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Maytag "Danged Agitator"
Merriam-Webster
Word of the Day
June 15
exigent \EK-suh-junt\
DEFINITION adjective
1 :requiring immediate aid or action
2:requiring or calling for much : demanding
EXAMPLES
The computer technician complained that customers' requests were becoming increasingly exigent, bordering on unreasonable.
"Except in exigent circumstances, citizens are supposed to call the police — not take the law into their own hands." — From an editorial by Owen Courrèges in Uptown Messenger, May 14, 2012
DID YOU KNOW?
"This writ seemeth to be called an Exigent because it exacteth the party, that is, requireth his expearance or forthcomming, to answer the lawe." Writer John Cowell, referring in 1607 to a writ summoning a person on pain of outlawry, clearly recognized "exigent" as a derivative of Latin "exigere," which means "to demand." Over the last five centuries we have demanded a lot from "exigent." It has served as a legal term (as in Cowell's quote), as well as a noun meaning either "an emergency" or "an end or extremity." Nowadays, the adjective is seen frequently in legal contexts referring to "exigent circumstances," such as those used to justify a search by police without a warrant.
Word of the Day
June 15
exigent \EK-suh-junt\
DEFINITION adjective
1 :requiring immediate aid or action
2:requiring or calling for much : demanding
EXAMPLES
The computer technician complained that customers' requests were becoming increasingly exigent, bordering on unreasonable.
"Except in exigent circumstances, citizens are supposed to call the police — not take the law into their own hands." — From an editorial by Owen Courrèges in Uptown Messenger, May 14, 2012
DID YOU KNOW?
"This writ seemeth to be called an Exigent because it exacteth the party, that is, requireth his expearance or forthcomming, to answer the lawe." Writer John Cowell, referring in 1607 to a writ summoning a person on pain of outlawry, clearly recognized "exigent" as a derivative of Latin "exigere," which means "to demand." Over the last five centuries we have demanded a lot from "exigent." It has served as a legal term (as in Cowell's quote), as well as a noun meaning either "an emergency" or "an end or extremity." Nowadays, the adjective is seen frequently in legal contexts referring to "exigent circumstances," such as those used to justify a search by police without a warrant.