sallymn: (words 6)
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vespertine [ves-per-tin]

adjective:
1 (botany, zoology) appearing, opening, or active in the evening
2 occurring in the evening or (esp of stars) appearing or setting in the evening

Examples:

I remember wondering why that was his time to lash out - the vespertine hour, when the day animals were retreating to sleep and the night animals were coming out to hunt. (Susan Straight, Voices, Los Angeles Times, May 2022)

With some species, the hours of activity are even more limited, to either dawn or dusk. Animals only active at dawn are said to be matutinal, while vespertine animals are only active at dusk. (Clay Wollney, Do any crepuscular animals or plants live on Staten Island?, silive.com, April 2015)

The vespertine hour was nigh, and over this iron landscape there floated the moon, an opal button in the sky. (James Huneker, Visionaries)

Odors from strong bacon and boiling coffee contended against the cut-plug fumes from the vespertine pipe. (O Henry, The Trimmed Lamp, and other Stories of the Four Million)

The vespertine light drains by degrees
into the night-time as if through bright
perforations of stars. (Vivek Narayanan, 'Fernando Pessoa in Durban')

Origin:
mid-15c, 'of the evening; belonging to or occurring in the evening,' from Latin vespertinus 'of the evening,' from vesper 'evening'. Evening dew in old science could be humor vespertine. Of animals, 'flying or otherwise active in evening,' from c1600. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

calzephyr: pwnies from ThinkGeek tee (MLP pwnies)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Frankalmoigne

I screenshotted this word, but didn't realize it was such a doozy!

This medieval English legal concept is also spelled frank almoin or frankalmoign and describes a tenure by which a religious body holds land given to them, on the condition that prayers for the soul of the donor and heirs are offered.
sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

jackanapes [jak-uh-neyps]

noun:
1a an impertinent, presumptuous person, especially a young man; whippersnapper.
1b an impudent, mischievous child.
2 (archaic) an ape or monkey.

Examples:

Meanwhile two jackanapes gathered this morning on the basketball court, the first public court downtown, to settle a score. Matt Goodman and I have been jawing at each other for a couple of years now about who would win a game of one on one. (Tim Rogers, Carpenter Park Hosted Its First Official Basketball Game Today, D Magazine, May 2022 )

But after four cocktails the Coney Island jackanapes started to mislay its manners. It demanded yet more booze. When its benefactor refused, it seized a whisky bottle and knocked him senseless to the floor. (Johnathan L Wright, Victorian Strangeness: The drunken monkey that smashed up a bar, BBC News, August 2014)

But do you realize that I would be looked upon as the most foolish jackanapes in the South Seas if I took a young girl like you in with me here on Berande? (Jack London, Adventure)

You pestilent young jackanapes, do you suppose I haven't noticed your idleness? (Compton Mackenzie, Sinister Street)

Origin:

mid-15c, 'a monkey,' also 'an impertinent, conceited fellow, an absurd fop,' a general term of reproach (in mid-15c especially a contemptuous nickname for William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk), of unknown origin. Apparently from Jack of Naples, but whether this is some specific personification of Jack (which is attested from 16c as 'saucy or impertinent fellow') or folk etymology of jack + ape is unknown. Century Dictionary suggests 'origin, it is supposed, a man who exhibited performing apes.' (Online Etymology Dictionary)

The most widespread story connects the origins of this word with William de la Pole, Duke of Suffolk. He was steward of the Royal Household under Henry VI, but was accused of treason and banished in 1450, only to be murdered at sea off Dover. His emblem was an ape’s clog and chain (a clog here being not a type of shoe but a heavy block of wood to stop the animal escaping). This led to his being described in a scurrilous poem the year before his death as ape-clog and posthumously as Jack Napes.

Though Jack Napes might therefore seem to derive from the ill-fated duke, something that has often been assumed, the experts are sure that it came from another source and was applied to the Duke because of his odd emblem. The real origin probably lay in a playful name for a tame ape, in which the second part was a case of metanalysis (in which an ape has been turned into a nape), with an s on the end to make it match other surnames of the period, like Jacques or Hobbes.

It went through various forms until it settled down to its modern spelling. The idea behind it moved from a pet name for an ape to a man acting in some way like an ape. The OED gives the sense in one of its wonderful definitions as 'One who is like an ape in tricks, airs, or behaviour; a ridiculous upstart; a pert, impertinent fellow, who assumes ridiculous airs; a coxcomb.' (World Wide Words)

sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

woebegone [woh-bi-gawn, -gon]

adjective:
1 beset with woe; affected by woe, especially in appearance
2 showing or indicating woe

Examples:

Those woebegone souls must prostrate themselves in front of judges, begging their honors to declare them complete and total failures. (Ron Lieber, Student Loan Borrowers Don't Deserve 'Forgiveness'. They Deserve an Apology., The New York Times, May 2022)

The run-down, two-story house, located in the woebegone former timber town of Aberdeen near the Olympic National Forest, can be moved into as is or uprooted from its foundations and carted off for display elsewhere, selling agent Edward Fitz said. (Rock hero Kurt Cobain’s childhood home for sale , The Express Tribune, September 2013)

She was so absorbed that she almost fell over the woebegone little figure on the step. (Mary Finley Leonard, The Story of the Big Front Door)

He stood before me the most woebegone, heartbroken man I ever saw. (Sarah Margan Dawson, A Confederate Girl's Diary)

Origin:

c 1300, in expressions such as me is wo bigone 'woe has beset me,' from woe + begon, past participle of Middle English bego 'to beset, surround, overwhelm,' from Old English began 'go over, traverse; inhabit, occupy; encompass, surround'. The verb is now obsolete, and its only survival is the fossilized past participle in this word. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Woebegone is first recorded in The Romance of Guy of Warwick, of about the year 1300. At that date, people would say things like 'me is woe begon', grief has beset me. Notice the word order, with me as the indirect object of the sentence, but put first. The verb here is bego, which has been obsolete for something like four hundred years, but which in medieval times had a variety of senses, such as to go round, surround or beset.

Over time, the link between woe and begone, the past participle of bego, became so close that they fused into a single adjective, so tightly linked that they survived shifts in language and the loss of the verb bego. For some centuries it retained this sense of 'afflicted by grief', oppressed with misfortune, distress, sorrow or grief. Shakespeare uses it this way in Henry IV:

    Even such a man, so faint, so spiritless,
    So dull, so dread in look, so woe-begone,
    Drew Priam's curtain in the dead of night
    And would have told him half his Troy was burnt.

This quotation in particular was so well known that it contributed to a revival of woebegone in a subtly altered sense at the beginning of the nineteenth century, not meaning somebody actually beset by woes, but somebody whose appearance makes them look as though they are.

We're now a long way from that medieval romance, but in continuing to use the word we retain a small vestige of middle English as a linguistic fossil. Several other archaic forms in woe have also survived, such as 'woe is me'and 'woe betide you', presumably because there's a continuing need for formulaic lamentatory utterances. (World Wide Words)


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flibbertigibbet [flib-er-tee-jib-it]

noun:
1 a silly, scatterbrained, or garrulous person
2 (archaic) a gossip

Examples:

This is how we will stay strong through this crisis. Why, just last night I entered my bathroom a mild-mannered person sliding quickly into madness and emerged a self-proclaimed flibbertigibbet with red hair and a weird husky voice modeled after Angelica, the second of Ryan's characters in the film. Is this what the public (my houseplants) wants? No. Is it what the public (my houseplants) needs? Absolutely. I am an altruistic flibbertigibbet and you're welcome. (R Eric Thomas, Finding Solace in Life's Absurdity and Terror in Joe Versus the Volcano, yahoonews, April 2020)

A flibbertigibbet in a Little Red Riding Hood raincoat, with a reckless habit of stepping out on to life’s busiest roads? (Kiran Sidhu, How my farmer friend Wilf gave me a new perspective, The Guardian, August 2021)

As blue chips turn into penny stocks, Wall Street seems less like a symbol of America's macho capitalism and more like that famous Jane Austen character Mrs. Bennet, a flibbertigibbet always anxious about getting richer and her 'poor nerves'. (Kiran Sidhu, Well-toned first lady brings style to her job, South Florida SunSentinel, March 2009)

All this responsibility at such an early age made her a bitchy flibbertigibbet. (Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five)

Origin:

1540s, 'chattering gossip, flighty woman,' probably a nonsense word meant to sound like fast talking; as the name of a devil or fiend it dates from c. 1600 (together with Frateretto, Hoberdidance, Tocobatto). OED lists 15 spellings and thinks flibbergib is the original. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

It's a fine word to throw out, in the appropriate circumstances, though there's a risk of tripping over all those syllables. That's no doubt why it has had so many spellings.

The original seems to have been recorded about 1450 as fleper-gebet, which may have been just an imitation of the sound of meaningless speech (babble and yadda-yadda-yadda have similar origins). It started out to mean a gossip or chattering person, but quickly seems to have taken on the idea of a flighty or frivolous woman. A century later it had become respectable enough for Bishop Latimer to use it in a sermon before King Edward VI, though he wrote it as flybbergybe.

The modern spelling is due to Shakespeare, who borrowed it from one of the 40 fiends listed in a book by Samuel Harsnet in 1603. In King Lear Edgar uses it for a demon or imp: "This is the foul fiend Flibbertigibbet... He gives the web and the pin, squints the eye, and makes the harelip; mildews the white wheat, and hurts the poor creature of earth".

There has been yet a third sense, taken from a character of Sir Walter Scott's in Kenilworth, for a mischievous and flighty small child. But despite Shakespeare and Scott, the most usual sense is still the original one. (World Wide Words)


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

temerarious [tem-uh-rair-ee-uhs]

adjective:
marked by temerity : rashly or presumptuously daring; recklessly bold

Examples:

Year by year Formula 2 provides excellent show for the fans. The drivers are determined and temerarious, the cars are fast and fight is tight. (Jim Perrin, Racing with tough guys: what is special about Formula 2 in Baku, Azernews, June 2017)

The day was one of tense expectation, when everyone lived from hour to hour for the next bulletin. Radio sets worked overtime; constructive plans were impossible and there was a certain amount of diffidence as to who would make the first sign that the great moment had arrived, until temerarious tradesmen began to make a display of flags and national colours in their windows. (Stacia Briggs, How East Anglia celebrated VE Day, Eastern Daily Press, May 2020)

The Master of the Horse was a young officer of a brave and even temerarious disposition. (Robert Louis Stevenson, New Arabian Nights)

That may have been temerarious, since building material of perfect quality is required when chances are taken. (Elizabeth Boyle O'Reilly, How France Built Her Cathedrals)

Origin:

'rash, reckless,' 1530s, from Latin temerarius 'rash, heedless, thoughtless, indiscreet,' from temere 'blindly, rashly, by chance' (Online Etymology Dictionary)

If you have guessed that temerarious may be related to the somewhat more common word temerity, you are correct. Temerarious was borrowed into English in the early 16th century from Latin temerarius, which in turn derives from Latin temere, meaning 'blindly' or 'recklessly'. Temerity, which arrived in English over a century earlier, also derives from temere; another descendant is the rare word intemerate, meaning 'pure' or 'undefiled'. Temere itself is akin to Old High German demar, Latin tenebrae, and Sanskrit tamas, all of which have associations with darkness. (Merriam-Webster)


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

splendiferous [splen-dif-er-uh s]
adjective:
(Informal) splendid, magnificent; fine; extraordinarily or showily impressive

Examples:

I want to write something most splendiferous to-day, and I am sure to find it in your face. (J M Barrie, Tommy and Grizel)

Near the garden is an extraordinary couture dress by Ms Chiuri and Mr Piccioli for Valentino; its metal-thread embroidery translates Cranach’s Adam and Eve, and its flora and fauna, into splendiferous ornament. (Jason Farago, 'Heavenly Bodies' Brings the Fabric of Faith to the Met, New York Times, May 2018)

Try the crispy fried faux-duck or the door-stopper-sized two-"cheese" and tomato toastie, and then order one of their splendiferous vegan custom cakes adorned with fruits, velvety icing and big native flowers.(Lenny Ann Low, Kurumac review: Japanese cool makes for a calming experience, New York Times, Nov 2019)

Origin:

Considered a playful elaboration since its re-birth in 1843, but in 15c it was good English, from Medieval Latin splendorifer, from splendor + ferre 'to bear, carry,"'from PIE root bher- (1) 'to carry,' also 'to bear children.' Compare 15c splendidious, also splendacious (1843). Bartlett (1859) offers this, allegedly from 'An itinerant gospeller... holding forth to a Kentuckian audience on the kingdom of heaven':

"Heaven, my beloved hearers," said he, "is a glorious, a beautiful, a splendiferous, an angeliferous place. Eye hath not seen, ear hath not heard, it has not entered into the imagination of any Cracker in these here diggings what carryings on the just made perfect have up thar." (Online Etymology Dictionary)


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