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Aug 7, 2024
This week’s themeLoanwords and loan translations This week’s words machtpolitik dogwatch bridgehead earworm immiseration
The Ludendorff Bridge over the Rhine river in Remagen, Germany. The US Army captured it and established a bridgehead in Mar 1945 during WWII.
Photo: Claude Musgrove / US Army
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargbridgehead
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: 1. A foothold opening the way for further advance. 2. A fortified position at the end of a bridge nearest the enemy. ETYMOLOGY:
Loan translation of French tête de pont (bridge head). Earliest documented use: 1760. Also see beachhead.
USAGE:
“Nigel Farage takes his first seat in the Commons on his eighth attempt
... a bridgehead to cajole Conservatives that lurching further to the
right is their future.” Mick O’Reilly; The UK’s Future Begins Today; Gulf News (Dubai); Jul 9, 2024. See more usage examples of bridgehead in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Those who believe without reason cannot be convinced by reason. -James
Randi, magician and scientific skeptic (7 Aug 1928-2020)
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