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.
noun
a person who has changed from one opinion, religious belief, sect, or the like, to another; convert.
The English noun proselyte comes via Old French and Late Latin 梯娶棗莽襲梭聆喧喝莽 sojourner, foreigner, stranger, a convert from paganism to Judaism. 捩娶棗莽襲梭聆喧喝莽 first occurs in the Vulgate, the Latin version of the Bible, prepared chiefly by Saint Jerome at the end of the 4th century a.d. 捩娶棗莽襲梭聆喧喝莽 comes from Greek 梯娶棗莽廎沭聆喧棗莽 one who has arrived, stranger, sojourner. 捩娶棗莽廎沭聆喧棗莽 and its kindred terms occur in the Septuagint (the Greek translation of the Hebrew Bible dating from the 3rd century b.c.) and the Greek New Testament. 捩娶棗莽廎沭聆喧棗莽 is equivalent to an unrecorded 梯娶棗莽廎沭聆喧堯棗莽, a derivative of the verb 梯娶棗莽矇娶釵堯梗莽喧堯硃勳 to come forward, go, approach. Proselyte entered English in the 14th century.
… I began to believe that if he did not make a proselyte of me, I should certainly make one of him ….
Still, proselytes often find that being Paleo quickly becomes a round-the-clock duty.
noun
the day after tomorrow: Ive heard that tomorrow and overmorrow may bring exceptionally high waves.
Overmorrow had a brief history, first recorded in the first half of the 16th century and lasting into the second half of that same century. The rare word occurred in the phrase today, tomorrow, and overmorrow.
It comes round on the overmorrow / Then why we wake we know aright.
“Do ye stop in tha cove over ‘morrow, Ralph?” she asked, with a sanguine intonation.