Word of the Day
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Immaculate (adjective) – having no fault, no stain, no blemish, no marking (the word originates in Middle English “immaculate” and Latin)
Word in a Sentence: It is every writer’s desire to send an immaculate manuscript to a publisher.
Your turn! We must have some Marians in the crowd…
(Again, if you're looking for the vampire story, the teaser of scene one is further down on this blog at Saving a Vampire from the Summer Sunrise.)
"Some days, you just want the dragon to win."
Wednesday, January 10, 2007
Immaculate (adjective) – having no fault, no stain, no blemish, no marking (the word originates in Middle English “immaculate” and Latin)
Word in a Sentence: It is every writer’s desire to send an immaculate manuscript to a publisher.
Your turn! We must have some Marians in the crowd…
(Again, if you're looking for the vampire story, the teaser of scene one is further down on this blog at Saving a Vampire from the Summer Sunrise.)
"Some days, you just want the dragon to win."
1 Comments:
Ok - I'm a day late here and to finish that slogan, also a dollar short, but the latter is the norm.
I could say, with respect to the above comment that my wallet is immaculate, clean, devoid of any dirty money gracing its presence. But that isn't a really good use of the word.
However, this one is absolute truth:
My Mother and Grandmother both had and expected their home to be absolutely immaculate! I am not their offspring. I always suspected I must have been adopted.
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