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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 16, 2009 is:
dissertate \DISS-er-tayt\ verb
: to speak or write at length : dissert; also : to write a dissertation
Examples:
Amy shared with her academic advisor her plans to dissertate on the subject of women’s roles in postcolonial India.
Did you know?
English speakers created the word "dissert" in the mid-17th century, but a single word for the concept was apparently not enough because "dissertate" appeared in the language less than a hundred years later. Both words descend from the Latin noun "dissertus," which shares their meaning. ("Dissert" came directly from "dissertus," whereas "dissertate" came by way of "dissertatus," past participle of "dissertare," meaning "to discuss, argue, or debate.") "Dissertus" itself traces back to the verb "disserere," formed by combining the prefix "dis-" and "serere" ("to place, arrange, or join together"). Other descendants of "serere" in English include "assert," "insert," and even "series."
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englishword of the daymerriamdictionarywordsword a dayvocabularywebsterwordmerriam-websterlanguage