Page 69 of 84 FirstFirst ... 1959676869707179 ... LastLast
Results 681 to 690 of 832

Thread: Word of the Day...

  1. #681
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    The woods are lovely dark and deep
    Posts
    5,364
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    PSEPHOLOGY:

    the scientific study of elections

    — pse·pho·log·i·cal \ˌsē-fə-ˈlä-ji-kəl\ adjective
    — pse·phol·o·gist \sē-ˈfä-lə-jist\ noun

    Origin of PSEPHOLOGY--Greek psēphos pebble, ballot, vote; from the use of pebbles by the ancient Greeks in voting

  2. #682
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Atlanta GA
    Posts
    6,793
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    sub–rosa (ˈsəb-ˈrō-zə-a) adj, secretive, private.

    Was she planning to win the club's sub-rosa competitions by sabotaging the other members?

  3. #683
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    The woods are lovely dark and deep
    Posts
    5,364
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    anamnesis \an-am-NEE-sis\, noun:

    1. The recollection or remembrance of the past.
    2. Platonism. Recollection of the Ideas, which the soul had known in a previous existence, especially by means of reasoning.
    3. The medical history of a patient.
    4. Immunology. A prompt immune response to a previously encountered antigen, characterized by more rapid onset and greater effectiveness of antibody and T cell reaction than during the first encounter, as after a booster shot in a previously immunized person.
    5. (Often initial capital letter) a prayer in a Eucharistic service, recalling the Passion, Resurrection, and Ascension of Christ.

    When I was writing a novel about a fourteen-year-old girl, I must remember what I was like at fourteen, but this anamnesis is not a looking back, from my present chronological age, at Madeleine, aged fourteen.
    -- Madeleine L'Engle, The Irrational Season

    The narrator of Dostoevsky's Dream of a Ridiculous Man visits in his sleep, in a state of anamnesis perhaps, a humanity living in the Golden Age before the loss of innocence and happiness.
    -- Czesław Miłosz, To Begin Where I Am: Selected Essays

    Anamnesis is derived from the Greek roots ana (meaning “re”) and mimnḗskein (meaning “to call to mind”).

  4. #684
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Atlanta GA
    Posts
    6,793
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    provenance [ˈpräv-nən(t)s, ˈprä-və-ˌnän(t)s] noun, origin, source; the history of ownership of a valued object or work of art or literature.

    She felt stupid. Such a hot tip--counterfeit pharmaceuticals, imported from Asia and sold under faked labels to drugstore chains that didn't check their provenance--it was dream story.

  5. #685
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Atlanta GA
    Posts
    6,793
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    Daglish, Dalglish, Dalgleish or Dalgliesh is a name originating from Gaelic dail (field) + glaise (brook).

    field: clearing, ground, lot, parcel, plat, plot, tract grass, green, greensward, lawn; glade, grassland, heath, heathland, lea (or ley), meadow, moor, pasture, pastureland.

    brook: a small flow of water along a wooded path.

  6. #686
    Join Date
    Jul 2010
    Location
    south
    Posts
    3,278
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    Thank-you! very interesting.QUOTE=blunthead;493856]Daglish, Dalglish, Dalgleish or Dalgliesh is a name originating from Gaelic dail (field) + glaise (brook).

    field: clearing, ground, lot, parcel, plat, plot, tract grass, green, greensward, lawn; glade, grassland, heath, heathland, lea (or ley), meadow, moor, pasture, pastureland.

    brook: a small flow of water along a wooded path.[/QUOTE]

  7. #687
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    The woods are lovely dark and deep
    Posts
    5,364
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    Cimmerian \si-MEER-ee-uhn\, adjective:

    1. Very dark; gloomy; deep.
    2. Classical Mythology. Of, pertaining to, or suggestive of a western people believed to dwell in perpetual darkness.

    I was ripe for death, and along a road full of dangers, weakness led me to the boundaries of the world and the Cimmerian land of darkness and whirlwinds.
    -- Arthur Rimbaud, A Season in Hell

    Once beneath the over-arching trees all was again Cimmerian darkness, nor was the gloom relieved until the sun finally arose beyond the eastern cliffs, when she saw that they were following what appeared to be a broad and well-beaten game trail through a forest of great trees.
    -- Edgar Rice Burroughs, Tarzan the Untamed

    Like gasconade, cimmerian was originally a toponym. It referred to the Cimmerii, an ancient nomadic people who live in Crimea, according to Herodotus.

  8. #688
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Atlanta GA
    Posts
    6,793
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    frisson (frē-ˈsōⁿ) noun, a brief moment of emotional excitement; shudder; thrill.

    She pushed the Open Door button... She felt a frisson of excitement.

  9. #689
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    The woods are lovely dark and deep
    Posts
    5,364
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    heterotelic \het-er-uh-TEL-ik\, adjective:

    Having the purpose of its existence or occurrence apart from itself.

    You're of heteroteleic value, that means you were invoked for an extraneous purpose alone, the outcome of which won't even be known to me until I'm back with my physical body in the physical world…
    -- William Cook, Love in the Time of Flowers

    Therefore, what has been proposed above as a means of redirecting the development of postmodernity toward more livable, human dimensions is a heterotelic narrative transitivity—an active reimmersion of narrative in the social—which contrasts sharply with the autotelic concern for their own procedures and the hermetic intransitivity of modernist self-consciousness and late modernist self-reflexivity.
    -- Joseph Francese, Narrating Postmodern Time and Space

    Heterotelic is directly derived from the Greek roots héteros meaning "other", tele- meaning "distant", and the suffix -ic which denotes an adjective, as in metallic and athletic.

  10. #690
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    Anytown, USA
    Posts
    1,930
    Post Thanks / Like

    Default Re: Word of the Day...

    Freedom -


Page 69 of 84 FirstFirst ... 1959676869707179 ... LastLast

Similar Threads

  1. Word Processor Of the Gods
    By aptpupil in forum Skeleton Crew
    Replies: 49
    Last Post: April 9th, 2013, 02:11 AM

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •