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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

decorous

[ dek-er-uhs, dih-kawr-uhs, -kohr- ]

adjective

characterized by dignified propriety in conduct, manners, appearance, character, etc.

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More about decorous

The English adjective decorous ultimately derives from Latin 餃梗釵娶喝莽 acceptable, fitting, proper. The adjective 餃梗釵娶喝莽 is a derivative of the noun decus (inflectional stem decor-) esteem, honor. The Latin words derive from the Proto-Indo-European root dek-, dok- to accept, take, from which Latin also derives the verb 餃梗釵襲娶梗 to be acceptable, be fitting, whose present participle stem decent- is the source of English decent. From the root dok- Latin forms the verb 餃棗釵襲娶梗 to teach (i.e., to make acceptable, make fitting). The English derivatives of 餃棗釵襲娶梗 include doctrine and docent. The same root appears in Greek 餃棗域梗簾紳 to expect, suppose, imagine, seem, seem good, and its derivative nouns 餃籀眶鳥硃 what seems good, opinion, belief, source of English dogma, and 餃籀單硃 expectation, opinion, estimation, repute, and in the Septuagint and the New Testament, glory, splendor, which forms the first element in doxology hymn of praise. Decorous entered English in the 17th century.

how is decorous used?

If you think British historical dramas are all decorous whisperings about how one should behave upon meeting the queen, this mini-series is here to prove that notion wrong …

Joanna Scutts, "The Very Real Story Behind A Very English Scandal," Slate, July 4, 2018

The normally decorous Senate has been rocked by heated confrontations this week as fellow Republicans have traded personal and profane insults over how much loyalty to show President Trump.

Sean Sullivan and Seung Min Kim, "Animosity in the Senate as GOP trades insults over criticism of Trump," Washington Post, June 14, 2018
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

agora

[ ag-er-uh ]

noun

the place where a popular political assembly met in Ancient Greece, originally a marketplace or public square.

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More about agora

In Greek 硃眶棗娶獺 originally meant assembly, especially of the common people, not of the ruling class. 插眶棗娶獺 gradually developed the meanings marketplace, the business that goes on in the marketplace, public speaking. The Greek noun is a derivative of the verb 硃眶梗穩娶梗勳紳 to gather, from the Proto-Indo-European root ger-, gere- to gather, collect, source also of Latin grex flock, herd, with its English derivatives aggregate, egregious, and gregarious. Agora entered English in the late 16th century.

how is agora used?

In the fall of 1964, left-wing students at U.C. Berkeley demanded the right to hand out antiwar literature on Sproul Plaza, the red brick agora at the center of the campus.

Andrew Marantz, "How Social-Media Trolls Turned U.C. Berkeley Into a Free-Speech Circus," The New Yorker, July 2, 2018

… it has become a commonplace among ancient historians to single out the agora as the political centre of the polis where the people met to make all important decisions or, in oligarchies and tyrannies, to rubber stamp the decisions made by the rulers.

, "The Agora as the Political Centre of the Polis," The Polis as an Urban Centre and as a Political Community, Symposium, August 2931, 1996
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

littoral

[ lit-er-uhl ]

adjective

of or relating to the shore of a lake, sea, or ocean.

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More about littoral

English littoral comes from the Latin adjective 梭勳喧喧棗娶櫻梭勳莽 (梭蘋喧棗娶櫻梭勳莽 is more correct), a derivative of littor- (梭蘋喧棗娶-), the inflectional stem of 梭蘋喧喝莽 (littus) shore, shoreline. In general littoral is used for technical subjects, e.g., geography, biology. The one exception is the common noun lido meaning fashionable beach resort, and the somewhat less fashionable public open-air swimming pool. Lido comes directly from Venetian Italian Lido (di Venezia) (from Latin 梭蘋喧喝莽), the name of a sandbar or chain of sandy islands between the Lagoon of Venice and the Adriatic, the site of the annual Venice Film Festival. Littoral entered English in the 17th century.

how is littoral used?

The Center for Advanced Studies would be built–perhaps there was still some virgin littoral stretch and the building he envisaged could be nestled somewhere along this lake or the other–but there would be modifications in the plan.

Ralph McInerny, The Green Revolution, 2008

In another hour the horns of motors began to blow down from the winding road along the low range of the Maures, which separates the littoral from true Proven癟al France.

F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tender Is the Night, 1934
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar