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  3. Lexbuzz Edition #16: Words in Full Bloom — Happy International Women's Day

Lexbuzz Edition #16: Words in Full Bloom — Happy International Women's Day

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  • lexulousL Offline
    lexulousL Offline
    lexulous
    wrote last edited by lexulous
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    LEXBUZZ Edition 16 - Words in Full Bloom

    Hello Lexulous Community!

    Welcome to Edition #16 of Lexbuzz. Tomorrow, March 8, is International Women's Day — a moment to celebrate the strength, creativity, and voices of women around the world. At Lexulous, where every word matters, it feels right to pause and reflect on just how much of the language we play with every day was shaped, built, and championed by women.


    The Women Who Built Our Words

    The story of the English language is full of remarkable female contributions that have gone largely uncelebrated — until recently.

    In 1858, Dr. James Murray launched the greatest dictionary project in history: the Oxford English Dictionary. The task was enormous. Every word needed historical quotations to trace its usage over centuries. Thousands of volunteer readers across Britain and America submitted handwritten slips of paper — one quotation per word, per source. Of all those contributors, an extraordinary number were women. Their names appear nowhere in the dictionary's celebrated introduction. Their words do, however — on almost every page.

    Jump forward to the 21st century. When J. K. Rowling published Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone in 1997, she introduced the world to MUGGLE — a non-magical person. Within a decade, the word had entered the Oxford English Dictionary. Rowling didn't just write books; she added vocabulary to the English language itself. MUGGLE, QUIDDITCH, HORCRUX — words invented in a cafe in Edinburgh that are now played in word games around the world.

    And consider Toni Morrison — Nobel laureate, editor, and one of the most precise users of the English language in literary history. Her novels introduced a generation of readers to language wielded with uncommon power and purpose.

    The words we play. The words we love. The words we know. Many of them have women's fingerprints all over them.


    Weekly Word Wonder: "VIRAGO"

    • Definition: Originally, a heroic woman; a female warrior of exceptional strength or spirit.

    • Pronunciation: vi-RAH-go

    • Origin: From Latin vir (man) + ago (to act, to drive) — literally "a woman who acts with the spirit of a man." Applied in ancient Rome to goddesses and heroic women. The word later shifted to imply a harsh-tempered woman, but its original sense was entirely celebratory.

    • Reclaimed: Modern usage is restoring the original meaning. A virago is formidable. She is someone to admire.

    • Usage:

    1. "In the old chronicles, Joan of Arc is described as a virago — a warrior woman without peer."
    2. "She walked into the boardroom like a virago, and every conversation in the room shifted."

    A word with centuries of history. A word worth reclaiming.


    Global News Snippets

    • World Baseball Classic 2026: The international baseball championship is underway with 20 national teams competing across venues in the United States, Puerto Rico, and Japan. The tournament runs through mid-March, with the final scheduled in Miami.

    • International Women's Day 2026 (March 8): This year's UN theme is "Accelerate Action" — a call for faster progress on gender equality. From equal pay to educational access, the data shows that progress has been too slow. Tomorrow, millions of events and conversations take place across more than 190 countries.


    Community Puzzle: Cryptic Clues

    Three cryptic clues in the spirit of International Women's Day. Each sentence hides both a definition AND a wordplay trick. Find both to crack the answer.

    Quick reminder — how cryptic clues work:
    Every clue contains a straightforward definition of the answer AND a wordplay component (an anagram, a word built from parts, or a double meaning). The number in brackets tells you how many letters the answer has.

    1. "Both a chess piece and a female monarch (5)"

    2. "A grade followed by a sprint gives you elegance (5)"

    3. "This spring month, scrambled, reveals a magical quality (5)"


    Think you've cracked them? Share your answers in the replies below! Solutions will be revealed in Edition #17.

    (Scroll down for last week's answers!)


    Last Week's Answers (Edition #15 — Cryptic Clues)

    1. SWALLOW
    2. BLOOM
    3. PETALS

    Join the Conversation

    Who is the woman who shaped your love of words? A teacher, a writer, a mother who always had a book in hand? Tell us about her in the replies.

    And of course — how did you get on with this week's cryptic clues? Share your answers and your working!

    Happy International Women's Day, from everyone at Lexulous.

    — The Lexulous Team

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