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#WordOfTheWeek
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TelevisionNeighbor
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Umwelt is blowing my mind. #wordoftheweek

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TaylorMay
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Any Gilmore Girls fans out there?!? Today's #WordOfTheWeek is a word I've known for a while but had never seen in writing! Anyone suffering from the same affliction as poor Michel? #GilmoreGirls

hermyknee YES 7y
TaylorMay @hermyknee yes Gilmore fan or yes you are in suffering?? 7y
hermyknee BOTH 7y
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TheDaysGoBy Yes! Gilmore girls fan and that describes my mood perfectly today. I'm fed up with my coworkers lol 7y
JoScho He was so funny!! Love GG 💕 7y
JessClark78 ❤️ 7y
TaylorMay @hermyknee @TheDaysGoBy well just make sure in true Michel fashion, you tell everyone what you are suffering from 😂 7y
hermyknee @TaylorMay I was at work! Suffering from ALL THE ENNUI! I am home now and the anguish seems to have abated. 7y
TaylorMay @hermyknee I am so very glad to hear that you are recovering from your affliction. Hopefully the symptoms will be fully cleared with an intense weekend relaxation regimen. I am prescribing a long bath and multiple hours of reading only good books 7y
41 likes9 comments
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TaylorMay
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I'm feeling especially sleepy from my migraine meds today so this was my #WordOfTheWeek. Anyone else just extra tired today?

wanderinglynn Me. I think it‘s from the rapid change in the weather from super warm yesterday to cold, rainy/snowy today. 😴 7y
TaylorMay @wanderinglynn ugh that's what always triggers my migraines too. Hope you are feeling better today ❤ 7y
31 likes2 comments
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TaylorMay
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I didn't even know that this was a word. ? #WordOfTheWeek
18th-century English lexicographer Samuel Johnson declared "commove" as being "not in use," but the word had not really disappeared from the language; it was simply, at that time, popular primarily with Scottish writers. The 14th-century poet Geoffrey Chaucer is credited with the first use of "commove," and many writers since have used the word, including Sir Walter Scott and George Eliot.

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TaylorMay
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Came across this word in my reading this week so I decided to share as the #WordOfTheWeek
"Eldritch" comes from a time when otherworldly beings were commonly thought to inhabit the earth. The word is about 500 yrs old and believed to have come from Middle English "elfriche," meaning "fairyland." The two components of "elfriche" - "elf" and "riche" - come from the Old English "ælf" and "rīce" (words which meant "elf kingdom").

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TaylorMay
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Today's #WordOfTheWeek this word just makes me giggle and I cannot wait to use it in causal conversation. ??
"Please excuse me I need to absquatulate" ???

SilversReviews Let us know how it goes. :) 7y
42 likes1 comment
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TaylorMay
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I'm enjoying doing this each week so far. If you are too let me know ?
This is actually the Webster's Dictionary Word of the Day. If you'd like more history check out their site.
#WordOfTheWeek
Mansuetude was first used in English in the 14th century, and it derives from the Latin verb mansuescere, which means "to tame." Mansuescere itself comes from the noun manus (meaning "hand") and the verb suescere ("to accustom" or "to become accustomed")

SilversReviews I like the definition and history of the word. Thanks. 7y
Reecaspieces Now to use that in a sentence today and scare the he!! Out of everyone 😂 7y
TaylorMay @Reecaspieces when you do please make sure to retell your story here! 😂 7y
TaylorMay @SilversReviews yay thanks for the feedback. This word kinda made me laugh because it sounds like a man's attitude 😂😂 the etymology helps lots 7y
SilversReviews @TaylorMay The pronunciation threw me off. :) 7y
39 likes5 comments
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TaylorMay
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Sorry if cursing offends anyone. I couldn't resist. The Webster's definition is okay, but Buzzfeed wins on this one
Formal definition:
separation of parts of a compound word by the intervention of one or more words (such as what place soever for whatsoever place)
#WordOfTheWeek #LoveToLearn

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TaylorMay
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Evidence shows that the adj. capricious debuted about 60 years before caprice; it's likely that both words derived via French from the Italian capriccio, which originally referred not to a sudden desire but a sudden shudder of fear. Capriccio derives from the Italian capo, meaning "head" & riccio, meaning "hedgehog." Someone who shuddered in fear, was said to have a "hedgehog head" meaning that their hair stood on end like the spines of a hedgehog

TaylorMay This week's word is one of my favorites. I had a teacher who told us that because this word sounded like Capricorn who's zodiac symbol is the goat, we should imagine cute little goats jumping all around from thought to thought. #WordOfTheWeek #LoveToLearn 7y
Libby1 ❤️🦔❤️ 7y
Reecaspieces @TaylorMay ha!! So I always think of it a as a monkey brain...a 🐵 hopping from Tree to Tree. Or thought to thought. Now I will use cute little goats 🐐😂 7y
43 likes3 comments
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TaylorMay
Lost Words | Nicola Gardini
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The word appears to have originated in the southern US. The earliest written record comes from an 1829 issue of The Virginia Literary Magazine in its glossary of Americanisms. The magazine states that hornswoggle came from KY, its oddness matches nicely w/ other 19th-century Americanisms, such as sockdolager, absquatulate, callithump, slumgullion, & skedaddle. It joins bamboozle and honeyfuggle as colorful ways to say "to deceive." #WordOfTheWeek

TaylorMay So I decided to start a #WordOfTheWeek post. Why? Because we all have a love of words so why not? This one is from the word of the day on the Merriam-Webster dictionary website. I'm going to try and make sure to use it this week. Anyone want to join me in this adventure? 7y
Dolly Good for you! I think you will get some strange looks😂. I‘m old and have heard a few of these words used but most sound odd. 🤔 7y
TaylorMay @dolly thanks! The only one I had heard before was skedaddle. And I do use it! I feel like I want to use it at work if one of my employees is trying to mess with me. 😂 they may look at me like I've lost my mind though lol 7y
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Reecaspieces Well..Being from the south...I have said this a time or two. And keep this up. I will enjoy this. 7y
SilversReviews @TaylorMay I know skedaddle. I have used it. 😍😍😍 7y
TaylorMay @Reecaspieces really?? That's awesome. Did you know any of the other words they mentioned? And it's my plan to keep it up thanks. I'm integrating it from my #BulletJournal so I'm sticking with one word a week for now. 7y
Reecaspieces @TaylorMay yes...skedaddle and Bamboozle. I use skedaddle regularly lol. 7y
33 likes8 comments