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macramé

[ mak-ruh-mey ] [ ˈmæk rəˌmeɪ ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

an elaborately patterned lacelike webbing made of hand-knotted cord, yarn, or the like, and used for wall decorations, hanging baskets, garments, accessories, etc.

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More about macramé

Macramé “a lacelike webbing made of hand-knotted cord” comes by way of French from Italian macramè, referring to a kind of fringe on hand towels. Note that both the French and Italian terms here stress the final syllable, while English stresses the first. Prior to Italian, macramè was borrowed from Turkish makrama “napkin, face towel,” which derives in turn from Arabic miqrama “embroidered coverlet, veil, bedspread.” Because of their location in the eastern Mediterranean, languages such as Turkish and Ancient Greek often served as channels for words from Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, and Sanskrit (or Hindi) to pass into the rest of Europe. Arabic-origin words such as coffee, kismet, sherbet, sofa, sorbet, and vizier passed through Turkish first on their way to English. Macramé was first recorded in English in the late 1860s.

how is macramé used?

“It has such a funny heritage,” said Alexa Adams, the designer, along with Flora Gill, of the conceptual women’s-wear line Ohne Titel. This season, the two managed to make macramé look modern again by combining it with mesh, chiffon and silk-cotton cording in muted tones. The result was wonderfully intricate dresses that cling to the body, and high-heel sandals that, designed in collaboration with Cesare Paciotti, are some of spring’s coolest.

Karin Nelson, “A Sleight of Hand With a Bit of String,” New York Times, June 10, 2009

The pattern was simple, striking and modern: No chunky bead embellishments, just crisp, white rope …. This looks expensive, but I could probably just make it myself …. Making macramé–by definition, cord tied into decorative knots–seemed doable. No messy paints or toxic turpentine involved. I assumed it would only take a spool of rope (which I bought for a few dollars at a hardware store) and that font of knowledge: the Internet.

Matthew Hague, “The messy art of macramé: ‘I could make that myself,’” Globe and Mail, May 2, 2014

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Word of the day

meunière

[ muhn-yair ] [ mənˈyɛər ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

adjective

dipped in flour, sautéed in butter, and sprinkled with lemon juice and chopped parsley.

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More about meunière

Meunière “dipped in flour, sautéed in butter, and sprinkled with lemon juice” is short for French à la meunière “in the manner of a miller’s wife.” The à la construction in French literally translates as “to the” or “in the,” as in past Word of the Day à la mode “in the fashion,” but is also often used more figuratively to mean “in the manner of.” Meunière, the feminine form of meunier “miller,” comes from Vulgar Latin molīnārius, an agent noun form of Late Latin molīna “mill,” a variant of molīnum. Molīnum is the ultimate source of English mill as well as French moulin, which you may recognize as the name of the Moulin Rouge cabaret in Paris, easily recognized for the gigantic red windmill on its roof. Meunière was first recorded in English in the 1840s.

how is meunière used?

Fish was crucial to Sarah’s project, for as long as she could coax Daniel and Maxime to eat it, cooking up the flour-dredged sole meunière in sparkling butter while ignoring their demands for meat, she could serve not only an orange crème or chocolate éclair for dessert but also cheese at the end of the meal, picking up a melting piece of the increasingly acceptable Bries available…

Kate Taylor, Madame Proust and the Kosher Kitchen, 2003

There was always that little rich decadent tin of lark pâté in the cupboard if I grew bored, or we could stroll down past the great ponds under the plane trees to the deft, friendly welcome of the Restaurant Thomé and eat a grilled pullet or a trout meunière, and an orange baked à la norvegienne. Or we could stay home and I would try at last the mayonnaise maker I had bought…

M. F. K. Fisher, "Two Kitchens in Provence," The New Yorker, August 19, 1966

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Word of the day

victorine

[ vik-tuh-reen ] [ ˌvɪk təˈrin ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a fur scarf with long tabs at the ends.

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More about victorine

Victorine “a fur scarf with long tabs at the ends” is likely a namesake of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, using the descriptive suffix -ine. The name Victoria is an adaptation of Latin victōria “victory” and is spelled variously as Victoria, Viktoria, Viktorija, or Wiktoria in most European languages that use the Roman alphabet. Because of regular sound changes, however, the name becomes Victoire in French and Vittoria in Italian. The Latin noun victōria derives from the verb vincere “to conquer, win,” which has two major stems: vinc-, as in invincible and province, and vict-, as in conviction and evict. Though vincere sounds similar to English win, the two are not related, but you can find a form of vincere in the phrase vēnī, vīdī, vīcī “I came, I saw, I conquered.” Victorine was first recorded in English in the 1840s.

how is victorine used?

‘If you please, my lady,’ said Patty, the little maid, putting in her curly head once more; ‘it’s a gentleman as I never see before. Nayther [sic] the Rector, nor the Curate, nor the General, nor nobody as I know; and he has got fur round his neck…,’ said Patty, with a cough which covered a laugh. ‘It’s just like the thing as they call a victorine.’

Margaret Oliphant, Lady William, 1894

So Mrs. Murden departed very much cast down, and very insignificant in her cashmere dress and the fur she had thought so handsome—so it was in her own set; but her eyes had been dwelling upon velvet cloaks and sable victorines the past two hours. Alas! for her last year’s mantle, pretty as it had been; embroidered merinos looked so common—fatal word.

“Mrs. Murden's Two Dollar Silk,” Godey’s Lady’s Book, Vol. 48, April 1854

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