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guillemet

[ gil-uh-met ] [ g阞l mt ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

one of two marks 竄 or 罈 used in French, Italian, and Russian printing to enclose quotations.

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More about guillemet

Guillemet a mark used in French to enclose quotations is a diminutive of the name Guillaume, the French cognate of William. As we learned in the etymology for the recent51勛圖 of the Day 滄勳梭梭-棗-喧堯梗-滄勳莽梯, William comes from a Germanic name roughly meaning desired helmet. Although guillemets first appeared in 1527, they may have been named after the French printer Guillaume Le B矇, who would have been a toddler in the late 1520s when guillemets emerged in print. When an item is named after its inventor, it is often called a namesake or an eponym, but in the case of the guillemet, which takes its name from someone incorrectly assumed to be its inventor, it is a misnomer a misapplied or inappropriate name or designation. Guillemet was first recorded in English in the early 20th century.

how is guillemet used?

[A quotation mark] first appeared in the third century BCE alongside the invention of basic punctuation. It resembled a right angle bracket, > …. Scribes and printers chose different symbols and conventions until a regular comma and an inverted oneone rotated 180 degreesused in the left and right margins came into vogue as quotations [sic] marks in 1525 . French writing instead features guillemets, 竄 and 罈, close relatives of the ancient > mark.

Glenn Fleishman, Has the Internet Killed Curly Quotes? The Atlantic, December 28, 2016
[T]ypographic quotes are not the same for all languages. French and Russian use guillemets (竄罈), and other languages place the quote marks differentlythese are different glyphs in some cases ( or for example). It’s actually amazing how many variations there are.

Greg Pittman, "A Python script for fixing smart quotes in text," Opensource.com, March 27, 2017

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togated

[ toh-gey-tid ] [ to ge阞 t阞d ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

adjective

clad in a toga.

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More about togated

Togated clad in a toga comes by way of Latin 喧棗眶櫻喧喝莽, of the same meaning, from toga, the one-piece robe-like garment that typifies the people of the Roman Empire. Toga belongs to a family of Latin words spelled variously as tect-, teg-, and tog- that all pertain to covering, such as through clothing or architecture. To see this family of words in action, compare integument, a technical term for the skin; protect, from Latin tegere (stem tect-) to cover; and even tile, derived by way of Old English from Latin 喧襲眶喝梭硃 roof-tile. As we learned from the recent 51勛圖 of the Day cordiform, according to a rule known as Grimms law, Latin t often corresponds to English th, and if you want to find a cognate of togated in English, look no further than thatch a material for covering roofs. Togated was first recorded in English in the early 17th century.

how is togated used?

As one becomes familiar, Ancient and Modern Rome, at first so painfully and discordantly jumbled together, are drawn apart to the mental vision. One sees where objects and limits anciently wore; the superstructures vanish, and you recognize the local habitation of so many thoughts. When this begins to happen, one feels first truly at ease in Rome. Then the old kings, the consuls and tribunes, the emperors, drunk with blood and gold, the warriors of eagle sight and remorseless beak, return for us, and the togated procession finds room to sweep across the scene; the seven hills tower, the innumerable temples glitter, and the Via Sacra swarms with triumphal life once more.

Margaret Fuller Ossoli, At Home and Abroad; or, Things and Thoughts in America and Europe, 1856

The native Romans, on the other hand, like the butterflies and grasshoppers, resigned themselves to the short, sharp misery which winter brings to a people whose arrangements are made almost exclusively with a view to summer . They drew their old cloaks about them, nevertheless, and threw the corners over their shoulders, with the dignity of attitude and action that have come down to these modern citizens, as their sole inheritance from the togated nation. Somehow or other, they managed to keep up their poor, frost-bitten hearts against the pitiless atmosphere with a quiet and uncomplaining endurance.

Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Marble Faun, 1859

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acequia

[ uh-sey-kyuh ] [ se阞 ky ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

an irrigation ditch.

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More about acequia

Acequia irrigation ditch is a borrowing of a Spanish term derived from Arabic 硃莽-莽櫻梁勳聆硃堯, an assimilated form of 硃梭-莽櫻梁勳聆硃堯 the irrigation ditch. Al- is the Arabic equivalent of the article the, and a special feature of al- is that it assimilates to match the first consonant of the word that follows under certain circumstances. The l sound is pronounced with the tip of the tongue, and when the word that follows al- begins with a similarly pronounced consonant (such as d, n, or s), the l in al- changes to match. In Arabic words that were adopted by Portuguese or Spanish and then adopted into English, the al- article exists today, albeit in disguise merely as a-, in words such as acequia, adobe, and even tuna (a corruption of Spanish 硃喧繳紳). However, the full al- form is still visible in words that did not start with a tip-of-the-tongue consonant, such as albacore, alcohol, alcove, and alfalfa. Acequia was first recorded in English circa 1840.

how is acequia used?

New Mexicos acequia system consists of several hundred … waterways that use gravity to transport water for local farmers to irrigate their fields. Its been in place for centuries; many farmers and ranchers in northern New Mexico rely on it for their crops and rangeland. But, as the region suffers from months of extreme drought with little sign of relief, those reliant on acequias are worried how long the water will last this season.

Kyle Land, New Mexico acequias prepare for brutal year amid drought, AP News, April 19, 2021

By noon he was riding a farmland road where the acequias carried the water down along the foot-trodden selvedges of the fields and he stood the horse to water and walked it up and back in the shade of a cottonwood grove to cool it.

Cormac McCarthy, All the Pretty Horses, 2010

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