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Sep 25, 2020
This week’s themeShirts & pants This week’s words fancy-pants shirtsleeve trouser role brownshirt seat-of-the-pants
Boeing 787-8 Dreamliner flight deck, built in 2011
Photo: Alex Beltyukov / Wikimedia
Blériot XI, built in 1909
Photo: J.Klank / Wikimedia This week’s comments AWADmail 952 Next week’s theme Rivers A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargseat-of-the-pants
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: 1. Using experience, instinct, or guesswork as opposed to methodical planning. 2. Done without instruments. ETYMOLOGY:
The term has its origin in aviation. Before modern instruments, a pilot
flew a plane based on how it felt. For example, in fog or clouds, in the
absence of instrumentation one could tell whether the plane was climbing
or diving by how heavy one feels in the seat. Seat of the pants is the
area where one sits, i.e. the buttocks. Earliest documented use: 1929.
USAGE:
“In a sprint race, he likely wouldn’t do all that well against
seat-of-the-pants racers. But make it a test of endurance, which 500
miles most definitely is, and a calm/steady approach could prove to
be the right way.” Norris McDonald; Methodical Racer Kellett Takes Aim at Indy 500; Toronto Star (Canada); Aug 22, 2020. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
I will not play at tug o' war. / I'd rather play at hug o' war, / Where
everyone hugs instead of tugs. -Shel Silverstein, writer (25 Sep 1930-1999)
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