From the fun and familiar to the strange and obscure, learn something new every day with Merriam-Webster.
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for March 4, 2011 is:
raffish \RAF-ish\ adjective
1 : marked by or suggestive of flashy vulgarity or crudeness
2 : marked by a careless unconventionality : rakish
Examples:
Gina often seemed to be attracted to the raffish and rebellious boys, rather than the quiet intellectuals in her classes.
"They rode a bus a few stops and got off in the raffish suburb of Chelsea, a low-rent neighborhood of artists and writers." -- From Ken Follett's 2010 novel Fall of Giants
Did you know?
"Raffish" sounds like it should mean "resembling raff." But what is raff? Originally, "raff" was a word meaning "rubbish"; it derived from Middle English "raf," and it was being used for trash and refuse back in the 1400s. Around a century later, English speakers were also using the word "riffraff" to mean "disreputable characters" or "rabble." The origins of "riffraff" are distinct from the "rubbish" sense of "raff"; "riffraff" derived from an Anglo-French phrase meaning "one and all." By the mid-1500s, the similarities between "raff" and "riffraff" had prompted people to start using the two words as synonyms, and "raff" gained a "rabble" sense. It was that ragtag "raff" that gave rise to the adjective "raffish" in the late 1700s.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.