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 | Feb 5, 2018This week’s theme Words to describe people This week’s words snollygoster highbinder wirepuller four-flusher jackleg  Roll the dice Get a random word from A.Word.A.Day archives             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg If you have been wondering what word to use to describe that good-for-nothing person -- a neighbor, a colleague, or a president -- you are in luck. Things are going to get colorful this week, linguistically speaking. We present you with five vivid, offbeat, American words -- what you do with them is up to you. snollygoster
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: A shrewd, unprincipled person.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
Of uncertain origin, perhaps an alteration of snallygaster, a mythical
creature said to prey on poultry and children, possibly from Pennsylvania
Dutch schnelle geeschter, from German schnell (quick) + Geist (spirit).
Earliest documented use: 1846.
 NOTES: 
According to a Georgia editor, “A snollygoster is a fellow who wants
office, regardless of party, platform, or principles, and who, whenever he
wins, gets there by the sheer force of monumental talknophical assumnacy.”
 USAGE: 
“Where do you find lawyers like this snollygoster?” Malcolm Berko; Dunkin’ Donuts May Be Full of Holes; Herald Sun with Chapel Hill Herald (Durham, North Carolina); Jun 10, 2012. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:In America, anybody can be president. That's one of the risks you take.
-Adlai Stevenson, statesman (5 Feb 1900-1965) | 
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