Word of the day

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Richard Ruck
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Post by Richard Ruck »

Singh

• noun - a title or surname adopted by certain warrior castes of northern India, especially by male members of the Sikh Khalsa.

— origin from Punjabi singh ‘lion’, from Sanskrit simha ‘lion’.
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englishangel
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Post by englishangel »

Richard Ruck wrote:Singh

• noun - a title or surname adopted by certain warrior castes of northern India, especially by male members of the Sikh Khalsa.

— origin from Punjabi singh ‘lion’, from Sanskrit simha ‘lion’.
and of course Kaur (princess) the female equivalent. (Many years spent as a midwife in southall)
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englishangel wrote:
Richard Ruck wrote:Singh

• noun - a title or surname adopted by certain warrior castes of northern India, especially by male members of the Sikh Khalsa.

— origin from Punjabi singh ‘lion’, from Sanskrit simha ‘lion’.
and of course Kaur (princess) the female equivalent. (Many years spent as a midwife in southall)
Never knew that - thanks!
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J.R.
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Post by J.R. »

Richard Ruck wrote:Singh

• noun - a title or surname adopted by certain warrior castes of northern India, especially by male members of the Sikh Khalsa.

— origin from Punjabi singh ‘lion’, from Sanskrit simha ‘lion’.
.......... and I thought it was what you did in a Quoir !!

(Boom Boom !!!!)
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Richard Ruck
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Post by Richard Ruck »

Back to architecture today:

soffit

• noun - the underside of an architectural structure, such as an arch, a balcony, or overhanging eaves.

— origin early 17th cent.: from French soffite or Italian soffitto, based on Latin suffixus ‘fastened below’.
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Post by englishangel »

Richard Ruck wrote:Back to architecture today:

soffit

• noun - the underside of an architectural structure, such as an arch, a balcony, or overhanging eaves.

— origin early 17th cent.: from French soffite or Italian soffitto, based on Latin suffixus ‘fastened below’.
I knew that one, mine are all PVCu, no painting.
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Post by Richard Ruck »

A good one today:

thimblerig

• noun [mass noun] - a game involving sleight of hand, in which three inverted thimbles or cups are moved about, contestants having to spot which is the one with a pea or other object underneath.

— derivatives
thimblerigger noun.

— origin early 19th cent.: from thimble + rig in the sense ‘trick, dodge’.

An appropriate epithet for Blair, perhaps.
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Richard Ruck
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Post by Richard Ruck »

Easy one today:

G-suit

• noun - a garment with pressurized pouches that are inflatable with air or fluid, worn by fighter pilots and astronauts to enable them to withstand high gravitational forces.

— origin 1940s: from g (symbol of gravity) + suit.

Not to be confused with gimp suit.....
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Inflatables with air on the G string? Or maybe the female versions come complete with a G-spot, cleverly hidden away so that men can't find them?

Oh, Lord, I'm going ...
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Post by englishangel »

cj wrote:Inflatables with air on the G string? Or maybe the female versions come complete with a G-spot, cleverly hidden away so that men can't find them?

Oh, Lord, I'm going ...
......to get your coat?
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englishangel wrote:
cj wrote:Inflatables with air on the G string? Or maybe the female versions come complete with a G-spot, cleverly hidden away so that men can't find them?

Oh, Lord, I'm going ...
......to get your coat?
Yes, I do apologise. I don't know what came over me on a Friday morning ...
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Oooo-errr!
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Post by Richard Ruck »

Today's word :

fungible

• adjective Law (of goods contracted for without an individual specimen being specified) - replaceable by another identical item; mutually interchangeable.

— derivatives
fungibility noun.

— origin late 17th cent.: from medieval Latin fungibilis, from fungi ‘perform, enjoy’, with the same sense as fungi vice ‘serve in place of’
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Post by Richard Ruck »

.....and yesterday's (sorry, didn't get around to it before) :

falchion

• noun historical - a broad, slightly curved sword with the cutting edge on the convex side.

— origin Middle English fauchon, from Old French, based on Latin falx, falc- ‘sickle’.
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Post by J.R. »

Richard Ruck wrote:Today's word :

fungible

• adjective Law (of goods contracted for without an individual specimen being specified) - replaceable by another identical item; mutually interchangeable.

— derivatives
fungibility noun.

— origin late 17th cent.: from medieval Latin fungibilis, from fungi ‘perform, enjoy’, with the same sense as fungi vice ‘serve in place of’
Nothing to do with mushrooms or toadstools, then ??????
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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