author.
De Benedetti, Carlo. (1934â) Italian industrialist.
debonair. In French, it is
débonnaire
.
Debrettâs Peerage and Baronetage. Guide to British aristocracy.
Debs, Eugene V(ictor). (1855â1926) American socialist and labor leader.
DeBusschere, Dave. (1940â2003) American basketball and baseball player.
Debussy, (Achille-) Claude. (1862â1918) French composer.
débutante.
decathlon. The ten events are long jump, high jump, pole vault, discus, shot put, javelin, 110-meter hurdles, and 100-, 400-, and 1,500-meter races.
deceit, deceive.
deci-. Prefix meaning one-tenth.
decimate. Literally the word means to reduce by a tenth (from the ancient practice of punishing the mutinous or cowardly by killing every tenth man). By extension it may be used to describe the inflicting of heavy damage, but it should never be used to denote annihilation, as in this memorably excruciating sentence cited by Fowler: âDick, hotly pursued by the scalp-hunter, turned in his saddle, fired and literally decimated his opponent.â Equally to be avoided are contexts in which the wordâs use is clearly inconsistent with its literal meaning, as in âFrost decimated an estimated 80 percent of the crops.â
décolletage. A plunging neckline on clothing.
Dedalus, Stephen. Character in James Joyce works. See also DAEDALUS .
de facto. (Lat.) Existing in fact but not in law; see also DE JURE .
defective, deficient. When something is not working properly, it is
defective;
when it is missing a necessary part, it is
deficient
.
Defferre, Gaston. (1910â1986) French Socialist politician and journalist.
defibrillator.
definite, definitive.
Definite
means precise and unmistakable.
Definitive
means final and conclusive. A definite offer is a clear one; a definitive offer is one that permits of no haggling.
Defoe, Daniel. (1659â1731) British author.
defuse, diffuse. Occasionally confused.
Defuse
means to make less harmful;
diffuse
means to spread thinly.
de Gaulle, Charles. (1890â1970) President of France (1944â1946, 1959â1969).
de haut en bas. (Fr.) âWith contempt.â
De Havilland. Aircraft.
Deirdre of the Sorrows. Play by J. M. Synge.
déjà vu.
de jure. (Lat.) According to law; see also DE FACTO .
Dekker, Thomas. (c. 1570âc. 1640) English playwright.
de Klerk, F. W. (for Frederik Willem) (1936â) President of South Africa (1989â1994); co-winner with Nelson Mandela of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993.
de Kooning, Willem. (1904â1997) Dutch-born American painter.
Delacroix, Eugène. (1789â1863) French painter.
de La Tour, Georges. (1593â1652) French painter.
De Laurentiis, Dino. (1919â) Italian film producer; his formal first name is Agostino.
delectable. Not
-ible.
Deledda, Grazia. (1871â1936) Italian novelist, awarded Nobel Prize for Literature in 1926.
deleterious.
delftware. (No cap.)
Delilah.
DeLillo, Don. (1936â) American novelist.
Delius, Frederick. (1862â1934) British composer.
Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu. (No commas.) International accountancy company.
DeLorean. Automobile named for John Z. DeLorean (1925â2005).
de los Angeles, Victoria. (1924â2005) Spanish soprano.
Delta Air Lines. Note
Air Lines
two words.
Del Toro, Benicio. (1967â) Puerto Rican actor.
De Lucchi, Michele. (1951â) Italian architect and designer.
demagogue is the preferred spelling, though some authorities also accept
demagog
.
de mal en pis, de pis en pis. (Fr.) Both mean âfrom bad to worse.â
de Maupassant, (Henri René Albert) Guy. (1850â1893) French writer of short stories and novels.
Dementieva, Elena. (1981â) Russian tennis player.
Demerol. (Cap.) Type of medication.
Demeter. Greek goddess of agriculture and fertility; the Roman equivalent is Ceres.
De Mille, Cecil B(lount). (1881â1959) American film producer and director, noted for epics.
demimonde. (In
Lynda Chance
Peter Lovesey
Rafe Haze
Melissa Schroeder
David Weber, John Ringo
MS Parker
V. K. Sykes
JM Guillen
Stephanie Burkhart
IGMS