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coup de grace: msg#00025

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Subject: coup de grace

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The Word of the Day for October 25 is:

coup de grace \koo-duh-GRAHSS\ noun
1 : a deathblow or death shot administered to end the suffering of one
mortally wounded
*2 : a decisive finishing blow, act, or event

Example sentence:
Paul's team led throughout the game, but the coup de grace was his
three-run homer in the eighth inning.

Did you know?
Borrowed directly from French and first appearing in English at the end of
the 17th century, "coup de grace" (literally, a "stroke of grace" or "blow of
mercy") originally referred to a mercy killing, or the act of putting to death
a person or animal who was severely injured and unlikely to recover. (In some
contexts the term is used to refer to the final act of executing a convicted
criminal.) Less than fifty years later, "coup de grace" had come to mean "an
act or event that puts a definite end to something." Other "coup" terms that
have made the jump from French to English include "coup de main," for a sudden,
forceful attack, and "coup d'etat" for a violent overthrow of a government
usually by a small group.





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