Tuesday, March 29, 2011


Word of the Day for Tuesday, March 29, 2011

f bedaub \bih-DOB\, transitive verb:

f 1. To smudge over; to besmear or soil with anything thick and dirty.

2. To overdecorate; to ornament showily or excessively.

f

The copy of the U.S. Constitution that the B.O. is operating from is apparently so bedaubed with socialism that he can't read it any more!

--Spy Maker, JSA's Blog

f The patient's signature is less neat than usual, not only because of his agitated state but also, quite possibly, because the pen is so bedaubed with chocolate that it slips through his fingers.-- Marcel Beyer, "The Karnau Tapes.", Grand Street, Fall 1997

f Only their wagon keeps on rolling, empty, bedaubed with tears, under our windows.-- Laszlo Darvasi and Ivan Sanders, "Stories of Kisses, Stories of Tears.", Grand Street, March 1, 1997

f Bedaub is from be-, "thoroughly" + daub, from Medieval French dauber, "to plaster," perhaps from Old French dauber, "to clothe in white, white-wash, plaster," from Latin dealbare, "to whitewash, to plaster," from de- (intensive prefix) + albus, "white."

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