Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Kindred

WORD OF THE DAY
 
KINDRED \ KIN-drud \ adjective
 
Definition
1a: of a similar nature or character
1b: like
 
2: of the same ancestry
 
Examples
Jessica found a kindred songwriting spirit in Brigid, and soon the two women were collaborating on a new album.

"The boys were well-behaved and inseparable. Kindred souls, as preschoolers they spoke to each other in 'twin language,' their mother said, using words that no one else understood."
— Clare Ansberry, Wall Street Journal, March 3, 2015
 
Did You Know?
If you believe that advice and relatives are inseparable, the etymology of kindred will prove you right. Kindred comes from a combination of kin (a word for one's relatives) and the Old English word ræden ("condition"), which itself comes from the verb ræden, meaning "to advise." Kindred entered English as a noun first, in the 12th century. That noun, which can refer to a group of related individuals or to one's own relatives, gave rise to the adjective kindred in the 14th century.

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