Blogger is a term who used and optimized blog but how about Hectic (h
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k)it is Characterized by intense activity, confusion, or haste: “There was nothing feverish or hectic about his vigor” Erik Erikson.[ Middle English etik, recurring, consumptive, from Old French etique, from Late Latin hecticus, from Greek hektikos, from hexis, habit, from ekhein, to be in a certain condition; see segh- in Indo-European roots.]
Word History: hectic in its most familiar sense, “characterized by feverish activity, confusion, or haste.” term’s Without some acquaintance with Middle English one would not recognize the first recorded instance of the word, etik, in a text written before 1398. The Middle English term comes from the Old French development of the Late Latin word hecticus, whose form helped reshape our word in the 16th century. Hecticus comes from Greek hektikos, “formed by habit or forming habit” and “consumptive.” The last sense developed because of the chronic nature of tuberculous fevers. Thus a word that once meant “habitual” eventually had an English descendant used to refer to conditions that most would want to be rare.
Source:The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition copyright ©2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2003. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
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