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Feb 1, 2019
This week’s themeWords that have many unrelated meanings This week’s words gob skelf shingle plenum rede This week’s comments AWADmail 866 Next week’s theme Words made with combining forms A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargrede
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
From Old English rǣdan (read). Ultimately from the Indo-European root
ar- (to fit together), which also gave us army, harmony, article, order,
read, adorn, arithmetic, rhyme, and ratiocinate.
Earliest documented use: before 450.
USAGE:
“There master Courtenay, sitting in his own chamber, gave his rede.” James Joyce; Ulysses; Sylvia Beach; 1922. “Well, rede me this riddle.” L. Sprague deCamp and Catherine Crook deCamp; The Incorporated Knight; Phantasia Press; 1987. “Yet do not cast all hope away. Tomorrow is unknown. Rede oft is found at the rising of the Sun.” J.R.R. Tolkien; The Two Towers (vol. 2 of The Lord of the Rings trilogy); George Allen & Unwin; 1954. See more usage examples of rede in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
When you turn the corner / And you run into yourself / Then you know that
you have turned / All the corners that are left. -Langston Hughes, poet and
novelist (1 Feb 1902-1967)
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