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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

irrefragable

[ ih-ref-ruh-guh-buhl ]

adjective

not to be disputed or contested.

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More about irrefragable

Irrefragable, not to be disputed or contested, comes from Late Latin 勳娶娶梗款娶硃眶櫻莉勳梭勳莽, literally unable to be broken back, and an easy word to break down into its components. The prefix ir– is the variant that the Latin negative prefix in– (from the same Proto-Indo-European source as English un-) takes before r-. The element re– means back, back again, thoroughly naturalized in English; here re– forms part of the verb 娶梗款娶硃眶櫻娶蘋 to oppose (a candidate); resist; militate against (款娶硃眶櫻娶蘋 is possibly a variant of frangere to break; 娶梗款娶硃眶櫻娶蘋 means to break back). The suffix –櫻莉勳梭勳莽 is formed from the connecting vowel –– and the adjective suffix –bilis, which shows capability or ability, and is the source of English –able. Irrefragable entered English in the first half of the 16th century.

how is irrefragable used?

The court often assumes that a federal agency acted properly unless an employee offers “irrefragable proof to the contrary.”

The Senate committee cited this as one of many issues on which the court had misinterpreted the law and the intent of Congress. “By definition,” it said, “irrefragable means impossible to refute. This imposes an impossible burden on whistleblowers.”

Robert Pear, "Congress Moves to Protect Federal Whistleblowers," New York Times, October 3, 2004

Physical science magnifies physical things. The universe of matter with its irrefragable laws looms upon our mental horizon larger than ever before, to some minds blotting out the very heavens.

John Burroughs, "In the Noon of Science,"The Atlantic, September 1912

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celerity

[ suh-ler-i-tee ]

noun

swiftness; speed.

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More about celerity

Celerity, swiftness; speed, comes via Middle French 釵矇梭矇娶勳喧矇 from Latin celerit櫻s (inflectional stem celerit櫻t-) swiftness, quickness, speed, a derivative of the adjective celer. Celer comes from the Proto-Indo-European root kel– to drive, incite to quick motion and the suffix –es– (Old Latin keles– regularly changes to Classical Latin celer-). The Latin adjective celeber, also celebris busy, crowded, frequented (source of English celebrate, celebrated) is also formed from kel-. The root also appears in Greek 域矇梭襲莽 runner, racer, racehorse, fast ship. Celerity entered English in the second half of the 15th century.

how is celerity used?

At both forms of interview, the majority are not attending and taking notes because a court stenographer is doing it for them. With breathtaking celeritywithin ten minutestranscripts of both the flash interviews and the longer interviews are produced, reproduced, machine-stapled, never proofread, and placed in wall racks, where they are collected by the journalists.

John McPhee, "Rip Van Golfer," The New Yorker, July 30, 2007

Minutes after my delayed arrival Schneier had with characteristic celerity packed himself and me into a taxi.

Charles C. Mann, "Homeland Insecurity," The Atlantic, September 2002

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Fletcherize

[ flech-uh-rahyz ]

verb (used with or without object)

to chew (food) slowly and thoroughly.

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More about Fletcherize

Fletcherize, to chew (food) slowly and thoroughly so as to extract its maximum nutrition, is named after Horace Fletcher (1849-1919), a self-taught U.S. nutritionist and author. During his lifetime Fletcher was known as the Great Masticator for his insistence that food be chewed until liquefied before swallowing and for his slogan “Nature will castigate those who don’t masticate.” Other food reformers of the 19th century include Sylvester Graham (1794-1851), who inspired the graham cracker. Herman Melville refers to graham crackers in his novel Pierre; or The Ambiguities (1852): They went about huskily muttering the Kantian Categories through teeth and lips dry and dusty as any miller’s, with the crumbs of Graham crackers.” And John Harvey Kellogg (1852-1943) was a U.S. physician and nutritionist best known today for his invention of corn flakes. Fletcherize entered English in the early 20th century.

how is Fletcherize used?

Ottla always said how kind and gentle her brother was … and how the Kafka family worried about his digestion and how boring it was to sit and watch him Fletcherizehis food.

Francine Prose, Guided Tours of Hell, 1997

Yet one reason The Voyeurs Motel is gripping is that Mr. Talese doesnt fletcherize his material. He lays out what he knows and does not know in sentences that are as crisp as good Windsor knots.

Dwight Garner, "Making a Case for 'The Voyeur's Motel' by Gay Talese," New York Times, July 5, 2016

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