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 | Sep 19, 2025This week’s theme Words that aren’t what they appear to be This week’s words corroboree monomachy verisimilar polystyle doctor's mandate     
“The good news is that with the proper care, you should be back on your feet in no time. The bad news is I’m a lousy doctor.” Cartoon: Dan Piraro This week’s comments AWADmail 1212 Next week’s theme Words with Seattle connections             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg doctor’s mandate
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: Full authority to deal with a crisis.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
 From Latin doctor (teacher, later physician), from docere (to teach)
+ mandate, from Latin mandare (to commission, literally, to give into
someone’s hand), from manus (hand) + date, from dare (to give).
Earliest documented use: 1931.
 NOTES: 
A doctor’s mandate sounds like a stern Rx: Take two reforms and
call me in the morning. In 1931 in the middle of Great Depression, British
Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald campaigned for a Doctor’s Mandate, asking
voters for a free hand to prescribe whatever bitter economic medicine was
needed. With a doctor’s mandate side effects may include austerity, abuse of power, or the occasional economic recovery. A synonym is a blank check. Antonym: insurance pre-approval requirement. Mandate comes from Latin manus (hand). If it were a surgeon’s mandate, both hands would be in it. The word surgeon is a respelling of chirurgeon, from Greek cheir (hand). USAGE: 
“You can see at the moment that Keir Starmer is trying to win,
essentially, a doctor’s mandate.” Stephen Bush; Labour’s Reversal on Benefits Cap Spells More Contortions to Come; Financial Times (London, UK); Jul 17, 2023. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:This is what power really is: the privilege of ignoring anything you might
find distasteful. -Oksana Zabuzhko, writer (b. 19 Sep 1960) | 
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