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Jan 28, 2019
This week’s themeWords that have many unrelated meanings This week’s words gob skelf shingle plenum rede
A Girl, a Guy, and a Gob
Image: Wikimedia
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargImagine just 50 years ago, you met someone who told you that in the future you’d be carrying a radio, a television, a record player, a calculator, a clock, a camera, a photo album, a library, not to mention a telephone, with you every day, everywhere. And all this would nicely fit in your pocket. You’d have looked at them in disbelief. How technology can advance so much in just a few decades! This week’s words are somewhat like that gadget in your pocket. They pack a whole bunch of meanings in just a few letters. gob
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: 1. Lump or a large amount of something. 2. Mouth. 3. Sailor. ETYMOLOGY:
For 1: Probably from Middle French gobe/goube (mouthful, lump). Earliest documented use: 1382. For 2: Probably from Irish and/or Scottish Gaelic gob (beak, mouth). Earliest documented use: 1568. For 3: Probably from gobshite (a worthless person), from gob (lump) + shite (feces). Earliest documented use: 1910. USAGE:
“We learned that spending gobs of time together is marvelous.” Ted Paul; Can Love Be an Open Book?; Los Angeles Times; Dec 22, 2018. “I’d ... do anything other than watch you shovel pizza in your gob.” Jill Poulsen; Unpaid Minions Must Say No to Working Like Slaves; The Courier-Mail (Brisbane, Australia); Oct 27, 2018. “‘A Girl, A Guy And A Gob’ (1941) is a delightful slapstick farce ... Never mind the plot (Lucy pursued by a wealthy snob and a boisterous sailor); just enjoy the fast pace and the many sight gags.” Ted Gilling; Having a Ball; Toronto Star (Canada); Jan 7, 1990. See more usage examples of gob in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Sit down and put down everything that comes into your head and then you're
a writer. But an author is one who can judge his own stuff's worth, without
pity, and destroy most of it. -Colette, author (28 Jan 1873-1954)
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