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HATCHET JOB
PRONUNCIATION: (HATCH-it job)
MEANING: noun: Malicious criticism meant to harm someone’s reputation.
ETYMOLOGY: From hatchet (a small, short-handled axe), from Old French (hachete), diminutive of hache (axe) + job, of unknown origin. Earliest documented use: 1925.
NOTES: In the beginning a hatchet job was a murder carried out by a hired Chinese assassin in the US, known as a hatchet man. Over time, the word began to be used metaphorically for verbal criticism meant to destroy someone’s reputation. Another hatchet idiom is to "bury the hatchet," meaning to end hostilities and reconcile. ______________________
HITCHET JOB - attach the horses to the wagon
HATCHET JOY - easy work for a lumberjack
HATCHET JIB - a small sail in the prow of the boat that lets it slice through the wind
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BATTLE-AXE (or BATTLE-AX)
PRONUNCIATION:
(BAT-l aks)
MEANING: noun: 1. A broadax used as a weapon of war. 2. A typically older woman with a reputation for being sharp-tongued, domineering, and aggressive.
ETYMOLOGY: From battle, from Latin battuere (to beat) + ax, from Old English aecs (ax). It’s not entirely clear how this term came to be applied to a fierce woman. Perhaps it’s because a sharp-tongued woman could cut down someone as well as an ax, metaphorically speaking. Earliest documented use: 1380 (1896 for the figurative meaning). __________________________
B.A. TITLE AXE - the lumberjack's tool that went to college (see also B.A. TITLE X - ...because she could postpone having children until she wanted them
BATT, LEAH - sister of Batt, Rachel
CATTLE-AX - (I don't think I want to discuss this one)
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SMOKING GUN
PRONUNCIATION: (SMOH-king gun)
MEANING: noun: Something that serves as incriminating evidence, especially of a crime.
ETYMOLOGY: From the idea that someone holding a recently fired gun that still has the smoke coming out of the barrel would make for incontrovertible evidence that they were the one who shot the victim. Earliest documented use: 1970s. ___________________________
SMOKING GYN - you're my doctor, she said; you should know better
I'M OK-ING GUN - Here's your license to carry
AMOK-ING GUN - fires a psychosis-inducing drug instead of a tranquilizer
SUMO KING GUN - even big wrestlers sometimes have to defend themselves
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GREAT GUNS
PRONUNCIATION: (grayt gunz)
MEANING: noun: Someone or something impressive. adverb: With energy and enthusiasm; successfully. interjection: Expressing surprise or disbelief.
ETYMOLOGY: In the beginning, great gun referred to a large firearm that required mounting. Eventually it came to be applied metaphorically. The adverbial use started in horse races. Earliest documented use: 1430. ________________________________
GROAT GUNS - ditto for kernels of grain
GREAT RUNS - record-breaking streaks of anything
GRE AT UNS - prerequisite for admission for graduate study at the University of Nova Scotia
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FULGOR oR FULGUOR
PRONUNCIATION: (FUHL-guhr))
MEANING: noun: Splendor; brightness.
ETYMOLOGY: From Latin fulgor (brightness), from fulgere (to shine). Ultimately from the Indo-European root bhel- (to shine or burn), which also gave us blaze, blank, blond, bleach, blanket, flame, refulgent, fulminate, and effulgent. Earliest documented use: 1600 ___________________________
FULIGOR - a zombie wrestling hold (cf. HALF-IGOR)
NUL-GOR - rated G
FOULGOR - rated XXX for violence
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INQUILINE
PRONUNCIATION: (IN-kwuh-lyn)
MEANING: noun: An animal living in the nest, burrow, or home of another.
ETYMOLOGY: From Latin inquilinus (tenant, lodger), from in- (into) + colere (to dwell). Earliest documented use: 1640. _________________________
INQUIRINE - curious
INQUININE - malaria-resistant
MINQUILINE - furry
SINQUILINE - transgressing (see also INIQUILINE)
INQUILINK - precursor of the fountain pen
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JOUISSANCE
PRONUNCIATION: (ZHWEE-sans)
MEANING: noun: Pleasure; ecstasy.
ETYMOLOGY: From French jouissance, from jouir (to enjoy). Earliest documented use: 1484. ___________________________
LOUISSANCE - regal bearing
JOUISTANCE - position taken by expert game-players
JOLUISSANCE- boxing prowess
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WORRICOW
PRONUNCIATION: (WUH-ree-kau)
MEANING: noun: A hobgoblin, scarecrow, or a person of frightening appearance.
ETYMOLOGY: From Scottish, from worry (to harass) + cow (hobgoblin). Earliest documented use: 1711. ___________________________
WORRI-CON - annual gathering of Fussbudgets
TWO RR ICON - Chessie (Chesapeake and Ohio Railway); Roxy (Long Island Rail Road)
WORRICOWL - worn by monks to indicate their bafflement over the ambiguities of this world
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HYALOID
PRONUNCIATION: (HY-uh-loyd)
MEANING: adjective: Glassy or transparent.
ETYMOLOGY: From Latin hyaloides, from Greek hualoeies (glass-like), from hualos (glass). Earliest documented use: 1835. ____________________________
HOYALOID - like a Georgetown sports team
HYALOIN - by going to school in Brooklyn, Noo Yawk
HYALOIS - 1. Clark Kent's informal greeting to Daily Planet reporter Lane; 2. Newspaper daily-and-Sunday comic strip
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CORBIE MESSENGER
PRONUNCIATION: (KOR-bee mes-uhn-juhr)
MEANING: noun: A messenger who does not arrive or return in time.
ETYMOLOGY: noun: From allusion to the crow that Noah had sent out from his ark. From corbin (raven), from Old French corbin, from Latin corvus (raven, crow). Earliest documented use: 1525. ____________________________
CORBIE MESS ANGER - rage at the bad food in the Crow army
SCORBIE MESSENGER - brings word of crippling Vitamin C deficiency
GORBIE MESSENGER - ambassador from the USSR between 1985 and 1991
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