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 | May 16, 2012This week's theme Words with allusions to geometrical shapes This week's words triangulate foursquare trapeze vicious circle orthogonal  Discuss  Feedback  RSS/XML             A.Word.A.Daywith Anu Garg trapeze
 PRONUNCIATION: MEANING: 
noun: An apparatus consisting of a short horizontal bar suspended by two ropes, used in gymnastics and acrobatics.
 ETYMOLOGY: 
Probably from the trapezoid shape made by the ropes, the bar, and the
roof. From French trapèze (trapezoid/trapezium), from Latin trapezium,
from Greek trapezion (small table), from trapeza (table), from tetra-
(four) + peza (foot). Earliest documented use: 1830.
 USAGE: 
"In my last year at the university, I felt like I had finally mastered
walking the trapeze of my life, work, and academics." Students in Rural Schools; The Centre Daily Times (Pennsylvania); Feb 6, 2005. "The Prime Minister and his advisers were hanging themselves in a trapeze of stale and false intelligence." Peter Newman; Harper's Election to Lose; Maclean's (Canada); Jun 21, 2004. See more usage examples of trapeze in Vocabulary.com's dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:What a strange illusion it is to suppose that beauty is goodness. -Leo Tolstoy, novelist and philosopher (1828-1910) | 
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