If you're a fan of words, you probably already know about A Word A Day. If you don't know Anu Garg's delightful daily offering, go HERE to find out more and to grab a free subscription. He usually chooses the words for a week with some sort of theme -- which the reader is invited to guess. This week's words were: drama queen, illiterati, dastard,
The dome of this church in Asheville is imbricated.
So are these lilac shingles on this fancy Victorian bed and breakfast just outside Burnsville.
More Asheville imbrication -- on the pink marble City Building.
Do you know about A Word A Day? Free, every day, a new word in your email.
Imbricate was the word a few days ago and the following is copied from the email I received.
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imbricate
PRONUNCIATION:
(adj: IM-bri-kit, -kayt; verb: IM-bri-kayt)
MEANING:
adjective: Having overlapping edges, as tiles on a roof or scales on a fish. verb tr., intr.: To overlap as roof tiles or fish scales.
ETYMOLOGY:
From Latin imbricare (to cover with pantiles: semicylindrical tiles), from imbrex (pantile), from imber (rain).
USAGE:
"In that region [Skopje], yesterday as today, allegiance to the Church was more than a merely confessional matter. It was, and is, imbricated with a series of loyalties to nation, region, and even party."
Christopher Hitchens; The Missionary Position: Mother Teresa in Theory and Practice; Verso Books; 1995.
I love this site. Back when I was writing IN A DARK SEASON with the character of the erudite and verbose Professor, I kept a running list of the WaD words and tried to use as many as possible.
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Below, the greenhouse snake basks in her imbricate beauty.