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Jun 14, 2021
This week’s themeContractions This week’s words bolshie lackadaisical blitz zounds extrality
“Radical, Anarchic, Bolshy, Scouse?”
(Scouse = Someone from Liverpool, UK) Photo: Andrew Taylor Previous week’s theme Nursery rhymes A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargIf you are one of those people for whom a contraction, such as za for pizza or k for OK, looks like a major faux pas, take a deep breath and imagine the sound of ocean waves and birds chirping. Abbreviations and contractions have been a part of language, any language, since, well, forever. It’s just that some of these shortenings have been with us for so long that we don’t realize that what we are using is a condensed version of something bigger. This week we’ll see five such words. What contractions and abbreviations do you use that are not a part of the language yet? Some of these may be just in your family, in your field, in a recreational activity, for example. Share them below or email us at words@wordsmith.org (include your location: city, state). bolshie or bolshy
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
Abbreviation of Bolshevik (a person with radical views), from Russian
Bolshevik, from bolshe (greater), referring to the faction of the Russian
Social Democratic party that seized power in the October Revolution of
1917. Ultimately from the Indo-European root bel- (strong), which also
gave us debility and Bolshoi Theatre (literally, Great Theater). Earliest
documented use: 1918.
USAGE:
“I was a bolshie teenager, full of argument.” Katherine Hassell; Jeremy Vine: My Family Values; The Guardian (London, UK); Sep 11, 2015. See more usage examples of bolshie in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The bitterest tears shed over graves are for words left unsaid and deeds
left undone. -Harriet Beecher Stowe, abolitionist and novelist (14 Jun
1811-1896)
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