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Nov 7, 2025
This week’s themeAdverbs This week’s words posthaste abreast ad nauseam anywhen
Time Transfixed, 1938
Art: René Magritte
A.Word.A.Day
with Anu Garganywhen
PRONUNCIATION:
MEANING:
adverb: At any time.
ETYMOLOGY:
From any + when, from Old English ǣnig + hwenne. Earliest documented use: 1834.
NOTES:
English, in its boundless capacity for linguistic possibilities,
once welcomed anywhen alongside anywhere and anyhow. Sadly, anywhen never
quite caught on, perhaps because time, unlike place or manner, resists
easy invitation. Still, it’s a handy word for those who prefer to keep
their schedules flexible. Postpone it, prepone it (for some reason it’s
highly popular in India), or simply pone it. Anywhen is good.
USAGE:
“Though the stories are centred on Dhaka, they could have happened
anywhere, anywhen.” Divya Dubey; Dhaka in 10 Short Takes; India Today (New Delhi); Jan 23, 2017. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
I love my country too much to be a nationalist. -Albert Camus, writer,
philosopher, Nobel laureate (7 Nov 1913-1960)
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