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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 28, 2014 is:
adscititious \ad-suh-TISH-us\ adjective
1 : derived or acquired from something on the outside
2 : supplemental, additional
Examples:
"We should choose our books as we would our companions, for their sterling and intrinsic merit, not for their adscititious or accidental advantages." - From Charles Caleb Colton's 1832 book Lacon
"I thrilled to crates of chilly hardware-coffee tins of rusty nails and mismatched bolts and nuts, odd attachments, gimcrack, rickrack, and adscititious crap…." - From William Davies King's 2008 book Collections of Nothing
Did you know?
"Adscititious" comes from a very "knowledgeable" family-it ultimately derives from "scire," the Latin verb meaning "to know." "Scire" also gave us "science," "conscience," "prescience" ("foreknowledge"), and "nescience" ("lack of knowledge"). "Adscititious" itself comes to us from "scire" by way of the Latin verb "adsciscere," which means "to admit" or "to adopt." This explains why "adscititious" describes something adopted from an outside source.
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merriam-websterwebstervocabularydictionarywordsmerriamlanguageenglishword of the dayword a dayword