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Word of the Day – Crepitate

By October 22, 2021Word of the Day

Crepitate (verb)

ped-a-goj-ik-al

Make a crackling sound.

Early 17th century (in the sense ‘break wind’): from Latin crepitat- ‘crackled, rustled’, from the verb crepitare, from crepare ‘to rattle’.

Example sentences

“The trees crepitated with the whistling winds”

Word of the Day – Infelicitous

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Word of the Day – Absquatulate

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Word of the Day – Steadfast

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Word of the Day – Motte

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Word of the Day – Plash

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Plash (noun) plash A gentle splash. / A pool or puddle. First recorded before 1000; Middle English plasch “pool, puddle,” Old English plæsc; cognate with Dutch, Low German plas, probably…

Word of the Day – Fulgurate

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Word of the Day – Eustress

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Eustress (noun) yoo-stres Physical, mental, or emotional tension that is caused by something positive or is psychologically or physically beneficial. First recorded in 1965–70 and comes from the Greek prefix…

Word of the Day – Heterogeneous

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Heterogeneous (adj) het-er-oh-jeen-yus Different in kind; unlike; incongruous. Composed of parts of different kinds; having widely dissimilar elements or constituents 1615–25; Medieval Latin (more…)

Word of the Day – Hodgepodge

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