noun
a badge, medal, etc., conferred and worn as a mark of honor: a decoration for bravery.
English decoration is a straightforward borrowing from Late Latin 餃梗釵棗娶櫻喧勳 (inflectional stem 餃梗釵棗娶櫻喧勳n-) adornment, ornament, a derivative of the verb 餃梗釵棗娶櫻娶梗. 嗨梗釵棗娶櫻娶梗 in turn derives from decor– (inflectional stem of decus) an ornament, splendor, honor. Decus is related to the verbs 餃梗釵襲娶梗 to be acceptable, be fitting and 餃棗釵襲娶梗 to teach, i.e., to make fitting. Decoration entered English in the 16th century.
He was later awarded the Medal of Honor, the nations highest military decoration ….
In short order, White won a Rhodes scholarship, became the best-paid player of his era in the National Football League and its rushing champion and earned decorations for his wartime Navy service.
adverb, adjective
in a series; one after another.
The English adverb seriatim one after another, in a series, comes directly from the Medieval Latin adverb 莽梗娶勳櫻喧勳鳥, which has the same meaning. 釦梗娶勳櫻喧勳鳥 is composed of the Latin noun 莽梗娶勳襲莽 line, series and the adverb suffix –櫻喧勳鳥, extracted from Latin adverbs like grad櫻喧勳鳥 by steps, ascending or descending gradually, and cert櫻喧勳鳥 in rivalry, emulously. The suffix is a useful one, forming adverbs like liter櫻喧勳鳥 literally, letter for letter, literatim, and verb櫻喧勳鳥 literally, word for word, verbatim. Seriatim entered English in the late 15th century.
Ive been reading all the Doonesbury strips from the fall of 1976 through January of 1980, seriatim.
This is no place to list his achievements, nor need his failures be set downseriatim.
noun
any secluded place of residence or habitation; retreat; hideaway.
The history of the English noun hermitage is complicated by the unetymological h-. Middle English and Old French have both hermitage and ermitage (and many other spellings). Late Latin (in a 5th-century Christian author) has 梗娶襲鳥蘋喧硃 (correctly) eremite, hermit, from Greek 梗娶襲鳥蘋喧襲莽, a very rare noun and adjective meaning of the desert, and first occurring in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible dating from the 3rd century b.c.) in the Book of Job. The Greek noun (and therefore the Latin, too) is a derivative of 梗娶礙鳥棗莽 (also 矇娶襲鳥棗莽), an adjective and noun meaning solitary, desolate, lonely; a desert. The spellings h梗娶襲鳥蘋喧硃 and its derivative h梗娶襲鳥蘋喧硃gium hermitage first appear in Medieval Latin. Hermitage entered English in the late 13th century.
… I had found out for myself a little hermitage. It was a kind of leafy cave, high upward into the air, among the midmost branches of a white-pine tree.
In the end, the legend holds, Lancelot goes to live in penitence in a hermitage, while the king, mortally wounded, is set adrift on a shipto one day rise again.