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 | Mar 8, 2024This week’s theme Words derived from body parts This week’s words tergiversate loggerhead hough middlebrow footloose     Illustration: Anu Garg + AI This week’s comments AWADmail 1132 Next week’s theme Words entering English in the last 30 years             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg footloose
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
adjective: Free to go or do as one pleases without concerns or commitments.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
 From foot, from Old English fot (foot) + loose, from Old Norse laus
(loose). Earliest documented use: 1650.
 NOTES: 
“Footloose and fancy-free” is a common pairing. Fancy-free here
means free of emotional attachment, especially of love.
 USAGE: 
“‘What would you rather be?’ one tug captain asked me. ‘If you had the
opportunity to be a tugboat captain or a bank teller, what would you
choose?’ Yet the footloose spirit that once sent sailors to sea has
been slowly starched out of the business -- mostly with good reason.” Burkhard Bilger; Towheads; The New Yorker; Apr 19, 2010. See more usage examples of footloose in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:Taxes are the price we pay for a civilized society. -Oliver Wendell Holmes,
Jr., US Supreme Court Justice (8 Mar 1841-1935) | 
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