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Jun 13, 2023
This week’s theme
Double-duty words

This week’s words
stymie
sluice
chirk
skeeve
souse

sluice
A sluice gate in Aarhus, Denmark
Photo: Sten / Wikimedia

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A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garg

sluice

PRONUNCIATION:
(sloos)

MEANING:
noun:1. An artificial channel, stream, etc.
 2. A valve or gate to control the flow of a liquid.
 3. A body of water controlled by a sluice gate.
verb tr.:1. To let out, by or as if by, opening a gate.
 2. To wash, flush, cleanse, etc.
 3. To send logs, gold-bearing gravel, or other material down a sluice.
verb intr.:To flow, as if from or through a sluice.

ETYMOLOGY:
From Old French escluse (sluice gate), from Latin exclusa (water barrier), from excludere (to exclude), from ex- (out) + claudere (to close). Earliest documented use: noun: 1340, verb: 1593.

USAGE:
“She pulled her cell phone from her bag with trembling fingers and keyed in Angie’s number, her sluice of emotions obliterating her conviction.”
Tracey Richardson; Heartsick; Bella Books; 2017.

“I was not born to this
wariness. I came of age
as my kind do -- armed with ache
and swathed in rectitude,
a rough carving
sluiced under a torrent
of disregard.”
Rita Dove; Unaccompanied Anthem; Poetry (Chicago, Illinois); Apr 2023.

See more usage examples of sluice in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary.

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Adults who are racked with death anxiety are not odd birds who have contracted some exotic disease, but men and women whose family and culture have failed to knit the proper protective clothing for them to withstand the icy chill of mortality. -Irvin D. Yalom, psychiatrist and professor (b. 13 Jun 1931)

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