Word of the Day for Monday January 23, 2006
incommunicado \in-kuh-myoo-nuh-KAH-doh\, adverb or adjective:
Without the means or right to communicate.
Western diplomats in Cuba said yesterday that the fact that
the six have been held incommunicado for so long suggests
that the Cubans fear they pose a security threat.
--Daniel McGrory, "Cuba to explain why it is holding six
Britons," [1]Times (London), October 25, 2000
This was Morrison's last despatch. Shortly after it was
sent, the Boxers cut the telegraph line. Peking was not
only besieged, but incommunicado.
--Martin Gilbert, A History of the Twentieth Century:
Volume One, 1900-1933
They went underground, they sought an underworld of codes
and shadows: incognito, incommunicado, and quietly
dissident.
--Martin Amis, "Survivors of the Cold War," [2]New York
Times, October 5, 1997
[H]e was held incommunicado for 72 hours, his phone lines
cut.
--Joseph Finder, "By Any Other Name," [3]New York Times,
June 9, 1996
_________________________________________________________
Incommunicado comes from Spanish incomunicado, past participle
of incomunicar, "to cut off," from in- (from Latin) +
comunicar, "to communicate," from Latin communicare, from
communis, "common."
References
1. http://www.thetimes.co.uk/
2. http://www.nytimes.com/
3. http://www.nytimes.com/
Dictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation
http://dictionary.reference.com/search?r=9&q=incommunicado
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