verb (used with object)
to startle into sudden activity; stimulate.
The English verb galvanize comes from the French verb galvaniser to make muscles contract by application of electrical current, a discovery made by the Italian physiologist Luigi Galvani in 1780, when an assistant touched the exposed sciatic nerve of a dead frog with a metal scalpel that had picked up a charge, which made the dead frog’s leg kick as if alive. Galvanize in its physiological sense entered English in the early 19th century; the figurative sense to startle into sudden activity dates to the mid-19th century.
The presence of the enemy seemed to galvanize the growers, underscoring the subtext of Elliot’s message: that their industry was under attack, and they needed D&W’s crisis-management services.
… [Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis] looms as just barely premodern, even though she presided over the start of (and maybe even helped galvanize) the most turbulent social transformation in recent history.
noun
a swaggering swordsman, soldier, or adventurer; daredevil.
If one is old enough, the word swashbuckler will call to mind Errol Flynn, the baddest, most romantic swashbuckler of them all during Hollywoods Golden Age. Others may think of the dueling swordsmen from The Princess Bride. Swashbuckler is a compound whose first element is swash, a verb of imitative origin meaning to splash loudly or violently, dash about. A buckler is a small round shield held by a handgrip and having straps through which ones arm is passed. A swashbuckler is a swaggering hero who makes a racket by striking the bad guys shield with his own or with his sword. Swashbuckler entered English in the mid-16th century.
EvenJohnny Depp, the linchpin of the series as the swishy swashbuckler Captain Jack Sparrow, knew that the last film, directed byGore Verbinski(as were the first two), had lost its way.
The fairy tale is about a swashbuckler named Westley (Elwes) who has to rescue his true love, Buttercup (Robin Wright), before she is forced to marry the evil Prince Humperdinck (Chris Sarandon).
adverb
as much as you like; to your heart's content; galore: food and drink gogo.
The colloquial phrase gogo comes from the name of a Parisian nightclub and discotheque Whisky Go-Go Whisky Galore, which opened in 1947 and quickly became very hip (or hep). A similar club, Whisky a Go Go, opened in Chicago in 1958, and a third Whisky a Go Go opened in Los Angeles in 1964. The French phrase gogo means aplenty, galore; it derives from a Middle French adverb sense joyfully, uninhibitedly, extravagantly, from the preposition to and gogo, probably a reduplicated form of gogue witticism, fun, amusement. gogo first appears in print in 1960.
… go up and out onto the Boulevard St.-Germain with its cafes a gogo for unlikelyseeming students and unpublished poets.
I was at my local park the other day, watching my sons playing tennis, and spotted the Mayor of London on another courtblond hair flying, Hawaiian shorts a go-go.