The word for today is…

hackle (noun, verb):

noun
1a: one of the long narrow feathers on the neck or saddle of a bird
b: the neck plumage of the domestic fowl
2: a comb or board with long metal teeth for dressing flax, hemp, or jute
3: hackles plural
a: erectile hairs along the neck and back especially of a dog
b: temper, dander
4a: an artificial fishing fly made chiefly of the filaments of a cock’s neck feathers
b: filaments of cock feather projecting from the head of an artificial fly

verb
: to comb out with a hackle

Source : Merriam -Webster

Etymology : In its earliest uses in the 15th century, hackle denoted either a bird’s neck plumage or an instrument used to comb out long fibers of flax, hemp, or jute. Apparently, some folks saw a resemblance between the neck feathers of domestic birds—which, on a male, become erect when the bird is defensive—and the prongs of the comb-like tool. In the 19th century, English speakers extended the word’s use to both dogs and people. Like the bird’s feathers, the erectile hairs on the back of a dog’s neck stand up when the animal is agitated. With humans, use of the word hackles is usually figurative. When you raise someone’s hackles, you make them angry or put them on the defensive.

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David is a retired surgeon originally from London who came to New Zealand twenty-seven years ago after being delayed in Singapore for thirteen years on leaving the UK. He was coerced into studying Latin...