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   Word of the Day for Monday November 19, 2001:

   redound \rih-DOWND\, intransitive verb:
   1. To have a consequence or effect.
   2. To return; to rebound; to reflect.
   3. To become added or transferred; to accrue.

     Even  if  we don't officially round them up, as we did with
     Japanese  Americans in World War II, the unofficial acts of
     meanness  and  hatred against those who look like our blood
     enemies are likely to redound to our shame.
     --William  Raspberry,  "Worse to Come," [1]Washington Post,
     September 15, 2001

     Women  are so inclined to vote Democratic that a Republican
     drive  to  get out the women's vote may actually redound to
     the Democrats' advantage.
     --   Ruth   Conniff,  "No  more  angry  feminists,"  [2]The
     Progressive, October 1, 1996

     [T]he  Kemp  Commission  tracked  three  periods of reduced
     taxation  in this century. Each was followed by an economic
     boom that redounded to the benefit of the entire society.
     --Mona  Charen,  "You Can't Punish the Rich Without Hurting
     the  Rest  of  Us," [3]St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 25,
     1996

     O'Sullivan  busied  himself  writing would-be contributors,
     outlining  his  plan  for  the enterprise and how its glory
     would redound to all associated with the project.
     --Edward  L.  Widmer,  [4]Young  America:  The Flowering of
     Democracy in New York City
     _________________________________________________________

   Redound,  originally "to be in excess or to overflow," derives
   from  Latin  redundare,  "to  overflow,  to be in abundance or
   excess," from re- + unda, "wave."

References

   1. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/front.htm
   2. http://www.progressive.org/
   3. http://home.post-dispatch.com/
   4. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0195140621/ref=nosim/lexico


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