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Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 07, 2009 is:

sanction • \SANK-shun\  • verb
1 : to make valid or binding usually by a formal procedure (as ratification) *2 : to give effective or authoritative approval or consent to

Example sentence:
The parks committee was willing to sanction the consumption but not the sale of alcohol on park premises.

Did you know?
"Sanction" can also be a noun meaning "authoritative approval" or "a coercive measure." The noun entered English first, in the 15th century, and originally referred to a formal decree, especially an ecclesiastical decree. (The Latin "sancire," meaning "to make holy," is an ancestor.) By the end of the 17th century, the meaning of the noun "sanction" had extended to refer to both a means of enforcing a law (a sense that in the 20th century we began using especially for economic penalties against nations violating international law) and the process of formally approving or ratifying a law. When the verb "sanction" appeared in the 18th century, it had to do with ratifying laws as well. Soon it had also acquired an additional, looser sense: "to approve."

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.

Word of the Day

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Themes and Topics PDF Print
There is plenty of Kitchen Table Lingo grouped around familiar themes. BUt you will have to look at the book to check out what they mean. For example:

KTL for Architects
KTL for architects and property types


Kitchroom: “Imagine entertaining your guests in this delightful kitchroom.”

Justin: “When the justins turn up escort them to the designer sink set in the granate work surface.”

Gizzer: “The gizzer is by far the finest feature in this palatial spread.”

Floordrobe: “All our studio flats come with fully equipped, state of the art floordrobes.”

Cruft: “ You have to expect some cruft work on a Friday afternoon.”

Cornish Thatch: “Following the financial crisis Cotswold villages are full of Cornish thatch.”

p.s there is also a word meaning a hotchpotch of architectural styles. Can you find it? Bocky

Credit Crunch Bollotics

If the credit crunch is leaving you lost for words maybe some Kitchen Table Lingo can help you make up the deficit...

Bongogobble: sales techniques for toxic financial instruments

Bocky: broken economy

Confuzzled: can’t make out what’s going on in the markets

Swoop: soup served to out of work hedgies

Testicualte: Alastiar darlings’s favourite way of talking

Bollotics: how investment bankers try to justify their bonuses

Scrungle: your mood when your pension drops out of sight

Lintox: an investor in an Icelandic bank

HoogellyKTL Imports

Kitchen Table Lingo contains many words whose roots lie outside Britain but which have been adapted – and sometimes changed beyond recognition – for local use.

Amongst these are foshel (shovel in food), muti (medicine), futi (more of), miningi (plenty), all of which are derived from Zambia. Howzit (hello) comes from Southern Africa

We have jojo (a fool) and maga (a dupe) from Nigeria, oldtama (a distinguished and handsome older man) from Ghana.

Hoogelly (cosy) comes from Denmark, picong (a liar) from Trinidad contributed by Sir Trevor Macdonald, jargoon harry (a pimply face) which may have Yiddish roots; kana (food) and pindoo (a country bumpkin), which are probably Punjabi and were contributed by Meera Syal plus peshawar (dust from naan bread). Oom-phoo (unwell) comes from Peru and gum-gum (remote control) from Cantonese.

There are, also, unsurprisingly a whole cohort of words which have Irish and Welsh origin.