| A.Word.A.Day | About | Media | Search | Contact | 
| Home 
 | Dec 18, 2013This week's theme Verbs This week's words descant hebetate blandish importune colligate Like what you see here? Send a gift subscription Share it with a friend             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg blandish
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
verb intr.: To coax with flattery.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
From Latin blandiri (to flatter). Ultimately from the Indo-European root
mel- (soft), which also gave us bland, melt, smelt, malt, mild, mulch,
mollify, mollusk, emollient, enamel, smalto,
and schmaltz. Earliest documented
use: 1305.
 USAGE: 
"In his first speech in the Parliament, Mussolini insulted and blandished
the legislature by turns." Thomas Bokenkotter; Church and Revolution; Doubleday; 1998. See more usage examples of blandish in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:A person usually has two reasons for doing something: a good reason and the real reason. -Thomas Carlyle, historian and essayist (1795-1881) | 
 | 
© 1994-2025 Wordsmith