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Locofoco Group Word Radical Democrats Roosevelt Member Party

Locofoco is a noun referring to a member of a radical group of New York Democrats from 1835, or a member of the Democratic Party. It originally also referred to a type of self-igniting match.

Locofoco es un sustantivo que se refiere a un miembro de un grupo radical de Demócratas neoyorquinos de 1835, o a un miembro del Partido Demócrata. Originalmente también se refería a un tipo de cerilla de autoinflamación.

Word Locofoco
Date December 6, 2007
Type noun
Syllables loh-kuh-FOH-koh
Etymology "Locofoco" burned brightest in 19th-cenutry America, where it designated a new type of self-igniting match or cigar capable of being lit by friction on a hard surface. The word is believed to combine the adjective "locomotive" (which was commonly taken to mean "self-propelled," though "loco" actually means "place," not "self," in Latin) and the Italian word for "fire," "fuoco." The political meaning of "Locofoco" is a story in itself. In 1835, a group of radical Democrats brought locofoco matches to one of their meetings after hearing that their adversaries were plotting to disrupt the meeting by putting out the gas lights. The room did indeed go black but was soon relit, thus earning the group its name.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Examples "It might be said that Roosevelt was the greatest locofoco since Andrew Jackson." (Robert E. Sherwood, Roosevelt and Hopkins)
Definition 1 : a member of a radical group of New York Democrats organized in 1835 in opposition to the regular party organization

2 : a member of the Democratic party of the United States

Tags: wordoftheday::noun

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