Rhyming Words for the Word Funny

8 Words and Phrases You lot Apply That Were Made Upward by Presidents

Turns out our leaders take quite the lexicons. Discover out which presidents' pick words have stuck around as part of our modern banter.

Library of Congress

"Iffy"

Franklin D. Roosevelt invented this term in the 1930s to dismiss questions at various press conferences. Today, we use it to communicate the status of that month-onetime bread in the refrigerator. Bank check out these words you had no idea were inspired by real people.

Library of Congress

"Sugarcoat"

Upon sending an urgent message to Congress, Abraham Lincoln said almost Southerners: "With rebellion thus sugar-coated they have been drugging the public mind of their department for more than xxx years." An official regime printer found the term to exist as well casual and asked Lincoln to change it for the record. Lincoln refused. The issue: The perfect give-and-take-flop to drop in your next argument.

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"Snowmageddon"

President Obama riffed off of the pop Michael Bay flick when he offset used this term to draw the huge snowstorm that hit Washington, D.C., in 2010. The snow may have melted, but the saying has stuck.

Library of Congress

"Belittle"

In 1788, Thomas Jefferson was so inspired while writing about the natural beauty of his habitation state, Virginia, that he just had to make up a whole new word to depict it. "The Count de Buffon believes that nature belittles her productions on this side of the Atlantic." Blast: "Belittle" was built-in. Only Jefferson didn't stop there. The third U.S. President gets credit for more than 100 new words such as: lengthily, monotonously, and (randomly enough) pedicure. Check out these funny words you never knew originated in the military.

Library of Congress

"Squatter"

Are out-of-work hipsters camping out in your neighbor'south apartment? Well, thanks to James Madison, at that place'due south a word for them! The first recorded utilise of the word "squatter" was in a 1788 letter from Madison to George Washington, discussing homeless Maine residents that lived on other people's property. If it's good enough for a president…

Warren G. Harding Former President Warren G. Harding. DNA testing is rewriting a chapter in presidential history, this one from the Roaring '20s. AncestryDNA, a division of Ancestry.com, says genetic analysis has confirmed President Warren G. Harding fathered a child out of wedlock with his long-rumored mistress Nan Britton. She set off a scandal when she went public nearly 90 years ago with her tale of forbidden love in the White House Uncredited/AP/Rex/Shutterstock

"Founding Fathers"

When the Founding Fathers were around, the term we most commonly use to refer to them wasn't. This alliterative phrase wouldn't exist until 1916, when President Warren G. Harding (then a senator) used it in a speech to the Republican National Convention. A few years later, he would apply information technology once more in his inauguration accost, solidifying its place in America'south national vocabulary. Before that, the Annunciation-signers and early on-The states patriots went by the "framers," or simply the "Fathers." You'll never guess which founding father has the about valuable signature on the Declaration of Independence.

George Washington (1732 - 1799) First American President Historia/Shutterstock

"Administration"

It seems only plumbing fixtures that the offset person to hold the office of the presidency first coined the term for a president's time in function. In his Farewell Address in 1796, George Washington said, "In reviewing the incidents of my administration, I am unconscious of intentional error." The word itself existed before this, but Washington was the 1 who commencement used information technology to refer to a president's tenure.

Theodore ROOSEVELT 1858-1919 26th American President (1901-9), at his home in Oyster Bay, New York, USA The Art Archive/Shutterstock

 "Muckraker"

In 1906, Teddy Roosevelt used this give-and-take in a voice communication to disparagingly describe unscrupulous journalists "digging in the muck" for juicy gossip. He'd discovered the term "muckrake" (in a more literal sense) in the bookPilgrim's Progress and tweaked it for his own purposes. However, as time passed, the word has evolved to have a positive connotation, too, depending on the context. Journalists who took risks in gild to expose corruption or scandal to the public could as well exist muckrakers. Next, acquire about the surprising hidden talents of U.S. presidents.

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Source: https://www.rd.com/list/funny-words-presidents/

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