Wiktionary:Word of the day/Archive/2024/July

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Word of the day
for July 1
Canuck n
  1. (Canada, US, informal, sometimes derogatory) A Canadian person; specifically (archaic), a French Canadian person; a pea-souper; also (obsolete) a Canadian person of other descent.
    1. (ice hockey) A member of the Vancouver Canucks professional ice hockey team belonging to the National Hockey League.
    2. (skiing) Chiefly as Crazy Canuck: a member of the Canadian alpine ski team.
  2. (rare) A thing from Canada.
    1. (aviation, military, historical) The Avro Canada CF-100 fighter-interceptor aircraft, in use between 1952 and 1981.
    2. (US, obsolete) A Canadian horse or pony.

Canuck proper n

  1. (historical, rare) synonym of Canadian French (the French language as spoken by Francophones in Canada).
  2. (slang) Synonym of Canadian English (the variety of the English language used in Canada)

Canuck adj

  1. (originally informal, sometimes derogatory) Of, belonging to, or relating to Canada, its culture, or people; Canadian.
  2. (ice hockey) Of or relating to the Vancouver Canucks professional ice hockey team belonging to the National Hockey League.

  Today is Canada Day or Fête du Canada, the national day of Canada which celebrates the anniversary of Canadian Confederation on this day in 1867.

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Word of the day
for July 3
goropism n (linguistics)
  1. A hypothesis, similar to the one originally propounded by Goropius which is now discredited, that some attested or modern language such as Dutch, Hebrew, or Turkish was the original language of human beings.
  2. An absurd etymology proposed as part of such a hypothesis.

  The Dutch physician and linguist Johannes Goropius Becanus, from whose name the word derives, was born on this day (23 June according to the Julian calendar) 505 years ago in 1519.

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Word of the day
for July 5
stampede n (originally US)
  1. A wild, headlong running away or scamper of a number of animals, usually caused by fright.
  2. (by extension)
    1. A situation in which many people in a crowd are trying to move in the same direction at the same time, especially in consequence of a panic.
    2. (Canada, US) An event at which cowboy skills are displayed; a rodeo.
  3. (figurative) A sudden unconcerted acting together of a number of persons due to, or as if due to, some common impulse.

stampede v

  1. (transitive)
    1. To cause (a drove or herd of animals) to run away or scamper in a wild, headlong manner, usually due to fright.
    2. To cause animals (owned by a person) to run away or scamper in this manner.
    3. (by extension) To cause (people in a crowd) to move in the same direction at the same time, especially due to panic.
    4. (by extension) To cause (an individual) to act hastily or rashly.
    5. (figurative) To cause (people) to act in a sudden unconcerted manner due to, or as if due to, some common impulse.
  2. (intransitive)
    1. Of a drove or herd of animals: to run away or scamper in a wild, headlong manner, usually due to fright.
    2. (by extension) Of people in a crowd: to move in the same direction at the same time, especially due to panic.
    3. (figurative) Of people: to act in a sudden unconcerted manner due to, or as if due to, some common impulse.

  The Calgary Stampede, which features one of the world’s largest rodeos, begins on this day in 2024. It was first held in 1912, and became an annual event 105 years ago in 1919.

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Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 8

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 9

 

Word of the day
for July 10
pet shop n
  1. A shop that sells animals kept as domestic pets, and products for caring for and feeding them.

  The English singer-songwriter Neil Tennant was born on this day 70 years ago in 1954; he formed the synth-pop duo Pet Shop Boys with Chris Lowe (born 65 years ago on 4 October 1959) and their first single, West End Girls, was released 40 years ago on 9 April 1984.

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Word of the day
for July 11
yessum contraction (informal)
  1. (US, dialectal, dated) Used to express agreement with a woman (and, somewhat less commonly, a man): yes, ma'am.
  2. (Australia) Alternative form of yes.

  The American author Harper Lee’s novel To Kill a Mockingbird, in which the word is used, was published on this day in 1960.

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Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 12

 

Word of the day
for July 13
enby n
  1. (neologism, informal) Pronunciation spelling of NB: a non-binary person; a person whose gender identity is not strictly female or male; one who is outside of the gender binary.

enby adj

  1. (neologism, informal) Pronunciation spelling of NB: non-binary; having or pertaining to a gender identity that is not strictly female or male, that is, outside of the gender binary.

  Today is the eve of International Non-binary People’s Day, which recognizes people who have a non-binary gender identity—one that is not exclusively female or male. The day was established by Katje van Loon in 2012, and was chosen for being midway between International Men’s Day and International Women’s Day.

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Word of the day
for July 14
cataphile n
  1. A type of urban explorer who visits the ancient catacombs and quarries linked by tunnels beneath Paris, France.
  2. (by extension) An individual who explores subterranean catacombs, mines, or quarries.

  Today is Bastille Day, the national day of France which commemorates the storming of the Bastille—a key event in the French Revolution—that took place on this day 235 years ago in 1789, and celebrates the unity of the nation.

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Word of the day
for July 15
cisalpine adj
  1. On this side of the Alps (chiefly the south side where Rome is located).
  2. Alternative letter-case form of Cisalpine (of or pertaining to Gallicanism (the doctrine that the church of France is autonomous, especially in relation to the pope); of or pertaining to cisalpinism (a movement in 18th–19th century Britain among Roman Catholics which took the view that allegiance to the Crown was compatible with allegiance to the pope, and that Roman Catholics should be emancipated from various legal restrictions))

  Marie Paradis from Chamonix (then part of the Kingdom of Sardinia), became the first woman to climb Mont Blanc, Western Europe’s highest mountain, on 14 July 1808.

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Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 16

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 17

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 18

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 19

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 20

 

Word of the day
for July 21
man in the moon proper n
  1. An image of a man perceived in the dark maria (plains or "seas") and light highlands or other features of the Moon, originally regarded as a man with a burden on his back or accompanied by a small dog, and now more commonly as a man's face in the full moon or his profile in a crescent moon; hence, an imaginary man thought to be living on the Moon.
  2. (obsolete, figurative) An imaginary person; also (UK politics, slang), an unidentified person who illegally pays for election expenditure and electors' expenses, as long as the latter vote as the person wishes.

  The American astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first person to step on to the Moon’s surface during the Apollo 11 mission on this day 55 years ago in 1969 at 02:56 UTC.

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Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 22

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 23

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 24

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 25

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 26

 

Word of the day
for July 27
organ gun n
  1. (firearms, historical) A large, portable firearm normally supported by wheels, in which bullets may be fired from a row of several tubes in succession; it was chiefly used from the 14th to the 17th century.

  Today is the eve of the day in 1835 when Giuseppe Marco Fieschi attempted to assassinate King Louis Philippe I of France using the machine infernale or infernal machine, a homemade 25-barrel organ gun. He was unsuccessful, but 18 people either died on the spot or succumbed to injuries later on.

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Word of the day
for July 28
san fairy ann phrase
  1. (Australia, New Zealand, UK, military slang, humorous, obsolete) It doesn't matter.

  World War I started on this day 110 years ago in 1914, when Austria-Hungary formally declared war on Serbia a month after Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, the heir presumptive to the throne, and his wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, were assassinated by Gavrilo Princip in Sarajevo.

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Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 29

Wiktionary:Word of the day/2024/July 30

 

Word of the day
for July 31
summit n
  1. The topmost point or surface of a thing; the apex, the peak.
    1. The highest point of a hill, mountain, or similar geographical feature.
    2. (mathematics) A vertex of a polygon or polyhedron.
    3. (nautical, rail transport, road transport) The highest point of a canal, railway, road, etc.
    4. (obsolete)
      1. (botany) Synonym of anther (the pollen-bearing part of the stamen of a flower); also (rare), synonym of stigma (the sticky part of a flower that receives pollen during pollination)
      2. (crystallography, rare) One of the two vertices of a crystal with a rhombohedral shape where the angles of each face are equal; also, the highest point of a crystal with a pyramidal or tetrahedral shape.
  2. (figurative)
    1. The highest point of achievement, development, etc., that can be reached; the acme, the pinnacle.
    2. (politics)
      1. (archaic) The highest level of political leadership.
      2. (by extension) An assembly or gathering of the leaders of countries to discuss issues of international significance; also (loosely), an important or high-level gathering or meeting.

summit v

  1. (transitive, climbing, informal) To reach the summit (noun sense 1.1) of (a mountain).
  2. (intransitive)
    1. (climbing, informal) To reach the summit of a mountain.
    2. (politics) To attend a summit (noun sense 2.2.2). [...]

  The mountaineers Achille Compagnoni and Lino Lacedelli, who were members of an Italian expedition, became the first people to reach the summit of K2—the second highest mountain in the world—on this day 70 years ago in 1954.

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