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calash

[ kuh-lash ] [ kəˈlæʃ ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a light vehicle pulled by one or two horses, seating two to four passengers, and having two or four wheels, a seat for a driver on a splashboard, and sometimes a folding top.

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More about calash

Calash “​​a light vehicle seating two to four passengers” is an adaptation of French calèche, which is itself a borrowing by way of German from Czech kolesa “carriage,” related to kolo “wheel,” both from an ancient Slavic root meaning “wheel.” Because the Slavic languages constitute a branch of the Indo-European language family, Czech kolesa and kolo have relatives throughout Europe and southern Asia, from English wheel (Old English hwēol) and Ancient Greek kýklos “wheel, circle, ring” (compare English cycle and cyclo-) to Sanskrit cakra “wheel, circle” (borrowed into English as chakra) and Persian charkha (also transliterated as čarxe) “spinning wheel.” Check out the recent Word of the Day bazaar for more. Calash was first recorded in English in the 1660s.

EXAMPLE OF CALASH USED IN A SENTENCE

As the calash clattered over the slick, wet cobblestones, the passengers pulled down the folding top to keep the rain out.

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Word of the day

⚛️ Today's Word was chosen in partnership with the Museum of Science as the Science Word Of The Week! ⚛️

yeuk

[ yook ] [ yuk ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

verb (used without object)

to itch.

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Why the Museum of Science chose yeuk

It feels so good to yeuk when you have a yeuk, and we wanted to know why. To find out, watch this video from science communicator, Alex Dainis, PhD.

More about yeuk

Yeuk comes from Middle Dutch jeuken, which is also related to German jucken and Old English giccan (pronounced “yeet-chahn”), all of which mean “to itch.” A common trend in the history of the English language is for Old English gi-, when pronounced as “yee,” to lose the g eventually, which is why modern English has itch instead of “gitch” or “yitch.” Yeuk was first recorded in English at the turn of the 15th century. Satisfy your itch for more words with the medical term for itching.

EXAMPLE OF YEUK USED IN A SENTENCE

Steer clear of poison ivy leaves when you’re on a hike, or you may start yeuking for days on end!

FUN FACT ABOUT YEUK

Rubbing or lightly slapping a yeuk has the same feel-good effect as yeuking, without the risk of damage to the skin. Learn more fun facts at the Museum of Science.

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Word of the day

rhotacize

[ roh-tuh-sahyz ] [ ˈroʊ təˌsaɪz ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

verb (used with object)

to change a sound to an r.

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More about rhotacize

Rhotacize, “to change a sound to an r,” is the verb form of rhotacism and is based on the Greek letter rho, on the pattern of iotacism. Similar to the recent Word of the Day muon, Ancient Greek rhô comes from Phoenician rōš, “head,” a cognate of the Hebrew letter rēsh. Phoenician rōš has relatives in several Afro-Asiatic languages, including Amharic ras, as in Rastafarian; Hebrew rōsh, as in Rosh Hashanah; and Arabic ra’s, as in Ra’s al Ghul, a comic supervillain whose name translates as “Head of the Demon.” All Ancient Greek words containing rho are transcribed in English with -rh- because the Greeks once pronounced the “ruh” sound with a “huh”-like breathiness called aspiration. Rhotacize was first recorded in English in the early 1960s.

EXAMPLE OF RHOTACIZE USED IN A SENTENCE

English speakers have permanently rhotacized many s and z sounds over the past 2,000 years, with ancient Germanic auso, haso, and wēz– becoming modern English ear, hare, and were.

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