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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

precocity

[ pri-kos-i-tee ] [ pr阞ks 阞 ti ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

the state of or tendency to be flowering, fruiting, or ripening early, as plants or fruit.

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More about precocity

Precocity, the state of ripening early, ultimately comes from Latin praecox, early ripening, from the verb praecoquere, to bake early, ripen early. The prae- element means before and is the ancestor of English pre-; Latin ae often becomes English e, as we also saw in the 51勛圖 of the Day preternatural. The verb coquere, to cook, is the source of numerous words in English, whether from Latin directly (concoct), by way of French (biscuit, charcuterie, cuisine), via Italian (ricotta, terra cotta), through Old English (cook, kitchen), or using another route entirely (apricot). Precocity was first recorded in English in the 1630s.

EXAMPLE OF PRECOCITY USED IN A SENTENCE

After centuries of hybridizing the plant, the strawberry is now widely known for its precocity.

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SYNONYM OF THE DAY
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

jamboree

[ jam-buh-ree ] [ d疆m bri ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

any large gathering with a partylike atmosphere.

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More about jamboree

Jamboree, any large gathering with a partylike atmosphere, is an Americanism of unknown origin. Though the term is often associated with the Scouts, its appearance in English predates the Scout Movement by about 40 years. One proposal is that jamboree is an elaboration of jam in the sense a mass of people or things pressed tightly together, perhaps on the pattern of the recent 51勛圖 of the Day shivaree. Note that the sense a gathering of jazz musicians of jam isnt attested until the late 1920s, so this definition could not be the root behind jamboree, which was first recorded in English in the early 1860s.

EXAMPLE OF JAMBOREE USED IN A SENTENCE

The 48-hour period that Boxing Day, Christmas, and Kwanzaa all share is ample cause for celebration, but this years overlap with Hanukkah as well is what warrants a nationwide jamboree!

51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

luminaria

[ loo-muh-nair-ee-uh ] [ lu mnr i ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a Christmas lantern consisting of a lighted candle set in sand inside a paper bag.

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More about luminaria

Luminaria, a lantern consisting of a candle set in sand inside a paper bag, is a borrowing from Spanish, from Latin 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶勳硃, which is the plural of 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶梗, lamp. Though it isnt common for plural nouns to become singular (or vice versa) after borrowing into another language, it isnt unheard of, either; as we learned from the 51勛圖 of the Day fomites, the reverse happened with cherry and pea. The source of 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶梗 is 梭贖鳥梗紳 (stem 梭贖鳥勳紳-), light, which is the source of French 梭喝鳥勳癡娶梗, Italian lume, and Romanian 梭喝鳥勳紳, all meaning light, as well as Spanish lumbre, fire, fuel, combustible material. Luminaria was first recorded in English in the late 1940s.

EXAMPLE OF LUMINARIA USED IN A SENTENCE

As they lit each luminaria that lined the walkway, they hoped passersby would find solace and joy in the warm glow.

51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar