Word of the Day

Sample Entries

If you register for the Word of the Day by email, here's a sample of what you could be reading each day.

Note - not all entries have pronunciation.

chape
audio pronunciation tep
noun
1. historical the metal point of a scabbard.
2. the metal pin of a buckle.
origin Middle English (in the general sense ‘plate of metal overlaying or trimming something’): from Old French, literally ‘cape, hood’, from late Latin cappa ‘cap’.


neoplasticism
noun [mass noun] a style of abstract painting developed by Piet Mondrian, using only vertical and horizontal lines and rectangular shapes in black, white, grey, and primary colours.
origin 1920s: coined by Piet Mondrian.


cabotage
audio pronunciation kabt:
noun [mass noun] the right to operate sea, air, or other transport services within a particular territory.
restriction of the operation of sea, air, or other transport services within or into a particular country to that country's own transport services.
origin mid 19th cent. (in the sense ‘coastal trade’): from French, from caboter ‘sail along a coast’, perhaps from Spanish cabo ‘cape, headland’.


mantelletta
audio pronunciation mantlt
noun (pl. mantellettas or mantellette) a sleeveless vestment reaching to the knees, worn by cardinals, bishops, and other high-ranking Catholic ecclesiastics.
origin mid 19th cent.: from Italian, from a diminutive of Latin mantellum ‘mantle’.


sudd
audio pronunciation sd
noun (the sudd) an area of floating vegetation in a stretch of the White Nile, thick enough to impede navigation.
origin Arabic, literally ‘obstruction’.


All entries for the AskOxford Word of the Day are taken from the latest edition of the Oxford Dictionary of English

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