Word of the day September 19
The Word of the Day for September 19 is:
malinger • \muh-LING-gur\ • (verb) to pretend or exaggerate incapacity or illness (as to avoid duty or work)
A little more information about today’s word:
Do you know someone who always seems to develop an ailment when there's work to be done? Someone who merits an Academy Award for his or her superb simulation of symptoms? Then you know a malingerer. The verb "malinger" comes from the French word "malingre," meaning "sickly," and one who malingers feigns illness. In its earliest uses in the 19th century, "malinger" usually referred to a soldier or sailor pretending to be sick or insane to shirk duty. Later, psychologists began using "malingering" as a clinical term to describe the feigning of illness in avoidance of a duty or for personal gain. Today, "malinger" is used in just about any context in which someone fakes sickness or injury to get out of an undesirable task.
My sentence:
When Kim called in sick on yet another beautiful summer day, her boss began to suspect she was malingering.
Based on Merriam-Webster's Collegiate® Dictionary, 10th Edition.
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