Tuesday, October 16, 2018

Nary

WORD OF THE DAY

nary / adjective / NAIR-ee

Definition
1: not any
2: not one

Examples
"I must have it back as I have nary other copy."
— Flannery O'Connor, letter, 1961

"Under harsh fluorescent hangar lights that would make even a brand-new Mercedes appear to have been painted with a broom, Symmetry reveals nary ripple nor flaw."
— Stephan Wilkinson, Popular Science, March 2004

Did You Know?
Nary, most often used in the phrase "nary a" to mean "not a single," is an 18th-century alteration of the adjectival phrase "ne'er a," in which ne'er is a contraction of never.
That contraction dates to the 13th century, and the word it abbreviates is even older: never can be traced back to Old English nǣfre, a combination of ne ("not" or "no") and ǣfre ("ever").
Old English ne also combined with ā ("always") to give us , the Old English ancestor of our no.
Ā, from the Latin aevum ("age" or "lifetime") and Greek aiōn ("age"), is related to the English adverb aye, meaning "always, continually, or ever."
This aye (pronounced to rhyme with say) is unrelated to the more familiar aye (pronounced to rhyme with sigh) used as a synonym of yes.

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