excited public interest, discussion, or the like, as the clamor attending some sensational event; hullabaloo: The brouhaha followed disclosures of graft at City Hall. ... Latin root of brouh...
dictionary.reference.com/browse/brouhaha dictionary.reference.com/browse/brouhaha
Brouhaha etymology ... Latin root of brouh... ... Search another word or see brouhaha on Dictionary...
thesaurus.reference.com/browse/brouhaha thesaurus.reference.com/browse/brouhaha
And, according to Robert Caro, quoted in the Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia used the phrase (in Latin, no less) in 1934. ... Yes, "brouhaha" is a real word, ... These "ducks" come from the same root that gave the feathered duck its name, the Old English word "ducan,"
www.word-detective.com/back-a2.html
in Geopolitical Brouhaha, ... It’s not clear — especially since it is legal in Venezuela and elsewhere in Latin America, ... To take another case, we root for Jean Valjean vs. the heartless Javert, even though Valjean admits committing a criminal act based on personal moral values — breaking-and-entering to steal food to...
hill-kleerup.org/blog/category/geopolitical-brouhaha hill-kleerup.org/blog/category/geopolitical-brouhaha
Remember the big brouhaha they started because they thought "niggardly" was racist? ... As was mentioned before, I can usually come up with a decent definition of a word just by its root, which is usually latin, and if not, it is from another language that took something else from latin. A great thing, that language.
www.stormfront.org/forum/sitemap/index.php/t-585946.htm... www.stormfront.org/forum/sitemap/index.php/t-585946.html
This is most probably derived from a Spanish word "bruja" meaning witch. Many have speculated that its choice and spelling may have been influenced by "brouhaha", originally a French word. ... "Doxa" is some what more complex, as it derives from a root with a base meaning of "showing" with a strong sense of the visual aspect.
www.iit.edu/~lance/tremere/ar_etymology.html
Brouhaha [1890; < French (1552) brouhaha, which "is said to have been, in medieval theater, 'the cry of the devil disguised ... or perhaps < the Greek root kata- 'implying disparagement or abuse'; ... cop < perhaps a pronunciation variant of cap (North British dialect) 'to arrest' (< Old French caper < Latin capere 'to seize');
www.english.uga.edu/dawgspeak/etymolhelp.html
ECONOMICREFORM (PDF File)
Take Root in Latin America? Article at a glance; • An ongoing food crisis is fueling populism and protectionism in Latin America, further pushing countries off the path to democratic and market reforms. ... Can Democratic Market Economies Take Root in Latin America? Center for International Private Enterprise;
www.cipe.org/publications/fs/pdf/042808.pdf
 The colored words represent his Latin root definitions that flow into English as “derivatives.”  The “grey” words are other words that we, as a class, discovered as having their foundations in Latin.  For a PDF of the same, click here, or from one of the three sidebar locations where this post is filed.
latinisenglish.wordpress.com/ latinisenglish.wordpress.com/
La Fiesta de los Vaqueros: Rodeo is Tucson's Mardi Gras; 24 fighting cocks taken from SE Side residence; Police Break Up Weekend Cockfight; Nostalgic for Cinco de Mayo; It's cool to be naco (tacky); 'Mi Corazon Negro' celebrates black/Latin culture;
www.latinamericanstudies.org/latinos.htm www.latinamericanstudies.org/latinos.htm
Definitions