Word of the Day
Sequacious, a. /se’kwā-shē’us/ - Disposed to follow; ready to be led; following; attendant. Logically consecutive or consistent. Ductile and pliable.
Source: Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary, 1953
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Word of the Day
Sequacious, a. /se’kwā-shē’us/ - Disposed to follow; ready to be led; following; attendant. Logically consecutive or consistent. Ductile and pliable.
Source: Funk & Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary, 1953

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sequacious
Today’s Merriam-Webster #definethis word of the day is:
sequacious
pronounced \sih-KWAY-shus\
it means:
adjective
: intellectually servile
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sequacious
\sih-KWAY-shuhs\ [adjective]
1. Disposed to follow, especially slavishly
2. Proceeding smoothly and regularly
History & Origin
Sequacious (1630s) is derived from Latin sequac-, stem of sequax "that follows, a follower," from sequi "to follow," from an imagined Proto Indo European root word *sekw- (the common root of Sanskrit sacate "accompanies, follows," Greek hepesthai "to follow," Lithuanian seku "to follow," Latin secundus "second, the following," Old Irish sechim "I follow").
Usage
"The devotion of these sequacious conservatives frightens me."