Well, I don't know if USA TODAY (in the video linked through the bold text below) uses the word 'Scorch' to describe Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Destiny, the 27th day ... April 18, this year) of Ramadan; but 'Scorch' is the meaning of one historical roots of the holiday's name.
The word “Scorcher” is built on ancient words that mean "to make |Dry, |Parch, become |Singed, be |Shriveled, |Shrink, Un|cork, |Flay, Strip off the Skin."
#Scorch #Scorches #Scorched #Scorching #Scorchy #Scorchier #Scorchers #ScorchMark #ScorchMarks #ScorchedEarth
And so it goes.
My New Mantra (one of several) |
I really enjoy sharing my unique perspectives and I'm thankful to you for liking this enough to subscribe (FOR FREE) to get alerts when I post something new and -to comment below (to tell me how crazy or -ingenious or -foolish or -enlightening-etc. my writing is).
Comments
Post a Comment
I appreciate your comment, and I'll probably approve it & publish it soon (give me about a week before you try to post it again when it doesn't publish immediately ... thanks)