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Project 366...
There is a 'sward' (I like that word and rarely get to use it) across the access road into the school campus that is just beautiful right now. The custodians mowed the grass yesterday, and now the area looks like a park.
From this angle you can see how the ground rolls around slightly, and you can see the kudzu-covered scrub trees in the background. The soccer goal is barely visible behind the trees. I wish I could have gotten a clear picture of the yellow and red leaves on the ground. I tried several angles, but none really captured the scope I was looking for as well as this. Plus, it was very overcast today, which means the sky in the picture is muddled. :( Even so, I like the picture.
Photo of the Day...'Sward'...

From this angle you can see how the ground rolls around slightly, and you can see the kudzu-covered scrub trees in the background. The soccer goal is barely visible behind the trees. I wish I could have gotten a clear picture of the yellow and red leaves on the ground. I tried several angles, but none really captured the scope I was looking for as well as this. Plus, it was very overcast today, which means the sky in the picture is muddled. :( Even so, I like the picture.
Photo of the Day...'Sward'...

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I've never used the word 'sward'. We have a grassy area near us that we call: the green area, the common area, the grassy area, or the little park. Maybe I'll start dazzling everyone with my great vocabulary and start calling it the 'sward'. :-)
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LOL! The fruits of reading historical fiction for years and years! :D
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The sky gives off a sense of summer gone without the blue
I'm googling kudzu as I don't know what it is :-)
xx
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Kudzu! The bane of a Southerner's existence!
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I like the photo. I have never heard the word sward before!
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Now that you've heard the word sward, you MUST use it at least once in the next week. LOL!
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If one of your back lots is a sward, it's awfully pretty! :D
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I've seen sward but never spoken it....until just now!
"Sward" reminds me of my son's heads a couple of days after they've shaved them up for a swim meet.
I was curious about the etymology of such a funny word:
sward
"grass-covered ground," O.E. sweard "skin, rind" (of bacon, etc.), from P.Gmc. *swarthu- (cf. O.Fris. swarde "skin of the head," M.Du. swarde "rind of bacon," Ger. Schwarte "thick, hard skin, rind," O.N. svörðr "walrus hide"). Meaning "sod, turf" developed c.1300, on notion of the "skin" of the earth (cf. O.N. grassvörðr, Dan. grønsvær "greensward").
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Hahahahahaha!
I learned the word by reading a LOT of historical fiction and from crossword puzzles. :/