Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Sustain


WORD OF THE DAY
sustain \ suh-STAYN \ verb
 
Definition
1: to provide with nourishment
2: keep up, prolong
3a: to support the weight of
3b: prop
3c: to carry or withstand (a weight or pressure)
4a : to buoy up
4b: suffer, undergo
5a: to support as true, legal, or just
5b: to allow or admit as valid


Examples
"It takes a village, a tribe, and a sorority to sustain one another, to flourish and to become an accomplished adult. So sisterhood means inspiring women around me, encouraging each other, crying, laughing, stumbling, and continuing on the path."
— Diana Tofan, Glamour, November 2017


"So one of our main goals was how can we make the game safer, prevent the injury that I sustained and that others sustained, head and neck injuries, from happening without affecting the speed, intensity, heritage or adding any more rules to the game."
— Thomas Smith, quoted on National Public Radio, 6 Jan. 2014


Did You Know?
Sustain, prop, buttress, and brace all mean "to provide support for something or someone." Sustain (from Latin sus-, meaning "up," plus tenēre, meaning "to hold") may suggest constantly holding up or maintaining ("the floor sustains the weight of dozens of bookcases").
Prop often implies a tendency to fall, sink, or recede on the part of the thing being treated—and therefore, a need for strengthening or reinforcing ("propped up the damaged fence with long boards"). Buttress tends to involve strengthening, reinforcing, or stabilizing at a stress point ("buttress the economy").
Brace typically suggests supporting or strengthening so that the thing treated is made firm, unyielding, or rigid against pressure ("brace the shelf with an angle iron").

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