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dunnage: msg#00019

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Subject: dunnage

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The Word of the Day for August 20 is:

dunnage \DUN-ij\ noun
*1 : loose materials used to support and protect cargo in a ship's hold;
also : padding in a shipping container
2 : baggage

Example sentence:
The container and dunnage add almost two more pounds to the total shipping
weight of the items we're sending.

Did you know?
Here's a little quiz for word history buffs. Which of the following
statements is true?

a) "Dunnage" derives from the Low German word "dunne twige," meaning
"brushwood."
b) "Dunnage" derives from "Dunlop," the name of a famous cheese-making town in
Scotland.
c) Etymologists don't know the exact origin of "dunnage."

You've got the goods if you guessed "c." Etymologists have pointed out the
similarity of "dunnage" and "dunne twige," but no one has ever proven the two
are related. Dunlop lent its name to the cheese it's so famous for, but neither
the town nor the cheese has any connection to "dunnage." Truth be told, though
"dunnage" has been with us since the 15th century, its etymological history
remains a mystery.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.





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