Word of the Day
for Friday,
March 8, 2013
Scupper \SKUHP-er\, verb:
1. Informal.
to prevent from happening or succeeding; ruin; wreck.
2. Military. to overwhelm; surprise and destroy, disable, or massacre.
2. Military. to overwhelm; surprise and destroy, disable, or massacre.
But what if Ira had
tried to back out, threatening to scupper
the entire thing?
-- Mark Zuehlke, Hands Like Clouds, 2000
-- Mark Zuehlke, Hands Like Clouds, 2000
Last summer, Edward
DeMarco, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac's regulator, scuppered
the White House's plan to write down principal for half a million homeowners
who'd fallen behind on payments, listing among his reasons that it would
encourage others to stop paying.
-- Tad Friend, "Home Economics," The New Yorker, Feb. 4, 2013
-- Tad Friend, "Home Economics," The New Yorker, Feb. 4, 2013
Scupper first entered English as a nautical noun in the late 1400s. The
verb senses did not enter English until the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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