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Bhubaneswar: The Empowered Committee on Infrastructure for PPP Projects under the chairpersonship of Chief Secretary Anu Garg accorded in-pr
Seventeen persons recorded their statements at the public hearing on the stampede in Puri in which three people were killed and 50 others in
Development Commissioner (DC) Anu Garg Friday highlighted the importance of creating an IT-enabled monitoring system to track every child’s
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY: As a general truth, communities prosper and flourish, or droop and decline, in just the degree that they practise or neglect to practise the primary duties of justice and humanity. -William Henry Seward, Secretary of State, Governor, and Senator (16 May 1801-1872)
Deacon
Today's word a day seems tailored for @xiaq
A.Word.A.Day--deacon
3:11 AM
Feb 28, 2023
This week’s theme Nouns that are also verbs
This week’s words pinion deacon
A.Word.A.Day with Anu Garg
deacon
PRONUNCIATION: (DEE-kuhn)
MEANING: noun: In a church, a person appointed as a lay leader to a position below a pastor, priest, etc.
verb tr.: 1. To present the best part of something.
2. To pack or arrange in a way so that the finest pieces (such as fruit) are visible.
3. To adulterate; to doctor; to falsify.
4. To kill a calf or another animal soon after birth.
5. To ordain as a deacon.
6. To read aloud lines of a verse before singing.
verb intr.:To lie.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Old English diacon, from Latin diaconus, from Greek diakonos (servant, minister). Earliest documented use: for noun: 900; for verb: 1839.
NOTES:
A deacon typically helps with things like ushering, collecting the offering, visiting church members in their homes, etc. In churches where not enough copies of religious books were available for all attendees, a deacon or a choir leader would read one or two lines at a time before the choir or the congregation would sing them.
It’s not clear how the negative meanings of the word arose. Maybe when a deacon visited, a family did a bit of staging: moved their religious music records to the front, brought out their best china, even displayed the best fruit on the table.
Maybe it’s alluding to the deacons themselves, displaying goodness on the surface (speaking politely) that hid what lies inside. According to a New England proverb “All deacons are good, but there’s odds in deacons.”
USAGE:
“And again, when you catch a fellow off guard who seemed all right the first time, you may find that he deaconed himself for your benefit, and that all the big strawberries were on top.” George Horace Lorimer; Old Gorgon Graham; Doubleday; 1903.
“‘It’s pretty late,’ Andrew said. ‘Why don’t we just stay at a roadhouse?’ ‘I don’t think so.’ ‘Why not?’ I deaconed. ‘It would be my first time.’ ‘Don’t worry. I’ll show you.’ Girls notoriously claimed they did it because they were drunk. But, in fact, I was drunk -- on euphoria.” Paul M. Levitt; Chin Music; Roberts Rinehart; 2001.
See more usage examples of deacon in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary.
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
The souls of emperors and cobblers are cast in the same mold. The same reason that makes us wrangle with a neighbor creates a war between princes. -Michel de Montaigne, essayist (28 Feb 1533-1592)
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Anu Garg
juggernaut
PRONUNCIATION:(JUG-uhr-not)
MEANING:noun: 1. Anything requiring blind sacrifice. 2. A massive relentless force, person, institution, etc. that crushes everything in its path.
ETYMOLOGY:From Hindi jagannath (one of the titles Krishna, a Hindu god, has), from Sanskrit jagannath, from jagat (world) + nath (lord). A procession of Jagannath takes place each year at Puri, India. Devotees pull a huge cart carrying the deity. Some have been accidentally crushed under the wheels (or are said to have thrown themselves under them). Earliest documented use: 1638.
A Word A Day
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