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Jan 23, 2020
This week’s themeAdjectives used postpositively This week’s words ad litem errant aforethought immemorial laureate Many ways to read AWAD o Email o Web o Twitter o RSS feed o Calendar o Flickr o Telegram o On your own website A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargimmemorial
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: Very old; beyond memory or recorded history.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin in- (not) + memoria (memory). Earliest documented use: 1593.
USAGE:
“Central bankers like giving the impression that they have played such
roles since time immemorial, but as Lord King points out the reality
is otherwise. The Fed was created only in 1913.” Mervyn King and the Financial Crisis; The Economist (London, UK); Mar 12, 2016. See more usage examples of immemorial in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
If you don't love me, it does not matter, anyway I can love for both of us.
-Stendhal (Marie-Henri Beyle), novelist (23 Jan 1783-1842)
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