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delve: msg#00011

culture.language.word-of-the-day

Subject: delve

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The Word of the Day for May 12 is:

delve \DELV\ verb
1 : to dig or labor with or as if with a spade
*2 : to make a careful or detailed search for information

Example sentence:
There might be a deeper reason why Bruce decided to quit his job, but I
don?t think we should delve into it.

Did you know?
We must dig deep into the English language's past to find the origins of
"delve." The verb originated in 9th century Old English as "delfan" and is
related to the Old High German word "telban," meaning "dig." For some 400
years, there was only delving -- no digging -- because "dig" didn't exist until
the 13th century. Is the phrase "dig and delve" (as in the line "eleven,
twelve, dig and delve," from the nursery rhyme that begins "one, two, buckle my
shoe") redundant? Not necessarily. According to the _Oxford English
Dictionary_, in some local uses as recently as the late 19th century, "dig" was
the term for working with a mattock (a tool similar to an adze or a pick),
while "delve" was reserved for using a spade.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.





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