Quote of the Day

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Custom

Etymology

From Middle English custume, from Anglo-Norman custume, from Old French coustume, from Vulgar Latin *cōnsuētūmen, from Latin cōnsuētūdinem, accusative singular of cōnsuētūdō (“custom, habit”), from cōnsuēscō (“accustom, habituate”), from con- (“with”) + suēscō (“become used or accustomed”), inchoative form of sueō (“I am accustomed”), perhaps from suus (“one's own, his own”); see consuetude. Displaced native Middle English wune, wone (“custom, habit, practice”) (from Old English wuna (“custom, habit, practice, rite”)), Middle English side, sid (“custom”) (from Old English sidu, sido (“custom, note, manner”)), Middle English cure (“custom, choice, preference”) (from Old English cyre (“choice, choosing, free will”)).

Noun

custom (plural customs)

1.  Frequent repetition of the same act; way of acting common to many; ordinary manner; habitual practice; usage; method of doing or living.
  • And teach customs which are not lawful. Acts xvi. 21. 
  • Moved beyond his custom, Gama said. Alfred Tennyson
  • A custom More honored in the breach than the observance. Shakespeare 
2.  Habitual buying of goods; practice of frequenting, as a shop, manufactory, etc., for making purchases or giving orders; business support.  

3. (law) Long-established practice, considered as unwritten law, and resting for authority on long consent; usage. See Usage, and Prescription.  

4. (obsolete) Familiar acquaintance; familiarity.  

5. The customary toll, tax, or tribute.  

6. created under particular specifications, specialized, unique, custom-made  

Synonyms
  • fashion 
  • habit 
  • wone 
  • practice 
  • usage
  • wont

 Adjective

custom (not comparable)

1. made in a different way from usual, specially to fit one's needs
  • My feet are as big as powerboats, so I need custom shoes.   

Verb

custom (third-person singular simple present customs, present participle customing, simple past and past participle customed)
  1.  (obsolete) (transitive) To make familiar; to accustom. 
  2. (obsolete) (transitive) To supply with customers. 
  3. (obsolete) (transitive) To pay the customs of. 
  4. (obsolete) (intransitive) To have a custom. 
  • On a bridge he custometh to fight. Edmund Spenser.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Event, agenda and function

event

Etymology

From Latin ēventus (“an event, occurrence”), from ēveniō (“to happen, to fall out, to come out”), from ē (“out of, from”), short form of ex, + veniō (“come”); see venture, and compare advent, convent, invent, etc., convene, evene, etc.

Noun

event (plural events)
  1. An occurence; something that happens.
  2. An end result; an outcome (now chiefly in phrases) - 1621, Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy, II.3.3: - hard beginnings have many times prosperous events [...]. - In the event, he turned out to have what I needed anyway.
  3. (physics) A point in spacetime having three spatial coordinates and one temporal coordinate.
  4. (computing) A possible action that the user can perform that is monitored by an application or the operating system (event listener).  When an event occurs an event handler is called which performs a specific task.
  5. (probability theory) A set of some of the possible outcomes; a subset of the sample space. 


  6.  
     
agenda

Etymology

From Latin agenda, substantive use of the neuter plural of agendus (“which ought to be done”), future passive participle (gerundive) of agō (“I do, act, make”).

Noun

agenda (plural agendas)
  1. (now rare) Plural form of agendum.
  2. A temporarily organized plan for matters to be attended to.
  3. A list of matters to be taken up (as at a meeting).

Usage notes

The word agenda is the Latin plural of agendum, but in English the word agenda is taken as a singular, and item on the agenda used for individual things in the list.

Synonyms
  • (temporarily organized plan): docket, schedule




function

Etymology

From Middle French fonction, from Old French function, from Latin functio genituve functionis "performance, execution", from Latin functus past participle of fungor "perform, execute, discharge".

Noun

function (plural functions)
  1. What something does or is used for.
  2. A professional or official position.
  3. An official or social ocassion.
  4. A relation where one thing is dependent on another for its existence, value, or significance.
  5. (mathematics) A relation in which each element of the domain is associated with exactly one element of the codomain.
  6. (computing) A routine that receives zero or more arguments and may return a result.
  7. (biology) The physiological activity of an organ or body part.
  8. (chemistry) The characteristic behavior of a chemical compound.
  9. (anthropology) The role of a social practice in the continued existence of the group.

Synonyms
  • (what something does or is used for): aim, intention, purpose, role, use
  • (professional or official position): occupation, office, part, role
  • (official or social occasion): affair, occasion, social occasion, social function
  • (analysis: many-to-one relation): many-to-one map, many-to-one mapping, mathematical function, operation, transformation
  • (computing: routine that returns a result): procedure, routine, subprogram, subroutine

Hypernyms

(mathematics): relation

Thursday, December 22, 2011

Phrases and sayings

1. Phrase in the offing meaning just entering or leaving a port.
  • e.g They could see that the ship was waiting in the offing.

2. Say cheese was devised by the American politician Joseph Davies. Say cheese use imperatively to elicit a smile from someone for a photography by their saying 'cheese' (the vowel of which, when pronounced as is usual in English, forces a somewhat smile-shaped mouth).

3. Spruce up means:
  1. To dress or arrange smartly, elegantly and neatly.
  2. To refresh, revamp; to freshen or improve something, especially its appearance.

4. The hair of the dog refers to the belief that drinking alcohol will cure a hangover.

5. The expression Bunny boiler derives from the 1987 thriller film Fattal Attraction directed by Adrian Lyne and stars Michael Douglas, Glenn Close and Anne Archer.

Bunny boiler was inspired by a scene in the movie where a scorned woman (Glenn Close), seeking revenge on her ex-lover (Michael Douglas), places his beloved family pet in a pot of boiling water when he is away from the house.

Bunny boiler meaning an obsessive and dangerous former lover who stalks the person who spurned them.  Bunny boiler also meaning an excessively obsessive girlfriend or boyfriend who reacts in an extreme way to ending a relationship.

6. Flotsam and jetsam were
  1. The debris remaining after a shipwreck.
  2. The collection of miscellaneous items or fragments of little importance.
  3. People considered to be of little worth
    • e.g. The flotsam and jetsam of society were at the night club. 

    7. A dead ringer was originally a horse substituted in order to gain advantage in a race. Dead ringer also meaning someone or something that very closely resembles another; someone or something easily mistaken for another.
    • e.g He is a dead ringer for his grandfather at that age.

    8. Oranges got their name from the Middle Eastern name 'norange'. Oranges originated in South-east Asia and when they arrived in Persia and Spain they were given the names 'narang' and 'naranja' respectively. As they got nearer to England, and hence nearer to requiring a name in English, they lost the 'n'. This on happened their journey through France, where they were known as 'pomme d'orenge'.

    9. Take the gilt off the gingerbread meaning remove an item's most attractive qualities.

    10. Dressed to the nines' derives from dressing well, in one's best clothes.

    11. Umbrage was a shady area.

    12. Beyond the pale derives from the outer limits of a settlement. The phrase inspired from pale, a jurisdiction under a given authority; often held by one nation in another country, hence suggesting that anything outside their control was uncivilised. It was in use by the mid-17th century. The phrase may be a reference to the general sense of boundary, but is often understood to refer to the English Pale in Ireland. In the nominally English territory of Ireland, only the pale fell genuinely under the authority of English law, hence the terms within the Pale and beyond the pale.

    13. Lock, stock and barrel derives from the parts of a flintlock musket. The phrase meaning a thing in its entirety, with nothing omitted.
    • They want to buy the whole thing, lock, stock and barrel.


    14. The first person described as a living legend was Florence Nightingale. Florence Nightingale (12 May 1820 – 13 August 1910) was a celebrated English nurse, wtiter and statistician. She came to prominence for her pioneering work in nursing during the Crimean War, where she tended to wounded soldiers. She was dubbed "The Lady with the Lamp" after her habit of making rounds at night. An Anglican, Nightingale believed that God had called her to be a nurse.

    15. Humble pie was a variant of 'umble pie', i.e a pie made from innards. In medieval times the pie was often served to lower-class people. Although 'umbles' and the modern word 'humble' are etymologically unrelated, each word has appeared both with and without the initial 'h' after the Middle Ages until the 19th Century.

    16. Weasel words originated from the supposed habits of weasels sucking eggs. Weasel word is a word used to qualify a statement so as to make it potentially misleading.

    "Weasel words are words that suck all of the life out of the words next to them just as a weasel sucks an egg and leaves the shell" - Century Magazine, quoted in Facts on File Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins by Robert Hendrickson (New York: Facts on File Publications,1987).

    17. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year was the text on the first Christmas card. The first commercial Christmas cards were commissioned by Sir Henry Cole in London in 1843 and featured an illustration by John Callcott Horsley.

    18. Saved by the bell meaning saved by a last minute intervention. This is boxing slang that came into being in the latter half of the 19th century. A boxer who is in danger of losing a bout can be 'saved' from defeat by the bell that marks the end of a round. The earliest reference to this that I can find is in the Massachusetts newspaper The Fitchburg Daily Sentinel, February 1893:

    "Martin Flaherty defeated Bobby Burns in 32 rounds by a complete knockout. Half a dozen times Flaherty was saved by the bell in the earlier rounds."

    19. The sorts in out of sorts were printer's type blocks. It actually meaning irritable or somewhat unwell, with vague medical symptoms.

    20. The phrase Salad Days was coined by William Shakespeare. It was taken from the play Anthony and Cleopatra written by Shakespeare:

    "My salad days, When I was green in judgment, cold in blood, To say as I said then!"

    The phrase is now used to refer to one's days of youthful inexperience.

    21. Boxing Day got its name from the giving of gifts in boxes at Christmas.

    22. The first Jumbo was an elephant in Barnum's circus in 1882. The giant elephant's name has spawned the common word 'jumbo', meaning large in size.

    23. The expression Double Dutch derives from the British difficulty in understanding Dutch. The English, historically, found Dutch (albeit a fellow Western Germanic language) particularly difficult to understand so anything that was completely incomprehensible would be double Dutch, i.e. twice as hard as Dutch. (Note that historically, 'Dutch' could refer to German dialects, as well.)

    24. Booby prize meaning A prize or status, often unwelcome, awarded as a joke or disincentive to the loser of a contest or for poor performance.
    • e.g At the end of the conference, they awarded him with a rubber chicken as a booby prize for complaining the loudest.

    25. An inkling was a faint hearing of one's own name. It also meaning A slight suspicion or hint.
    • e.g Featuring a prominent and unique opening chord, the song's success provided the first inkling that The Beatles were not the one-hit wonder some had suggested when they first came to America. —A Hard Day's Night (song)
    Another meaning for inkling was inclination or desire.

    source: www.phrases.org.uk, wikipedia

    Friday, November 25, 2011

    Subject and Predicate


    The subject in grammar is the agent (the 'doer') in an active sentence such as: Alan kissed Jane.

    However, there is a difficulty. The following two sentences are identical in meaning:
    • Our children planted a tree
    • A tree was planted by our children.

    Only in the first sentence is our children the grammatical subject. So there is a difference between the logical subject and the grammatical subject. Also, many sentences have no subject, for instance:
    • Come here!
    • Identifying the thief may take some time.

    If a sentence does have a subject, then the rest of the sentence may be called the predicate. These two parts make a sentence complete.

    Examples:

    The large car stopped outside our house.

    The large car = subject

    Outside our house = predicate.


    source: wikipedia

    Sunday, November 20, 2011

    Mum's the word

    Mum's the word meaning keep quiet or say nothing.

    Origin

    'Mum's the word' has become a popular name for baby product shops and nursery services, but the 'mum' in this phrase isn't mother. Nor has 'mum' anything to do with Egyptian mummies, despite their prolonged tactiturn disposition. That 'mummy' derives from 'mum' being the name of the bitumen used for embalming.

    The 'mum' of 'mum's the word' is 'mmm' - the humming sound made with a closed mouth, indicating an unwillingness or inability to speak. The word is of long standing in the language and first appeared in print in William Langland's Middle English narrative poem Piers Plowman, circa 1376:

    Thou mightest beter meten the myst on Malverne hulles
    Then geten a mom of heore mouth til moneye weore schewed!

    That loosely translates as 'You may as well try to measure the mist on the Malvern Hills as to try and get her to speak without first offering payment'.

    As old as Piers Plowman, and as central to English folklore, is the tradition of mumming. Sadly, no complete texts of the mediaeval mummers' plays have been preserved. There was never a definitive version in any case, as the acting, dancing, drinking and alms collecting that made up mumming varied from one parish to another. We can't be sure what mediaeval mumming plays were like, but a raucous mixture of pantomime, morris dancing and carol singing, played out by a group of bizarre characters in stylised fancy dress, is what has come down to us by oral tradition.

    What we do know is that 'mumming', or 'miming' as it was sometimes called, derives from the word 'mum'. Early versions of mumming involved a parade of characters entering houses to dance or play games in silence, i.e. 'miming'. More recently, the tradition has evolved to almost always include the character of a quack doctor, who revives the hero (usually Saint George) after his death in a fight with the Turkish Knight (boo, hiss).

    Although they mummed for all they were worth, the players didn't use the phrase 'mum's the word'; that usage came later, in the 17th century. The earliest version of the phrase was 'mum is counsel', that is, 'you are advised to say nothing'. That form of the phrase was used in Gulielmus Gnapheus 1540 translation of the Latin text The Comedye of Acolastus:

    I dare not to do so moche as put my hande to my mouthe, and saye mum, is counseyle.

    Of course, we can't examine a Tudor phrase without Shakespeare getting in on the act, and he used 'mum' inHenry VI, Part 2, 1592:

    "Seal up your lips and give no words but mum."

    'Mum's the word' later became the standard way of advising a person to keep quiet and the first citation of it in print that I have found is in Of the Seasons, Francis Rabelais, 1653:

    I have known the time when Men reckoned the Spring to begin when the Sun enter'd in the first Degree of Aries. If they reckon it otherwise now, I knock under ['concede defeat'], and Mum's the word.

    source: phrases.org.uk

    Tuesday, November 15, 2011

    Fish


    Fish

    Etymology - From Middle English, from Old English fisc. Cognate include Latin piscis.


    Noun

    Fish (plural: fish or fishes.

    1. (Countable) A cold-blooded veterbrate animal that lives in water, moving with the help of fins and breathing with gills.
    • Salmon and trout are species of fish.

    2. (Uncountable) The flesh of the fish used as food.
    • The seafood pasta had a lots of fish but not enough pasta.

    3. (Countable) A period of time spent fishing.
    • The fish didn't prove successful.

    4. A card game in which the object is to obtain pairs of cards.

    5. (Uncountable) (derogatory slang) Women.

    6. (Slang): an easy victim for swindling.


    Intransitive verb

    to fish (fishes, fished, fishing)

    1. To try to catch fish, whether sucessfully or not.
    • She went to the river to fish for trout.

    2. (Followed by about, around, though, etc) To attempt to find or get hold of an object by searching among other objects.
    • Why are you fishing around my things?


    3. (Followed by around) To attempt to obtain information by talking to people.
    • The detective visited the local pubs fishing around for more information.

    4. (Cricket) Of a batsman, to attempt to hit a ball outside off stump and missed it.


    Synonyms
    • Angle, drop in a line
    • Rifle, rummage
    • Angle


    Transitive verb.

    1. (Followed by for) To attempt to get hold of (an object) that is among other objects.
    • He was fishing for the keys in his pocket.

    2. (Figurative, followed by for) To attempt to gain (compliments, etc).


    Synonyms
    • (Attempt to get hold of (an object) among others): rummage.
    • (Attempt to gain (compliments, etc)): angle


    Adjective

    1. Of or relating to fish.
    • A fish dinner.

    2. Of or relating to fishing
    • A fish hook.

    Fishy

    Noun

    1. Diminutive or childish version of fish.


    Adjective

    1. Of, from, or similar to fish
    • What is that fishy odor?

    2. Suspicious, inspiring doubt
    • I don't trust him, his claims seem fishy to me.



    Fish and chips

    1. (Uncountable) A meal of fish fried in batter and served with chips (fried potatoes), popular in the United Kingdom.


    Fish Finger (plural fish fingers)

    1. (British, Australia) A rectangular finger of fish coated in breadcrumbs that is cooked by frying or grilling.


    Synoyms
    Fish stick (US)


    Fish Supper

    Noun phrase

    Fish supper (plural fish suppers)

    1. (British) The dish of fish and chips eaten at supper-time.


    Fish tape

    Noun

    1. A long strip of metal used to 'fish' electrical wiring through a building.


    Starfish

    Etymology - star + fish


    Noun

    Starfish (singular and plural)

    1. Any of various echinoderms eith usually five arms, many of which eat bivalves or corals by everything their stomach.

    source: wiktionary

    Tuesday, September 13, 2011

    Trivia about Malaysia


    1) Where did the handing over of power from the British and the lowering of the Union Jack flag take place?

    ANSWER: ROYAL SELANGOR CLUB PADANG (FIELD)

    The handover of power actually took place at the Royal Selangor Club Padang where the late Tunku Abdul Rahman arrived at 11:58 pm and joined members of the Alliance Party's youth divisions in observing two minutes of darkness. At the stroke of midnight, the Union Jack was lowered and the Malaya flag was raised.


    2) Who is known as 'Bapa Kemerdekaan'?

    ANSWER: TUNKU ABDUL RAHMAN

    The late Tunku Abdul Rahman was known as Bapa Kemerdekaan, or Bapa Malaysia, for his contributions leading up to the declaration of independence. In fact, in 1955, he led a contingent comprising Tun Sir Tan Cheng Lock and Tun V. T. Sambanthan to London to negotiate Malayan independence.


    3) How many times did the late Tunku Abdul Rahman yell 'Merdeka!' at the Merdeka Stadium?

    ANSWER: SEVEN

    After the handing-over ceremony the day before, Tunku Abdul Rahman was presented with the instrument of independence by the Duke of Gloucester, The Queen's representative, before he proceeded to read the Proclamation of Independence. He then led the 20,000-strong crowd who gathered at the newly built Stadium Merdeka to seven chants of 'Merdeka!'


    4) When did the Federation of Malaya officially become Malaysia?

    ANSWER: 1963

    In 1961, Tunku Abdul Rahman contemplated the idea of forming "Malaysia", which would consist of the states ruled by the British colony. However, it wasn't until September 1963 the Federation of Malaya become Malaysia.


    5) In which year did Singapore withdraw from Malaysia?

    ANSWER: 1965

    Originally a part of Malaysia, Singapore was requested to leave the coalition in August 1965 after just two years.


    6) Who is the longest serving Prime Minister of Malaysia?

    ANSWER: TUN DR. MAHATHIR

    Tun Dr. Mahathir was sworn in as the fourth Prime Minister of Malaysia on 16 July 1981, before stepping down on 31 October 2003. With his political career spanning almost 40 years, including the 22 years as the premier of the country, Tun Dr. Mahathir is Malaysia's longest serving Prime Minister. The second longest serving Malaysian Prime Minister is the late Tunku Abdul Rahman (13 years), followed by Tun Abdullah Ahmad Badawi (6 years), Tun Abdul Razak (6 years) and Tun Hussein Onn (5 years).


    7) Each year, Malaysia Day is celebrated on...

    ANSWER: SEPTEMBER 16th

    The forming of Malaysia was planned to occur on 1 June 1963, but was later postponed to 31 August to coincide with the sixth Hari Merdeka. However, due to strong opposition from Indonesia and the Philippines, the Federation of Malaya - at that time consisting of the Malayan states, North Borneo (later renamed Sabah), Sarawak and Singapore - would only officially become known as Malaysia on 16 September 1963.


    8) The national anthem "Negaraku" was originally used as the state anthem of...

    ANSWER: PERAK

    Originally used as the state anthem of Perak, "Negaraku" was selected as the national anthem for the Federation of Malaya after they declared independence from Britain in 1957. The tune was adopted from a popular French tune titled "La Rosalie", composed by renowned lyricist Pierre-Jean de Béranger.


    9) How many stripes are there in the national flag?

    ANSWER: 14

    The original Malayan flag was designed by a 29-year-old architect named Mohamed Hamzah in 1947 as part of a flag-designing competition. The flag was later modified following the formation of Malaysia in 1963, and it comprises of 14 alternating red and white stripes of equal width to represent the 14 Malaysian states.


    10) The national flag of Malaysia is also known as...

    ANSWER: JALUR GEMILANG

    In 1997, the general public was invited to give the Malaysian flag an alternate name. It was Prime Minister Tun Dr. Mahathir who picked the moniker 'Jalur Gemilang', to project "the country's onward drive towards continuous growth and success".

    source: news.malaysia.msn.com
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