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Sep 5, 2013
This week's themeWords borrowed from Japanese This week's words kabuki honcho skosh kamikaze tycoon
Kamikaze: A typhoon destroying the invading Mongol fleet
Art: Kikuchi Yoosai, 1847
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with Anu Gargkamikaze
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: Someone who behaves in a reckless, self-destructive manner. adjective: Extremely reckless, potentially self-destructive. ETYMOLOGY:
From Japanese kamikaze (divine wind), from kami (god, divinity) + kaze
(wind). Earliest documented use: 1896.
NOTES:
In Japanese folklore, kamikaze was the divine wind that destroyed
a Mongol invasion fleet under Kublai Khan. In World War II, the kamikaze
were suicidal attacks by Japanese pilots who crashed their planes on an
enemy target such as a ship.
USAGE:
"We're traveling along busy, multilane roads, and the kamikaze driving
makes me glad that I'm not behind the handlebars. Romans drive as though
they're playing a video game: They're fast and aggressive, taking turns
as if they're in Super Mario Kart -- and the winner is the one reaching
the next traffic light first." Kelly DiNardo; Roam in Today's Chariot; The Washington Post; Aug 4, 2013. See more usage examples of kamikaze in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak. -Hans Hofmann, painter (1880-1966)
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