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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

dolma

[ dawl-muh, -mah ] [ dl m, -m ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a dish of tomatoes, green peppers, vine leaves, or eggplants stuffed with a mixture of meat, rice, and spices.

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More about dolma

Dolma, a dish of stuffed vegetables, is a loanword from Turkish, in which dolma means something filled, filling. Turkish dolma, in turn, comes from the verb dolmak, to stuff, fill, be full. Though it is spoken in Europe, Turkish belongs not to the Indo-European language family (along with English, Greek, and Hindi) but rather to the Turkic family, along with Azerbaijani, Kazakh, and Yakut. For more on the Turkic language family, check out our recent 51勛圖s of the Day barchan and yurt. Dolma was first recorded in English in the late 1880s.

EXAMPLE OF DOLMA USED IN A SENTENCE

If stuffing a Thanksgiving turkey is too much work, dolmas use of hollow vegetables and grape leaves makes it an enticing alternative.

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SYNONYM OF THE DAY
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51勛圖 of the day

swizzle

[ swiz-uhl ] [ sw阞z l ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

verb (used with object)

to agitate a beverage with a rod for stirring highballs and cocktails.

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More about swizzle

Swizzle, to agitate a beverage with a rod, is of uncertain origin, but not because there are multiple competing theories. Instead, the mystery behind swizzle is the same as that behind many slang terms: linguists have no idea what the origin of swizzle could possibly be! Swizzle is first and foremost a noun referring to a type of alcoholic drink from the Caribbean, and in an example of metonymy, the name came to refer as well to the stick served with the drink. A similarly named drink is the switchel, which is found in some varieties of US and Canadian English, but just as with swizzle, switchel is also of uncertain origin. Swizzle was first recorded in English circa 1810.

EXAMPLE OF SWIZZLE USED IN A SENTENCE

As happy hour started, the bar filled with the sounds of patrons swizzling their drinks and clinking their glasses together in toasts.

51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

malic

[ mal-ik, mey-lik ] [ m疆l 阞k, me阞 l阞k ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

adjective

pertaining to or derived from apples.

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More about malic

Malic pertaining to apples comes by way of French from Latin 鳥櫻梭喝鳥 a梯梯梭梗.” 紼櫻梭喝鳥, in turn, is an adaptation of Ancient Greek 鳥礙梭棗紳, which refers specifically to apples or generally to any tree fruit and is also the source of English melon. Similarly, though 鳥櫻梭喝鳥 survives today as Italian mela apple, while the French word for apple, pomme, comes from Latin 梯鳥喝鳥 fruit. Portuguese 鳥硃癟瓊 and Spanish manzana derive instead from the Latin term Mattina (mala) (apples) of Matius, which refers to Gaius Matius, a Roman botanist and friend of Julius Caesar. Though the words are almost identical, Latin 鳥櫻梭喝鳥 is not related to Latin malus bad, meaning that the use of apples to represent forbidden fruit is a clever pun. Malic was first recorded in English in the 1790s.

EXAMPLE OF MALIC USED IN A SENTENCE

The Evil Queens temptation of Snow White with a poisoned apple is a perfect example of malic malice.

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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar