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THE WONDER OF WORDS: BOOK 2
ONE-HUNDRED MORE WORDS AND PHRASES SHAPING HOW CHRISTIANS THINK AND LIVE
Common words have an uncommon history. Take the word park, for example. As a noun, it stands for land set apart for public pleasure. As a verb, it means to leave a vehicle, for a time, in a certain place. Our word park comes from the Old French word "parc" which, in turn, came from the Medieval Latin "parricus," meaning an enclosure. Long ago, in what is now France, animals were kept in an enclosure called a "parc." The word was taken to England by William the Conqueror, in 1066, and applied to animal enclosures surrounded by thick hedges.

