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The Word of the Day for November 27, 2009 is:inoculate \ih-NAHK-yuh-layt\
verb
Example Sentence:In 1796, the English physician Edward Jenner discovered that inoculating people with cowpox could provide immunity against smallpox.Did you know?If you think you see a connection between "inoculate" and "ocular" ("of or relating to the eye"), you are not mistaken -- both words look back to "oculus," the Latin word for "eye." But what does the eye have to do with inoculation? Our answer lies in the original use in English of "inoculate" in Middle English: "to insert a bud in a plant." Latin "oculus" was sometimes applied to things that were seen to resemble eyes, and one such thing was the bud of a plant. "Inoculate" was later applied to other forms of engrafting or implanting, including the introduction of vaccines as a preventative against disease.*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
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