Wednesday, April 4, 2018

Career

WORD OF THE DAY
career / verb / kuh-REER 
 
Definition
: to go at top speed especially in a headlong manner


Examples
The nervous passengers gripped their seats and exchanged anxious looks as the bus careered down the icy road.


"The year continued apace, as Hollywood careered haphazardly between wildly unexpected successes and 'sure things' that bombed just as dramatically."
— Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post, 29 Dec. 2017


Did You Know?
Chances are you're familiar with the verb careen as used in the sense of "to go forward in a headlong or uncontrolled manner."
Similarly, you likely know the noun career meaning "a profession for which one trains and which is undertaken as a permanent calling."
What you may not know is that the noun career (from Middle French carriere) originally referred to a course or passage (as in "the sun's career across the sky") and to the speed used to traverse such a course. In the context of medieval tournaments, career referred to the charge of mounted knights as well as to the courses they rode.
Verb use eventually developed with a general "to go fast" meaning, and later the more specific sense of moving in a reckless or headlong manner. (If you're wondering, career is not etymologically related to careen; careen has nautical origins, tracing to the Latin word for "hull.")

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