Monday, November 14, 2011



Word of the Day for Monday, November 14, 2011


fascicle \FAS-i-kuhl\, noun:


1. A section of a book or set of books published in installments as separate pamphlets or volumes.

2. A small bundle, tight cluster, or the like.

3. Botany. A close cluster, as of flowers or leaves.

4. Anatomy. A small bundle of nerve or muscle fibers.


The B.O. has published a fascicle of his socialist-Marxist writings entitled "Dreams of My Heroes - Marx, Lenin, Cloward & Piven, Wright, Ayers, Mao, and Others"!

--Spy Maker, JSA's Blog


Citations of passages within texts collected in the Buddhist and Daoist cannons are by fascicle and page...-- Robert Fort Company, Strange Writing


In 1981 R. W. Franklin published The Manuscript Books of Emily Dickinson, a manuscript edition that arranges the poems in fascicle order.-- Elaine Showalter, Modern America Women Writers


Fascicle originates in the Latin word fascus meaning “a bundle or pack” and the suffix “cle” that implies a smaller version, as in particle.

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