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chaussure: msg#00017

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Subject: chaussure

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The Word of the Day for October 18 is:

chaussure \shoh-SEWR\ noun
*1 : footgear
2 plural : shoes

Example sentence:
"'I delight in Hessian boots,' said Rebecca. Jos Sedley, who admired his
own legs prodigiously, and always wore this ornamental chaussure, was extremely
pleased at this remark...." (William Makepeace Thackeray, _Vanity Fair_)

Did you know?
What could shoes possibly have in common with a food item made of pizza
dough stuffed with cheese and other fillings? Etymologically, quite a bit.
Retrace the footprints of both "chaussure" and "calzone" (a word that, like the
tasty turnover itself, comes from Italy) and you'll arrive at the Latin word
"calceus," meaning "shoe." "Calzone" is the singular of "calzoni," which means
"pants" (someone must have seen a similarity between the food and the clothing
item). "Calzoni" in turn comes from "calza," which means "stocking" and
descends ultimately from the Latin "calceus." "Chaussure" made its way to
English via Anglo-French rather than Italian (and goes back to an Old French
verb meaning "to put on footwear"), but it too can be traced to "calceus."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.





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