Word | bombinate |
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Date | November 20, 2017 |
Type | verb |
Syllables | BAHM-buh-nayt |
Etymology | Bombinate sounds like it should be the province of bombastic blowhards who bound up and bombard you with droning blather at parties—and it is. The word derives from the Greek word bombos, a term that probably originated as an imitation of a deep, hollow sound (the kind we would likely refer to as "booming" nowadays). Latin speakers rendered the original Greek form as bombus, and that root gave forth a veritable din of raucous English offspring, including not only bombinate, but also bomb, bombard, and bound ("a leap or jump"). However, Latin bombus is not a direct ancestor of bombastic, which traces to bombyx, a Greek name for the silkworm. |
Examples | The only sounds Jared could hear in the office that night were those of his own typing and the air conditioner bombinating. "Black-marketeers and scalpers began buzzing around the theatres, bombinating ceaselessly, … 'Ten-for-five, ten-for five, ten-for-five.'" — Rohinton Mistry, Such a Long Journey, 1991 |
Definition | : to make a sustained deep murmuring, humming, or buzzing sound : buzz, drone |
Tags: wordoftheday::verb
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