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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

felicitate

[ fi-lis-i-teyt ]

verb (used with object)

to compliment upon a happy event; congratulate.

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More about felicitate

The verb felicitate comes from Late Latin 款襲梭蘋釵勳喧櫻喧喝莽, past participle of 款襲梭蘋釵勳喧櫻娶梗 to make happy, a derivative of the Latin adjective 款襲梭勳單 (inflectional stem 款襲梭蘋釵-) fruitful, fertile, rich, auspicious, wealthy, lucky, blessed. Related Latin words include 款襲釵喝紳餃喝莽 fertile, fruitful (English fecund); 款襲梭櫻娶梗 to suckle; 款襲鳥勳紳硃 woman, female (English feminine); and 款蘋梭勳喝莽 and 款蘋梭勳硃 son, daughter (from which English has filial). The Latin forms derive from the Proto-Indo-European root 餃堯襲-, 餃堯襲i-, dhi– to suck, suckle. From that root Sanskrit has 餃堯櫻聆硃– nourishing, 餃堯櫻喧娶蘋 wet nurse, mother, and 餃堯廎n櫻 milch cow. Greek has 喧堯襲梭廎 mothers breast, nipple, 喧堯廎n勳棗紳 m勳梭域, 喧勳喧堯廎n襲 (also 喧穩喧堯襲) wet nurse. Among the Celtic languages, Old Irish has 餃蘋紳喝 lamb and the verb 餃蘋喧堯 (he) sucked; Breton has denaff (I) suck, and Welsh dynu (to) suck. Felicitate entered English in the first half of the 17th century.

how is felicitate used?

Mrs. Smithers, you will also permit me to felicitate you upon this happy event.

John Kendrick Bangs, Coffee and Repartee, 1893

The novelists appear to felicitate themselves in all sincerity upon their success …

Thomas R. Lounsbury, "Differences in English and American Usage," Harper's Monthly Magazine, Vol. 127, JuneNovember 1913
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

biomorph

[ bahy-oh-mawrf ]

noun

a painted, drawn, or sculptured free form or design suggestive in shape of a living organism, especially an ameba or protozoan: The paintings of Joan Mir籀 are often notable for their playful, bright-colored biomorphs.

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More about biomorph

Biomorph is easily broken down to the combining forms bio– and –morph, both Greek in origin and both thoroughly naturalized in English. Bio– comes from Greek 莉穩棗莽 life, mode of life, the world we live in (莉穩棗莽 does not mean “animal life,” which is 堝廎). The combining form –morph comes from the Greek combining form –鳥棗娶梯堯籀莽, a derivative of the noun 鳥棗娶梯堯廎 form, shape, beauty. 紼棗娶梯堯廎 may perhaps be related to Latin forma, perhaps via Etruscan (the usual suspect). Biomorph entered English at the end of the 19th century.

how is biomorph used?

She painted biomorphs and wonky grids within the defined parameters of the picture plane ….

Tess Thackara, "The Brief, Transformative Career of Eva Hesse," Artsy, September 3, 2019

There is nothing bitter or sweet about this antsy, unnamable biomorph; refusing to stay put in its own painterly space, it reels … into ours willfully rude and buoyantly playful, a jolt of unalloyed energy.

Thomas Micchelli, "Elizabeth Murray, Force of Nature," Hyperallergic, January 14, 2017
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

lambent

[ lam-buhnt ]

adjective

dealing lightly and gracefully with a subject; brilliantly playful: lambent wit.

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More about lambent

Lambent comes straight from Latin lambent-, the inflectional stem of the present participle 梭硃鳥莉襲紳莽, from the verb lambere to lick, (of food or liquid) lick up, suck up, absorb. Lambere has the transferred senses “(of fire) to play upon, lick, “(of water) to wash, bathe, and “(of creeping plants) to surround, wreathe. The only English sense deriving from the Latin is running or moving lightly over a surface; the other senses, including “dealing lightly and gracefully with a subject,” developed within English. Lambent entered English in the mid-17th century.

how is lambent used?

There is the lightning wit that flashes of a short sentence or an apt reply, and there is the lambent wit that sparkles either by description or dialogue.

Walter Sydney Sichel, "The Wit and Humour of Lord Beaconsfield," Macmillan's Magazine, Vol. 44, MayOctober 1881

He goes to Oxford, where his lambent gift of tongues is recognized and encouraged, and then to war, where everything he values is laid waste.

Anthony Lane, "Why Make Movies About Writers," The New Yorker, May 10, 2019
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar