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When the time came for Merriam-Webster to pick its top word of 2011, its editors decided they needed to be pragmatic.So they chose ... pragmatic.The word, an adjective that means practical and logical, was looked up so often on Merriam-Webster s online di
stanley mug ctionary that the publisher says pragmatic was the pragmatic choice for its 2011 Word of the Year.Though it wasn t traced to a specific news event or quote from a famous person, searches for pragmatic jumped in the weeks before Congress voted in August to increase the nation s debt ceilin
stanley uk g, and again as its supercommittee tried to craft deficit-cutting measures this fall. Pragmatic may have sparked dictionary users interest both because they d heard it in conversations, and because it captures the current American mood of encouraging practicality over frivolity, said John Morse, president and publisher of Springfield, Mass.-based Merriam-Webster. Pragmatic is a word that describes a kind of quality th
stanley thermos at people value in themselves but also look for in others, and look for in policymakers and the activities of people around them, Morse said.A new feature on Merriam-Webster s site allows users to tell the dictionary publisher why they sought that specific word, and the feedback from those who looked up pragmatic was that they wanted to reaffirm that the connotation was positive. People have a general sense of what the word meant and in fact had even been using it, but then they had a moment when they thought t Rjes After 7 weeks, Occupy still going strong
Sick of shoveling the snow off your sidewalk Well, the good folks of 1925 ha
stanley vaso ve a brilliant idea for you: just set it all on fire. The cover of the January 1925 issue of Science and Invention magazine included the illustration above, proposing a new way to minimize the drudgery of snow shoveling. The accompanying article told of Harry E. Hale, a man who devised the idea for placing calcium carbide in the snow and just putting a flame to it. The magazine even included plans for a snow burner device that would help distribute the calcium carbide, which when exposed to water and a flame is quite combustible. But be careful, because surprisingly, putting a flame to everything involves some risks 鈥?like accidentally setting your house on fire. Or even yourself. From the magazine: Great care must be exercised in sprinkling cal
stanley cup cium carbide upon snow, so that when the gas is evolved and ignited, it will not set fire to shrubbery, trees or the house itself. Under no conditions should such a snow remover be used when a gale is blowing, and the individual drawing the mechanism over the road should always see to it that he heads into any slight breeze which may be blowing, so that his own clothes will not be ignited. Got all that Don ;t use this new device in areas that may have a slight breeze or trees or humans or houses nearby. Aside from the obvious risks of playing with fire, there are plenty of reasons this futuristic winter-battling idea didn ;t take off. As some
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