Wed Nov 07 11:00:34 PST 2018






apoplectic







apoplectic \ap-uh-plek-tik\, adjective












1. Intense enough to threaten or cause a stroke.






2. Of or pertaining to apoplexy.






3. Having or inclined to apoplexy.






noun:






1. A person having or predisposed to apoplexy.






When Abie used to shout, Rebecca always used to make a joke that he was having one of his apoplectic fits.






-- Alan Grayson, Mile End






...four years, one recession and a host of battles ? over financial regulation and the nomination of Elizabeth Warren, over Dodd-Frank and the Buffett Rule ? have taken their toll. Some on Wall Street are apoplectic. One former supporter, Dan Loeb, compared Obama to Nero; the president?s enemies insinuated worse.






-- Nicholas Confessore, "Obama?s Not-So-Hot Date With Wall Street", The New York Times Magazine, May 2, 2012






Apoplectic stems from the Greek word apoplektik�s which meant "pertaining to stroke". It literally meant "struck down".
















agita







agita \AJ-i-tuh\, noun












1. Agitation; anxiety.






2. Heartburn; indigestion.






And my being named after the patron saint of love, St. Valentine, when I've had nothing but agita in romance just makes it more painfully ironic.






-- Rosanna Chiofalo, Bellla Fortuna














I'm eighty-two years old and I don't need this agita in my life!






-- Rita Lakin, Getting Old Is Murder










Agita was coined in America in the 1980s. It comes from the Italian word agitare meaning "to bother."
















mucro







mucro \MYOO-kroh\, noun








A short point projecting abruptly, as at the end of a leaf.






The outward surface of it was extremely slippery, and the mucro, or point, so very cold withal, that upon endeavoring to take hold of it, it glided through the fingers like a smooth piece of ice.






-- Richard Hughes, Spectator, No. 281










Munro holds that it must be "from the mucro or point of the stylus setting a mark at each end of any length you wish to note."






-- William Ellery Leonard, De Rerum Natura










Mucro stems from Latin word mucro meaning "sharp point."











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