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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 12, 2012 is:
vade mecum \vay-dee-MEE-kum\ noun
1 : a book for ready reference : manual
2 : something regularly carried about by a person
Examples:
Her latest book is an accessible and amusing vade mecum of the English literary tradition.
"Well into the 20th century, John Barlow's Ideal Handbook, the vade mecum of the rifleman, carried instructions for molding the Keene bullet." -- From Dan Shideler's book Gun Digest 2012
Did you know?
"Vade mecum" is Latin for "go with me" (it derives from the Latin verb "vadere," meaning "to go"). In English, "vade mecum" has been used (since at least 1629) of manuals or guidebooks sufficiently compact to be carried in a deep pocket. But from the beginning, it has also been used for such constant companions as gold, medications, and memorized gems of wisdom.
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Topics
dictionaryenglishmerriamwebsterword a dayword of the daywordslanguagemerriam-websterwordvocabulary