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 | May 24, 2024This week’s theme Words from music This week’s words pitch-perfect fanfare downbeat boogie fiddle-faddle     Illustration: Anu Garg + AI This week’s comments AWADmail 1143 Next week’s theme Terms formed from names             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg fiddle-faddle
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: Nonsense. verb intr.: To trifle. ETYMOLOGY: 
Reduplication of fiddle, from Old English fithele, of obscure origin.
Earliest documented use: 1577.
 NOTES: 
The fiddle gets no respect. The English language is full of idioms
that downplay this fine instrument: to fiddle away (to squander one’s time),
to fiddle around (to act aimlessly), or to fiddle with (to tamper, to handle
something unskillfully). There are also the interjections fiddlesticks or
fiddle-dee-dee, both meaning nonsense. May I suggest we update the idiom to bagpipe: To bagpipe away, to bagpipe around, or to simply bagpipe, or to shout, “Bagpipes!” USAGE: 
“You’re wasting time, young man. All this fiddle-faddle about plots.” Frances & Richard Lockridge; Dead as a Dinosaur; J.B. Lippincott; 1952. See more usage examples of fiddle-faddle in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:Life is like a library owned by an author. In it are a few books which he
wrote himself, but most of them were written for him. -Harry Emerson
Fosdick, preacher and author (24 May 1878-1969) | 
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