686: scotch Oct 24, 2016

What's something that everyone needs and loves, children and adults alike: scotch...tape that is. 'Scotch' means a great many things, including, whiskey a brand of tape, a people, and as a verb it means to cut, and to wedge or end. As a verb, no one is quite sure where the word came from, though some believe it is related to 'skate' which can be also a sort of cutting wedge. Though the verbal sense is found in Shakespeare's Macbeth, and may be historically interesting, it is the noun that is more often used more often. This instead does not come from the meaning of 'wedge' but instead relates to the Scottish people. Today, the word is considered somewhat offensive when referring to the people, but for the whiskey, nobody pays much mind.
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687: addiction and diction Oct 25, 2016

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685: confide, confident, & confidant(e) Oct 23, 2016