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Updated: 5/25/2005; 4:05:33 PM.

 


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Wednesday, February 05, 2003

Today In History

February 5, 1830

The first daily labor newspaper, the New York Daily Sentinel, began publication.

Thanks to Workday Minnesota


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imbroglio: Dictionary.com Word of the Day. imbroglio [Dictionary.com Word of the Day]

Word of the Day for Wednesday February 5, 2003

imbroglio im-BROHL-yoh, noun:
1. A complicated and embarrassing state of things.
2. A confused or complicated disagreement or misunderstanding.
3. An intricate, complicated plot, as of a drama or work of fiction.
4. A confused mass; a tangle.

The political imbroglio also appears to endanger the latest International Monetary Fund loan package for Russia, which is considered critical to avoid a default this year on the country's $17 billion in foreign debt.
--David Hoffman, "Citing Economy, Yeltsin Fires Premier," Washington Post, May 13, 1999

Worse still, hearings and investigations into scandals -- from the imbroglio over Clarence Thomas's Supreme Court nomination in 1991 to the charges of perjury against President Clinton in 1998 -- have overshadowed any consideration of the country's future.
--John B. Judis, The Paradox of American Democracy

To the extent that Washington had a policy toward the subcontinent, its aim was to be evenhanded and not get drawn into the diplomatic imbroglio over Kashmir.
--George Perkovich, India's Nuclear Bomb

The imbroglio over the seemingly arcane currency issue threatens to plunge Indonesia -- and possibly its neighbors as well -- into a renewed bout of financial turmoil.
--Paul Blustein, "Currency Dispute Threatens Indonesia's Bailout," Washington Post, February 14, 1998



Imbroglio derives from Italian, from Old Italian imbrogliare, "to tangle, to confuse," from in-, "in" + brogliare, "to mix, to stir." It is related to embroil, "to entangle in conflict or argument."


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Feds pull suspicious .gov site. In a move that raises questions about the security of governmental domains, a .gov Web site has been yanked pending an investigation into the group that controlled it. By Declan McCullagh, Staff Writer, CNET News.com. [CNET News.com]
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© Copyright 2005 The Usual Suspect.



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