logo       

ramify: msg#00018

culture.language.word-of-the-day

Subject: ramify

****************************************************************
It's National Poetry Month! Set your own poetry in motion
with Merriam-Webster's Rhyming Dictionary.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/cgi-bin/book.pl?rhym_pbk.htm&6/
****************************************************************

The Word of the Day for April 18 is:

ramify \RAM-uh-fye\ verb
intransitive verb
1 : to split up into branches or constituent parts
*2 : to send forth branches or extensions
transitive verb
1 : to cause to branch
2 : to separate into divisions

Example sentence:
"The bus system ramified so widely that it became possible to travel to
Athens in a single day from a very large proportion of the villages of
Greece...." (William H. McNeill, _The Metamorphosis of Greece Since World War
II_)

Did you know?
"Ramify" has been part of English since the 15th century and is an
offshoot of the Latin word for "branch," which is "ramus." English acquired
several scientific words from "ramus," including "biramous" ("having two
branches"). Another English word derived from "ramus" is the now obsolete
"ramage," meaning "untamed" or "wild." Like "haggard" (our Word of the Day on
April 12), "ramage" originated in falconry -- it was originally used of young
hawks that had begun to fly from branch to branch in trees. "Ramify" started
out as a scientific word, at first referring to branching parts of plants and
trees and later to veins and nerves. But it soon branched out into
non-scientific and even figurative uses, as in "ideas that ramify throughout
society."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.






<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Google Custom Search

News | FAQ | advertise