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 | Apr 23, 2021This week’s theme Nouning verbs and verbing nouns This week’s words woodshed balk festoon bivouac savvy     Image: memegenerator This week’s comments AWADmail 982 Next week’s theme Words made with animal parts             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg savvy
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
verb: To understand or know. noun: Know-how, practical knowledge, or shrewdness. adjective: Shrewd or knowledgeable, especially in practical matters. ETYMOLOGY: 
Via pidgin and/or creole language(s), from Portuguese and/or Spanish
sabe (do you know?), from Latin sapere (to be wise). Ultimately from
the Indo-European sep- (to taste or perceive), which also gave us sage,
savant, savor, sapid, sapient, resipiscent,
insipid, and sipid. Earliest
documented use, verb: 1686, noun: 1785, adjective: 1826.
 USAGE: 
“‘I have never savvied the outlaw mind,’ Fred said.” Ralph Compton; The Evil Men Do; Signet; 2015. “He was clearly a hoodlum with a lot of street savvy.” Robert Littell; A Nasty Piece of Work; St. Martin’s Press; 2013. See more usage examples of savvy in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:My words fly up, my thoughts remain below. Words without thoughts never to
heaven go. -Shakespeare, poet and dramatist (23 Apr 1564-1616) | 
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