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Oct 10, 2016
This week’s themeVerbs This week’s words confute propine flocculate absolve objurgate A.Word.A.Day on your site Add the daily word to your web page. It is free. A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargThis sentence no verb. This one neither. Well, it may be possible to crank out a sentence or two without verbs, but this train isn’t going very far. It’s glaringly obvious in the above paragraph that the first car is missing a key part, while in the second there’s a verb, just hidden under the floor. Verbs make the world go around. You can’t say the same about other parts of speech. Let’s take a look at five uncommon verbs this week. confute
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
verb tr.: To prove to be wrong.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin confutare (to restrain or silence), from con- (an intensifier) +
futare (to beat). Ultimately from the Indo-European root bhau- (to strike),
which also gave us refute, beat, button, halibut, and buttress. Earliest
documented use: 1529.
USAGE:
“Page after page of these volumes confute that claim by showing how
philoprogenitive the mothers were who sat for [the artist George]
Romney with their children.” Edward Short; The English Look; The Weekly Standard (Washington, DC); Jun 6, 2016. See more usage examples of confute in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
When small men begin to cast big shadows, it means that the sun is about to
set. -Lin Yutang, writer and translator (10 Oct 1895-1976)
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