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Jun 13, 2024
This week’s themeMisc words This week’s words lentitude virid coterminous salvific hyaline Illustration: Anu Garg + AI
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargsalvific
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: Having the power to save or redeem.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin salvus (safe). Ultimately from the Indo-European root sol-
(whole), which also gave us solid, salute, save, salvo, soldier,
catholicity,
solicitous,
solicitude,
salutary, and
salubrious.
Earliest documented use: 1591.
USAGE:
“For years I had believed that love held out the one hope of cleaning me
and making me whole. Now I knew the truth. Love was just another way I’d
wished in vain to be fixed. There was no salvific silver bullet.” Corey White; Last Lines at Story Bridge; The Age (Melbourne, Australia); Jun 29, 2019. See more usage examples of salvific in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Out of the quarrel with others we make rhetoric; out of the quarrel with
ourselves we make poetry. -William Butler Yeats, writer, Nobel laureate (13
Jun 1865-1939)
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