Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for August 17, 2008 is:
spavined \SPAV-ind\ adjective
1 : affected with spavin
2 : old and decrepit : over-the-hill
Examples:
There is no point in expecting the spavined Arts Council to do more than sponsor the same stale events and shopworn fund-raisers.
Did you know?
"His horse [is] . . . troubled with the lampas, infected with the fashions, full of windgalls, sped with spavins. . . ." Petruchio's poor, decrepit horse in Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew is beset by just about every known equine malady, including a kind of swelling in the mouth (lampas), skin lesions (fashions), tumors on his fetlocks (windgalls), and bony enlargements on his hocks (spavins). The spavins alone can be enough to render a horse lame and useless. In the 17th century, "spavined" horses brought to mind other things that are obsolete, out-of-date, or long past their prime, and we began using the adjective figuratively. "Spavined" still serves a purpose, despite its age. It originated in Middle English as "spaveyned" and can be traced to the Middle French word for "spavin," which was "espavain."
See Privacy Policy at art19.com and California Privacy Notice at art19.com.