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Maytag "Danged Agitator"
Merriam-Webster
Word of the Day
December 17
railleryA \RAIL-uh-ree\
DEFINITION noun
1 :good-natured ridicule : banter
2 :jest
EXAMPLES
New workers at the plant can expect to endure some raillery and joshing from the old-timers.
"Scioli, a floorsweep, another barber and a man on the sofa called Buddy Lite are carrying on a conversation that bounces around like a Wham-O Super Ball, touching on conspiracy theories, 20th-century pop culture, UFOs, lewd raillery and an eerie tale concerning a caribou walking backward via supernatural forces." — From an article by Luke Jerrod Kummer in The Washington Post, January 7, 2011
DID YOU KNOW?
"Raillery" is the anglicized form of the French word "raillerie," which stems from the Middle French verb "railler," meaning "to mock." "Railler," which probably comes from Old French "reillier" ("to growl" or "to mutter") and ultimately from Late Latin "ragere" ("to neigh"), also gave us our verb "rail." But "rail" and "raillery" are quite different in tone. "Rail" means "to revile or scold in harsh, insolent, or abusive language," whereas "raillery" usually suggests cutting wit that pokes fun good-naturedly.
Word of the Day
December 17
railleryA \RAIL-uh-ree\
DEFINITION noun
1 :good-natured ridicule : banter
2 :jest
EXAMPLES
New workers at the plant can expect to endure some raillery and joshing from the old-timers.
"Scioli, a floorsweep, another barber and a man on the sofa called Buddy Lite are carrying on a conversation that bounces around like a Wham-O Super Ball, touching on conspiracy theories, 20th-century pop culture, UFOs, lewd raillery and an eerie tale concerning a caribou walking backward via supernatural forces." — From an article by Luke Jerrod Kummer in The Washington Post, January 7, 2011
DID YOU KNOW?
"Raillery" is the anglicized form of the French word "raillerie," which stems from the Middle French verb "railler," meaning "to mock." "Railler," which probably comes from Old French "reillier" ("to growl" or "to mutter") and ultimately from Late Latin "ragere" ("to neigh"), also gave us our verb "rail." But "rail" and "raillery" are quite different in tone. "Rail" means "to revile or scold in harsh, insolent, or abusive language," whereas "raillery" usually suggests cutting wit that pokes fun good-naturedly.