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Nov 25, 2025
This week’s themeNouning the verb, verbing the noun This week’s words shirtfront
Shirtfronting (video, 2 min.)
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Gargshirtfront
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
ETYMOLOGY:
From shirt, from Old English scyrte + front, from Old French front
(forehead), from Latin frons (forehead, front). Earliest documented use:
noun 1808, verb 1952.
NOTES:
In Australian football, the term acquired a new meaning: a full-speed
collision a player would use to flatten an opponent. Basically, giving
someone your full frontal... enthusiasm. In 2014, after the downing of flight MH17, the Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said, “I am going to shirtfront Mr. Putin, you bet I am.” From there, the meaning broadened. Today, to shirtfront someone can mean to confront them aggressively anywhere: football field, parliament, or in online comments. When it comes to clothing-related language, there’s always a new wrinkle. If only all conflicts could be resolved by ironing out our differences. USAGE:
“They comb the club, attempting to shirtfront the perpetrator, and make
sure the frightened woman gets home in a cab.” Cameron Woodhead; Timely Message From a Toilet Cannot Be Ignored; The Age (Melbourne, Australia); Feb 2, 2024. See more usage examples of shirtfront in Vocabulary.com’s dictionary. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
How anyone can profess to find animal life interesting and yet take delight
in reducing the wonder of any animal to a bloody mass of fur or feathers?
-Joseph Wood Krutch, writer and naturalist (25 Nov 1893-1970)
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