Word of the
Day for Friday 3rd January 2014
Oeillade \œ-YAD\, noun:
an
amorous glance; ogle.
"Please?"
Significant pause and oeillade. Eugene thought of his hopes with
Rapunzel, of badly wanting to start a clean slate, baleful of all the miseries Laura
had caused whenever they had resumed even a friendship...
-- Alexander Theroux, Laura Warholic, or, The Sexual Intellectual,
2007
Another
coarse laugh, and another oeillade to the Princesses, showed
me clearly enough how the Queen construed my relationship to Anne of England.
-- Louis Auchincloss, Exit Lady Masham, 1983
-- Louis Auchincloss, Exit Lady Masham, 1983
Oeillade entered English in the late
1500’s from the French oeillide, and ultimately comes from the
Latin ocuclus meaning "eye."
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
No comments:
Post a Comment