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April 29, 2019

Word of the Day: Accolade

2 CQ

Word of the Day : April 29, 2019

accolade \AK-uh-layd\ noun

Definition

1 a : a mark of acknowledgment : award

b : an expression of praise

2 a : a ceremonial embrace

b : a ceremony or salute conferring knighthood

3 : a brace or a line used in music to join two or more staffs carrying simultaneous parts

Did You Know?

Accolade was borrowed into English in the 16th century from French. The French noun, in turn, derives from the verb accoler, which means "to embrace," and ultimately from the Latin term collum, meaning "neck." (Collum is also an ancestor of the English word collar.) When it was first borrowed from French, accolade referred to a ceremonial embrace that once marked the conferring of knighthood. The term was later extended to any ceremony conferring knighthood (such as the more familiar tapping on the shoulders with the flat part of a sword's blade), and eventually extended to honors or awards in general.

Aired April 29, 2019

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