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Word of the Day – Bosky

By December 11, 2023Word of the Day

Bosky (adj)

bos-kee

covered with bushes, shrubs, and small trees; woody.

Bosky was first recorded in 1585–95 and comes from the noun bosk, “a small wood or thicket,” which entered English around 1250–1300. Bosk, in turn, comes from the Middle English variant of busk(e), which shares the Old Norse origin, buskr, with bush, “a low plant with many branches.”

Example sentences

“They were up on the bosky part of the heath when the storm rolled in.”

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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