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Dec 22, 2008
This week's themeWords related to the names of fish This week's words minnow gudgeon remora inconnu tope Loach Minnow
Photo: US Fish and Wildlife Service
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with Anu GargI remember the day I caught my first, and last, fish. I was in college. During the winter break, a friend invited me to visit him. With makeshift fishing rods in our hands we went to the dam near his house. I sat there uneasily, holding the rod with the line dipped in the still water of the reservoir. A while later there was a tug and I promptly handed over the rod to my friend. He pulled the line in. There was a small orange fish on the end. It was alive, wildly flailing at its sudden change of fortune. With a promise of food I had tricked it out of its life. Much time has passed since then. Now whenever I'm near water and see someone sitting with a fishing rod extended over the lake, I softly say "Good luck!" in his general direction. He thanks me. I tell him I was saying that to the fish. He smiles at the apparent joke... But I wasn't joking. All of this week's words refer to fish, but they are more than just fish words. They can also be used metaphorically in other senses. minnow
PRONUNCIATION:
(MIN-o)
MEANING:
noun:1. Any of the small freshwater fish of the Cyprinidae family. 2. Someone or something considered insignificant. ETYMOLOGY:
Ultimately from Old High German munewa, a kind of fish, via Old English and Middle English.
USAGE:
"Compared with the Scottish Parliament, a regional authority in the
north-east would indeed be a minnow."Tony Travers; The Long Struggle; New Statesman (London); May 20, 2002. See more usage examples of minnow in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Eyes are vocal, tears have tongues, \ And there are words not made with lungs. -Richard Crashaw, poet (1613-1649)
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