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legerdemain [lej-er-duh-meyn]

noun:
1 sleight of hand
2 a display of skill or adroitness

Examples:

In Open Eye's itsy-bitsy performing space, Sass has constructed a set filled with tricks and gimmicks: old-fashioned bulletin boards animate themselves, objects move on their own, characters appear from and disappear to unexpected places. Some of the legerdemain is how'd-they-do-that pieces of stage magic, while other bits are visual distraction. (Dominic P Papatola , Theater review: These 'Red Shoes' can't be tied with a bow. And that's a good thing , Twin Cities, March 2017)

Poirot reacts to all this legerdemain with a disbelieving scowl, even when he can't fully explain the hair-raising tricks his eyes and ears are playing on him. (Justin Chang, Review: With 'A Haunting in Venice,' Kenneth Branagh's Agatha Christie series hits its stride , Los Angeles Times, September 2023)

The magician on stage is all-powerful to the mesmerised audience, pulling the rabbit out of his hat, sawing pretty ladies in half, making members in the audience disappear and a host of other tricks in his legerdemain (Ravi Shankar, Why poll Houdini Prashant Kishor isn't a neta, The New Indian Express, February 2022)

Every little while he would bend down and take hold of the edge of the blanket with the extreme tips of his fingertips, as if to show there was no deception - chattering away all the while - but always, just as I was expecting to see a wonder feat of legerdemain, he would let go the blanket and rise to explain further. (Mark Twain, A Tramp Abroad)

He already sang as nobody on this earth had ever sung before; he practised ventriloquism and gave displays of legerdemain so extraordinary that the caravans returning to Asia talked about it during the whole length of their journey. (Gaston Leroux, The Phantom of the Opera)


(click to enlarge)

Origin:

early 15c, 'conjuring tricks, sleight of hand,' from Old French léger de main 'quick of hand,' literally 'light of hand.' Léger 'light' in weight (Old French legier, 12c) is from Latin levis 'light' (from PIE root legwh- 'not heavy, having little weight'). Main 'hand' is from Latin manus (from PIE root man- 'hand'). (Online Etymology Dictionary)

In Middle French, folks who were clever enough to fool others with fast-fingered illusions were described as leger de main, literally 'light of hand'. English speakers condensed that phrase into a noun when they borrowed it in the 15th century and began using it as an alternative to the older sleight of hand. (That term for dexterity or skill in using one's hands makes use of sleight, an old word from Middle English that derives from an Old Norse word meaning 'sly.') In modern times, a feat of legerdemain can even be accomplished without using your hands, as in, for example, 'an impressive bit of financial legerdemain.' (Merriam-Webster)

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Ladramhaiola (Irish Gaelic): a day that was frittered away, despite one's planning to get a lot done
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Tuesday, Feb. 25, 2025

Levity (noun)
lev·i·ty [lev-i-tee]


noun Plural levities.
1. lightness of mind, character, or behavior; lack of appropriate seriousness or earnestness.
2. an instance or exhibition of this.
3. fickleness.
4. lightness in weight.

Related Words
frivolity, giddiness, hilarity, mirth, repartee

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com
Synonyms
1, 2. frivolity, flippancy, triviality, giddiness.

Origin: 1555–65; < Latin levitas lightness, frivolity, equivalent to levi ( s ) light + -tas -ty

Example Sentences
This isn’t just the levity viewers are seeking, it’s the community they require.
From Salon

Words outlast life, so I’m just determined to find my joy through the page, and bring as much light and levity to this burning world.
From Los Angeles Times

I really love music and film because it adds a levity and an emotional layer that not only lifts the audience in the story but the crew when we’re making the film.
From Los Angeles Times

Love is a killer in the new Valentine’s Day horror flick “Heart Eyes” — but Gigi Zumbado brings levity and charm to this cheeky, yet gruesome movie.
From Los Angeles Times

But that levity and absurdity was really the show’s superpower at a time when a lot of the other buzzy comedy shows are making us cringe or cry.
From Los Angeles Times
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limn [lim]

verb:

1. to draw or paint on a surface
2. to outline in clear sharp detail
3. to describe
4. to illuminate manuscripts

examples:

It is probably a bit too harsh to call those upset by The Baltimore Sun's recent use of the word limn in a headline word-haters, but I assume they'd be even more offended by the fancy word misologists. Boston Globe Ideas section, Erin McKean, 2010

She lay nude atop the featherbed, the soft curves of her young body limned in the faint glow from the hearth.
A Clash of Kings, George R.R. Martin

Look when a painter would surpass the life / In limning out a well-proportioned steed.... William Shakespeare, "Venus and Adonis"

Now light /sits in chairs, /lims / the wooden / filigree / milled to indicate / leisure. Rae Armantrout, "Lasting"

origins:
Limn traces to the Anglo-French verb aluminer and ultimately to the Latin illuminare, which means "to illuminate." Its use as an English verb dates from the days of Middle English; at first, limn referred to the action of illuminating (that is, decorating) medieval manuscripts with gold, silver, or brilliant colors.

illuminated manuscript
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Today's word is brought to you by [personal profile] dine 

"Latibulate" is a verb that means to hide in a corner to escape reality or until conditions improve:

Definition

To hide in a corner in an attempt to escape reality or until conditions improve

Pronunciation

In British English, it is pronounced "La tibulate" with four syllables. In the U.S., it is often pronounced similarly to "populate".

Etymology

The word comes from the Latin word latibulāri. The only known use of the verb is in 1623, in the writing of Henry Cockeram, a lexicographer
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Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2024

Lackadaisical (adjective)
lackadaisical [ lak-uh-dey-zi-kuhl ]


adjective
1. without interest, vigor, or determination; listless; lethargic: a lackadaisical attempt.
2. lazy; indolent: a lackadaisical fellow.

OTHER WORDS FROM LACKADAISICAL
lack·a·dai·si·cal·ly, adverb
lack·a·dai·si·cal·ness, noun

WORDS RELATED TO LACKADAISICAL
lazy, passive, halfhearted, listless, lethargic, laid-back, apathetic, abstracted, daydreaming, disinterested, dreamy, dull, enervated, idle, inattentive, indolent, inert, languid, languishing, limp

See synonyms for: lackadaisical / lackadaisically / lackadaisicalness on Thesaurus.com

OTHER WORDS FOR LACKADAISICAL
2. slothful, unambitious, idle.

Origin: 1760–70; lackadais(y) (variant of lackaday) + -ical

Example Sentences
Their defense is lackadaisical, their forwards frequently inept.
From The Daily Beast

Now is not the time for lackadaisical, quiet and deferential diplomacy.
From The Daily Beast

That's the impression you get with their lackadaisical approach to filling the job.
From The Daily Beast

The horsemeat scandal has shown just how lackadaisical we are toward the content of processed food here.
From The Daily Beast

She rejected that the idea it was lackadaisical policing that is responsible for such crimes.
From The Daily Beast
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Today's word is brought to you by [personal profile] prettygoodword 
~~~

logodaedalus (log-uh-DEE-duh-luhs) - n., a wordsmith, someone who is skilled at using or coining words.


Not a common word, though see also logodaedaly, the "arbitrary or capricious coinage of words," to which I say coining words is a perfectly cromulent thing to do. Coined in this case from Greek roots logos, word + either daidalos, skillful or Daedalus the Greek mythological figure whose name means skillful.

---L
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If you’re the planning type, your vacations may begin to feel so structured that you need a do-nothing holiday by the time you return. Sound familiar? It may be time to consider the Swedish practice of “lagom.”

 

The word, pronounced lah-gom, means “not too much, not too little.” When applied to a trip, it means striking the ideal balance of exercise, adventure, food and relaxation.

Source: The Swedish secret to the perfectly balanced vacation, from The Washington Post

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Lavalava - noun.

Continuing with interesting names for skirts, I present the lavalava which is a simple wraparound skirt worn by men, women, and children. Found in Polynesian places like Samoa and Tonga, contemporary lavalavas come in a variety of fabrics and some may even contain pockets.

USMC-100414-M-4787A-004.jpg
By Pfc. Vanessa M. American Horse - This image was released by the United States Marine Corps with the ID 100414-M-4787A-004 .

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luminary, n.

lu·​mi·​nary ˈlü-mə-ˌner-ē

1: a person of prominence or brilliant achievement

a literary luminary
a luminary in the medical profession

2: a body that gives light

especially : one of the celestial bodies

skywatchers … will see one more bright luminary below Orion and Canis Major —
Martin Ratcliffe


Did you know?


As, dare we say, leading lights of the dictionary game, we're here to brighten your day with the 411 on luminary. This word has been casting its glow in English since the 15th century, and it traces back to the Latin word lumen, meaning "light." Other lumen descendants in English include illuminate ("to light up"), luminous ("emitting light"), phillumenist ("one who collects matchbooks or matchbox labels"), and bioluminescence ("the emission of light from living organisms").

Recent Examples on the Web

On Thursday, May 23, luminaries from the world of politics, cultures and the arts arrived for an official State Dinner at the residence of President Joe Biden and First Lady Dr. Jill Biden.

— Lawrence Yee, Peoplemag, 24 May 2024

Film industry luminaries have paid fulsome homage to Indian DoP Santosh Sivan, this year’s recipient of the annual Pierre Angénieux ExcelLens in Cinematography award conferred during the Cannes Film Festival.

— Naman Ramachandran, Variety, 21 May 2024

One of America’s top-tier classical pianists, Jeremy Denk has toured the world for almost three decades as a soloist and as a collaborator with violinist Joshua Bell and other luminaries.

— Beth Wood, San Diego Union-Tribune, 19 May 2024

Alongside former general manager Dayton Moore and manager Ned Yost once again were such luminaries as Eric Hosmer, Lorenzo Cain, Mike Moustakas and current team captain Salvador Perez — the only one from that august group who’s still playing in 2024

. — Jaylon Thompson, Kansas City Star, 18 May 2024


Etymology

Middle English luminarye, from Anglo-French & Late Latin; Anglo-French luminaire light, luminary, from Late Latin luminaria, plural of luminare lamp, heavenly body, from Latin, window, from lumin-, lumen light; akin to Latin lucēre to shine

First Known Use

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1


(Source: merriam-webster.com)

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[personal profile] sallymn
Sunday Word: Lugubrious

lugubrious [loo-goo-bree-uhs, -gyoo-]

adjective:
mournful, dismal, or gloomy, especially in an affected, exaggerated, or unrelieved manner


(click to enlarge)


Examples:

The sole protagonist is yet another of Wächtler's lugubrious loners in exile from the realm of fantastical or folkloric creatures. This time around, it is a world-worn dragon with ratty locks and a straw hat who perches and broods or flaps morosely to and fro against a desolate backdrop of craggy wasteland and roiling skies. ( Caoimhín Mac Giolla Léith, From a World-Worn Dragon to a Shy Troll: Artist Peter Wächtler's Lugubrious Loners, Frieze, January 2024)

There's a kind of mopey cinema, plodding and lugubrious, that's often mistaken for artistic sensitivity in creating in-depth character studies and exploring important issues. (Eileen Jones, Review: 'My Policeman' Turns a Gripping Real-Life Gay Love Story Into a Dreary Film, The Wire, November 2022)

With similar insight, Mellow describes how, on unexpected occasions, the child would declaim a line from Richard III: "Stand back, my Lord, and let the coffin pass!" This, Mellow maintains, proves that the young Hawthorne "had a dramatic instinct for the lugubrious." ( Sara L Frankel, An Instinct for the Lugubrious, The Harvard Crimson, October 1980)

The dogs dashed on, but at the threshold suddenly stopped and snarled, and then, simultaneously lifting their noses, began to howl in most lugubrious fashion. (Bram Stoker, Dracula)

Billy sang a lugubrious song of many stanzas about a cowboy, the refrain of which was, "Bury me out on the lone pr-rairie." (Jack London, The Valley of the Moon)

A lugubrious quail doled forth a grating, dismal note at long but measured intervals, offending the ear and depressing the heart. (Charles Reade, It is Never Too Late to Mend)

Origin:

'expressing or characterized by sadness or mournfulness; doleful,' c. 1600, formerly also lugubrous, from -ous + Latin lugubris 'mournful, doleful, pertaining to mourning,' from lugere 'to mourn,' from PIE root leug- 'to break; to cause pain' (source also of Greek lygros 'mournful, sad,' Sanskrit rujati 'breaks, torments,' Lettish lauzit 'to break the heart') (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Lugubrious is the sole surviving English offspring of Latin lugēre, meaning 'to mourn.' Its closest kin, luctual, an adjective meaning 'sad' or 'sorrowful,' was put to rest centuries ago. (Merriam-Webster)

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liminality

[ lim-uh-nal-i-tee ]
noun Anthropology.

the transitional period or phase of a rite of passage, during which the participant lacks social status or rank, remains anonymous, shows obedience and humility, and follows prescribed forms of conduct, dress, etc.

Today's word is brought to you by [personal profile] amaebi --many thanks :)
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Tuesday, Jan. 9, 2024

Listless (adjective)
list·less [list-lis]


adjective
1. having or showing little or no interest in anything; languid; spiritless; indifferent: a listless mood; a listless handshake.

OTHER WORDS FROM LISTLESS
list·less·ly, adverb
list·less·ness, noun

WORDS RELATED TO LISTLESS
drowsy, dull, inert, lackadaisical, languid, leaden, lethargic, lifeless, lukewarm, passive, sleepy, sluggish, absent, abstracted, apathetic, blah, bored, careless, dormant, dreamy

See synonyms for listless on Thesaurus.com
SYNONYM STUDY FOR LISTLESS
See indifference.

ORIGIN: First recorded in 1400–50, listless is from the late Middle English word lystles. See list, -less

HOW TO USE LISTLESS IN A SENTENCE
Jam is there because of the sudden death of her boyfriend, Reeve, and the listless state of major depression it throws her into.
THE THRILLING, TRAUMATIC LIVES OF TEENS: THE FALL’S BEST YA FICTION | HUGH RYAN | NOVEMBER 8, 2014 | THE DAILY BEAST

As I turned, my listless glance included the man below in the churchyard.
READ ‘THE KING IN YELLOW,’ THE ‘TRUE DETECTIVE’ REFERENCE THAT’S THE KEY TO THE SHOW | ROBERT W. CHAMBERS | FEBRUARY 20, 2014 | THE DAILY BEAST

The New Republic enters the fray on the most important discussion of all time: Why do young people seem so listless?
GENERATION MEME | JUSTIN GREEN | OCTOBER 15, 2012 | THE DAILY BEAST

The White House response to Tuesday's results has been listless at best.
GETTING OBAMA BACK IN THE GAME | RICHARD WOLFFE | NOVEMBER 5, 2009 | THE DAILY BEAST

Instantly Eudora, who had seemed so listless, woke up with all the hospitality of her Southern nature roused to action.
THE CROMPTONS | MARY J. HOLMES
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[personal profile] sallymn

longueur [lawng-gur, long-; French lawn-]

noun:
a long and boring passage in a literary work, drama, musical composition, or the like, usually used in plural
a period of boredom or dullness

Examples:

I grew up reading many of the novelists that Walsh meets, so his subject should interest me, but I found myself bored. I am not saying that Walsh cannot be funny - he has a cutting portrait of Rupert Murdoch - but his humor only punctuates the longueur (Gustav Jonsson, Dimming London's literary lights, Washington Examiner, November 2023)

Even so, the trip was pure discovery, bursts of activity in the longueurs of a glorious English summer, where the leaves glow with that golden green to the point of bursting, the sun that illuminates your pint but stays gentle on your neck. (Geoff Lemon, Glorious English summer hustle has been an Ashes rush like no other, The Guardian, August 2023)

This enthusiasm is a blessing for the longueurs to come, as one by one the cast spins out the inscrutable tale of the annual Jellicle Ball, when all the street cats of London convene to dance and sing. (Daniel Drake, The Slog Comes in on Little Cat Feet, The New York Review, January, 2020)

The by-the-numbers genre exercise features a plot weighed down by scene-stealing but irrelevant supporting characters, longueurs and a half-baked, ludicrous finale. (Clarence Tsui, 'Three' ('Saam Yan Hang'/'San Ren Xing'): Film Review, The Hollywood Reporter, June 2016)

Origin:

You've probably come across long, tedious sections of books, plays, or musical works before, but perhaps you didn't know there was a word for them. English speakers began using the French borrowing longueur in the late 18th century. As in English, French longueurs are tedious passages, with longueur itself literally meaning 'length.' An early example of longueur used in an English text is from 18th-century writer Horace Walpole, who wrote in a letter, "Boswell's book is gossiping;... but there are woful longueurs, both about his hero and himself.' (Merriam-Webster)

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Lexiphanicism [LEKS-ih-FAN-ih-siz-im]
(n.)
-The use of excessively learned and bombastic vocabulary or phraseology in a pretentious and showy fashion.
From “Lexiphanes” (a character in Lexiphanes by Lucian)
From Greek “lexikos” (pertaining to words)
+
“-phane” (having the appearance of) from Greek “-phanes” from “phainein” (to show) from “phainesthai” (to appear).
Used in a sentence:
“Lieutenant Larry Longshort’s lexiphanicism leaves his listeners lost in a labyrinth of lofty lexemes and longing for lucid language.”
_______
My book, "Grandiloquent Words: A Pictoric Lexicon of Ostrobogulous Locutions" is available for pre-order! https://amzn.to/3R05mfJ


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Lúcuma - noun.

Lúcumas are the fruit of the Pouteria lucuma tree, which is native to Bolivia, Ecuador, and Peru.

The fruit is said to have a dry, mealy texture, so it's more used as a flavouring and filling in other dishes.


Lúcuma.png
By OtterAM - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link


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Louche - adjective.

Derived from the Latin word luscus which means "having poor sight" or "blind in one eye", and borrowed by the French to mean "cross-eyed" or "squinting", louche came to mean someone or something shady, rakish or a little devious. Roguish, of ill repute, rascally or unconventional, louche (click here for a pronunciation), feels like a luxurious character description.
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[personal profile] sallymn

librocubicularist [leeb-ruh-kyoo -bic-kyoo-lah-rist]

noun:
someone who reads in bed

Examples:

I encourage you to become a librocubicularist. Whether you read physical or digital books, I recommend winding down your day in bed with a good book. It will allow your mind to forget the troubles of today as well as the challenges you'll face tomorrow. (Curtis Honeycutt, In praise of librocubicularists, The Berkshire Eagle, May 2023)

If you travel less than me and your tsundoku pile is on your bedside table, chances are that you are a librocubicularist - someone who likes to read in bed. There's something particularly relaxing about being horizontal with a book propped up in your hands, whether or not your health confines you to bed. (Shashi Tharoor, Librocubicularist, dog-earing and bibliclasm: Which type of book reader are you?, Khaleej Times, March 2022)

While my husband loves books, he is not a librocubicularist. Bedtime is lights out. I had tried small book lights and various flashlights, though never holiday candles from SEARS. Even the smallest light seems to bother him, he loves that we live in the country without even a streetlight in the entire village. (Kitty Lapin Agile, How I became a librocubicularist, Two Different Girls, December 2013)

"Are you a librocubicularist?" Miss Chapman is taken aback by the word, but another character, Helen, chimes in: "He only means you are fond of reading in bed. I've been waiting to hear him work that word in the conversation. He made it up, and he's immensely proud of it." (Christopher Morley, The Haunted Bookshop)

Here's something I didn't know about my wife, Julie, before I married her, she's a librocubicularist. There is no known cure, but that's OK because a librocubicularist is someone who reads in bed. (Arvid Huisman, The Des Moines (Iowa) Register, 25 July 2018)

Origin:

The sesquipedalian librocubicularist is the name for a person who reads books in bed. The first syllable of the word is based on Latin liber, which originally denoted the inner bark of a tree, and later came to be used for a sheet of papyrus used for writing before acquiring the additional senses of 'book, volume, long document' and 'a division of a long literary work' (and, yes, it is the source of library and librarian). Another etymological element of librocubicularist is Latin cubiculum, meaning 'bedroom', which itself is from cubare, 'to lie' or 'to recline' and from which English cubicle is derived. Print evidence suggests librocubicularist was checked into the English language in the early 20th century, and it has yet to check out. (Merriam-Webster)

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Longan - noun.

A longan, also called a dragon's eye is both the name of a tree and the edible fruit produced by that tree. The trees thrive in mainland China, Vietnam, and Taiwan. The name is derived from lùhng-ngáahn, which literally means "dragon's eye" in Cantonese. Once the fruit is peeled, the inside flesh looks somewhat like an eyeball.


A branch bearing many light brown fruits
Public Domain, Link


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Tuesday, Apr. 11, 2023

Lexicon (noun)
lex·i·con [lek-si-kon, -kuhn]


noun noun, plural lex·i·ca [lek-si-kuh], lex·i·cons.
1. a wordbook or dictionary, especially of Greek, Latin, or hebrew.
2. the vocabulary of a particular language, field, social class, person, etc.
3. inventory or record: unparalleled in the lexicon of human relations.
4. Linguistics.
a. the total inventory of morphemes in a given language.
b. the inventory of base morphemes plus their combinations with derivational morphemes.

WORDS RELATED TO LEXICON
dictionary, glossary, terminology, thesaurus, vocabulary, wordbook, word stock

See synonyms for lexicon on Thesaurus.com
OTHER WORDS FOR LEXICON
1. glossary, thesaurus, gloss, concordance.

HISTORICAL USAGE OF LEXICON
The noun lexicon comes from New Latin, from Greek lexikòn ( biblíon ) “word (book).” Lexikón is first used for the dictionary of Photius, the 9th-century Byzantine scholar, lexicographer, and patriarch of Constantinople (Photius could very well have coined the Greek word).
English lexicon was first used in the sense “dictionary, wordbook,” and usually referred to dictionaries of Greek and the culturally important Semitic languages (Hebrew, Syriac, Aramaic, Arabic). Dictionaries of these particular languages were traditionally written in Latin, and since Latin had no native word for dictionary, lexicon was the word generally used.
Our English word dictionary comes from Medieval Latin dictionarium, the neuter form of dictionarius ( liber ) “word (book)”—that is, “a phrase book, a beginner’s textbook (of Latin).”

ORIGIN: First recorded in 1595–1605; from Modern Latin, from Medieval Greek, Greek lexikòn (biblíon) “word (book),” from lexikón neuter of adjective lexikós “of or pertaining to words” + biblíon “book”; see lexis-ic;see also Bible

HOW TO USE LEXICON IN A SENTENCE
Just a machine, promising help “momentarily,” the biggest lie in the lexicon of all voice mail.
GENE WEINGARTEN: MAYBE THE PAST IS ONLY A PHONE CALL AWAY|GENE WEINGARTEN|NOVEMBER 5, 2020|WASHINGTON POST

The game’s lexicon was built first with the New General Service List to serve as its foundation.
FORMER APPLE ENGINEER AND AUTOCORRECT CREATOR BUILDS HIS FIRST APP, A WORD GAME CALLED UP SPELL|SARAH PEREZ|OCTOBER 7, 2020|TECHCRUNCH

The fast-paced, fun word game challenges users to spell all the words you can in two minutes and uses a lexicon of words Kocienda built to allow for the inclusion of proper names.
FORMER APPLE ENGINEER AND AUTOCORRECT CREATOR BUILDS HIS FIRST APP, A WORD GAME CALLED UP SPELL|SARAH PEREZ|OCTOBER 7, 2020|TECHCRUNCH

Root out the biased language we so often use when discussing women and people of color, not by unilaterally relying on anti-bias training, but by fixing the underlying systems that enable this bias to creep into the talent assessment lexicon.
HOW TO BE A FAIR-PAY CEO|MATTHEWHEIMER|AUGUST 25, 2020|FORTUNE
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