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8. pit·fall (noun)
Etymology
● pit + fall
● pit = a hole in the ground. fall = to drop, descend, or move downwards.
Pronunciation
● UK: pĭtʹfôl /ˈpɪʔfɔːl/
● US: pĭtʹfäl /ˈpɪʔfɑl/
Definition
● a potential problem, hazard, or danger that is easily encountered but not immediately obvious
● a type of trap or concealed hole in the ground: victims fall into the hole and are unable to escape
Source: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/pitfall
9. pro·to·col (noun)
Etymology
● Middle French protocolle, protocole (“document, record”)
● Late Latin protocollum (“the first sheet of a volume (on which contents and errata were written)”)
● Byzantine Greek πρωτόκολλον (“first sheet glued onto a manuscript”), from πρῶτος (prôtos, “first”) + κόλλα (kólla, “glue”)
Pronunciation
● UK: pĭtʹfôl /ˈpɪʔfɔːl/
● US: pĭtʹfäl /ˈpɪʔfɑl/
Definition
● a set of formal rules or instructions; official formulas or guidelines
● notes of observations made during an experiment; also, the precise method for carrying out or reproducing a given experiment
Source: https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/protocol
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