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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 4, 2009 is:
tantivy \tan-TIV-ee\ adverb
: in a headlong dash : at a gallop
Examples:
Once the school bell sounded signaling dismissal, the children rose from their desks and headed tantivy for the exits.
Did you know?
"Tantivy" is also a noun meaning "a rapid gallop" or "an impetuous rush." Although its precise origin isn't known, one theory has it that "tantivy" represents the sound of a galloping horse's hooves. The noun does double duty as a word meaning "the blare of a trumpet or horn." The second use probably evolved from confusion with "tantara," a word for the sound of a trumpet that came about as an imitation of that sound. Both "tantivy" and "tantara" were used during foxhunts; in the heat of the chase people may have jumbled the two.
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Topics
merriam-websterwordsword a daywordvocabularyword of the dayenglishmerriamdictionarylanguagewebster