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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for September 15, 2012 is:
quail \KWAIL\ verb
1 : to give way : falter
2 : to recoil in dread or terror : cower
Examples:
Douglas quailed when the dentist told him that he would need a root canal.
"There's an already notorious scene in a bathtub, involving the extraction of toenails, which would send Mary Whitehouse quailing ashen-faced for the exit, if she'd even made it that far." - From a film review by Tom Robey in The (London) Telegraph, November 17, 2011
Did you know?
"Flinch," "recoil," and "wince" are all synonyms of "quail," but each word has a slightly different use. When you flinch, you fail to endure pain or to face something dangerous or frightening with resolution ("she faced her accusers without flinching"). "Recoil" implies a start or movement away from something through shock, fear, or disgust ("he recoiled at the suggestion of stealing"). "Wince" usually suggests a slight involuntary physical reaction to something ("she winced as the bright light suddenly hit her eyes"). "Quail" implies shrinking and cowering in fear ("he quailed before the apparition").
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Topics
vocabularymerriamwordsword of the daywordlanguageword a daydictionarymerriam-websterwebsterenglish