crimp, curl,” but the modern word probably is from Middle Dutch or Low German crimpen “to shrink, to be contracted, be drawn together.” Sense of “bend back or inward, draw together” is from 1712. Related: Crimped; crimping.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Britannica, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

113
Q

wry

A

wry

1 cleverly and often ironically or grimly humorous; A wry remark or piece of writing refers to a bad situation or a change in a situation in an amusing way: IRONIC, sardonic, satirical, mocking, scoffing, sneering, derisive, scornful, sarcastic, double-edged, dry, droll, witty, humorous; British informal sarky.
…‘Was it as bad as you expected?’ Travis gave a wry smile.
…His wry humor made her laugh.
…His books are noted for their wry humor.
…When I asked her how she felt after winning the race, she gave me a wry smile and said, “Pretty tired.”

—wryly adverb
…As Carr wryly notes, ‘Being freed up sounds a lot more pleasant than being fired.’

2 (of a person’s face or features) twisted into an expression of disgust, disappointment, or annoyance
…He sipped his cold coffee and made a wry face.

> 1520s, “distorted, somewhat twisted to one side,” from obsolete verb wry “to contort, to twist or turn,” from Old English wrigian “to turn, bend, move, go,” from Proto-Germanic *wrig- (source also of Old Frisian wrigia “to bend,” Middle Low German wrich “turned, twisted”), from PIE *wreik- “to turn” (source also of Greek rhoikos “crooked,” Lithuanian raišas “lame, limping”), from root *wer- (2) “to turn, bend.” Of words, thoughts, etc., from 1590s. The original sense is preserved in awry.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

114
Q

ensnare

A

ensnare

1 to trap someone in an unpleasant or illegal situation, from which they cannot escape; If a bad situation ensnares someone, they are unable to escape from it

→ ensnare in
…Young girls were ensnared in prostitution rings.
…They were ensnared in downtown traffic.

2 to trick someone in an unpleasant way and get control of them

3 If an animal is ensnared, it is caught in a trap: TRAP, catch, capture, seize
…The spider must wait for prey to be ensnared on its web.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Macmillan Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English

115
Q

visceral

A

vis‧ce‧ral
/ˈvɪsərəl/

1 relating to deep inward feelings rather than to the intellect; Visceral feelings are feelings that you feel very deeply and find it difficult to control or ignore, and that are not the result of thought: INSTINCTIVE, innate, instinctual, gut, deep-down, deep-seated, deep-rooted, inward; emotional; animal
…his visceral hatred of the ruling class
…the sheer visceral joy of being alive

2 felt in or as if in the internal organs of the body : DEEP
…a visceral conviction

3 of, relating to, or located on or among the viscera /ˈvɪsərə/: SPLANCHNIC
visceral organs

> 1570s, “affecting inward feelings,” from French viscéral and directly from Medieval Latin visceralis “internal,” from Latin viscera, plural of viscus “internal organ, inner parts of the body”; further etymology uncertain, perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *weys- (“to rotate, turn”)) + -ālis (suffix meaning ‘of or pertaining to’ forming adjectives).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

116
Q

inoculate

A

i‧noc‧u‧late
/ɪˈnɒkjəleɪt $ ɪˈnɑː-/

1 to protect someone against a disease by putting a weak form of the disease into their body using a needle: IMMUNIZE, vaccinate, inject; protect from, shield from, safeguard from; informal give someone a jab, give someone a shot

→ inoculate sb against sth
…All the children had been inoculated against hepatitis.

2 to introduce (an infective agent) into an organism
…The microorganism can be inoculated into laboratory animals.

3 to introduce (cells or organisms) into a culture medium
…0.5 ml of the specimen was inoculated into each tissue culture flask.

> mid-15c., “implant a bud into a plant,” from Latin inoculatus, past participle of inoculare “graft in, implant a bud or eye of one plant into another,” from in- “in” (from PIE root *en “in”) + oculus “bud,” originally “eye” (from PIE root *okw- “to see”). Meaning “implant germs of a disease to produce immunity” is from inoculation, originally in reference to smallpox, after 1799, often used in sense of “to inoculate with a vaccine.” Related: Inoculated; inoculating.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

117
Q

hit the ground running

A

hit the ground running

If you hit the ground running, you start a new activity with a lot of enthusiasm and energy and do not waste any time.
…We want our students to hit the ground running after they graduate.

> Collins English Dictionary

118
Q

tangential

A

tan‧gen‧tial
/tænˈdʒenʃəl/

1 of, relating to, or of the nature of a tangent; If something is tangential to something else, it is at a tangent to it.
…point T, where the demand curve is tangential to the straight line L
…the street tangential to the courthouse square.

2 FORMAL

2a touching lightly : INCIDENTAL, PERIPHERAL
tangential involvement

2b also : of little relevance; If you describe something as tangential, you mean that it has only a slight or indirect connection with the thing you are concerned with, and is therefore not worth considering seriously
…Too much time was spent discussing tangential issues.

tangential to
…arguments tangential to the main point
…Their romance is tangential to the book’s main plot.
…The reforms were tangential to efforts to maintain a basic standard of life.
…They thought the whole thing was a side-show, tangential to the real world of business.

> tangent +‎ -ial.
> tangent (adj.): From Latin tangentem (nominative tangens), present participle of tangere “to touch,” from PIE root *tag- “to touch, handle.” First used by Danish mathematician Thomas Fincke in “Geomietria Rotundi” (1583). Extended sense of “slightly connected with a subject” is first recorded 1825. Related: Tangence; tangency
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

119
Q

brim

A

brim

noun

1 the projecting rim of a hat: PEAK, visor, bill, projection, shield, shade
…Rain dripped from the brim of his baseball cap.
…touched the brim of his cap by way of salute

2 the top edge of a container: RIM, lip, brink, edge, margin

→ filled/full to the brim (=completely full)
…The cup was filled to the brim with coffee.
…She filled each glass to the brim.

verb

1 to be or become full often to overflowing; When your eyes are brimming with tears, they are full of fluid because you are upset, although you are not actually crying: FILL, fill up, fill to capacity, overflow
…eyes brimming with tears
…Michael looked at him imploringly, eyes brimming with tears.

2 → be brimming (over) with sth
to have a lot of a particular thing, quality, or emotion; If someone or something is brimming with a particular quality, they are full of that quality: BE FULL, be filled up, be filled to the top, be full to capacity, be packed with, overflow, run/well over
…Her heart was brimming with happiness.
…England are brimming with confidence after two straight wins in the tournament.
…The show brims with excitement.

Brim over means the same as brim.
…I noticed Dorabella was brimming over with excitement.
…Her heart brimmed over with love and adoration for Charles.

> brim (n.): “brink, edge, margin,” c. 1200, brymme “edge (of the sea), bank (of a river),” a word of obscure origin, chiefly Northern, which is probably from or related to dialectal German bräme “margin, border, fringe,” from PIE *bhrem- “point, spike, edge.” It was extended by 1520s to the upper or projecting edge of anything hollow (cups, basins, hats).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

120
Q

venerable

A

venerable

121
Q

call sth off

A

call sth off

122
Q

unfold

A

unfold

123
Q

fizzle

A

fiz‧zle
/ˈfɪzəl/

verb

1 to make a feeble hissing or spluttering sound: CRACKLE, sputter, buzz, hiss, crack; rare sibilate, crepitate
…oozing gobs of grease, a pair of fatty burgers fizzled on the grill

2 to end or fail in a weak or disappointing way; If something fizzles, it ends in a weak or disappointing way after starting off strongly: PETER OUT, die off, blow over, ease off, cool off, let up; tail off, taper off, trail away/off, wither away, grind to a halt; ebb, wane, wilt; come to nothing, fall through, come to grief; informal flop, fold, flatline
…Interest in the project fizzled after the funding was withdrawn.
…Our relationship fizzled into nothing.

Fizzle out means the same as fizzle: PETER OUT
…The railway strike fizzled out on its second day as drivers returned to work.

noun

1 a feeble hissing or spluttering sound: HISS, hissing, buzz, buzzing, crackle, crackling, sputter, sputtering, crack
..the electric fizzle of the waves

2 INFORMAL
a failure: FAILURE, fiasco, debacle, catastrophe, disaster, blunder; British damp squib; informal flop, washout, letdown, botch, hash, foul-up, screwup, dead loss, dead duck, lead balloon, lemon; British informal cock-up, pig’s ear; North American informal snafu, clinker; vulgar slang fuck-up; British vulgar slang balls-up
…We’ll look ridiculous if the whole thing turns out to be a fizzle.
…The home team’s unexpected fizzle in that last game cost them the championship.

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Cambridge Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

124
Q

dox

A

dox
(also doxx)

to publish the personal information of (an individual) without their consent; to publicly identify or publish private information about (someone) especially as a form of punishment or revenge
…Hackers and online vigilantes routinely dox both public and private figures.
…Facebook, like other platforms, wants to prevent users from being doxed or otherwise targeted for harassment …
—Karissa Bell
…This isn’t the first time the LAPD has been doxxed. In 2011, a group affiliated with the online hackers Anonymous claimed responsibility for posting personal information of more than 40 officers, including their home addresses, campaign contributions, property records, and names of family members after they claimed the LAPD oppressed them by shutting down the Occupy L.A. Movement.
—Christine Pelisek

> Phonetic respelling of docs, which is a short form of documents.
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary

125
Q

not bothered

A

not bothered

126
Q

behoove

A

be‧hove /bɪˈhəʊv $ bɪˈhoʊv/ British English, behoove /bɪˈhuːv/ American English

: to be necessary, proper, or advantageous for

it behoves sb to do sth
FORMAL
used to say that someone should do something because it is right or necessary, or it will help them; If it behooves you to do something, it is right, necessary, or useful for you to do it: BE INCUMBENT ON, be obligatory for, be required of, be appropriate for, be expected of, be advisable for, be sensible for, be wise for, befit, become, suit, be fitting to, be suitable for, be seemly for, be proper for, be decorous for
…It behooves us to think of these dangers.
…That behooved the Fed to take a close look at all the banks.
—Michael Hiltzik, Los Angeles Times, 13 Mar. 2023

> Middle English bihoven, from Old English behofian “to have need of, have use for,” verbal form of the ancient compound word represented by behoof (q.v.). From c. 1200 as “be fit or meet for, be necessary for,” now used only in the third person, with it as subject. Related: Behooved; behooving.
> behoof (n.): c. 1200, “use, benefit, advantage,” from Old English *bihof “advantage, utility” (implied by bihoflic “useful,” and compare behoove), from Proto-Germanic *bi-hof “that which binds, requirement, obligation” (source also of Old Frisian bihof “advantage,” Dutch behoef, Middle High German bihuof “useful thing,” German Behuf “benefit, use, advantage,” Danish behov “need, necessity”). In the common Germanic compound, the first element, likely intensive, is cognate with be- and the second with Old English hof, past tense of hebban “to raise” (see heave (v.)). The original sense is perhaps, then, “taking up (for oneself).”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

127
Q

puncture

A

punc‧ture
/ˈpʌŋktʃə $ -ər/

noun

verb

1 [intransitive, transitive] if a tyre punctures, or if you puncture it, a small hole appears in it

2 [transitive] to make a small hole in something

3 [transitive] to interrupt a period of silence by making a noise
…There was a stunned silence, punctured by shrill laughter.

4 [transitive] to cause a sudden collapse of (mood or feeling); to suddenly destroy someone’s hopes or beliefs, making them feel unhappy, embarrassed, or confused: PUT AN END TO, cut short, reverse, prick, deflate, flatten, reduce
…The earlier mood of optimism was punctured.
…He wasn’t hurt, but his dignity was punctured.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

128
Q

#useful-phrases

A

#useful-phrases

129
Q

auspicious

A

aus‧pi‧cious
/ɔːˈspɪʃəs $ ɒː-/

FORMAL
showing or suggesting that future success is likely: FAVORABLE /ˈfeɪvərəbəl/, PROPITIOUS, promising, full of promise, bright, rosy, good, optimistic, hopeful, encouraging; OPPORTUNE, timely, well timed, lucky, fortunate, providential, felicitous, advantageous, beneficial
…An auspicious day was chosen for the wedding.
…His acclaimed first novel was an auspicious debut.

→ auspicious start/beginning
…made an auspicious beginning
…Saccani’s excellent recording is an auspicious start to what promises to be a distinguished musical career.
…The baseball season got off to an auspicious start with two good wins for the Tokyo Giants.

USAGE NOTES:

  • Favorable implies that the persons involved are approving or helpful or that the circumstances are advantageous.
    • favorable weather conditions
  • Auspicious applies to something taken as a sign or omen promising success before or at the start of an event.
    • an auspicious beginning
  • Propitious may also apply to beginnings but often implies a continuing favorable condition.
    • a propitious time for starting a business

> 1590s, “of good omen” (implied in auspiciously), from Latin auspicium “divination by observing the flight of birds,” from auspex “augur” + -ous. Related: Auspiciousness.
> auspex (n.): “one who observes flights of birds for the purpose of taking omens,” 1590s, from Latin auspex “interpreter of omens given by birds,” from PIE *awi-spek- “observer of birds,” from root awi- “bird” + root spek- “to observe.” Compare Greek oionos “bird of prey,” also “bird of omen, omen,” and ornis “bird,” which also could mean “omen.” ~ Etymonline
> auspicious comes from Latin auspex, which literally means “bird seer” (from the words avis, meaning “bird,” and specere, meaning “to look at”). In ancient Rome, these “bird seers” were priests or augurs who studied the flight and feeding patterns of birds, then delivered prophecies based on their observations. The right combination of bird behavior indicated favorable conditions, but the wrong patterns spelled trouble. The English noun auspice, which originally referred to this practice of observing birds to discover omens, also comes from Latin auspex. Today, the plural form auspices is often used with the meaning “kindly support and guidance.” ~ Merriam-Webster
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Britannica, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

130
Q

absorbing

A

ab‧sorb‧ing
/əbˈsɔːbɪŋ, -ˈzɔː- $ -ɔːr-/

fully taking one’s attention: FASCINATING, interesting, captivating, gripping, engrossing
…an absorbing novel
…‘Two Sisters’ is an absorbing read.
…Shell collecting can be so absorbing that you don’t notice the tide coming in.

> 1670s, “soaking up, swallowing,” present-participle adjective in a figurative sense from absorb (v.). Originally in medicine. Figurative sense of “engrossing” is by 1826. Related: Absorbingly.
> absorb (v.): “to drink in, suck up, take in by absorption,” early 15c., from Old French absorbir, assorbir (13c., Modern French absorber), from Latin absorbere “to swallow up, devour,” from ab “off, away from” (see ab-) + sorbere “suck in,” from PIE root *srebh- “to suck, absorb”. Figurative meaning “to completely grip (one’s) attention” is from 1763.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

131
Q

languish

A

lan‧guish
/ˈlæŋɡwɪʃ/

1 If someone languishes somewhere, they are forced to remain and suffer in an unpleasant situation: WASTE AWAY, rot, decay, wither away, molder, be abandoned, be neglected, be forgotten, suffer; be disregarded, experience hardship
…Shaw languished in jail for fifteen years.
…No one knows for certain how many refugees languish in camps without a permanent place of settlement.

2 to be weak or fail to improve; If something languishes, it is not successful, often because of a lack of effort or because of a lot of difficulties: WASTE AWAY, suffer, rot, be abandoned
…The housing market continues to languish.
…Without the founder’s drive and direction, the company gradually languished.
…The shares are languishing at just 46p after yesterday’s fall.
…Oil prices continue to languish at $10.79 a barrel.
…West Ham United are currently languishing at the bottom of the league.

> early 14c., “fail in strength, exhibit signs of approaching death,” from languiss-, present participle stem of Old French languir “be listless, pine, grieve, fall ill” (12c.), from Vulgar Latin *languire, from a variant of Latin languere ‘to be faint, unwell’, related to laxus ‘loose, lax’.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Macmillan Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline

132
Q

be on a roll

A

be on a roll

The phrase “be on a roll” means to be experiencing a period of success or good luck, especially in a game or activity. For example, you might say “I’m on a roll today, I’ve won three games in a row” or “She’s on a roll with her writing, she’s finished two chapters this week”.

The origin of this phrase is not very clear, but there are some possible explanations. One is that it comes from the game of dice, where rolling the dice can result in winning or losing. If someone is on a roll, they are getting lucky numbers and winning repeatedly. Another is that it comes from the game of bowling, where rolling the ball can result in knocking down all the pins. If someone is on a roll, they are getting strikes and scoring high. A third is that it comes from the idea of rolling downhill, where momentum and gravity make it easier and faster to move. If someone is on a roll, they are making progress and achieving their goals with ease.

Source:
(1) roll | Etymology, origin and meaning of roll by etymonline. https://www.etymonline.com/word/roll.
(2) We’re on a roll! (Everyday idioms in newspapers) - About Words. https://dictionaryblog.cambridge.org/2018/05/09/were-on-a-roll-everyday-idioms-in-newspapers/.
(3) Roll Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com. https://www.dictionary.com/browse/roll.
(4) On the History of the ‘Rolling Stone’ | Merriam-Webster. https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/rolling-stone-phrase-origin.

133
Q

dry spell

A

dry spell

1 a prolonged period of dry weather.
…The flowers died during a dry spell.

2 a period characterized by a lack of success or productivity
…Through the 1940s, Ebsen’s movie career hit a terrible dry spell.
…Fears remain that the industry’s dry spell could last longer than expected.
…For a portion of the fall season, the play-maker underwent a dry spell not scoring a goal or providing an assist.

> Originated around 1885–1890, from dry +‎ spell (“a period of time”).
> Dictionary.com, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary

134
Q

get on sb’s nerves

A

get on sb’s nerves

INFORMAL
to irritate or annoy someone; If someone or something gets on your nerves, they annoy or irritate you, especially by doing something all the time: IRRITATE, annoy, irk, anger, bother, vex, provoke, displease, upset, exasperate, infuriate, gall, get/put sb’s back up, put out, ruffle sb’s feathers, stroke someone’s hair the wrong way, make someone’s hackles rise; jar on, grate on; British rub up the wrong way; informal aggravate, get, get to, bug, miff, peeve, rile, get under someone’s skin, get in someone’s hair, hack off, get someone’s goat; British informal nark, get on someone’s wick, give someone the hump, wind up, get across, get up someone’s nose; North American informal rankle, ride, gravel; vulgar slang piss off; British vulgar slang get on someone’s tits
…Lately he’s not done a bloody thing and it’s getting on my nerves.
…His constant humming is really beginning to get on my nerves.
…The noise from the apartment upstairs was beginning to get on my nerves.
…Nick’s whining is really starting to get on my nerves.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Macmillan Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

135
Q

tranche

A

tranche
/trɑːnʃ/

1 BUSINESS•BRITISH
[countable] part of a larger sum of money or group of shares
…The second tranche of the loan would be repaid over three years.
…The government has traded 200 million Eurobonds in two tranches.

2 FORMAL
[countable] A tranche of something is a piece, section, or part of it. A tranche of things is a group of them.
…They risk losing the next tranche of funding.
…The next tranche of managers consists of assistant general managers and board directors.
…According to Elliptic, a large tranche of the funds have flowed to the Russian exchange Garantex, which was sanctioned by the US Treasury Department last year but continues to operate.
WIRED, 17 June 2023
…Trump’s legal team turned over a new tranche of classified documents to the Department of Justice in December and January.
—Brian Bushard, Forbes, 17 Mar. 2023

> c. 1500, from French tranche “a cutting,” from trancher, trencher “to cut,” Old French trenchier “to cut, carve, slice” (see trench). Economic sense is from 1930.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

136
Q

bout

A

bout
/baʊt/

a spell or period of activity: such as
a an athletic match (as of boxing)
…He fought 350 bouts, losing only nine times.

b an attack of illness or strong emotion of a specified kind : OUTBREAK, ATTACK
…a bout of pneumonia
…frequent bouts of depression
…survived her bout with cancer

c a short period of time during which you do something a lot, especially something that is bad for you : SESSION
…a drinking bout
…a bout of unemployment

> mid 16th century (denoting a curve or circuit, hence later a ‘turn’ of activity): from Middle English bught, probably from Old English *buht (“bend, turn”), an unrecorded variant of Old English byht (“a bend, curve”), from Proto-West Germanic *buhti, from Proto-Germanic *buhtiz (“a bend”). Doublet of bight and bought. The sense evolved from “a circuit of any kind” (as of a plow) to “a round at any kind of exercise” (1570s), “a round at fighting” (1590s), “a fit of drinking” (1660s), and “a fit of illness” (by 1938).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary, Etymoline

137
Q

portent

A

por‧tend
/pɔːˈtend $ pɔːr-/

to be a sign that something is going to happen, especially something bad; If something portends something, it indicates that it is likely to happen in the future: PRESAGE /preh·suhj/, augur, foreshadow, foretell, prophesy; BE A SIGN OF, be a warning of, warn of, be an omen of, be an indication of, be a harbinger of; indicate, herald, signal, bode
…The distant thunder portended a storm.
…Countries such as Germany and France are concerned by what such a shift would portend for EU immigration and climate policies.
—Ciarán Giles and Joseph Wilson, Chicago Tribune, 23 July 2023

por‧tent
/ˈpɔːtent $ ˈpɔːr-/

1 a sign or warning that something is going to happe; A portent is something that indicates what is likely to happen in the future: OMEN, SIGN, indication, presage, warning, forewarning, harbinger, augury, signal, promise, threat, menace, ill omen, forecast, prediction, prognostication, prophecy, straw in the wind, writing on the wall, hint, auspice; premonition, presentiment, feeling, vague feeling, funny feeling, feeling in one’s bones, foreboding, misgiving
…The portents for future publication are good, since we continue to receive a steady flow of good manuscripts.

→ portent of
…Some people believe the raven is a portent of death.

2 future significance: SIGNIFICANCE, importance, import, consequence, meaning, meaningfulness, moment, momentousness, weight, weightiness, cruciality
…The word “plague” carries terrifying portent.

> portend (v.): “to presage, foreshadow, signify in advance,” early 15c., portenden, from Latin portendere “foretell, reveal; point out, indicate,” originally “to stretch forward,” from por- (variant of pro-; see pro-) “forth, forward” + tendere “to stretch, extend,” from PIE root *ten- “to stretch.” The literal Latin sense “stretch forth, extend” was occasional in English 17c.-18c. Related: Portended; portending.
> So you might imagine portend as having a literal meaning of “stretching forward to predict.”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

138
Q

covet

A

cov‧et
/ˈkʌvɪt/

to have a very strong desire to have something that someone else has; If you covet something, you strongly want to have it for yourself: DESIRE, be consumed with desire for, crave, have one’s heart set on; WANT, LONG FOR, wish for, yearn for, dream of, aspire to, hanker for, hanker after, hunger after/for, thirst for, ache for, fancy, burn for, pant for
…She coveted his job so openly that conversations between them were tense.
…The Michelin Awards are coveted by restaurants all over the world.
…The Booker Prize is the most coveted British literary award.

USAGE NOTES:
Covet implies strong envious desire.
covets his rise to fame

> mid-13c., “to desire or wish for inordinately or without regard for the rights of others,” from Old French coveitier “covet, desire, lust after” (12c., Modern French convoiter, influenced by con- words), probably ultimately from Latin cupiditas “passionate desire, eagerness, ambition,” from cupidus “very desirous,” from cupere “long for, desire” (see cupidity). From mid-14c. in a good sense, “desire or wish for eagerly, desire to obtain or possess.” Related: Coveted; coveting.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

139
Q

portentous

A

por‧ten‧tous
/pɔːˈtentəs $ pɔːr-/

1 showing that something important is going to happen, especially something bad: OMINOUS, warning, foreshadowing, predictive, premonitory, prognosticatory, momentous, fateful
…Recent developments are as portentous as the collapse of the Berlin Wall.
…An eerie and portentous stillness hung over the camp the night before the battle.

2a being a grave or serious matter
portentous decisions

2b self-consciously solemn or important; If someone’s way of speaking, writing, or behaving is portentous, they speak, write, or behave more seriously than necessary because they want to impress other people: POMPOUS, bombastic, self-important, pontifical, ponderous, solemn, sonorous, grandiloquent, declamatory, overblown, overripe, inflated, rhetorical, oratorical
portentous prose

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

140
Q

sizzle

A

sizzle

1 (of food) make a hissing sound when frying or cooking
…The bacon began to sizzle in the pan.

2 INFORMAL
to be very hot
…Arizona sizzles in the summer.

3 INFORMAL
to be interesting or exciting
…Discover how love can sizzle between you and your partner.
…The second act sizzles with brilliant special effects.

4 INFORMAL
to be very sexually attractive:
…Jessica Simpson sizzles in a low-cut silver dress.

> Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary

141
Q

disingenuous

A

dis‧in‧gen‧u‧ous
/ˌdɪsənˈdʒenjuəs◂/

lacking in frankness, candor, or sincerity; falsely or hypocritically ingenuous; insincere; Someone who is disingenuous is slightly dishonest and insincere in what they say: DISHONEST, deceitful, underhand, underhanded, duplicitous, double-dealing, two-faced, dissembling, insincere, false, lying, untruthful, mendacious; not candid, not frank, not entirely truthful; artful, cunning, crafty, wily, sly, sneaky, tricky, scheming, calculating, designing, devious, unscrupulous; informal shifty, foxy; humorous economical with the truth, terminologically inexact
…Her excuse was rather disingenuous.
…It was disingenuous of her to claim she had no financial interest in the case.
…It would be disingenuous of us to pretend ignorance of our book’s impact.

—disingenuously adverb
…He disingenuously remarked that he knew nothing about strategy.

> “lacking in candor, insincere; not open, frank, or candid,” 1650s, from dis- “opposite of” + ingenuous. Related: Disingenuously; disingenuousness; disenginuity (1640s).
> ingenuous (adj.): 1590s, “noble in nature, high-minded; honorably straightforward,” from Latin ingenuus “with the virtues of freeborn people, of noble character, frank, upright, candid,” originally “native, freeborn,” literally “born in (a place),” from in- “in” (from PIE root *en “in”) + PIE *gen(e)-wo-, suffixed form of root gene- “to give birth, beget, produce” (see genus). Sense of “artless, innocent” is 1670s, via evolution from “honorably open, straightforward,” to “innocently frank.” Related: Ingenuously; ingenuousness.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Dictionary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

142
Q

convalesce

A

convalesce

143
Q

clientele

A

cli‧en‧tele
/klai·uhn·tel/

The clientele of a place or organization are its customers or clients: CLIENTS; CUSTOMERS, buyers, purchasers, shoppers, consumers, users; patients; patrons, regulars, habitués, frequenters; patronage, public, market, trade, business; British informal punters
…This pub had a mixed clientele.
…I have built up a loyal clientele for my clothes.
…Bryant estimates her shop’s clientele is about 60 percent women and 40 percent men; on a recent Friday morning, an even split walked inside.
—Michael Brice-Saddler, Washington Post, 12 Aug. 2023

> 1560s, “body of professed adherents, clients collectively under the patronage of someone,” from French clientèle (16c.), from Latin clientela “relationship between dependent and patron; body of clients,” from clientem (nominative cliens, “follower, retainer;” see client).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

144
Q

pretext

A

pre‧text
/ˈpriːtekst/
/pree·tekst/

a purpose or motive alleged or an appearance assumed in order to cloak the real intention or state of affairs; A pretext is a reason which you pretend has caused you to do something: EXCUSE, false excuse, ostensible reason, alleged reason, plea, supposed grounds; guise, ploy, pretense, ruse, semblance, show, blind, pose, masquerade, mask, cloak, veil, veneer, smokescreen, camouflage, cover, travesty, parody, charade

→ pretext for
…They wanted a pretext for subduing the region by force.
…The incident provided the pretext for war.

→ on/under the pretext of doing sth
…Tom called at her apartment on the pretext of asking for a book.

→ on/under the pretext that
…She went back to her friend’s house on the pretext that she had forgotten her purse.
…Russia still bans protests on the pretext that mass gatherings are a health hazard.
—Ann M. Simmons, WSJ, 11 Nov. 2023

> “that which is assumed as a cloak or means of concealment,” 1510s, from French prétexte, from Latin praetextum “a pretext, outward display,” noun use of neuter past participle of praetexere “to disguise, cover,” literally “weave in front” (for sense, compare pull the wool over (someone’s) eyes); from prae- “in front” (see pre-) + texere “to weave” (from PIE root *teks- “to weave,” also “to fabricate”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

145
Q

incumbent

A

in‧cum‧bent
/ɪnˈkʌmbənt/

adjective

1 imposed as a duty; If it is incumbent upon you to do something, it is your duty or responsibility to do it: BINDING, OBLIGATORY, mandatory, necessary, compulsory, required, requisite

it is incumbent upon/on sb to do sth
It is incumbent on the government to give a clear lead.
It is incumbent upon(= necessary for) all of us to create a safe community.
It is incumbent on them to pay their own debts.

2 having the status of an incumbent: CURRENT, existing, present, in office, in power; reigning
…the only candidate who defeated an incumbent senator

noun

someone who has been elected to an official position, especially in politics, and who is doing that job at the present time; An incumbent is someone who holds an official post at a particular time: HOLDER, bearer, occupant; office-holder, office-bearer, officer, functionary, official.
…In the June elections, Morris easily defeated the incumbent, Tom Smith.
…The incumbent has been awarded the airline’s new advertising contract, despite stiff competition from other agencies.

> incumbent (n.): early 15c., “person holding a church position,” from Medieval Latin incumbentem (nominative incumbens) “holder of a church position,” noun use of present participle of incumbere “to obtain or possess,” from Latin incumbere “recline on,” figuratively “apply oneself to,” from in- “on” (from PIE root *en “in”) + -cumbere “lie down,” related to cubare “to lie” (see cubicle). Extended to holders of any office from 1670s.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Vocabulary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

146
Q

conundrum

A

conundrum

147
Q

rapacious

A

ra‧pa‧cious
/rəˈpeɪʃəs/

1 FORMAL
: excessively grasping or covetous /ˈkʌvɪtəs/; always wanting more money, goods etc than you need or have a right to; If you describe a person or their behavior as rapacious, you disapprove of their greedy or selfish behavior: GRASPING, GREEDY, avaricious, acquisitive, covetous, mercenary, materialistic, insatiable, predatory, voracious, usurious, extortionate; informal money-grubbing; North American informal grabby
rapacious real estate developers
…Activist groups saw the move as a way to sell off public housing to rapacious developers, who would treat residents as expendable.
Curbed, 9 Jan. 2024
…Viewed one way, it’s moved antitrust law forward in significant ways and provided the Biden administration with a big victory—all while setting up future prosecutions against the country’s most rapacious companies.
—Alex Shephard, The New Republic, 3 Nov. 2022

2 : living on prey

3 : RAVENOUS /ˈrævənəs/
…a rapacious appetite

USAGE NOTES:
Voracious, Gluttonous, Ravenous, Rapacious mean excessively greedy.

  • Voracious applies especially to habitual gorging with food or drink.
    • teenagers are often voracious eaters
  • Gluttonous applies to one who delights in eating or acquiring things especially beyond the point of necessity or satiety.
    • an admiral who was gluttonous for glory
  • Ravenous implies excessive hunger and suggests violent or grasping methods of dealing with food or with whatever satisfies an appetite.
    • a nation with a ravenous lust for territorial expansion
  • Rapacious often suggests excessive and utterly selfish acquisitiveness or avarice.
    • rapacious developers indifferent to environmental concerns

> late 16th century: from Latin rapax, rapacii- (from rapere ‘to snatch; seize’) + -ous.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

148
Q

infamy

A

in‧fa‧my
/ˈɪnfəmi/

1 FORMAL
the state of being well known for some bad quality or deed; Infamy is the state of being infamous: NOTORIETY, disrepute, disreputableness, ill repute, ill fame, loss of reputation, disgrace, discredit, shame, dishonor, ignominy, scandal, censure, blame, disapprobation, condemnation, contempt; humiliation, loss of face
…These acts brought him fame and infamy.
…He enjoyed exaggerating his infamy.
…He never escaped the infamy his crimes had earned him.

2 an evil or wicked act: WICKEDNESS, evil, baseness, sordidness, vileness, iniquity, iniquitousness, depravity, degeneracy, turpitude, immorality, unscrupulousness, corruption, dissolution
…one of the greatest acts of infamy in history

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

149
Q

menace

A

men‧ace
/ˈmenɪs/

noun

1 Menace is a quality or atmosphere that gives you the feeling that you are in danger or that someone wants to harm you.
an atmosphere full of menace: THREAT, ominousness, intimidation, warning, ill-omen.

2 If you say that someone or something is a menace to other people or things, you mean that person or thing is likely to cause serious harm.
the snakes are a menace to farm animals: DANGER, peril, risk, hazard, threat; jeopardy, source of apprehension/dread/fright/fear/terror.

3 the child next door is a menace: NUISANCE, pest, source of annoyance, annoyance, plague, torment, troublemaker, mischief-maker, a thorn in someone’s side/flesh.

verb

1 serious bush fires menaced the suburbs of Sydney: THREATEN, be a danger to, put at risk, jeopardize, imperil, loom over.

2 she menaced me with a fire extinguisher: BULLY, intimidate, issue threats to, threaten, frighten, scare, alarm, terrify; browbeat, cow, terrorize.

> menace (n.): c. 1300, “declaration of hostile intent,” also (early 14c.) “a threat or act of threatening,” from Old French menace “menace, threat” (9c.), from Vulgar Latin minacia “threat, menace” (also source of Spanish amenaza, Italian minaccia), singular of Latin minaciæ “threatening things,” from minax (genitive minacis) “threatening,” from minari “threaten; jut, project,” from minæ “threats; projecting points,” from PIE root *men- (2) “to project.” Applied to persons from 1936.
> Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

150
Q

commensurate

A

com‧men‧su‧rate
/kəˈmenʃərət/

corresponding in size or degree; in proportion; If the level of one thing is commensurate with another, the first level is in proportion to the second: EQUIVALENT, equal, corresponding, correspondent, comparable, proportionate, proportional, commensurable, appropriate to, in keeping with, in line with
…This explosion in popularity has not led to a commensurate spike in rigorous research.
WIRED, 31 July 2023
…But with rising rents and wages that aren’t commensurate, that dream has become increasingly out of reach.
—Brittny Mejia, Los Angeles Times, 7 July 2023

→ commensurate with
…Salary will be commensurate with age and experience.
…Employees are paid salaries commensurate with those of teachers.
…athletes are rewarded commensurate with their fame, not their intrinsic talent …
—Frank Deford, Sports Illustrated, 21 Dec. 1987
…Because the effects of tobacco are slow—and iterative—and produce diseases that have other causes and explanations, often later in life, they seldom arouse fear commensurate with their impact.
—Allan M. Brandt, The Cigarette Century, (2007) 2009

—commensurately adverb
…As life expectancy continues to rise, the demand for care services expands commensurately.
…The gain will be commensurately modest.

> 1640s, “corresponding in amount, degree, or magnitude,” also “of equal size” (on the notion of “having the same boundaries”), from Late Latin commensuratus, from Latin com “with, together” (see com-) + Late Latin mensuratus, past participle of mensurare “to measure,” from Latin mensura “a measuring, a measurement; thing to measure by,” from mensus, past participle of metiri “to measure; to determine the extent of,” from PIE root *me- (2) “to measure.” Meaning “reducible to a common measure, commensurable” is from 1680s. Related: Commensurately.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

151
Q

percolate

A

per‧co‧late
/ˈpɜːkəleɪt $ ˈpɜːr-/

1 If an idea, feeling, or piece of information percolates through a group of people or a thing, it spreads slowly through the group or thing: SPREAD, be disseminated, filter, pass, go; penetrate, permeate, pervade, infiltrate
…The message has begun to percolate through the organization.
…Democratic principles would, of course, take time to percolate through a population accustomed to autocracy.

2 To percolate somewhere means to pass slowly through something that has very small holes or gaps in it: FILTER, drain, drip, ooze, seep, trickle, dribble, strain, leak, leach
…Rainwater will only percolate through slowly.

> 1620s, “to strain through” (transitive), a back-formation from percolation, or else from Latin percolatus, past participle of percolare “to strain through.” Figurative sense by 1670s. Intransitive sense of “to pass through small interstices” is from 1680s. Related: Percolated; percolating.
> percolation (n.): “the act of straining or filtering through some porous material,” 1610s, from Latin percolationem (nominative percolatio) “a straining through; the act of filtering,” noun of action from past-participle stem of percolare “to strain through, filter,” from per “through” (from PIE root *per- (1) “forward,” hence “through”) + colare “to strain,” from colum “a strainer,” which is of uncertain origin.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

152
Q

neck and neck

A

neck and neck
/ˌnek (ə)n ˈnek/

very close (as in a race); In a competition, especially an election, if two or more competitors are neck and neck, they are level with each other and have an equal chance of winning: EQUAL, tied, nip and tuck, side by side, with nothing to choose between them, close together; British level, level pegging; informal even-steven(s)
…We have six contestants who are neck and neck.
…The two boys ran toward the finish line neck and neck.
…The latest polls indicate that the two main parties are neck and neck.
…The party is running neck-and-neck with Labour.
…In fact, this one was a little friendlier on fine and natural hair than the Dyson was, though both were neck and neck in this test.
—Alyssa Brascia, Peoplemag, 26 May 2023

> In a neck and neck horse race, the horse’s necks are right next to each other, because no one has been able to pull ahead. This phrase applies to other types of competition that are also tight. If two baseball teams are tied, they’re in a neck and neck race for best in the division. Two applicants for a job could be neck and neck if their qualifications are excellent and similar. A neck and neck election can’t be predicted.
> Oxford Dictionary of English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Vocabulary.com, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

153
Q

meandering

A

me·an·der·ing
/mēˈandəriNG/

adjective

1 taking a winding or indirect course:
…The city of Budapest is divided into two parts by the meandering Danube River, spanned by several stunning bridges.

2 wandering aimlessly; proceeding seemingly without direction; rambling:
…I’m unsure how I will condense a meandering narrative of my experiences into a thirty-second elevator pitch.
…Things proceed in a meandering way between them, until suddenly their relationship comes to a devastatingly emotional climax.

noun

the act of wandering or proceeding aimlessly or by a winding or indirect course:
…I digress—but I blame it on the mental meandering of age.
…After a coffee and some meandering among the displays on the hotel mezzanine, I left the convention.

> Meander comes from Greek Maiandros, an old name for a winding river in Asia Minor that is now known as the Menderes. Despite this origin, the word is more commonly used to refer to a person’s wandering course than a river’s.
> Merriam-Webster, Dictionary.com

154
Q

unassailable

A

un‧as‧sail‧able
/ˌʌnəˈseɪləbəl◂/

not able to be criticized, made weaker, or beaten: IMPREGNABLE, INVULNERABLE, invincible, secure
…an unassailable argument
…The party’s position looked unassailable.
…His legal position is unassailable.
…That was enough to give her an unassailable lead.
…Liverpool football club are still looking unassailable.
…By then, Hoover was the most unassailable figure in American public life, a true untouchable, beyond criticism, genuflected to by Republican and Democratic politicians alike.
—Thomas Doherty, The Hollywood Reporter, 7 July 2023

> 1590s, from un- (1) “not” + assailable (see assail (v.)). Related: Unassailably.
> assail (v.): “attack violently,” c. 1200, from Old French assalir “attack, assault, assail” (12c., Modern French assaillir), from Vulgar Latin *adsalire “to leap at,” from Latin ad “to, toward” (see ad-) + salire “to jump, leap” (see salient (adj.)). The figurative use, of mental states, emotions, etc., is from mid-14c.; the meaning “attack with arguments, abuse, criticism, etc.” is from c. 1400. Related: Assailed; assailing; assailable.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary, Etymonline

155
Q

prime

A

prime

adjective

noun

verb

1 to prepare someone for a situation so that they know what to do; If you prime someone to do something, you prepare them to do it, for example by giving them information about it beforehand: BRIEF, give information to, fill in, prepare, supply with facts, put in the picture, inform; informal clue in, give someone the lowdown; British informal gen up
…Claire wished she’d primed Sarah beforehand.

→ prime sb with sth
…Did you prime her with what to say?

→ prime sb for sth
…He had a shower and primed himself for action.
…Arnold primed her for her duties.

→ prime sb to do sth
…He had been primed to say nothing about it.
…The press corps was primed to leap to the defense of the fired officials.

2 If someone primes a bomb or a gun, they prepare it so that it is ready to explode or fire: PREPARE, load, set up, ready, make ready, get ready, equip
…He was priming the bomb to go off in an hour’s time.
…Tom keeps a primed 10-foot shotgun in his office.

3 → prime the pump
to take steps to encourage the growth or functioning of something; To prime the pump means to do something to encourage the success or growth of something, especially the economy.
…Marjorie tried to prime the pump by offering some new issues for discussion.
…the use of tax money to prime the pump of the state’s economy
…Spring is the time when the government primes the pump to help farmers prepare their fields.
…We could also be priming the pump for a devastating wave of inflation.
The Guardian (2021)
…Any government trying to borrow more to prime the pump merely makes investors, businesses and consumers even more nervous.
Times, Sunday Times (2011)

> prime (a.): late 14c., “first, original, first in order of time,” from Old French prime and directly from Latin primus “first, the first, first part,” figuratively “chief, principal; excellent, distinguished, noble” (source also of Italian and Spanish primo), from Proto-Italic *prismos, superlative of PIE *preis- “before,” from root *per- (1) “forward,” hence “in front of, before, first, chief.”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Dictionary.com, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

156
Q

engross

A

en‧gross
/ɪnˈɡrəʊs $ -ˈɡroʊs/

to take or engage the whole attention of : occupy completely; If something engrosses you, it interests you so much that you do not notice anything else: PREOCCUPY, absorb, engage
…ideas that have engrossed the minds of scholars for generations

→ engross yourself in sth
…Take your mind off it by engrossing yourself in a good book.

—engrossed adjective
…Dad was engrossed in the paper.
…Who’s that guy Ally’s been engrossed in conversation with all night?

> The word “engross” has two main meanings: one is “to buy up the whole stock of” and the other is “to absorb the whole attention of”. The origin of both meanings can be traced back to the same root: the Old French phrase “en gros”, which means “in bulk, in a large quantity, at wholesale”.
> The first meaning of “engross” came from the practice of buying up all the available goods in a market to create a monopoly or to sell them at a higher price. This sense of “engross” was recorded in Anglo-French from around 1300 and in English from around 1400.
> The second meaning of “engross” came from the idea of writing something in large letters, as opposed to in detail. This sense of “engross” was also recorded in Anglo-French from around 1400, but it was probably influenced by another Old French word, “engrosser”, which means “to write in large (letters)”. This word was derived from the Medieval Latin word “ingrossare”, which literally means “(written) in large (letter)”. The figurative sense of “engross” as “to occupy completely” or “to fascinate” is a later development, first attested in 1709. It is related to the notion of being so focused on something that one ignores everything else.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

157
Q

stipend

A

sti‧pend
/ˈstaɪpend/

a fixed sum of money paid periodically for services or to defray expenses.
…an annual/monthly stipend
…An $80-a-month stipend covers each volunteer’s personal expenses.
…In addition to their regular salaries, the coaches receive a stipend of up to $6,000 a year.
…As a student advisor, she gets a monthly stipend from the college.
…He receives a small stipend for his work as a research fellow.
…The stipend you’ll receive as an intern will just barely cover your housing costs.
…The state is boosting payments for youths in extended foster care who live independently and who receive a basic stipend that is inadequate in the face of the state’s soaring housing market.
—Greg Moran, San Diego Union-Tribune, 1 July 2023

> The noun is derived from Late Middle English stipend, stipende (“salary, wage”) [and other forms], from Old French stipende, stipendie, from Latin stīpendium (“contribution; dues; impost, tax; tribute; military pay or stipend; military service”), from *stipipendium, *stippendium, from stips (“alms /ä(l)mz/; contribution, donation, gift”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *steyp- (“erect; stiff”)) + pendere (the present active infinitive of pendō (“to cause to hang down or suspend; to weigh, weigh out; (hence) to pay”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *(s)pend- (“to pull; to spin; to stretch”)) + -ium (suffix forming abstract nouns).
> The first element apparently is related to Latin stipula “stalk, straw, reed.” De Vaan writes, “The noun stip- must have developed from a concrete object that was used for payments, but the nature of the object is unknown: a certain stalk of a plant? a measure of com? Since the root meant ‘to be stiff, erect’, the meaning ‘stalk’ is attractive.” That could connect it to stipes “log, stock, trunk of a tree” (see stipe) and ultimately to the source of English stiff (adj.). For financial use of Latin pendere, compare pound (n.1). As a verb from late 15c., “pay by settled wages.”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary, Etymonline

158
Q

finesse

A

fi‧nesse
/fəˈnes/

> 1520s, “fineness” (obsolete); 1530s, “artifice, delicate stratagem,” from French finesse “fineness, subtlety,” from Old French fin “subtle, delicate” (see fine (adj.)).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

159
Q

Having said that

A

Having said that

160
Q

scupper

A

scup‧per
/ˈskʌpə $ -ər/

verb

1 to prevent from happening or succeeding; to ruin someone’s plans or chance of being successful – used especially in news reports: RUIN, SCUTTLE, wreck, destroy, devastate, wreak havoc on, damage
…The snowstorm scuppered our plans for the evening.
…The latest information could scupper the peace talks.
…China may have wanted to scupper the deal to reciprocate U.S. pressure on the country’s own domestic semiconductor industry.
—Peter Vanham, Fortune, 17 Aug. 2023
…That may scupper the Move Forward Party leader’s chances of contesting the prime ministerial election in parliament, which may well drag into next week.
Time, 12 July 2023

2 to deliberately sink your own ship

noun

a hole in the side of a ship that allows water to flow back into the sea

> “opening in a ship’s side at deck level to let the water flow out,” early 15c. (implied in scoper-nail “nail used to attach scupper leathers to a ship”), perhaps from Old French escopir “to spit out,” because the water seems to spit out of it.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Dictionary.com, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

161
Q

mensch

A

mensch
/menʃ/

a person of integrity and honor; a good person

…My Justin, who will always be the face of the Dodgers, was a mensch, a real human being, who along with his wife, Kourtney, did marvelously caring services for the entire Los Angeles community.
Los Angeles Times, 23 Dec. 2022
…Jonah is a mensch for engaging constructively with his critics.
—Ed Yong, Discover Magazine, 31 Mar. 2012
…If you were a real mensch, you just locked yourself in a room and sweated it out. Be a mensch!
…You’ve been a real mensch.

> “person of strength and honor,” 1907, from Yiddish, from German Mensch, literally “man, person,” from Old High German mennisco “human,” from Proto-Germanic adjective *manniska- “human,” from *manna- (from PIE root *man- (1) “man”). Middle English had cognate menske “honor, reputation” (c. 1200, from Old Norse mennska “human nature”), which, as modern mense “propriety, decorum,” lingered in Scottish and North of England dialect long enough to be in Scott and Burns.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

162
Q

tacit

A

ta‧cit
/ˈtæsɪt/

understood without being expressed directly or not expressing or talking about something directly or openly; If you refer to someone’s tacit agreement or approval, you mean they are agreeing to something or approving it without actually saying so, often because they are unwilling to admit to doing so: IMPLICIT, understood, implied, inferred, hinted, suggested, insinuated; UNSPOKEN, unstated, undeclared, unsaid, unexpressed, unmentioned, unvoiced, silent, mute, wordless, not spelled out; taken for granted, taken as read
…The decision to settle out of court was seen as a tacit admission of guilt.
…There was a tacit understanding that we didn’t want to see each other again.
…She felt that she had her parents’ tacit approval to borrow the car.
…While they got a frosty public response, officials say the private message was a tacit green light.
—Mark Thompson, Time, 16 Nov. 1998

—tacitly adverb
…He tacitly admitted that the government had breached regulations.

> early 17th century (in the sense ‘wordless, noiseless’): from Latin tacitus, past participle of tacere ‘be silent’.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus

163
Q

beat a dead horse

A

beat a dead horse

1 to keep talking about a subject that has already been discussed or decided
…I don’t mean to beat a dead horse, but I still don’t understand what happened.

2 to waste time and effort trying to do something that is impossible
…Is it just beating a dead horse to ask for another recount of the votes?

> Merriam-Webster

164
Q

beg to differ

A

beg to differ

165
Q

forage

A

for‧age
/ˈfɒrɪdʒ $ ˈfɑː-, ˈfɔː-/

verb

1 When animals forage, they search for food.
…We disturbed a wild boar that had been foraging by the roadside.
…The cat forages for food.

2 If someone forages for something, they search for it in a busy way: SEARCH, hunt, scavenge, cast about
…They were forced to forage for clothing and fuel.

noun

food for animals especially when taken by browsing or grazing; Forage is crops that are grown as food for cattle and horses: FODDER, food, feed, foodstuffs
…The grass serves as forage for livestock.

> From Middle English forage, from Old French fourage, forage, a derivative of fuerre (“fodder, straw”), from Frankish *fōdar (“fodder, sheath”), from Proto-Germanic *fōdrą (“fodder, feed, sheath”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *peh₂- (“to protect, to feed”). Cognate with Old High German fuotar (German Futter (“fodder, feed”)), Old English fōdor, fōþor (“food, fodder, covering, case, basket”), Dutch voeder (“forage, food, feed”), Danish foder (“fodder, feed”), Icelandic fóðr (“fodder, sheath”).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary

166
Q

_____ the blinds

A

raise the blinds
vs.
lower the blinds

167
Q

Do you get cold easily?

A

Do you get cold easily?

168
Q

subvert

A

sub‧vert
/səbˈvɜːt $ -ˈvɜːrt/

1 to overturn or overthrow from the foundation; To subvert something means to destroy its power and influence: DESTABILIZE, OVERTURN, unsettle, overthrow; bring down, bring about the downfall of, topple, depose, oust, supplant, unseat, dethrone, disestablish, dissolve; disrupt, wreak havoc on, sabotage, ruin, upset, destroy, annihilate, demolish, wreck, undo, undermine, undercut, weaken, impair, damage
…Scanlan said the former president — who faces four criminal indictments, including two that pertain to his attempts to subvert democracy after the 2020 election — is entitled to due process.
—Steven Porter, BostonGlobe.com, 25 Aug. 2023

2 to pervert or corrupt by an undermining of morals, allegiance, or faith: CORRUPT, pervert, warp, deprave, defile, debase, distort, contaminate, poison, embitter; vitiate.
…He tried to subvert the minds of innocent teenagers.

> late 14c., “to raze, destroy, overthrow, undermine, overturn,” from Old French subvertir “overthrow, destroy” (13c.), or directly from Latin subvertere “to turn upside down, overturn, overthrow,” from sub “under” (see sub-) + vertere “to turn, turn back, be turned; convert, transform, translate; be changed” (from PIE root *wer- (2) “to turn, bend”). Related: Subverted; subverting.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

169
Q

dearth

A

dearth
/dɜːθ $ dɜːrθ/

a scarcity or lack of something; If there is a dearth of something, there is not enough of it: LACK, scarcity, scarceness, shortage, shortfall
…There is a dearth of evidence.
…There is a dearth of properly trained specialists.
…There was a dearth of usable firewood at the campsite.
…The dearth of salesclerks at the shoe store annoyed us.
…It may also be a respite for booksellers, who have been grumbling for several years about sluggish sales and a dearth of dependable blockbuster fiction.
—Julie Bosman, New York Times, 19 Oct. 2006
…AirNet, which hauls bank checks and other time-critical freight, used to require that its pilots have at least 1,200 hours of flight experience. Then, faced with a dearth of experienced applicants, it dropped the requirement to 500 hours. Now, it has no minimum.
—Scott McCartney, Wall Street Journal, 10 Aug. 2000

> c. 1300, derthe “scarcity of food,” of other situations of scarcity by mid-14c., abstract noun from root of Old English deore “precious, costly” (see dear) + abstract noun suffix -th (2). A common Germanic formation, though not always with the same sense (Old Saxon diurtha “splendor, glory, love,” Middle Dutch dierte, Dutch duurte, Old High German tiurida “glory”). Dearth, in one form or another, has been used to describe things that are in short supply since at least the 13th century, when it often referred to a shortage of food.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

170
Q

purvey

A

pur‧vey
/pɜːˈveɪ $ pɜːr-/

1 FORMAL
to supply goods, services, information etc to people; If someone purveys goods or services, they provide them: SELL, supply, provide, furnish, cater, retail, deal in; informal flog
…a shop purveying handmade merchandise
…They have two restaurants that purvey dumplings and chicken noodle soup.
…The corporations purveying these services are thriving in a context of obscurity and regulatory neglect.
WIRED, 22 June 2023

2 FORMAL
to spread or promote (an idea, view, etc.); If you purvey something such as information, you tell it to people: PASS ON, transmit, broadcast, disseminate, spread, put around, circulate; provide, supply, furnish, make available, peddle
…one who would, for a hefty fee, purvey strategic advice to private corporations
…We didn’t want to purvey gloom and doom.
…There seems to be no shame among those who continue to purvey the election lie — even at the risk of court punishment.
—Marnie Hunter, CNN, 9 Aug. 2021
…These platforms work overtime to hijack our attention by purveying information that arouses curiosity, outrage, or anger.
—Anastasia Kozyreva, Fortune, 21 Feb. 2023

> c. 1300, purveien, “make previous arrangements,” also “think beforehand, consider” (senses now obsolete); early 14c. as “prepare (something), make (something) ready;” late 14c. as “provide, supply (a necessity), furnish (what is needed),” from Anglo-French porveire, purveire and directly from Old French porveoir “to provide, prepare, arrange” (Modern French pourvoir), from Latin providere “look ahead, prepare, supply, act with foresight,” from pro “ahead” (see pro-) + videre “to see” (from PIE root *weid- “to see”). Compare provide, which now usually replaces it. Related: Purveyed; purveying.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

171
Q

make ends meet

A

make ends meet

172
Q

edge

If someone or something edges somewhere, they _____________________________.

A

edge

to advance by short moves; to move gradually with several small movements, or to make something do this; If someone or something edges somewhere, they move very slowly in that direction: INCH, ease, creep, worm
…He edged closer to the phone, ready to grab it.
…He is edging ahead in the opinion polls.
Tim was edging away from the crowd.
…She edged closer to get a better look.
…He edged her towards the door.

→ edge your way into/round/through etc sth
…Christine edged her way round the back of the house.

> edge (v.): late 13c., “to give an edge to” (implied in past participle egged), from edge (n.). Intransitive meaning “to move edgeways (with the edge toward the spectator), advance slowly” is from 1620s, originally nautical. Meaning “to defeat by a narrow margin” is from 1953. The meaning “urge on, incite” (16c.) often must be a mistake for egg (v.). Related: Edger.
> Collins English Dictionary, Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

173
Q

anesthetize

A

a‧nes‧the‧tize
/əˈniːsθətaɪz $ əˈnes-/

to give someone an anaesthetic so that they do not feel pain
…The doctor anesthetized the patient by an intravenous injection.
…She was anesthetized before the operation.

> anesthesia (n.): /ˌænəsˈθiːziə $ -ʒə/ 1721, “loss of feeling,” medical Latin, from Greek anaisthēsia “want of feeling or perception, lack of sensation (to pleasure or pain),” abstract noun from an- “without” (see an- (1)) + aisthēsis “feeling” (from PIE root *au- “to perceive”). For the abstract noun ending, see -ia. As “a procedure for the prevention of pain in surgical operations,” attested from 1846. Aesthesia “capacity for feeling” is attested in English from 1853, perhaps a back-formation.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Etymonline

174
Q

unequivocal

A

un‧e‧quiv‧o‧cal
/ˌʌnɪˈkwɪvəkəl◂/

completely clear and without any possibility of doubt; leaving no doubt : CLEAR, UNAMBIGUOUS
…Whether or not Bernstein saw wedlock as cover is left open to interpretation, but his love for Felicia is unequivocal.
—David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 2 Sep. 2023
…Though officials say the United States would be reluctant to go that far, Mr. Blinken was unequivocal.
—Declan Walsh, New York Times, 29 July 2023

> 1784, from un- (1) “not” + equivocal. Related: Unequivocally.
> equivocal (adj.): “of doubtful signification, capable of being understood in different senses,” c. 1600, with -al (1) + Late Latin aequivocus “of identical sound, of equal voice, of equal significance, ambiguous, of like sound,” past participle of aequivocare, from aequus “equal” (see equal (adj.)) + vocare “to call,” which is related to vox (genitive vocis) “voice” (from PIE root *wekw- “to speak”). Earlier in same sense was equivoque (late 14c.). Related: Equivocally (1570s).
> Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

175
Q

gravitas

A

grav‧i‧tas
/ˈɡrævɪtæs/

high seriousness (as in a person’s bearing or in the treatment of a subject); If you say that someone has gravitas, you mean that you respect them because they seem serious and intelligent: DIGNITY, SERIOUSNESS, solemnity, gravity, loftiness, grandeur, decorum, sobriety, sedateness
…a man of gravitas
…The new leader has an air of gravitas that commands respect.
…a comic actress who lacks the gravitas for dramatic roles
…The new leader has a certain gravitas.
…Henriksen plays his part to the hilt here, bringing a gravitas that few actors would consider bringing to the role of a shoot-‘em-up movie villain.
—Declan Gallagher, EW.com, 11 Jan. 2023
…Some fiction podcasts ape true crime, borrowing that genre’s structure and tropes in order to achieve a suspenseful gravitas.
—Katy Waldman, The New Yorker, 14 July 2022
…Baseball holds a particular gravitas in the world of sports.
—Aj Willingham, CNN, 8 May 2022

> Borrowed from Latin gravitās (“weight, heaviness”). Doublet of gravity. This word comes to us straight from Latin. Among the Romans, gravitas was thought to be essential to the character and functions of any adult (male) in authority. Even the head of a household or a low-level official would strive for this important quality. We use gravitas today to identify the same solemn dignity in men and women.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

176
Q

addle

A

ad‧dle
/ˈædl/

verb

to make (someone) unable to think clearly; confuse; If something addles someone’s mind or brain, they become confused and unable to think properly: CONFUSE, bewilder, mix up, muddle
…All that drink has addled his brains!
…A few cocktails later, enough to addle my memory, I found myself in bed with Bob.
…I suppose the shock had addled his poor old brain.
…Their brains were addled with fear.
…Instead, cocaine-addled Rafe (Drew Starkey) — brother to John B.’s girlfriend Sarah (Madelyn Cline) — is the true killer.
—Ariana Romero, refinery29.com, 20 Apr. 2020
…Erich von Stroheim stars in this eerie low-budget thriller, as a vaudeville marksman whose aim is addled by lust for his young assistant (Mary Beth Hughes).
—Richard Brody, The New Yorker, 10 Apr. 2020

adjective

…My brain grew more and more addle as I made my way through the tax instructions.

> addle (a.): Middle English adel- (in adel eye “putrid egg”), attributive use of Old English adela “filth, filthy or foul-smelling place,” going back to Germanic *adela-, *adelōn- (whence Middle Dutch ael “liquid manure,” Middle Low German ādel, ādele, Middle High German —east Upper German— adel, regional Swedish adel, al “animal urine”), of obscure origin
> addle (v.): probably back-formation from addled. “become putrid,” hence “be spoiled, be made worthless or ineffective,” 1640s (implied in addled), from archaic addle (n.) “urine, liquid filth,” from Old English adela “mud, mire, liquid manure” (cognate with East Frisian adel “dung,” Old Swedish adel “urine,” Middle Low German adel “mud,” Dutch aal “puddle”). From this phrase, since c. 1600 the noun in English was mistaken as an adjective meaning “putrid,” and thence given a figurative extension to “empty, vain, idle,” also “confused, muddled, unsound” (1706), then back-formed into a verb in that sense. Related: Addling. Popular in forming derogatory compounds 17c. and after, such as addle-headed “stupid, muddled” (1660s); addle-pated (1630s); addle-pate “stupid bungler” (c. 1600); addle-plot “spoil-sport, person who spoils any amusement” (1690s).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Etymonline

177
Q

liberal

A

liberal

In some regions, such as the United States, liberal is also used as a noun to refer to a person who supports the policies and principles of the Democratic Party, which is generally more progressive and left-leaning than the Republican Party. In other regions, such as Europe, liberal can refer to a person who supports free-market capitalism and individual rights, which are often associated with the political right. Therefore, it is important to consider the context and the source when encountering the word liberal.

178
Q

flippant

A

flip‧pant
/ˈflɪpənt/

lacking proper respect or seriousness; If you describe a person or what they say as flippant, you are criticizing them because you think they are not taking something as seriously as they should: FRIVOLOUS, superficial, shallow, glib, thoughtless, carefree, irresponsible; DISRESPECTFUL, irreverent, facetious, cheeky, pert, overfamiliar, impudent, impertinent; informal flip; British informal saucy; North American informal sassy
…Don’t be flippant, damn it! This is serious!
…He now dismisses that as a flippant comment.
…He made a flippant response to a serious question.

—flippantly adverb
…He answered carelessly and flippantly.

—flippancy noun
: FRIVOLOUSNESS, levity, superficiality, shallowness, glibness, thoughtlessness, carefreeness, irresponsibility, insouciance, offhandedness; DISRESPECT, irreverence, facetiousness, cheek, cheekiness, pertness, overfamiliarity; British informal sauciness; North American informal sassiness.
…She detected flippancy in his tone, and said, ‘I wish you’d take this seriously’.

> 1595, from Northern English dialectal flippand (“prattling, babbling, glib”), present participle of flip (“to babble”), of North Germanic origin. Cognate with Icelandic fleipa (“to babble, prattle”), Swedish dialectal flepa (“to talk nonsense”). Alteration of -and suffix (a variant of the participial -ing) to -ant probably due to influence from words in -ant.
> Flippant is believed to come from flip, which, in turn, is a supposed imitation of the sound of something flipping. The earliest senses of the adjective are “nimble” and “limber.” One can be flippant not only on one’s feet but in speech—that is to say, their words flow easily. Such flippancy was considered a good thing at first; however, people who speak freely can sometimes seem too talkative, and even impertinent. The positive sense of flippant has slipped from use, but the “disrespectful” sense still flows.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary

179
Q

specter

A

spec‧ter
/ˈspektə $ -ər/

1 [countable] literary a ghost
…feeling so terrified that every shadow became a specter

2 → specter of sth
something that haunts or perturbs the mind; If you refer to the specter of something unpleasant, you are referring to something that you are frightened might occur.
…The recession is again raising the specter of unemployment.
…The prospect of such telecoms competition raises the specter of intervention by government or the courts.
…The arrests raised the specter of revenge attacks.
…The specter of climate change can feel overwhelming.
—Karim Doumar, Los Angeles Times, 28 Aug. 2023

> early 17th century (in the sense ‘specter’): from Latin, literally ‘image, apparition’, from specere ‘to look’.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster

180
Q

cutthroat

A

involving businesses competing very strongly with each other, for example by offering lower prices which may force some businesses to fail; marked by unprincipled practices : RUTHLESS
Cutthroat competition is keeping ticket prices low.
…a cutthroat battle for market share
cutthroat business practices intended to drive competitors out of business
…While the recent Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey showed a slight decline in job openings from 10.6 million to 9.9 million, the competition for the very top employees remains cutthroat, especially for startups trying to poach talent from seasoned tech giants.
—Lucy Brewster, Fortune, 6 Apr. 2023
…In the Wallace family, Trivial Pursuit, skeet shooting, and mini golf matches can be equally cutthroat.
—Andrew Goldman, Town & Country, 28 Sep. 2020
…The interactions between straight-talking, foul-mouthed Jim, with his grounding in cutthroat corporate culture, and the Doug crew, whose work ethic comes a distant second to their enthusiasm for movie nights and idle web-surfing, provides some of BlackBerry’s most amusing scenes.
—David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter, 17 Feb. 2023

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster

181
Q

rise/rose/risen

A

rise/rose/risen

182
Q

hindsight

A

hind‧sight
/ˈhaɪndsaɪt/

perception of the nature of an event after it has happened

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster

183
Q

upend

A

up‧end
/ʌpˈend/

1 to turn something over so that it is upside down
…When he upended the bottle of water over his sleeping sister, the lid popped off and surprised them both.
upend the box and empty the contents

2 (figurative) to destroy, invalidate, overthrow, or defeat
…The scientific evidence upended the popular myth.

3 to affect or upset drastically
…By the middle of March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic upended normal life for virtually all Americans.

> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster, Wiktionary

184
Q

unfazed

A

faze
/feɪz/

INFORMAL
if a new or difficult situation fazes you, it makes you feel confused or shocked, so that you do not know what to do
…John was embarrassed, but it didn’t faze Mike a bit.

un‧fazed
/ʌnˈfeɪzd/

not confused or shocked by a difficult situation or by something bad that has happened
…The protestors were unfazed by the prospect of arrest.
…The company seemed unfazed by the protest and is sticking with the mandate.
—Bysteve Mollman, Fortune, 11 June 2023
…Several hours after dozens of enemy drones infiltrated the Russian capital, damaging two residential buildings, Russian President Vladimir Putin appeared unfazed before reporters, acting as if nothing unusual had happened.
—Isobel Koshiw, Washington Post, 31 May 2023
…The Rams do not require an answer until the opener, but Bennett showed promise during training camp workouts. Bennett, who led Georgia to consecutive national titles, appeared unfazed by mistakes.
—Gary Klein, Los Angeles Times, 11 Aug. 2023

> 1933, American English, from un- (1) “not” + past participle of faze (v.).
> faze (v.): 1830, American English, said to be a variant of Kentish dialect feeze “to frighten, alarm, discomfit” (mid-15c.), from Old English fesian, fysian “drive away, send forth, put to flight,” from Proto-Germanic *fausjan (source also of Swedish fösa “drive away,” Norwegian föysa). Related: Fazed; fazing. Bartlett (1848) has it as to be in a feeze “in a state of excitement.” There also is a nautical verb feaze “to unravel” (a rope), from 1560s.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Merriam-Webster

185
Q

cut one’s teeth on sth

A

cut one’s teeth on sth

to begin; to gain early experience; to get your first experience of doing something and learn the basic skills; to gain experience with something, especially at a young age (when one’s teeth would be coming in); If you say that someone cut their teeth doing a particular thing, at a particular time, or in a particular place, you mean that that is how, when, or where they began their career and learned some of their skills.
…He cut his teeth flying model airplanes as a child, so aeronautical engineering came naturally.
…I cut my teeth on this kind of layout.
…He cut his eyeteeth on magazine editing.
…director John Glen, who cut his teeth on Bond movies
…She had cut her teeth at local radio stations, but made her name on a reality show.
…Oh, I cut my teeth on those kinds of equations! Give me a challenging problem for a change!
…Jen may be young, but she cut her teeth at a prestigious journal, so her perspective and expertise will be invaluable to us.

> This term alludes to the literal verb to cut teeth, meaning “to have teeth first emerge through a baby’s gums,” a usage dating from the late 1600s.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Dictionary.com, The Free Dictionary

186
Q

knack

A

knack

1 [singular] a natural skill or ability; A knack is a particularly clever or skillful way of doing something successfully, especially something which most people find difficult: GIFT, talent, flair, genius, instinct, faculty, ability, capability, capacity, aptitude, aptness, bent, forte, know-how, the hang of something

knack for doing something
…Some people seem to have a knack for making money.

knack of doing something
…Thomson’s knack of scoring vital goals makes him important to the team.

2 → have a knack of doing sth
INFORMAL•BRITISH
…He has a knack of saying the wrong thing.

> mid-14c., “a deception, trick, device,” a word of uncertain origin. Perhaps from or related to a Low German word meaning “a sharp sounding blow” (compare Middle English knak, late 14c.; German knacken “to crack;” also knap) and of imitative origin. Sense of “special skill” (in some specified activity) is first recorded 1580s, if this is in fact the same word. In old slang (mid-18c. to mid-19c.) nacky meant “full of knacks; ingenious, dexterous.”
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

187
Q

stymie

A

sty‧mie
/ˈstaɪmi/

INFORMAL
to prevent or hinder the progress of; to prevent someone from doing what they have planned or want to do; If you are stymied by something, you find it very difficult to take action or to continue what you are doing: IMPEDE, interfere with, hamper, hinder, obstruct, inhibit, frustrate, thwart, foil, spoil, stall, shackle, fetter, stop, check, block, cripple, handicap, scotch; informal put paid to, put the kibosh on, snooker; British informal scupper, throw a spanner in the works of; North American informal throw a monkey wrench in the works of
…The changes must not be allowed to stymie new medical treatments.
…Companies have been stymied by the length of time it takes to reach an agreement.
…Relief efforts have been stymied in recent weeks by armed gunmen.
…In our search for evidence, we were stymied by the absence of any recent documents.
…Progress on the project has been stymied by lack of money.
…The raging blizzard stymied the rescuers’ attempts to find the stranded mountain climbers.

> 1857, in golf, “put a player in the position where an opponent’s ball is directly in the line of approach to the hole;” from stymie (n.) “condition in which an opponent’s ball blocks the line of approach to the hole” (1834). It is of uncertain origin, perhaps from Scottish stymie “person who sees poorly,” from stime “the least bit” (early 14c.), as in unable to see a stine, itself of uncertain origin. The general sense of “block, hinder, thwart” is by 1902. Related: Stymied.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Cambridge Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

188
Q

tether

A

tether

189
Q

stoke

A

1 to poke or stir up (a fire, flames, etc.) : supply with fuel; If you stoke a fire, you add coal or wood to it to keep it burning: ADD FUEL TO, mend, keep burning, tend, fuel
…She was stoking the stove with sticks of maple.

2 to increase the activity, intensity, or amount of; If you stoke something such as a feeling, you cause it to be felt more strongly.
…Rising oil prices stoked inflation.
…Poor revenue figures have stoked concerns about possible layoffs.
…The new ad campaign has helped to stoke sales.
…He has sent his proposals in the hope of stoking up interest for the idea.
…Despite the workforce cuts, Salesforce’s chat subsidiary, Slack, set its sights on rehiring former staff in June, all in pursuit of stoking the fires of its generative AI aspirations.
—Bykylie Robison, Fortune, 15 Sep. 2023

→ stoke fear/anger/envy etc
…The scandal has stoked public outrage.

3 INFORMAL
to feed abundantly; to consume a large quantity of food or drink to give one energy
…Carol was at the coffee machine, stoking up for the day.

stoked /stəʊkt $ stoʊkt/

SPOKEN•NORTH AMERICAN
very pleased and excited; If you are stoked about something, you are very excited about it.
…“I can’t wait to get there,” she said. “I am so stoked about this trip.”
…I’m stoked about getting a new car.
…The kids were happy, the crowds were stoked.

> 1680s, “to feed and stir up” (a fire in a fireplace or furnace), a back-formation from stoker “one who maintains a fire in a furnace” (1650s); ultimately from Dutch stoken “to stoke,” from Middle Dutch stoken “to poke, thrust,” related to stoc “stick, stump,” from Proto-Germanic *stok- “pierce, prick” (from PIE *steug-, extended form of root *(s)teu- (1) “to push, stick, knock, beat;” see steep (adj.)).
Later especially in reference to fire used as a boiler for a steam engine. The figurative meaning “to stir up, rouse” (feelings, etc.) is from 1837. Stoked “enthusiastic” is recorded in surfer slang by 1963, but the extension of the word to persons is older, originally “to eat, to feed oneself up” (1882).
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Oxford Dictionary of English, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Etymonline

190
Q

dole sth out

A

dole sth out

191
Q

solicitous

A

so‧lic‧i‧tous
/səˈlɪsɪtəs/

1 manifesting or expressing solicitude; very concerned about someone’s safety, health, or comfort: CONCERNED, caring, attentive, mindful, interested, considerate, thoughtful; anxious, worried
…a solicitous inquiry about his health
…I appreciated his solicitous inquiry about my health.
…He had always been solicitous for the welfare of his family.

2 full of concern or fears : APPREHENSIVE
solicitous about the future

3 meticulously careful
solicitous in matters of dress

4 full of desire : EAGER

—solicitously adverb
…He took her hand in greeting and asked solicitously how everything was.

> solicitous (adj.): “anxious, concerned, apprehensive,” 1560s, also “very desirous” (1640s), from Latin sollicitus “restless, uneasy, careful, full of anxiety” (see solicit). Related: Solicitously; solicitousness.
> solicit (v.): From Old French solliciter, from Latin sollicitare ‘to agitate’, from sollicitus ‘anxious’, from sollus ‘entire’ + citus (past participle of ciere ‘set in motion’)
> From Middle English soliciten, solliciten, from Old French soliciter, solliciter, from the present active participle of Latin sollicitō (“stir, disturb; look after”), from sollicitus (“agitated, anxious, punctilious”, literally “thoroughly moved”), from sollus “whole, entire” (from PIE root *sol- “whole, well-kept”) + citus “aroused,” past participle of ciere “shake, excite, set in motion” (from PIE root *keie- “to set in motion”).
> keie-: also keiə-, Proto-Indo-European root meaning “to set in motion.” It might form all or part of: behest; cinema; cinematography; citation; cite; excite; hest; hight; hyperkinetic; incite; kinase; kinematics; kinesics; kinesiology; kinesis; kinesthesia; kinesthetic; kinetic; kineto-; kino-; oscitant; recital; recitation; recite; resuscitate; solicit; solicitous; suscitate; telekinesis.
> Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, Collins English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, Oxford American Writer’s Thesaurus, Wiktionary, Etymonline