1. scurf — scales of epidermis that are continually peeling off the skin; any scaly incrustation upon a body The telephone pole on the street corner was pierced with hundreds of large staples at eye level, each metal clinch holding down a geologic scurf formed from the shreds of old announcements of lost dogs, roommates …
Tag Archives: vocabulary
Friday Vocabulary
1. rennet — membrane from the fourth stomach of an unweaned calf, used for curdling milk in the making of cheese Cream cheese can be made easily at home, since, like many soft cheeses, an acid such as lemon juice is used for curdling the milk rather than rennet. 2. invultuation — creation of …
Friday Vocabulary
1. clinker-built — (naut.) of a ship’s hull built with the edges of its planks overlapping, as opposed to “carvel-built” ships where the planks are fitted side-by-side and flush with one another The front end view of Viking longships shows the edge-over-edge construction characteristic of clinker-built boats. 2. felloe — outer part of wheel …
Friday Vocabulary
1. stertorous — characterized by heavy snoring Until three of the four sexagenarians started using CPAP machines, their Bohemian Grove cabin was famous for the stertorous rumblings emanating from within. 2. epergne — table centerpiece designed to hold fruit or flowers Though Roscoe appreciated the thought behind his aunt’s generous gift, in truth he …
Friday Vocabulary* [UPDATED]
NOTE: Due to recently (27 June 2019) discovered repetition of a previously used vocabulary word, the offending entry has been replaced with a new word, definition, and example sentence. The original entry is preserved with strikethrough formatting. 1. prolepsis — (1) marshaling counterarguments to a position so they may be refuted in advance “Just because …
Friday Vocabulary
1. eyot — small island, particularly in a river The raft ran aground upon the small, treeless eyot which lay in the center of the large bend in the river. 2. calcareous — of or like chalk The lizard’s calcareous medication may have added to the constipation of the gecko. 3. halitus — …
Friday Vocabulary
1. toast-and-water — water in which toast has been soaked, thought to be cooling and refreshing (also seen as toast-water) I availed myself of some toast-and-water from the pitcher near at hand, attempting to calm my febrile brain and efface the frightening visions. 2. glaucous — pale grey-green or greenish-blue In the crepuscule of …
Friday Vocabulary
1. Comstockery — “censorship because of perceived obscenity or immorality” (George Bernard Shaw) Though named after an anti-smut crusader of the 1870s, Comstockery has a long reach through American culture, as the example of Tipper Gore can attest. 2. poetaster — writer of inferior, insignificant verse The popular anthologies circulating in the United States …
Friday Vocabulary
1. a fortiori — all the more, for an even stronger reason Since she hired a private detective to shadow her husband, then a fortiori she would have no compunction in reading his personal email. 2. dido — bauble, trifle She wore a necklace she had made from a little dido she had found …
Friday Vocabulary
1. prosopopeia — personification (Rhetoric) The walls spoke silently of years of decaying neglect, the persistent prosopopeia of drywall and dust sounding its forlorn dirge for love’s opportunities lost. 2. apodictic — incontestable because demonstrable In spite of her constant allusions to the spiritual basis of life, she seemed always to search for apodictic rules …