January 26 Australia Day
Quote of the Day
Early to rise, early to bed, makes a man healthy, wealthy
and dead.
Terry Pratchett
Word of the Day
harry \HAIR-ee\
verb
Definition
1: to make a pillaging or destructive raid on :
assault
2: to force to move along by harassing
3: to torment by or as if by constant attack
Examples
The young boy harried
the kitten until it swiped him with its claws.
"Coming off a
Thursday schedule packed with practice, a Pearl Harbor visit and a luau, the
Aggies shot 54 percent on Friday and harried the Rainbow Wahine basketball team
into turnovers that fueled an 82-41 rout at the Cannon Activities Center in Laie."
— Jason Kaneshiro, The Honolulu Star-Advertiser, 6 Dec. 2015
Was there once a warlike man named Harry who is the source
for today's word? One particularly belligerent Harry does come to mind:
Shakespeare once described how "famine, sword, and fire" accompanied
"the warlike Harry," England's King Henry the Fifth. But neither this
king nor any of his namesakes are the source for the verb harry. Rather, harry
(or a word resembling it) has been a part of English for as long as there has
been anything that could be called English. It took the form hergian in Old
English and harien in Middle English, passing through numerous variations
before finally settling into its modern spelling. The word's Old English
ancestors are related to the Old High German words heriōn ("to lay
waste") and heri ("army").
Name That Synonym
Fill in the blanks to
create a synonym of harry: f _ r _ _ t.
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