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Sep 5, 2023
This week’s themeMisleading words This week’s words pronation militate instar diaeresis funambulism Internet Anagram Server I, Rearrangement Servant May I try your name? A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargmilitate
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
verb intr.: To exert a strong influence, either for or against something.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin militare (to serve as a soldier), from miles (soldier).
Over time, the term evolved from its military origins to signify a
strong influencing force. Earliest documented use: 1598.
QUESTION:
Q. Why did the soldier retreat when he saw the bombshell at the military ball? A. Because she militated against his advances. USAGE:
“‘The twin imperatives of corporate profit and national security,’ Igo
says, militate against greater privacy protections.” Louis Menand; Nowhere to Hide; The New Yorker; Jun 18, 2018. “The importance of the town’s biggest industry seems to militate for sticking with Britain.” Scottish Independence; The Economist (London, UK); Aug 2, 2014. See more usage examples of militate in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
If he does not fight, it is not because he rejects all fighting as futile,
but because he has finished his fights. He has overcome all dissensions
between himself and the world and is now at rest... We shall have wars and
soldiers so long as the brute in us is untamed. -Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan,
philosopher and second president of India (5 Sep 1888-1975)
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