Sunday, April 22, 2007

WORD A DAY

INTERPOLATE: 1: to insert (words) into a text or into a conversation 2: to insert between other things or parts

Derived from the Latin interpolare, a verb whose meanings included "to refurbish," "to alter," and also "to falsify," "interoplate" entered English in the 17th century and early on applied to the alteration (and in many case corruption) of texts by insertion of additional material. It's modern use till often suggests the insertion of something extraneous or spurious, as in "she insisted on interpolating her own comments into the official report."

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