noun
Psychology, Sociology.
a collective consciousness, analogous to the behavior of social insects, in which a group of people become aware of their commonality and think and act as a community, sharing their knowledge, thoughts, and resources: the global hive mind that has emerged with sites like Twitter and Facebook.
The meaning of the term hive mind, a collective consciousness, analogous to the behavior of social insects, is pretty creepy to most of us. The phrase, appropriately enough, first appeared inGalaxy Science Fiction, an American pulp science fiction magazine, in 1950.
When I searched, I always selected the videos with the most views first. The wisdom of the so-called hive mind would guide me ….
… it also has an exceptionally well-organized reference section, summarizing the conclusions of the hive mind on ingredients, the identification and treatment of certain skin conditions, the best products, and how to build an effective routine with them.
Operose is a borrowing from the Latin adjective 棗梯梗娶莽喝莽 busy, active, painstaking, taking or involving much care. 倏梯梗娶莽喝莽 is a derivative of the noun opus (stem oper-) labor, work, a work and the adjective suffix –莽喝莽, meaning full of, abounding in. Opus comes from an uncommon Proto-Indo-European root op– to work, produce in quantity. In Oscan, the most conservative of the Italic languages, the root appears in the verbal adjective 繳梯莽硃紳紳硃鳥 (in form equivalent to Latin operandam, and both derived from Italic opesandam) to be built, to be made. Sanskrit derives the noun 獺梯硃莽 work from op-, and Avestan the compound hvapah– good work. Operose entered English in the 16th century.
In reality no problem can be imagined more operose, than that of decomposing the sounds of words into four and twenty simple elements or letters, and again finding these elements in all other words.
So long as we insist upon approaching them through the operose and roundabout method of dead-language studies, schooldays will flee away, and the object will not be accomplished.
verb (used with object)
to suppress; omit; ignore; pass over.
Elide comes straight from the Latin verb 襲梭蘋餃梗娶梗 to strike out, crush, smash, a compound of the preposition and prefix 襲, 襲-, a variant of ex, ex-, here indicating deprivation or loss, and the combining form –梭蘋餃梗娶梗, from laedere to wound, injure, damage. 梭蘋餃梗娶梗 and elide both have the legal sense to nullify, invalidate, and the grammatical or prosodic sense to omit a vowel or syllable in pronunciation, as formerly in English thembattled plain, and in French 梭h棗鳥鳥梗, or Italian 梭u棗鳥棗. Laedere has no known etymology. Elide entered English in the 16th century.
These videos slyly elide the long hours that lie between seeing how something is done and knowing how to do it.
They confused her, made her angry, as though the whole middle section of her lifethe part where she was supposed to grow to adulthood, bear children, be a young mother, and watch her children grow to adulthoodhad simply been elided.