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Show Notes
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for February 28, 2010 is:
waggish \WAG-ish\ adjective
1 : resembling or characteristic of a wag : displaying good-humored mischief
2 : done or made for sport : humorous
Examples:
Lisa listens to the same waggish DJ every morning, never tiring of his prank phone calls and irreverent impressions of local politicians.
Did you know?
One who is waggish acts like a wag. What, then, is a wag? Etymologists think "wag" probably came from "waghalter," a word that was once used for a "gallows bird" (that is, a person who was going to be, or deserved to be, hanged). "Waghalter" was apparently shortened to "wag" and used jokingly or affectionately for mischievous pranksters or youths. Hence a wag is a joker, and waggery is merriment or practical joking. "Waggish" can describe the prank itself as well as the prankster type; the class clown might be said to have a "waggish disposition" or might be said to be prone to "waggish antics."
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Topics
vocabularylanguageword a dayword of the dayenglishwebstermerriamdictionarymerriam-websterwordsword