I’ve been getting the Word of the Day in my e-mail for about two years now. It’s nice to learn new words, whats so great about this is if you can’t pronounce it in your head there is a link to click on so you can hear it.
Anyway…today’s word made me giggle so I thought I would share it with ya’ll.
Word of the Day
October 31
noun
1 :
a mischievous goblin
2 :
a source of fear, perplexity, or harassment
Max was convinced that hobgoblins had taken over his computer, which was why it was flashing garbled error messages.
"For one thing, the turtle was an enjoyable hobgoblin for the kids who swim in the lake. They used to stand atop the floating dock looking out anxiously to see if the turtle was nearby and it added an element of chills to an otherwise placid swimming experience." — From an article by Scott Gerschwer in the Redding Pilot (Connecticut), September 9, 2010
While a goblin is traditionally regarded in folklore as a grotesque, evil, and malicious creature, a hobgoblin tends to be more about creating mischief. (The character of Puck from Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream might be regarded as one.) First appearing in English in 1530, "hobgoblin" combined "goblin" with "hob," a word meaning "sprite" or "elf" that derived from "Hobbe," a nickname for Robert. "Goblin" derived via Middle English and Medieval Latin from the Greek word "kobalos," meaning "rogue." The American writer Ralph Waldo Emerson famously applied the word’s extended sense in his essay Self-Reliance: "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines."

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