Words and Numbers
» The plain black dickey worn with a clerical collar by some clergymen is called a rabat.
» The female name Vanessa is Greek for "butterfly."
» Rulership by words is called logocracy.
» In Australian slang, to be “spliced” means to be married.
» The final word given at the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee in 2000 was "demarche," a noun meaning a course of action or a diplomatic representation or protest; in 1999, the final word was "logorrhea," a noun meaning an excessive use of words.
» Secure, relatively high-yielding stocks came to be called blue chips, a term taken from the game of poker, where blue chips are more valuable than white or red chips.
» In British English, a booger is called a "bogey" or "bogie."
» Senectitude is another word for old age.
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