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Word of the Day – Ploat

By June 13, 2020Word of the Day

Ploat (verb) (British/Scottish)

pl-oat

To pluck; to strip of feathers, wool, etc. Frequently figurative: to rob or plunder, to fleece.

Mid 18th century. From Dutch ploten (also Dutch regional (West Flemish) plotten) to pluck, to strip the wool from a fleece; further etymology uncertain and disputed.

Example sentences

“They ploat our lands and bleed us dry!”

Word of the Day – Medley

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Medley (noun) med-lee a mixture, especially of heterogeneous elements; hodgepodge; jumble. First recorded in 1300–50; Middle English noun and adjective medle(e), medlei(e), maedlai(e) “battle, war, quarrel; mixture, balanced mixture,” from…

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