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 | Jun 24, 2020This week’s theme Words coined after metals This week’s words golden calf silver spoon tinhorn brass tacks ironclad     Photo: Mary Matzek             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg tinhorn
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: Someone who pretends to have money, skill, influence, etc. adjective: Inferior or insignificant, while pretending to be otherwise. ETYMOLOGY: 
The word has its origin in gambling, from the use of a cone-shaped
container used to shake the dice. A tinhorn gambler was someone who
pretended to be a big player, but actually played for small stakes.
Earliest documented use: 1885.
 USAGE: 
“I’m a veteran, and toted an assault rifle for a couple of years in a war.
was a useful and necessary tool of military combat, but I haven’t
needed or wanted one since I left the military 50 years ago. “I was a hunter before I went in the service, and enjoyed it thoroughly, except for maybe eating what I shot. It was always a little tougher and gamier than the same stuff in the supermarket. After the service, I stopped hunting, because I didn’t want to shoot at anything if it wasn’t shooting at me, and gunfire made me jumpy. “Today, I don’t want to be anywhere near a woods full of tinhorn troopers with their military toys.” Mike Pfrang; Your Views; Wisconsin State Journal (Madison); Aug 5, 2018. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:History is a vast early warning system. -Norman Cousins, editor and author
(24 Jun 1915-1990) | 
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