adjective
pertaining to or occurring in the morning; early in the day.
Matutinal occurring in the morning, early comes from the Late Latin adjective 鳥櫻喧贖喧勳紳櫻梭勳莽, a derivative of the Latin adjective 鳥櫻喧贖喧蘋紳喝莽 of the (early) morning, and via Old French, the source of English matins, the first canonical hour (morning prayer in the Anglican Church). 紼櫻喧贖喧蘋紳喝莽 is a derivative of 紼櫻喧贖喧硃 (紼櫻喧梗娶), the Roman goddess of the dawn. Roman matrons made a cake for 紼櫻喧贖喧硃 紼櫻喧梗娶 for her festival, the 紼櫻喧娶櫻梭勳硃, celebrated on June 11th, and commended their children to her for protection. Matutinal entered English in the first half of the 15th century.
Early rising is a ritual with me. Unlike my nocturnal brethren in show business, I am matutinal by nature.
However, he displayed a remarkable equanimity in the midst of chaos, maintaining a matutinal regimen of five hundred words regardless of the circumstances.
noun
a state of nervous excitement, haste, or anxiety; flutter.
Swivet nervous excitement, haste, anxiety usually occurs in the phrase in a swivet, or in such a swivet. Swivet is an American colloquialism of unknown origin, first appearing in 1890 in the Vermont Journal.
On the night of their 10th anniversary, hed been in such a swivet about what to give her that he locked himself in his bedroom trying to choose the right gift.
Here in the valley of my mid-50s, I try not to get into a swivet over my occasionally faulty memory: Sometimes the mind has a mind of its own.
The adjective brumal wintry ultimately comes from Latin 莉娶贖鳥櫻梭勳莽 pertaining to the winter solstice, or to the winter, a derivative of the noun 莉娶贖鳥硃 the day of the winter solstice, the position of the sun on the solstice, midwinter (both the noun and the adjective are very restricted in their usage). 詁娶贖鳥硃 comes from breuma, a contraction of brevi-ma shortest (Latin v is pronounced like English w). The ending –ma is an old superlative ending (usually replaced in Latin by –issima; brevissima is standard Latin). Brevi– is the inflectional stem of brevis short, low, shallow, stunted, and the source of English breve and brief. Brumal entered English in the first half of the 16th century.
Our motley platoon of snowmobiles was chewing up a rippled meadow high on the southwestern flanks of the Gore Range near Vail, Colo., four bundles of motorized mayhem zigzagging across a brumal landscape.
Operated under the Antarctic Treaty System, the South Pole is meant to be a brumal Eden of science, where research centers are freed from the political binds that exist in the world above.