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Jul 14, 2014
This week's themeWords that appear to be misspellings This week's words vizard grogram secretory factitious proem
A horseman with his wife in a vizard
16th century. Artist unknown
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu GargI love optical illusions and one of my favorite is the checker shadow illusion. This week's words are a kind of illusion. They are spelled correctly, but you may wonder if they are misspelled. It's just that each of these words has a spelling very similar to an everyday word. So keep calm and spell on. And if your spellchecker makes a noise, give it a click on the backside and tell it you have everything under control. vizard or visard
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
noun: A visor, mask, or disguise.
ETYMOLOGY:
A variant of visor, from Anglo-French viser, from vis (face), from visus
(sight), from videre (to see). Ultimately from the Indo-European root weid-
(to see), which is also the source of guide, wise, vision, advice, idea,
story, history, previse,
polyhistor,
invidious,
hades,
eidos, and
eidetic. Earliest documented use:
1555.
USAGE:
"The birds wear floor-length costumes, and Princess Victoria actually comes
from the Veneto, bearing a vizard (the beaked plague-doctor's mask)." The ABC of Fabulous Princesses; Kirkus Reviews (New York); Dec 15, 2013. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The power to define the situation is the ultimate power. -Jerry Rubin, activist and author (1938-1994)
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