Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Capital
cap-i-tal / kăp-ĭ-tl
adjective
 
1.     first, primary, main
Since the most ancient times, all men, and particularly those who endeavored in the practice of medicine, have brought closer together two natural phenomena ofcapital importance: illness or fever and fermentation.  Louis Pasteur, 1822 – 1895
 
2.     excellent, top-notch
When I come upon anything-in Logic or in any other hard subject-that entirely puzzles me, I find it a capital plan to talk it over, aloud, even when I am all alone.  Lewis Carroll, 1832 – 1898
 
3.     related to being a seat of government
There is no reason, in the capital city of the richest country in the world, for anybody to be hungry.  William E. Conway, Jr., 1949 –
 
4.     very serious
It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data.  Arthur Conan Doyle 1859-1930
 
5.     involving death or the death penalty
If lying were a capital crime, the hangman would work overtime.  Spanish proverb
 
6.     involving the financial assets or wealth of
I was originally supposed to become an engineer but the thought of having to expend my creative energy on things that make practical everyday life even more refined, with a loathsome capital gain as the goal, was unbearable to me.  Albert Einstein, 1879 – 1955
 
7.     involving an uppercase letter
No one thinks about capital letters or punctuation when one texts, but then again, do you think about those things when you talk?   John H. McWhorter, 1965 –
 
noun
 
1.     resource, means, principal, wealth
Education is a capital to the poor man, and an interest to the rich man.  Horace Mann, 1796 – 1859
 
2.     the investors of a business or venture as a group
Each needs the other: capital cannot do without labor, nor labor without capital. Pope Leo XIII, 1810 – 1903
 
3.     an uppercase letter, often used as the first letter of a sentence or in a proper name
Use capitals for proper nouns.  From “The Rules of Capitalization”
 
4.     the city where the rules for a state or county are made; a seat of government
America is a nation with no truly national city, no Paris, no Rome, no London, no city which is at once the social center, the political capital, and the financial hub. C. Wright Mills 1916-1962
 
5.     the top part of a column
If you look at Gothic detailing right down to the bottom of a column or thecapital of a column, it’s a small version of the whole building; that’s why, like dating the backbones of a dinosaur, a good historian can look at a detail of a Gothic building and tell you exactly what the rest of the building was, and infer the whole from the parts. Charles Jencks, 1939 – 
 
Capitol
cap-i-tol / kăp-ĭ-tl
noun
 
1.     the building in which the Congress of the United States or a state legislature meets to create laws
We reached Washington at about half-past six that evening, and had upon the way a beautiful view of the Capitol, which is a fine building of the Corinthian order, placed upon a noble and commanding eminence. 
From “American Notes for General Circulation” by Charles Dickens, 1812 – 1870

Thank you for including the Dictionary Project in the good work you do in your club.  In my club, we have provided Dictionaries for third-grade students for enough years that now we are having former students help us to present dictionaries each year.  They are often returning to the same classrooms that they were third-grade students.  Teachers plead every year for us to NEVER quit this valuable project.  They tell us that students NEED paper books to learn to read, to learn to do research and to do independent study.  Please send me pictures of your presentations and tell me about your visits to the schools to give dictionaries to the students. To be included in our newsletter you can send me your stories at DG.2019@5630mail.org.

August | Together we’ll Grow Rotary

August | Together we’ll Grow Rotary

August 2019

Rotary International President Mark Maloney

2019-2020 Rotary International President Mark Daniel Maloney

During 2019-2020, I am encouraging Rotarians and Rotaractors to grow Rotary. We must grow our service, we must grow the impact of our projects, but, most importantly, we must grow our membership so that we can achieve more.

Let us try a new approach to membership, one that is more organized and strategic. I am asking every club to form an active membership committee consisting of people of different backgrounds who will look methodically at the leadership of the community.

Your club’s membership committee will then apply Rotary’s classification system — designed to ensure that the range of professions in your community is well represented — to identify potential leaders with the skill, the talent, and the character that will strengthen your club. If your club’s membership committee is unsure how to proceed, look to the club membership committee checklist on Rotary.org for clearly defined steps to organizing its work.

How else will we connect to grow Rotary? We will also form new types of clubs — either independent clubs or satellite clubs — with different meeting experiences and engaging service opportunities, not just where there is no Rotary, but also where Rotary is already thriving. No Rotary club in the world can possibly serve all segments of its community. Therefore, we must organize new clubs to engage community leaders who cannot connect with our existing clubs.

Growing Rotary is all about making the connections that make our organization unique in the world and strengthening and multiplying them. Let us commit ourselves to growing Rotary and to welcoming the next diverse generation of women and men as Rotary Connects the World.

reprinted from Rotary.org [https://my.rotary.org/en/news-media/office-president/presidential-message]

Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Word of the Day: Friendly

Word of the Day: Friendly

friend-ly / ˈfren(d)-lē
 
adjective
 
1.      showing kindly interest
With a friendly word you get farther than with a club.
Ukrainian Proverb
 
2.      not hostile
You can proclaim the truth also in a friendly way.
Turkish Proverb
 
3.      serving a beneficial purpose
Cheerfulness is the best promoter of health and is as friendly to the mind as to the body.
Joseph Addison, 1672-1719
 
4.      easy to understand, often used in combination
Computers have become more friendly, understandable, and lots of years and thought have been put into developing software to convince people that they want and need a computer. 
Roberta Williams, 1953 –
 
5.      not likely to cause harm
Environmentally friendly cars will soon cease to be an option…they will become a necessity.
Fujio Cho, 1937-
 
6.      cheerful; comforting
To make the world a friendly place,
One must show it a friendly face.
James Whitcomb Riley, 1849-1916
 
7.      designed to accommodate particular needs, groups, etc., usually used in combination
More and more companies are updating their leave policies to reflect an understanding that being family-friendly is a smart investment in their workforce and America’s future. 
Suzan DelBene, 1962 –

Thank you for including the Dictionary Project in the good work you do in your club.  In my club, we have provided Dictionaries for third-grade students for enough years that now we are having former students help us to present dictionaries each year.  They are often returning to the same classrooms that they were third-grade students.  Teachers plead every year for us to NEVER quit this valuable project.  They tell us that students NEED paper books to learn to read, to learn to do research and to do independent study.  Please send me pictures of your presentations and tell me about your visits to the schools to give dictionaries to the students. To be included in our newsletter you can send me your stories at DG.2019@5630mail.org.

Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Word of the Day: Kerfuffle

Word of the Day: Kerfuffle

ker-fuf-fle / kər-ˈfə-fəl
 
noun
 
1.      a commotion caused by conflict
I’ve learned to be true to yourself, stick to the big arguments, don’t get distracted by the everyday kerfuffle that is in the nature of any democratic system.
George Osborne, 1971-

Thank you for including the Dictionary Project in the good work you do in your club.  In my club, we have provided Dictionaries for third-grade students for enough years that now we are having former students help us to present dictionaries each year.  They are often returning to the same classrooms that they were third-grade students.  Teachers plead every year for us to NEVER quit this valuable project.  They tell us that students NEED paper books to learn to read, to learn to do research and to do independent study.  Please send me pictures of your presentations and tell me about your visits to the schools to give dictionaries to the students. To be included in our newsletter you can send me your stories at DG.2019@5630mail.org.

Word of the Day: Capital and Capitol

Word of the Day: Disability

Word of the Day: Disability

dis-a-bil-i-ty / ˌdisəˈbilədē
 
noun
 
1.      a physical or mental condition that impairs, interferes with, or limits a person’s ability to perform certain tasks
It’s not the disability that defines you; it’s how you deal with the challenge the disability presents you with.
Jim Abbott, 1967-
 
2.      a disadvantage
A true friend knows your weaknesses but shows you your strengths; feels your fears but fortifies your faith; sees your anxieties but frees your spirit; recognizes your disabilities but emphasizes your possibilities.
William Arthur Ward, 1921-1994
 
3.      legal incapacity; lack of legal qualification to do something
Knowledge and liberty are so prevalent in this country, that I do not believe that the United States would ever be disposed to establish one religious sect and lay all others under legal disabilities.
Oliver Wolcott, 1726-1797
 
4.      a program that provides financial support to a person with a mental or physical condition that limits their ability to perform certain tasks
Scandinavians spend 15 percent of their gross national product ondisability.
Steven C. Hayes, 1948-
 
5.      the state or action of being limited due to a physical or mental condition
My disability exists not because I use a wheelchair, but because the broader environment isn’t accessible.
Stella Young, 1982-2014

Thank you for including the Dictionary Project in the good work you do in your club.  In my club, we have provided Dictionaries for third-grade students for enough years that now we are having former students help us to present dictionaries each year.  They are often returning to the same classrooms that they were third-grade students.  Teachers plead every year for us to NEVER quit this valuable project.  They tell us that students NEED paper books to learn to read, to learn to do research and to do independent study.  Please send me pictures of your presentations and tell me about your visits to the schools to give dictionaries to the students. To be included in our newsletter you can send me your stories at DG.2019@5630mail.org.