A.Word.A.Day |
About | Media | Search | Contact |
Home
|
Mar 23, 2012
This week's themeWords with multiple, unrelated meanings This week's words doxy enceinte bravo cant pug This week's comments AWADmail 508 Next week's theme Verbs Discuss Feedback RSS/XML A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargpug
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
For 1-3: Origin unknown. Earliest documented use: early 1800s. For 4-5: From Hindi pag (foot, step), from Sanskrit pad (foot). Earliest documented use: 1851. For 6: Short for pugilist (boxer), from Latin pugnus (fist). Earliest documented use: 1858. For 7: Of unknown origin. Earliest documented use: 1702. USAGE:
"For wheel-throwing, once the clay is pugged and wedged, it can be centred
on the wheel." Edwin Wong; Going Potty Over Handmade Dinnerware; New Straits Times (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia); Sep 25, 2010. "There is the oddly delicate track of a leopard and the just-plain-scary pugs of a male lion." Mike Leggett; Tales of Life in the Wild; Austin American-Statesman (Texas); Aug 12, 2010. "Sporting comebacks used to be associated with desperate pugs risking their final brain cells for a cheque desperately needed to pay off a bookie or a bar tab." Richard Hinds; Thorpe Brave to Meddle With Golden Legacy; The Age (Melbourne, Australia); Feb 5, 2011. See more usage examples of pug in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Talent develops in tranquillity, character in the full current of human life. -Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, poet, dramatist, novelist, and philosopher (1749-1832)
|
|
© 1994-2024 Wordsmith