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mattockmat‧tock /ˈmætək/ noun [countable] a tool used for digging, with a long handle and a metal blade Old English mættoc, probably from Vulgar Latin *matteuca "club," related to Latin mateola, a kind of mallet (see mace (n.1)), but this is not certain, and synonymous Russian motyka, Lithuanian matikkas suggest other possibilities. OED says similar words in Welsh and Gaelic are from English. - He was half laughing—from shock—when she suddenly seized a mattock from the - “The rest of that bit got bulldozed last week, but they left a patch round | |
MillennialsFrom 1992 used as a generational name for those born in the mid-1980s and thus coming of age around the year 2000. | |
mustelid"a mammal of the weasel family (Mustelidae),
distinguished by having a long body, short legs, and musky scent glands
under the tail." Etymology: 1910, from Modern Latin Mustelidae, taken as a genus name by Linnaeus (1758), from Latin mustela "weasel," possibly related to mus "mouse" (see mouse (n.)). Tucker tentatively suggests *mus-ters-la "mouse harrier" and Klein notes that the weasel was identified in antiquity as "the catcher of mice."Example: We could be looking at a rat, or a fox, except both of those would’ve probably | |