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Maytag "Danged Agitator"
Merriam-Webster
Word of the Day
December 21
wreak \REEK\
DEFINITION verb
1 :to cause the infliction of (vengeance or punishment)
2 :to give free play or course to (malevolent feeling)
3 :bring about, cause
EXAMPLES
The visiting team's skilled receivers wreaked havoc on our defense all night long.
"Emily VanCamp stars [as] a wealthy young woman who returns to her former Hamptons home to wreak vengeance on the people who ruined her family. " — From a review by Glenn Teichman in The Times-Union, September 16, 2011
DID YOU KNOW?
"Wreak" is a venerable word that first appeared in Old English as "wrecan," meaning "to drive, drive out, punish, or avenge." "Wrecan" is related to a number of similar words in the Germanic languages, including Middle Dutch "wreken" ("to punish, avenge"), Old High German "rehhan" ("to avenge"), Old Norse "reka" ("to drive, push, or avenge"), and Gothic "wrikan" ("to persecute"). It may also be related to Latin "urgēre" ("to drive on, urge"), the source of the English verb "urge." In modern English, vengeance is a common object of the verb "wreak," reflecting one of its earlier uses in the sense "to take vengeance for" — as when Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus proclaims "We will solicit heaven, and move the gods / To send down Justice for to wreak our wrongs."
Word of the Day
December 21
wreak \REEK\
DEFINITION verb
1 :to cause the infliction of (vengeance or punishment)
2 :to give free play or course to (malevolent feeling)
3 :bring about, cause
EXAMPLES
The visiting team's skilled receivers wreaked havoc on our defense all night long.
"Emily VanCamp stars [as] a wealthy young woman who returns to her former Hamptons home to wreak vengeance on the people who ruined her family. " — From a review by Glenn Teichman in The Times-Union, September 16, 2011
DID YOU KNOW?
"Wreak" is a venerable word that first appeared in Old English as "wrecan," meaning "to drive, drive out, punish, or avenge." "Wrecan" is related to a number of similar words in the Germanic languages, including Middle Dutch "wreken" ("to punish, avenge"), Old High German "rehhan" ("to avenge"), Old Norse "reka" ("to drive, push, or avenge"), and Gothic "wrikan" ("to persecute"). It may also be related to Latin "urgēre" ("to drive on, urge"), the source of the English verb "urge." In modern English, vengeance is a common object of the verb "wreak," reflecting one of its earlier uses in the sense "to take vengeance for" — as when Shakespeare's Titus Andronicus proclaims "We will solicit heaven, and move the gods / To send down Justice for to wreak our wrongs."