A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia
A Complete Word Dictionary Encyclopedia

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fund.html -


 Could not find an exact match for fund.html. Closest matches are listed below.
New English :: fundie
fund.html - noun
Also written fundy or (in discussions of German Green Party politics) Fundi (Environment) (Politics) In colloquial use : a fundamentalist; especially either a religious fundamentalist or a member of a radical branch of the green movement, a 'deep' green. Etymology : Formed by adding the suffix -ie to the first four letters of fundamentalist; the spelling Fundi reflects borrowing from the German slang name of the radical wing of the German Green Party. History and Usage : A nickname which belongs to the political debates of the early eighties, when the Moral Majority and other fundamentalist Christian groups in the US and the Greens in Germany became a political force to be reckoned with. In the green sense, fundie has its origins in the arguments from 1985 onwards between the German Greens' realo wing, who were prepared to take a normal co-operative approach to parliamentary life, and the more radical fundamentalists, who did not wish to co-operate with other parties and favoured extreme measures to solve environmental problems. The Fundies are not a serious political force and their current hero is not a serious political candidate. New York Times 7 Mar. 1988, section A, p.
19 The fundies are the purists who believe the only way to save the Earth is to dismantle industry. Daily Telegraph 20 Sept. 1989, p. 15
Traditional English :: fund
fund.html - n. & v.
--n.
    1 a permanent stock of something ready to be drawn upon (a fund of knowledge; a fund of tenderness).
    2 a stock of money, esp. one set apart for a purpose.
    3 (in pl.) money resources.
    4 (in pl.; prec. by the) Brit. the stock of the National Debt (as a mode of investment).
--v.
    tr.
    1 provide with money.
    2 convert (a floating debt) into a more or less permanent debt at fixed interest.
    3 put into a fund.
    fund-raiser a person who seeks financial support for a cause, enterprise, etc. fund-raising the seeking of financial support. in funds colloq. having money to spend. [L fundus bottom, piece of land]
Traditional English :: fundament
fund.html - n.
joc. the buttocks. [ME f. OF fondement f. L fundamentum (as FOUND(2))]
Traditional English :: fundamental
fund.html - adj. & n.
--adj.
    of, affecting, or serving as a base or foundation, essential, primary, original (a fundamental change; the fundamental rules; the fundamental form).
--n.
    1 (usu. in pl.) a fundamental rule, principle, or article.
    2 Mus. a fundamental note or tone.
    fundamental note Mus. the lowest note of a chord in its original (uninverted) form. fundamental particle an elementary particle. fundamental tone Mus. the tone produced by vibration of the whole of a sonorous body (opp. HARMONIC).
    fundamentality n. fundamentally adv. [ME f. F fondamental or LL fundamentalis (as FUNDAMENT)]
Traditional English :: fundamentalism
fund.html - n.
1 strict maintenance of traditional Protestant beliefs such as the inerrancy of Scripture and literal acceptance of the creeds as fundamentals of Christianity.
2 strict maintenance of ancient or fundamental doctrines of any religion, esp. Islam.
    fundamentalist n.
Traditional English :: fundus
fund.html - n.
(pl. fundi) Anat. the base of a hollow organ; the part furthest from the opening. [L, = bottom]
fund.html -