noun
a party, gathering, or the like, at which dancing, singing, and storytelling are the usual forms of entertainment.
Ceilidh is an adaptation of either Irish Gaelic 釵矇勳梭勳餃堯梗 or Scottish Gaelic 釵癡勳梭勳餃堯, both from Old Irish 釵矇勳梭梗 or 釵矇梭梗, meaning companion. From here, the deeper origins of ceilidh become murky. One proposal is that ceilidh is distantly related to Latin 釵蘋措勳莽, citizen, the source of city and civilization. Ceilidh was first recorded in English in the early 1870s.
EXAMPLE OF CEILIDH USED IN A SENTENCE
The ceilidh, overflowing with dancing and music, went from dusk till dawn in the small countryside village.
Bewray is a compound of the prefix be-, which is a form of the preposition by, and wray, an obsolete verb meaning to accuse, expose. Because of the influence of betray, the definition of bewray may have shifted from accusation to disloyalty. The prefix be- appears in befriend, bedazzle, and bejewel. Bewray was first recorded in English in the late 13th century.
EXAMPLE OF BEWRAY USED IN A SENTENCE
Several senators bewrayed Caesar, bringing him to an untimely end.
noun
a subatomic particle with spherical symmetry and positive, negative, or neutral charge.
Pion is either a contraction of pi meson or formed from pi and the suffix -on, which indicates subatomic particles. The Greek letter pi (Ancient Greek 梯簾 or 梯梗簾) is a borrowing from the Phoenician alphabet, and its name comes from a Semitic root meaning mouth. Pion was first recorded in English in the early 1950s.
EXAMPLE OF PION USED IN A SENTENCE
The pion blinked into and out of existence within mere billionths of a second.