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  1. #1
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    CYCLOPEAN adjective (sahy-kluh-pee-uhn)

    adjective
    1. gigantic; vast.
    2. (initial capital letter) of or characteristic of the Cyclops.
    3. Architecture, Building Trades. formed with or containing large, undressed stones fitted closely together without the use of mortar: a cyclopean wall.


    Quotes

    ... large ships’ vents hang from the two-story-high ceiling, like Cyclopean worms poking their heads in to check out the space.
--*Colin Stokes,*"The Ship," The New Yorker, May 16, 2016


    And ahead, the great cyclopean edifice reared like a giant's curse against the darkness: too dense a black, too severe.
--*Storm Constantine,*The Way of Light, 2002



    Origin

    English cyclopean comes from the Latin adjective Cyclōpēus, a borrowing of Greek Kyklṓpeios, a derivative of the common noun, proper noun, and name Kýklōps, which the Greeks interpreted to mean “round eye” (a compound of kýklos “wheel” and ōps “eye, face”). The most famous Cyclops is Polyphemus, a crude, solitary shepherd living on an island whom Odysseus blinded in Homer’s Odyssey. Hesiod (ca. 8th century b.c.) in his Theogony names three Cyclopes; they are craftsmen who make Zeus’s thunderbolts, and whom the Greeks often credited with building the walls of ancient Mycenae, Tiryns, Argos, and the acropolis of Athens, all constructed with massive limestone blocks roughly fitted together without mortar. Cyclopean entered English in the 17th century.

  2. #2
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    LOCAVORE noun (loh-kuh-vawr)

    noun
    1. a person who makes an effort to eat food that is grown, raised, or produced locally, usually within 100 miles of home.


    Quotes

    The pomegranates, Boston lettuce, and tomatoes came from out of state--it was hard to be a complete locavore in New England during the winter.
--*Steven Raichlen,*Island Apart, 2012


    The locavore movement aims to capture that flavor difference and promote sustainable, community-based agriculture by favoring "low-mileage" foods over ones that have traveled long distances to arrive at your plate.
--*Christie Aschwanden,*"The Locavore," Runner's World, October 2008



    Origin

    Locavore was coined in 2005 by Jessica Prentice (born 1968), an American chef and author, and a co-founder of Three Stone Hearth, a community-supported kitchen in Berkeley, California. Locavore is a compound of English local, from Latin locālis “pertaining to a place” (from locus "place") and Latin vorāre “to swallow ravenously,” which also appears in devour “to swallow down, gulp down,” carnivore “meat eater,” and herbivore “grass eater.”

  3. #3
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    CABOSHED adjective (kub-bosht)

    adjective
    1. Heraldry. (of an animal, as a deer) shown facing forward without a neck: a stag's head caboshed.


    Quotes

    ... an heraldic shield featuring a lion's head caboshed, with medusa hair, a single bulging eye, a beard, and tusks ...
--*John Clute,*Appleseed, 2001


    A fanciful menagerie flourished on the banners: the caboshed boar of Janos of Hungary, the naiant dolphin of a Sicilian Norman, the salient-countersalient white stags of Conrad's men, and everywhere the Templars' Pegasus.
--*Chelsea Quinn Yarbro,*Crusader's Torch, 1988



    Origin

    Caboshed, also spelled caboched and cabossed is a technical term in heraldry referring to a beast decapitated behind its horns. The -ed shows that the variant spellings are all past participles of the very rare and obsolete verb cabochen, cabachen “to behead (a deer or other beast) right behind its horns.” The English verb comes from the French verb cabocher (past participle caboché), a derivative of caboche (Old French caboce), a pejorative northern French dialect (Norman, Picard) word meaning “head” (literally “cabbage”). Caboche may be a development of Latin caput “head.” Caboshed entered English in the 16th century.

  4. #4
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    SWEETING noun (swee-ting)

    noun
    1. a sweet variety of apple.
    2. Archaic. sweetheart.


    Quotes

    ... I do give her the frut of two appel trees one a sweeting ye nothermost of ye sweetings in ye Lower yard and ye westermost tree by ye highway.
--*"A Trip to Old Harwich," The Owl, September 1903


    They be not righteous actions that make a righteous man; nor be they evil actions that make a wicked man: for a tree must be a sweeting tree before it yield sweetings; and a crab tree before it bring forth crabs.
--*John Bunyan,*A Discourse Upon the Pharisee and the Publican, 1685



    Origin

    Sweeting is an obvious noun formed from the adjective sweet and the noun suffix -ing “one belonging to, descended from.” The sense “sweetheart,” not used nowadays, dates from about 1300; the sense “a variety of sweet apple” dates from the 16th century.

  5. #5
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    TAUTOLOGY noun (taw-tol-uh-jee)

    noun
    1. needless repetition of an idea, especially in words other than those of the immediate context, without imparting additional force or clearness, as in “widow woman.”
    2. an instance of such repetition.
    3. Logic. a. a compound propositional form all of whose instances are true, as “A or not A.” b. an instance of such a form, as “This candidate will win or will not win.”


    Quotes

    Take away perspective and you are stranded in a universal present, something akin, weirdly, to the unhistoried — and, at the risk of tautology, perspective-less — art of the Middle Ages.
--*Geoff Dyer,*"Andreas Gursky's photos visually articulate the world around us, framing modern society," Los Angeles Times, October 17, 2015


    ... the central moral question is whether we are going to use the language of tautology and self-justification – one that gives us alone the right to be called reasonable and human – or whether we labour to discover other ways of speaking and imagining.
--*Rowan Williams,*"What Orwell can teach us about the language of terror and war," The Guardian, December 12, 2015



    Origin

    Tautology comes from Late Latin tautologia, a borrowing of a Hellenistic Greek rhetorical term tautologÃ*a “repetition of something already said.” The second half of tautology is clear enough, being the same suffix as in theology or philology. The first element tauto- needs some clarification: it comes from tò autó “the same,” formed from the neuter singular of the definite article and the third person pronoun (the combination of tò autó to tautó is called krâsis “mixture,” which appears in idiosyncrasy “personal temperament”—a “personal blend” as it were. Tautology entered English in the 16th century.

  6. #6
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    ATWEEL adverb (uh-tweel, at-weel)

    adverb
    1. Scot. surely.


    Quotes

    Atweel, I can do that, and help her to buy her parapharnauls.
--*John Galt,*The Entail, 1823


    Atweel, I dinna ken yet.
--*George MacDonald,*Robert Falconer, 1868



    Origin

    Atweel is an alteration and contraction of Scots (I) wat weel, (I) wot well in standard if archaic English, meaning (I) know well in modern standard English. Unsurprisingly, atweel is found only in Scottish authors, the two most famous being Robert Burns (1759–1796) and Sir Walter Scott (1771–1832). Atweel entered English in the 18th century.

  7. #7
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    RETICULATION noun (ri-tik-yuh-ley-shuhn)

    noun
    1. a netlike formation, arrangement, or appearance; network.


    Quotes

    ... Ralph Marvell, stretched on his back in the grass, lay gazing up at a black reticulation of branches between which bits of sky gleamed with the hardness and brilliancy of blue enamel.
--*Edith Wharton,*The Custom of the Country, 1913


    Her appearance has changed as well, and I don't mean just the intense reticulation of lines and wrinkles, the true stigmata of life.
--*Rabih Alameddine,*An Unnecessary Woman, 2013



    Origin

    Reticulation Is a derivative of the adjective reticulate (and the noun suffix -ion), of Latin origin. Reticulate comes from Latin rēticulātus “covered with a net, having a netlike pattern,” a derivative of the noun rēticulum “small net, a network bag,” itself a derivative of rēte “net (for hunting, fishing, fowling).” Reticulation entered English in the 17th century.

  8. #8
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    EXOTERIC adjective (ek-suh-ter-ik)

    adjective
    1. popular; simple; commonplace.
    2. suitable for or communicated to the general public.
    3. not belonging, limited, or pertaining to the inner or select circle, as of disciples or intimates.
    4. pertaining to the outside; exterior; external.


    Quotes

    I was on a holiday, and was engaged in that rich and intricate mass of pleasures, duties, and discoveries which for the keeping off of the profane, we disguise by the exoteric name of Nothing.
--*G. K. Chesterton,*Tremendous Trifles, 1909


    Practical or exoteric alchemy was concerned chiefly with attempts to prepare the philosopher's stone, a hypothetical transmuting and healing agent capable of curing the imagined diseases of metals and the real ones of man.
--*John Read,*"A grandiose philosophical system," New Scientist, February 21, 1957



    Origin

    Exoteric, the opposite of esoteric, comes from Latin exōtericus “popular (e.g., of books); not overly technical or abstruse,” a borrowing of Greek exōterikós “external, outside, popular.” The first element of the Greek word is the adverb éxō “out, out of, outside”; the last element, -ikós, is a typical adjective suffix. The middle element, -ter-, is usually called a comparative suffix, which is only one of its functions. The suffix -ter is also used in Latin and Greek to form natural or complementary pairs, e.g., Latin nōster “our” and vester “your,” and dexter “right (hand)” and sinister “left (hand).” The Latin adjectives correspond with Greek hēméteros “our” and hyméteros “your,” and dexiterós “right (hand)” and aristerós “left (hand).” Aristerós is a euphemism meaning “better (hand)” (áristos means “best” in Greek, as in aristocracy “rule of the best”). Exoteric entered English in the 17th century.

  9. #9
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    INTERREGNUM noun (in-ter-reg-nuhm)

    noun
    1. any period during which a state has no ruler or only a temporary executive.
    2. an interval of time between the close of a sovereign's reign and the accession of his or her normal or legitimate successor.
    3. any period of freedom from the usual authority.
    4. any pause or interruption in continuity.


    Quotes

    But now, he has been on the job for two decades, save for a brief interregnum when he switched posts with his prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev.
--*Michael McFaul,*"I've been in meetings with Putin. Here's what Trump can expect." Washington Post, July 15, 2018


    During the two years of interregnum, during Dr. Aagaard's administration and in the year of two following his resignation to accept a similar position at the University of Washington, all major clinical chairmanships fell vacant and new appointments had to be made.
--*John S. Chapman,*"The Cinderella School of Medicine," The Alcalde, January 1962



    Origin

    Interregnum, a straightforward borrowing from Latin, applies far back in Roman history, to the period of kings (traditionally, 753 b.c.–509 b.c.). An interregnum was the period between the death of the old king and the accession of the new one. During the time of the Roman Republic (509 b.c.–27 b.c.), an interregnum was a period when both consuls or other patrician magistrates were dead or out of office. The Roman Senate then appointed from among themselves an interrex (or a series of interregēs) with consular powers for five-day terms whose principal duty was to supervise the election of new consuls. Interregnum entered English in the 16th century.

  10. #10
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    PIACULAR adjective (pahy-ak-yuh-ler)

    adjective
    1. expiatory; atoning; reparatory.
    2. requiring expiation; sinful or wicked.


    Quotes

    T. S. Eliot made a fetish of using long-dormant adjectives like defunctive, anfractuous, and polyphiloprogenetive; he apparently felt piacular (meaning something done or offered in order to make up for a sin or sacrilegious action) was too run-of-the-mill, so he made up a new form: piaculative.
--*Ben Yagoda,*When You Catch an Adjective, Kill It, March 11, 2007


    Sacrifices have generally been divided into three classes of (1) honorific, where the offering is believed to be in some sense a gift to the deity; (2) piacular, or sin-offerings, where the victim was usually burnt whole, no part being retained for eating ...
--*W. Warde Fowler,*The Religious Experience of the Roman People, 1911



    Origin

    Piacular comes directly from the Latin adjective piāculāris “(of a rite or sacrifice) performed or offered by way of atonement; expiatory.” Piāculāris is a derivative of the noun piāculum “a sacrificial victim or expiatory offering,” itself a derivative of the verb piāre “to propitiate a god, remove or avert by expiation.” Finally, piāre is a derivative of the adjective pius “faithful, loyal, and dutiful to the gods, one’s country, family, kindred and friends.” Pius is one of the most potent words in Latin and typical of the Romans. The phrase pius Aenēās “loyal, faithful, dutiful Aeneas” occurs 17 times in the Aeneid. Piacular entered English in the 17th century.

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