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May 13, 2021
This week’s themeShirts This week’s words unshirted arrow-collar button-down sleeveless shirttail
An ermine sleeve on the coat of arms of the Family of Mohun, Earl of Somerset
Image: Wikimedia Commons
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargsleeveless
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adjective: 1. Unprofitable; futile; unreasonable; irrelevant. 2. Without sleeves. ETYMOLOGY:
From sleeve, from Old English sliefe + less, from Old English laes
(less). Earliest documented use: 950. Also see shirtsleeve.
NOTES:
What does a sleeve have to do with profit? In former times, a lady
would give her detachable sleeve (also known as a maunch/manche, from French)
to a knight as a symbol of love and he would wear it as he went around in
his adventures. A knight without a sleeve was, well, sleeveless. The
Encyclopedia Britannica (1880) mentions: “Bayard took a lady’s sleeve and
proclaimed it, with a valuable ruby, as a prize to be contended for.”
USAGE:
“I pictured them drearily slogging through the blackened midwinter
slush on sleeveless errands.” Jennifer Howard; What Does Everyone Need This Time of Year?; The Washington Post; Dec 3, 2000. See more usage examples of sleeveless in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The Panama Canal was dug with a microscope. -Ronald Ross, doctor and Nobel
laureate (13 May 1857-1932) [alluding to the research done to get rid of
the mosquito]
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