Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow

A Week of a Word a Day!

Monday, 19 March
Hair! What a thing! People spend millions trying to grow it. Others spend even more to get rid of it. Some do both, though on different parts of their bodies. We can get in other people's hair (to annoy). We let our hair down (relax). We split hairs (make petty distinctions). Things can make our hair standon end (terrify), or we might be having a bad hair day (an unpleasant day). Sometimes literally. I have seen my niece in tears in a family wedding just because she felt her hair wasn't done as well as she had hoped. (I know what some of you are saying to yourselves, "Just because?") Our hair grows. We cut it. And in between we spend countless hours on it. This week we devote five days on hair -- and on their absence.

This week's theme in AWAD: Hair today, gone tomorrow.

piliferous

(py-LIF-uhr-uhs) adjective

Having or producing hair.

[From Latin pilus (hair).]

Tuesday, 20 March
This week's theme: Hair today, gone tomorrow.

calvous

(KAL-vuhs) adjective

Bald.

[From Latin calvus (bald).]

Wednesday, 21 March

pogonotrophy

(po-guh-NAW-truh-fee) noun

The growing of a beard.

[From Greek pogon (beard) + -trophy (nourishment, growth).] Pogonology is the study of beards and pogonotomy is a fancy word for shaving.

Thursday, 22 March
(mine and Luis' 17th anniversary)

pilgarlic

(pil-GAHR-lik) noun

A bald-headed person.

[Literally peeled garlic, from pill (to peel) + garlic.]

Friday, 23 March
hirsutulous

(hur-SOO-chuh-luhs) adjective

Minutely hirsute.

[From Latin hirsutus (rough, hairy).]

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