Wednesday, September 21, 2011



Word of the Day for Tuesday, September 20, 2011


acme \ACK-mee\, noun:


The highest point of something; the highest level or degree attainable.



So the B.O. was recently seen with his new copy of Wile E. Coyote's Acme Guide to Government Spending; in it was seen a picture of a rocket aimed at the moon with a phantasm of all wealthy taxpayers (those evil people daring to make over $200,000) strapped to the rocket!

Spy Maker, JSA's Blog


In 1990 Iraq's Saddam Hussein aimed to corner the world oil market through military aggression against Kuwait (also aimed at Saudi Arabia); control of oil, a product of land, represented the acme of his ambitions.-- Richard Rosecrance, The Rise of the Virtual State


So we drove around looking at daffodils and exploring countryside hamlets instead of lakeside tourist traps. These should not be scorned, however, by a browser interested in the curious categories of British humor, one of which achieves a kind of acme in funny postcards on sale in such places. "The weather's here," went one postcard I saw, "I wish you were lovely."-- Joseph Lelyveld, "The Poet's Landscape", New York Times, August 3, 1986


Acme comes from Greek akme, point, highest point, culmination.

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