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    [Noun]  | "riot act" 


    1: a vigorous reprimand or warning —used in the phrase read the riot act


    Origin: 1784 ;

     The Riot Act, English law of 1715 providing for the dispersal of riots upon command of legal authority;

    [Verb]  | "read" | \ ˈrēd \


    1: to receive or take in the sense of (letters, symbols, etc.) especially by sight or touch

    2: to study the movements of with mental formulation of the communication expressed

    3: to utter aloud the printed or written words of


    Origin: before 12th century ;

     Middle English reden "to counsel, order, decide, guide, govern, realize, grasp the meaning of, interpret, explain, teach, look at and understand (written symbols), say aloud (something written)," going back to Old English rǣdan, (non-West Saxon) rēdan "to rule, direct, decide, deliberate, counsel, suppose, guess, expound the meaning of (as a riddle or dream), look at and understand (written symbols), say aloud (something written)," going back to Germanic *rēdan- (whence also Old Frisian rēda "to advise, protect, help, plan, decide," Old Saxon rādan "to consult, guess, take care of, counsel," Old High German rātan "to advise, deliberate, assist," Old Icelandic ráða "to advise, counsel, decide, determine, plan, rule, explain, interpret," Gothic garedan "to make provision for," fauragarairoþ "[s/he] predestined"), going back to an Indo-European verbal base *(H)reh1dh- "carry through successfully," whence also Sanskrit rādhati "will bring about," rādhnóti "(s/he) achieves, prepares, satisfies," Avestan rādat̰ "will make right"; from a causative *(H)roh1dh-éi̯e-, Gothic rodjan "to speak, talk," Old Icelandic ræða "to speak, converse," Old Irish ráidid "(s/he) speaks, says, tells," imm-rádi "(s/he) thinks, reflects," Welsh adroddaf "(I) utter, say, relate," Old Church Slavic neraždǫ, neraditi "to have no care for, take no heed of" (also neroždǫ, neroditi), radi "for the sake of," Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian ráditi "to work, do," Lithuanian ródyti "to show";

      * Note : Old English rǣdan was a Class VII strong verb, with evidence of reduplication (past tense reord), though also conjugated as a weak verb; by the Middle English period evidence for strong conjugation is vestigial. The expected outcome of Anglian rēdan would be *reed, reflecting Middle English close long ; the predominance of read, reflecting open long e, is perhaps due to interference from outcomes of Germanic *raidja- (see: {ready:1|ready:1}). This is essentially the conclusion of the Oxford English Dictionary, third edition, which assembles a number of presumed outcomes of *raidja- under a somewhat shadowy verb rede, the inflected forms of which can be difficult to distinguish from redd and rid (see: {redd:1|redd:1}, ). — As is evident from the number of glosses, the Old and Middle English verbs covered a remarkably broad range of meanings. Those senses not having to do with the act of reading are now mostly represented by the spelling rede in Modern English (see: {rede|rede:1}). Though the sense "interpret" is evident in Old Norse, adaptation of this verb to refer to visual processing of written language is peculiar to Old English (and hence to Modern English); to express this idea other Germanic languages, excepting Gothic, have adapted, either by inheritance or loan, outcomes of the verb *lesan- "to gather, select," presumably as a calque on Latin legere (see: {legend|legend}). — A confusingly broad spectrum of meanings also characterizes the verb's Indo-European congeners, while the formal similarities are close. The gloss "carry through successfully" for *(H)reh1dh- ("erfolgreich durchführen") in Lexikon der indogermanischen Verben, 2. Ausgabe, applies best only to the Indo-Iranian forms.;

    [Noun]  | "riot act" 


    1: an often public or formal expression of disapproval;


      * e.g., " ... at a specially called meeting, he read the riot act to his staff for their poor handling of the crisis "





    [Phrase]  | "read the riot act (to)" 


    1: to criticize (someone) severely or angrily especially for personal failings;


      * e.g., " ... The officer read the riot act to her for speeding in a school zone. "



    •  Antonyms : 

    • (N/A)





     [ "riot act" ]

    1: A top Pearl Jam album.

      * e.g.,  ... Riot Act is a return to form for Vedder and company. 

     [ "Riot Act" ]

    1: Viciously telling somebody off with nothing left out

      * e.g.,  ... "I have been seeing Ernie for ten years. Since he still refuses to commit, I read him the riot act." 

     [ "read the riot act" ]

    1: to rebuke firmly, especially with a stern warning (the riot act was an act of the Parliament of Brittan which was often read before it was enforced and was made particularly infamous by the "Peterloo massacre")

      * e.g.,  ... He read the riot act to him in front of everyone when he tried to steal his book. 

     [ "Read the Riot Act" ]

    1: This occurs after you make the first date after meeting online through social media. Everything has been going great until you meet in person and then your date “reads the riot act” firmly setting out their terms for how the dating and further relationship should progress.

      * e.g.,  ... Phil met Meghan on their first date only to be read the riot act, stating that she did not kiss on the first date, what days of week she was available, how he was to dress when they dated, the types of events she expected him to attend, etc. 

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