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 | Jan 19, 2018This week’s theme Words of nautical origins This week’s words copper-bottomed flotsam leeway jetsam groggy     Photo: Beth JusinoThis week’s comments AWADmail 812 Next week’s theme Eponyms             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg groggy
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
adjective: Dazed, weak, or unsteady, as from lack of sleep, tiredness, sickness, intoxication, etc.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
After Old Grog, nickname of Admiral Edward Vernon (1684-1757), who ordered
diluted rum to be served to his sailors (and thus helped coin the term grog). The admiral earned the nickname from
his habit of wearing a grogram cloak. Grogram is a coarse fabric of silk,
wool, mohair, or a blend of them. The word grogram is from French gros grain
(large grain or texture). Earliest documented use: 1770.
 USAGE: 
“It kept the kids awake at night and left them groggy all the next day
at school.” William B. McCloskey; Warriors: A Novel; Skyhorse Publishing; 2017. See more usage examples of groggy in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:On stage, I make love to 25,000 different people, then I go home alone.
-Janis Joplin, singer-songwriter (19 Jan 1943-1970) | 
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