Word of the Day for Sunday July 31, 2005
wastrel \WAY-struhl\, noun:
1. A person who wastes, especially one who squanders money; a
spendthrift.
2. An idler; a loafer; a good-for-nothing.
Horace Liveright, the book publisher of the 1920's, is
usually recalled in literary memoirs as a charming wastrel,
a gambler who always saw a winning bet as a chance to raise
his stake in whatever game he was losing at.
--Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, "Disastrous Life of a Pioneer
in Hype," [1]New York Times, July 27, 1995
Thad risked everything, including his farm, to set Abner up
in the grocery business in the town of Hargrave, only to
have Abner turn wastrel and lose everything.
--John Kenny Crane, "Good Fellers," [2]New York Times,
November 15, 1992
Was her father ... the brilliant, glamorous figure she
remembered, or the alcoholic wastrel his own brother
described?
--Jean Strouse, "Making the Facts Obey," [3]New York Times,
May 24, 1992
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Wastrel is from waste + -rel (as in scoundrel).
References
1. http://www.nytimes.com/
2. http://www.nytimes.com/
3. http://www.nytimes.com/
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=9&q=wastrel
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