Skip to main content

Word of the Day – Succotash

By March 17, 2020Word of the Day

Succotash (noun)

suk-u-tash

An American dish of maize and lima beans boiled together.

Mid 18th century from Narragansett msiquatash (plural).

Example sentences

“People put flags out on the Fourth of July, eat turkey and succotash at Thanksgiving.”

Word of the Day – Pyroclastic

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Pyroclastic (adj) piy-ro-klas-tik

Word of the Day – Mantic

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Mantic (adj) man-tik

Word of the Day – Lateral

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Lateral (adj) lat-uh-rel

Word of the Day – Abbiocco

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Abbiocco (noun) ah-bee-oh-ko

Word of the Day – Rickety

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Rickety (adj) rik-i-tee

Word of the Day – Uppity

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Uppity (adj) up-i-tee 

Word of the Day – Albergo

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Albergo (noun) (Italian) al-ber-go

Word of the Day – Anatine

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Word of the Day - Anatine (adj) an-uh-tahyn

Word of the Day – Wonky

| Word of the Day | No Comments
Wonky (adj) won-kee Not straight or balanced, off kilter. First recorded in 1915–20; perhaps variant of dialectal wanky, equivalent to wank(le) ( Middle English wankel, Old English wancol. (more…)

Leave a Reply