a person who gives money or other help to a person or cause

Basher Eyre on geograph.org.uk
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Give, donate, share. Benefactors don't need to be rich, just have something to give.
In the Netherlands and Flanders many villages have roads paved with "klinkers" (= unvitrified clinker bricks). My dictionary mentions: (Dutch) brick paving, (Dutch) clinker (brick) paving. It causes a very singular noise inside cars driving over it. A rather melodious sound actually, quite distinct from the tearing scream produced by blacktop, the tackadap-tackadap of concrete slabs or the racket of cobblestones.Algot Runeman wrote:clinker
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mid 17th century: from obsolete Dutch klinckaerd (earlier form of klinker), from klinken 'to clink'
The adjective infernal infers a hellish situation, extreme heat or a raging forest fire.Algot Runeman wrote:infer
For millennia Bah has been not the WoTD, but the Word of Every Day for shepherds. Countless numbers of them switched to a different profession because they were driven crazy by the incessant 24/7/365 Bah's of their sheep. Most took up fishing.Algot Runeman wrote:Bah
After his F1 accident, Niki Lauda would have made a poor earwitness ...Algot Runeman wrote:earwitness
Algot Runeman wrote:gaffe
To pin yang in your comment, may I suggest you write it in Pinyin?Algot Runeman wrote:yang
I hesitate to comment on yang.