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THEWLESS adjective (thyoo-lis)
adjective
1. lacking in mental or moral vigor; weak, spiritless, or timid.
Quotes
For indeed they were but thewless creatures, pallid with the damp caves of the moors, and so starved that they seemed to have eaten grass like Nebuchadnezzar.
--*S. R. Crockett,*The Cherry Ribband, 1905
Here I stand amid my clan / Spoiled of my fame a thewless man.
--*J. Stuart Blackie,*"Is the Gaelic Ossian a Translation from the English?" The Celtic Magazine, July 1876
Origin
First recorded in 1300-50, thewless is from the Middle English word theweles.
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EPIGRAMMATIC adjective (ep-i-gruh-mat-ik)
adjective
1. terse and ingenious in expression; of or like an epigram.
2. containing or favoring the use of epigrams.
Quotes
... the dialogue is sanded and sharpened to an epigrammatic elegance ...
--*Richard Brody,*"'Phantom Thread': Paul Thomas Anderson's Furious Fusion of Art and Love," The New Yorker, December 27, 2017
His is the sort of epigrammatic utterance to which there can be no rejoinder, the clean hit and quick-killing witticism: once over lightly and leave.
--*Nicholas Delbanco,*The Lost Suitcase, 2000
Origin
In Greek epĂ*gramma means “inscription, commemorative or memorial inscription, short poem, written estimate of or demand for damages.” Probably the most famous epigram is that attributed to Simonides of Ceos (c566 b.c.–c468 b.c.) for the Spartans who fell at Thermoplylae (480 b.c.): “Stranger, report to the Spartans that we lie here in obedience to their orders,” which is spartan in its terseness. Epigrammatic entered English in the early 18th century.
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FANTASTICATE verb (fan-tas-ti-keyt)
verb
1. to make or render fantastic.
Quotes
Parallel universes are another trope borrowed from the repertory of science fiction. They are a marvelous convenience for authors who want to fantasticate at a high rpm without having to offer a rational explanation for the wonders they evoke.
--*Thomas M. Disch,*The Dreams Our Stuff Is Made Of, 1998
She also fantasticates about food, and her Catholicism surfaces in her lingering on the cannibalism at the heart of the eucharist.
--*Marina Warner,*"From high society to surrealism: in praise of Leonora Carrington -- 100 years on," The Guardian, April 6, 2017
Origin
Fantasticate was first recorded in 1590-1600.
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RASPUTIN noun (ra-spyoo-tin)
noun
1. any person who exercises great but insidious influence.
2. Grigori Efimovich, 1871–1916, Siberian peasant monk who was very influential at the court of Czar Nicholas II and Czarina Alexandra.
Quotes
... the dynamics of the situation do not permit him to be a Rasputin, whispering in Nixon's ear.
--*David Nevin,*"Autocrat in the Action Arena," Life, September 5, 1969
Others have described Isaacs as "a Rasputin or Svengali-like character in Kerner's life who exploited his undue influence over the governor and led him astray."
--*Cynthia Grant Bowman,*Dawn Clark Netsch: A Political Life, 2010
Origin
Grigori Efimovich Rasputin (c1871-1916) was a Russian peasant and self-proclaimed mystic and holy man (he had no official position in the Russian Orthodox Church). By 1904 Rasputin was popular among the high society of St. Petersburg, and in 1906 he became the healer of Alexei Nikolaevich Romanov, heir to the Russian throne and the hemophiliac son of Czar Nicholas II and his wife, Czarina Alexandra Feodorovna (a granddaughter of Queen Victoria and a carrier of hemophilia). In December 1916 Rasputin was murdered by Russian noblemen because of his influence over Czar Nicholas and the czarina.
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TUTTI adjective (too-tee)
adjective
1. Music. all; all the voices or instruments together.
2. Music. intended for or performed by all (or most of) the voices or instruments together, as a passage or movement in concert music (opposed to solo).
noun
1. Music. a tutti passage or movement.
2. Music. the tonal product or effect of a tutti performance.
Quotes
He used to say that music could be either about almost nothing, one tiny strand of sound plucked like a silver hair from the head of the Muse, or about everything there was, all of it, tutti tutti, life, marriage, otherworlds, earthquakes, uncertainties, warnings, rebukes, journeys, dreams, love, the whole ball of wax, the full nine yards, the whole catastrophe.
--*Salman Rushdie,*The Ground Beneath Her Feet, 1999
You will hear the very obvious difference in volume between the tutti notes and the immediately following music, which is still forte but is played by fewer instruments.
--*Robert Nelson, Carl J. Christensen,*Foundations of Music, 2006
Origin
The Italian word tutti means “all,” i.e., all the instruments or voices of an orchestra together. Tutti is the masculine plural of tutto “all,” from Vulgar Latin tottus (unattested), from Latin tōtus. Tutti entered English in the 18th century.
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MORES plural noun (mawr-eyz)
plural noun
1. Sociology. folkways of central importance accepted without question and embodying the fundamental moral views of a group.
Quotes
... as Lincoln now feared, with the passing of this noble generation, “if the laws be continually despised and disregarded, if their rights to be secure in their persons and property, are held by no better tenure than the caprice of a mob, the alienation of their affections from the Government is the natural consequence.” To fortify against this, Lincoln essentially proposed that the national mores of America—taught in every classroom, preached in every church, proclaimed in every legislative hall—must revolve around “reverence” to the laws ...
--*David Bahr,*"Abraham Lincoln's Political Menagerie," Forbes, June 29, 2017
... the artist has always considered himself beyond the mores of the community in which he lived.
--*Philip Roth,*The Ghost Writer, 1979
Origin
The Latin noun mōrēs is the plural of mōs “custom, habit, usage, wont.” The Latin noun, whether singular or plural, has a wider range of usage than English mores has. Mōs may be good, bad, or indifferent: in Cicero’s usage the phrase mōs mājōrum “custom of our ancestors” is roughly equivalent to “constitution”; mōs sinister means “perverted custom," literally “left-handed”; and Horace used to walk along the Via Sacra as was his habit (mōs). Mores entered English in the late 19th century.
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HYETAL adjective (hahy-i-tl)
adjective
1. of or relating to rain or rainfall.
Quotes
What grand cause has operated to disturb the ordinary rate of hyetal precipitation ... is a question to be studied by climatologists.
--*"The Drought and Smoky Days in Central New-York," New York Times, July 23, 1864
Hyetal regions, mean annual cloudiness, co-tidal lines, cyclonic rotations, and progressive low pressure systems are not charming in themselves.
--*Michael Innes,*There Came Both Mist and Snow, 1940
Origin
The English adjective hyetal is very uncommon, used only in meteorology. The Greek noun hyetόs means “rain”; the noun hyetĂ*a means “rainy weather”; both nouns derive from the verb hĂ˝ein “to rain.” In English and other languages (German, for example), verbs of weather and natural phenomena are impersonal (e.g., it is raining, es regnet; it is snowing, es schneit). In Greek, however, such verbs are personal, Zeus or another god being understood as the subject if not explicitly named; thus hĂ˝ei means to a Greek not “it is raining,” but “Zeus is raining,” and neĂ*phei “Zeus is snowing.” Hyetal entered English in the 19th century.
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GOLDILOCKS adjective (gohl-dee-loks)
adjective
1. (usually initial capital letter) not being extreme or not varying drastically between extremes, especially between hot and cold: a Goldilocks economy that is neither overheated nor too cold to cause arecession; a goldilocks planet such as Earth.
noun
1. (used with a singular verb) a person with golden hair.
Quotes
For future generations to realize the search for distant “Goldilocks planets,” this generation must work harder to protect our own.
--*Alan S. Fintz,*"Letter to the Editor: The Good Earth," New York Times, February 1, 2011
Short-story collections prove to be a solution to folks who are “too busy to read” or are trying to find a way to break up a monotonous commute becoming the “just right” in a Goldilocks situation.
--*Nicole Y. Chung,*"9 short-story collections we can't wait to read this fall," Washington Post, September 18, 2017
Origin
Little new or unknown can be said about Goldilocks, but in the late 1980s astronomers began using the phrases Goldilocks planet or Goldilocks zone for planets in our solar system exoplanets that are not too hot, not too cold for supporting life (as we know it on earth).
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UFOLOGY noun (yoo-fol-uh-jee)
noun
1. the study of unidentified flying objects.
Quotes
The First International Congress on the U.F.O. Phenomenon, which ended here yesterday, brought the two groups uncomfortably together, and, after a week of heated debate, a single theory of ufology seemed further away tha[n] ever.
--*Alan Riding,*"Scientists and Laymen in Conflict At World Conference on U.F.O.'s," New York Times, April 25, 1977
The history of ufology shows the complex psychology of fringe beliefs.
--*Julie Beck,*"What UFOs Mean for Why People Don't Trust Science," The Atlantic, February 18, 2016
Origin
Ufology was first recorded in 1955-60.
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ABERRATION noun (ab-uh-rey-shuh n_
noun
1. the act of departing from the right, normal, or usual course.
2. the act of deviating from the ordinary, usual, or normal type.
3. deviation from truth or moral rectitude.
4. mental irregularity or disorder, especially of a minor or temporary nature; lapse from a sound mental state.
5. Astronomy. apparent displacement of a heavenly body, owing to the motion of the earth in its orbit.
6. Optics. any disturbance of the rays of a pencil of light such that they can no longer be brought to a sharp focus or form a clear image.
7. Photography. a defect in a camera lens or lens system, due to flaws in design, material, or construction, that can distort the image.
Quotes
They don't want to believe that the United States is opposed to action on global warming. They’d rather see the Trump administration as an aberration.
--*Lisa Friedman and Brad Plumer,*"Introducing Our Newsletter, Climate Fwd:" New York Times, November 15, 2017
I had never fought or thrown a punch at anyone. It was an aberration to my father, and he had instilled in me this idea of physical violence as an aberration.
--*David Adams Richards,*Mercy Among the Children, 2000
Origin
The English noun aberration has wandered far from its Latin original. Cicero (106-43 b.c.) is the first (and only) Latin author to use the noun aberrātiō “distraction, diversion, relief (from pain or sorrow).” Aberrātiō is a derivative of the verb aberrāre “to divert, forget for a time; to wander off, go astray, deviate.” Aberration entered English in the 16th century.