Today’s list of the day is made of boxing words like punch-drunk, flyweight, glass jaw, haymaker, and more.
Today’s list of the day is made of boxing words like punch-drunk, flyweight, glass jaw, haymaker, and more.
Today’s list of the day is “mythical creatures,” which includes words like satyr, chiron, and minotaur.
Today’s word of the day is thropple, an old word for windpipe or throat. A variant is thrapple. The verb form of thropple means to throttle or strangle. It might be related to the ancient throat-boll, which meant Adam’s apple.
Today’s word of the day is methinks, an archaic or humorous way of saying, “it seems to me,” as in King Lear, Act IV, scene VI: “Methinks thy voice is alter’d and thou speak’st/In better phrase and matter than thou didst.”
Today’s list of the day is “Don’t Drink The War,” featuring military and martial terms ending in -ade that aren’t fizzy drinks, such as barricade, cockade, and chamade.
Today’s word of the day is greatcoat, a heavy outer garment you wear outside of all of your other clothes. It is approximately the same thing as an overcoat (which can be of any weight) or a topcoat (which is lightweight) and related to a surcoat (which is loose).
In 1842 Penny Magazine of London quoted this description of a certain kind of greatcoat in Ireland in 1581:
With jackets long and large,
Which shroud simplicity:
Though spiteful darts which they do bear
Import iniquity.
Their skirts be very strange,
Not reaching past the thigh;
With plaits on plaits they plaited are,
As thick as plaits may lie.
Whose sleeves hang trailing down
Almost unto the shoe;
And with a mantle commonly
The Irish kerne do go.
Now some amongst the rest
Do use another weed:
A coat, I mean, of strange device,
Which fancy first did breed.
His skirts be very short,
With plaits set thick about.