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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for November 1, 2008 is:
parry \PAIR-ee\ verb
1 : to ward off a weapon or blow
2 : to evade especially by an adroit answer
Examples:
The senator effectively parried all Beverly's questions about his dubious financial affairs.
Did you know?
"Parry" (which is used in fencing, among other applications) probably comes from "parez," a form of the French verb "parer," meaning "to guard or ward off." Its history can be compared with that of two other English words: "parapet" and "parasol." Those two terms go back to an Italian word ("parare") that means "to shield or guard." (A parapet shields soldiers and a parasol wards off the sun.) All three -- "parry," "parapet," and "parasol" -- can ultimately be traced to the Latin "parare," meaning "to prepare." And they're not alone. Other descendants of the Latin term include "apparatus," "disparate," "emperor," and even "prepare."
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word of the daywebsterword a daywordsmerriam-webstervocabularymerriamlanguageenglishdictionaryword