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June 2025

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oik

Jun. 24th, 2025 04:34 am
[syndicated profile] wordsmithdaily_feed
noun: A person perceived as uncouth, unpleasant, and of lower social standing.

noisome

Jun. 24th, 2025 01:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 24, 2025 is:

noisome • \NOY-sum\  • adjective

Noisome is a formal and literary word used to describe things that are very unpleasant or disgusting; it is used especially to describe offensive smells. Noisome can also mean “highly obnoxious or objectionable” as in “we were put off by their noisome habits.”

// The noisome odor of a trash can in the alley was so strong that even diners seated inside the adjacent restaurant complained to staff.

See the entry >

Examples:

“During the fourteenth century, the bubonic plague outbreak that came to be known as the Black Death claimed thousands of victims, condemning them to a rapid and painful end. As the sufferers deteriorated, the disease tainted them with a tell-tale, repellent stench, which seemed to confirm smell as the root cause of the illness. ... Noisome dwellings were set right by fumigation, while rooms were doused with strong-smelling substances like vinegar and turpentine—anything to keep at bay the dreaded miasma.” — Ashley Ward, Where We Meet the World: The Story of the Senses, 2023

Did you know?

Noisome looks and sounds like a close relation of noisy, but it’s not. While noisy describes what is excessively loud, noisome typically describes what is excessively stinky. (It is also used to describe things offensive to the senses generally, as well as things that are highly obnoxious, objectionable, or simply harmful.) Noisome comes from the synonymous Middle English noysome, which combines the suffix -some, meaning “characterized by a specified thing,” and the noun noy, meaning “annoyance.” Noisy, incidentally, comes ultimately from Latin nausea, meaning “nausea.”



Monday Word: Sybarite

Jun. 23rd, 2025 09:20 am
stonepicnicking_okapi: letters (letters)
[personal profile] stonepicnicking_okapi posting in [community profile] 1word1day
sybarite [sib-uh-rahyt]

noun

1. a person devoted to luxury and pleasure.

examples

1. Higher volumes of sybarites are also tasking luxury operators with making crowd-free vacation dreams come true. Lindsay Cohn, Robb Report, 20 May 2025
2. What unites these contemporary sybarites with their stylish forebears is a powerful longing for freedom. Lynn Yaeger, Vogue, 16 May 2025
3. His lifestyle is scandalous in a Spain that's suffering so much right now; he's a sybarite and a lover of antiques--his probably be able to get hold of the most valued pieces, paid for by other people's hunger. The Seamstress María Dueñas

origin
mid 16th century, originally denoting an inhabitant of Sybaris, an ancient Greek city in southern Italy, noted for luxury

A Pythagorean School Invaded by Sybarites, Michele Tedesco, 1877
sybarite

FFXV Fandom Events

Jun. 23rd, 2025 09:29 am
reclaimingvox: (Tonberry)
[personal profile] reclaimingvox posting in [community profile] finalfantasy
Hiya! My name's Meadz and I'm new to the comm. FFVII was my first game back when it came out (yes I'm old) and FFXV is my primary fandom these days. On that note I hope y'all don't mind me promoting some fandom events in the FFXV coming up?

ExpandFFXV Fandom Events )

It's lovely meeting y'all!

New Music Monday - 23 June 2025

Jun. 23rd, 2025 10:01 pm
paradisedinermod: (Default)
[personal profile] paradisedinermod posting in [community profile] paradisediner
The regular weekly post for us to talk about any and all of our thoughts about the week's new releases.

Cravity - Set Net G0?!
Allday Project - Famous (debut)
Baby DONT Cry - F Girl (debut)
Jang Wooyoung - Simple Dance
Le Sserafim - Different (Japan)
X-Unit - To. U
fromis_9 - Like You Better
H1-KEY - 여름이었다
Catch the Young - Ideal Type
Katseye - Gabriela
POW - Being Tender
aespa - Dirty Work
Wonho - Better Than Me
Alex Warren, Rose - On My Mind
Wish - Palm Tree

New MVs are also added to an ongoing youtube playlist.

Last week's MVs: 16 June

Feel free to add new comments in the replies for songs/MVs we missed.

[ Rec Something Wednesday | WIP Wednesday | Monthly General Chat | Comment Fest ]

vuln

Jun. 23rd, 2025 04:57 am
[syndicated profile] wordsmithdaily_feed
noun: Vulnerability: susceptibility to attack, injury, or temptation. verb tr.: To wound.

wherewithal

Jun. 23rd, 2025 01:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 23, 2025 is:

wherewithal • \WAIR-wih-thawl\  • noun

Wherewithal refers to the means, skills, resources, or money that is needed to get or do something.

// The company does not have the financial wherewithal to expand into other markets at this time.

See the entry >

Examples:

"... it is heartening to know that there are people of real influence who have the will and wherewithal to help lift the city out of the doldrums." — Scott Wright, The Herald (Scotland), 15 May 2025

Did you know?

If wherewithal sounds like three words smashed together, that’s because it is—sort of. Wherewithal combines where and withal, an adverb from Middle English that is itself a combination of with and all. In the past, wherewithal was used as a conjunction meaning "with or by means of which" and as a pronoun meaning "that with or by which." Today, however, it is almost always used as a noun to refer to the means or resources a person or entity has at their disposal. It refers especially to financial resources, but other means such as social influence, ability, and emotional capacity may also be termed as "wherewithal."



Sunday Word: Clishmaclaver

Jun. 22nd, 2025 02:17 pm
sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn posting in [community profile] 1word1day

clishmaclaver [klish-muh-kley-ver, kleesh-]

noun:
(Scots) gossip; idle or foolish talk

Examples:

There is more of good sense, sound judgment, truth, and good taste, in it, than in all the clishmaclaver which has been issued from the Popish presses and Jesuit quarterly reviews in the United States, during the last half century. (William Hogan, Auricular Confession and Popish Nunneries)

Noo, I’ve been a gude friend to ye always, Peter, and eef there’s iver been anything wrang, I’ve been like Sir Murray himsel’ to all ye sairvants, and paid yer wage, and seen ye raised, and that no ane put upon ye; so now tell me, like a gude laddie, has there been any clishmaclaver with Maister Norton and my laird here? (George Manville Fenn, The Sapphire Cross)

Let me insense ye how matters are on that head, for it's better coming from the factor than any clishmaclaver you'll hear in other quarters. (Sam Hanna Bell, Across the Narrow Sea)

Your letter is at hand, stating that you cannot visit me on Friday per promise, because you husband has business that keeps him in town. What clishmaclaver is this! Has it come to such a pass that you can’t leave him for two days? (Jean Webster, Dear Enemy)

Origin:

1720–30; clish(-clash) gossip (gradational compound based on clash ) + -ma- (< ?) + claver (Dictionary.com)

The usual meaning of the Scottish word clishmaclaver (also clish-ma-claver, clishmaclaiver, clashmaclaver) is 'idle talk, gossip, or empty chatter'. The OED says it was formed 'apparently with allusion to clish-clash and claver, with echoic associations', and finds it also used as a verb ('keep me clishmaclavering'). Hiberno-English has the related short form clash 'gossip' as both noun and verb. Terence Dolan notes clash in Sligo ('He’s an awful old clash'), while a century ago P W Joyce reported clashbag 'tale-bearer' or 'busybody' in Armagh, Northern Ireland. (Sentence first)

bemuse

Jun. 22nd, 2025 01:00 am
[syndicated profile] merriamwebster_feed

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 22, 2025 is:

bemuse • \bih-MYOOZ\  • verb

If you are bemused by something, you are confused or bewildered by it, and often also somewhat amused.

// The contestant seemed somewhat bemused by the question, but gave the correct answer.

See the entry >

Examples:

“The duck touched down on the surface of Raymond James Stadium just minutes before the Bucs scored their own touchdown. ... Many of the staff not assigned to work on the field were bemused by the sight of Anchor carrying a duck out of the stadium. They held cellphones and took pictures.” — Rick Stroud, The Tampa Bay (Florida) Times, 1 Jan. 2025

Did you know?

In 1735, British poet Alexander Pope lamented, in rhyme, being besieged by “a parson much bemus’d in beer.” The cleric in question was apparently one of a horde of would-be poets who pestered Pope with requests that he read their verses. Pope meant that the parson had found his muse—his inspiration—in beer. That use of bemused harks back to a 1705 letter in which Pope wrote of “Poets … irrecoverably Be-mus’d.” In both letter and poem, Pope used bemused to allude to being inspired by or devoted to one of the Muses, the Greek sister goddesses of art, music, and literature. The lexicographers who followed him, however, interpreted “bemus’d in beer” as meaning “left confused by beer,” and their confusion gave rise to the “bewilder” sense of bemuse. The newer (and very common) use of bemuse to mean “to cause to have feelings of wry or tolerant amusement” is a topic of some dispute, as discussed here.