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Subject: nocuous

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The Word of the Day for October 4 is:

nocuous \NAH-kyuh-wus\ adjective
: harmful

Example sentence:
"Poorly tuned engines can put out up to 800 times the nocuous emissions of
properly maintained ones." (PR Newswire, January 7, 1992)

Did you know?
You are probably more familiar with the adjective "innocuous," meaning
"harmless," than with its antonymous relative "nocuous." Both "nocuous" and
"innocuous" have immediate Latin predecessors: "nocuus" and "innocuus." (The
latter combines "nocuus" with the negative prefix "in-.") Both words can also
be traced back to the Latin verb "nocere," meaning "to harm." Other "nocere"
descendants in English include "innocent" and "nocent," which means "harmful."
"Nuisance" (which originally meant, and still can mean, "a harm or injury") is
a more distant relative. "Nocuous" is one of the less common "nocere"
descendants, but it does turn up occasionally.




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