Comment Archive for "Today's Word "efficacious"":
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Posted Comments:
09-17-2009 13:50
wrote:
Hello, introducing myself
First-rate Post.
I want to thank you for the information.
I want to thank you for the information.
08-13-2009 00:14
Lazyacious wrote:
Definitely, that was not efficacious work!
07-31-2009 18:32
deeber wrote:
efficacious
somebody slipped. They should be expunged!
06-30-2009 13:13
tesfatadelle wrote:
efficacious
"Post Not Accepted". Wow, great!
06-30-2009 13:10
tesfatadelle wrote:
efficacious
Wow. I thought I was the only one who learned from your daily word treats. This is the best way to gauge the interest of those who read your daily Vocabulary contributions to us dummies. Bravo, keep sprinkling as such and watch the interst of us all and don't mind the few p****s you may creat along the way.
06-29-2009 23:10
Beohrt wrote:
efficacious
you guys are usually so good! I remember once seeing a photo of Elton John captioned "Olivia Newton-John".
06-29-2009 18:07
Fianna wrote:
tee hee hee
Hey, I am looking for a job as en editor. It appears you need one desperately!
06-29-2009 15:28
jamie wrote:
definitions
Efficacious... expunge? an error oh my. i guess efficacious was expunged.
06-29-2009 10:05
Frankas wrote:
Today's Word
Today's word is: efficacious. The definition that follows is for the word: expunge. Brilliant!
06-29-2009 03:01
brianmor54 wrote:
Todays word
Todays word did not have the desired effect of being CORRECT.......
06-29-2009 00:38
Lorraine wrote:
word definition
Word for the day: efficacious -definition word used was
expunge, please define efficacious
thank you for your correction please
LMcB in California
expunge, please define efficacious
thank you for your correction please
LMcB in California
06-28-2009 21:41
siripurapu sankar wrote:
expunge in place of efficacious
Is this the first time that this mistake occurred?It is quite unlike the Arcamax team. I have a feeling that you have wifully made this entry to check how many of us are going through this and how many more of us are interested in bringing this to your notice. Don't worry about the slip, but be more cautious though.
06-28-2009 14:36
Tony More wrote:
We are all human
Even the efficacious Shakespeare made a mistake once in a while, but that is no reason to expunge him.
06-28-2009 13:28
B.T. wrote:
efficacious
Don't tell me. Let me guess. Whoever wrote today's column saw 'efficacious' at the top of the page of the dictionary. He/she turned away for a moment, a breeze of some sort blew a few pages over and when the writer came back 'expunge' was at the top of the page instead.
Great work paying attention to what you're doing unless you happen to be a high school sophomore that is trying to help with this for the summer.
SHEESH!!!!!!!!!!
We readers are in for some 'fun' if you are.
Great work paying attention to what you're doing unless you happen to be a high school sophomore that is trying to help with this for the summer.
SHEESH!!!!!!!!!!
We readers are in for some 'fun' if you are.
06-28-2009 12:02
yoyome wrote:
Editors on Vacation??
Seems like there's been quite a few typos and missed mistakes lately....Are your editors on vacation? Kinda disappointing, ya know...
06-28-2009 11:56
Hellas wrote:
errare humanum est!
06-28-2009 11:34
Roulette wrote:
Today's blog entry must be expunged because it lacks efficaciousness ... perhaps due to editorial incompetence.
06-28-2009 10:09
Wendy wrote:
Sorry to repeat other comments, but...the word for the day is listed as "efficacious" but yo are showing the word "expunge" and the definition for that. I guess the 2 words could go hand in hand if the desired result one is trying to produce is obliteration!
06-28-2009 10:00
Theresa Curran wrote:
efficacious
The title word should have been expunged before dissemination since that clearly was not today's word. Your writer may have been asleep at the keyboard but your loyal readers are not! Watchit!
06-28-2009 09:53
Wm. Yeager wrote:
Today's Word - "Expunge"
I find "expunge" to be an interesting word, and one certainly worth adding to ones vocabulary, but it, as noted before, did not match the title of todays offering. I suspect someone had a rather interesting Saturday Night. Ques: Am I jealous? Ans: a little.......hehehe
06-28-2009 09:45
sue wrote:
efficacious
Usually I trust this column to define words in an efficacious manner. Today I doubted the effectiveness of your definition for "effcacious".
I was right to doubt, according to the Mirriam-Webster dictionary. Your definition did not "...have the power to produce the desired effect...", but thanks for giving a new purpose to your usually accurate column.
I was right to doubt, according to the Mirriam-Webster dictionary. Your definition did not "...have the power to produce the desired effect...", but thanks for giving a new purpose to your usually accurate column.
06-28-2009 09:23
Shirley wrote:
Wrong definition!
Most of the words are simple, so I just read for the etymologies. I didn't even get that today. It would be helpful if the word and its definition matched
06-28-2009 09:17
Sarah wrote:
efficacious
NO, NO, NO!!!
06-28-2009 09:17
pandriani wrote:
todays word
it seems to me you have no one editing your definations this is not the first time you printed a word and defined another
06-28-2009 09:10
Jim Clark wrote:
efficacious
Tell me it isn't so! Tell me I can still trust this daily word and its definitions and examples!
The OED disagrees with your definition of this word. Your illustration and illustration seems to clearly indicate that "efficacious" was not the word you intended to define.
The OED disagrees with your definition of this word. Your illustration and illustration seems to clearly indicate that "efficacious" was not the word you intended to define.

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