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Dec 15, 2016
This week’s themeUsage examples from well-known authors This week’s words behoof comminute maffick inhere spavined Many ways to read AWAD o Email o Web o Twitter o RSS feed o Calendar o On your own website A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garginhere
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
verb intr.: To belong to something by its very nature; to be an inseparable part of something.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin inhaerere (to be attached), from in- (in) + haerere (to stick).
Earliest documented use: 1563.
USAGE:
“As any honest magician knows, true magic inheres in the ordinary, the
commonplace, the everyday, the mystery of the obvious. Only petty minds
and trivial souls yearn for supernatural events, incapable of perceiving
that everything -- everything! -- within and around them is pure miracle.” Edward Abbey; Abbey’s Road; Plume; 1979. See more usage examples of inhere in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The universe is made of stories, not of atoms. -Muriel Rukeyser, poet and
activist (15 Dec 1913-1980)
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