Word of the Day
for Saturday,
March 9, 2013
Linchpin \LINCH-pin\, noun:
1. something that holds the various elements of a complicated
structure together: The
monarchy was the linchpin of the nation's traditions and society.
2. a pin inserted through the end of an axletree to keep the wheel on.
2. a pin inserted through the end of an axletree to keep the wheel on.
Sometimes I feel if I
lost it I would lose the linchpin
of my life. But of course I remember that in one way I lost the linchpin
years before, not long after I acquired the datebook. It was not an even swap.
-- Anna Quindlen, One True Thing, 2010
-- Anna Quindlen, One True Thing, 2010
… let's not forget who
started the whole thing, who was the first one to go out of his element and
drown, whose watery death removed the linchpin,
the foundation-stone, and began the family's long slide, which ended up by
dumping me in the pit: Francisco de Gama, Epifania's defunct spouse.
-- Salman Rushdie, The Moor's Last Sigh, 1995
-- Salman Rushdie, The Moor's Last Sigh, 1995
Linchpin, a portmanteau of lynch
and pin,
comes from the Old English lynis.
While the literal sense entered English in the late fourteenth century, the
figurative sense has supplanted the original sense in most contexts since the
1950s.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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