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 | Jan 18, 2018This week’s theme Words of nautical origins This week’s words copper-bottomed flotsam leeway jetsam groggy             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg jetsam
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: 1. Goods thrown overboard to lighten a ship in distress. 2. Discarded material, debris, etc. ETYMOLOGY: 
An alteration of the word jettison. Earlier, jettison was the act of throwing
goods overboard to lighten a ship in distress. From Latin jactare (to throw),
frequentative of jacere (to throw). Earliest documented use: 1491.
 USAGE: 
“I yearn to be of the stars. We are all stardust, after all, having been
created from jetsam of the Big Bang.” A.J. Ullman; Drifting Falling; Moonshine Cove Publishing; 2017. See more usage examples of jetsam in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:Only the madman is absolutely sure. -Robert Anton Wilson, novelist (18 Jan
1932-2007) | 
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