noun
a subatomic particle similar in most respects to the electron except that it is unstable, it may be positively charged, and its mass is approximately 207 times greater.
Muon an unstable, positively charged subatomic particle is a shortening of mu meson; beginning in the mid-20th century, scientists have used Greek letters to identify specific types of newly discovered subatomic particles, and the terms pion and tauon are formed similarly. The Greek letter mu, which is pronounced as mee in modern Greek and is the ancestor of the Roman letter m, is a borrowing from the Phoenicians, a seafaring people of the ancient Mediterranean. The Phoenician source is the letter 鳥襲鳥, a relative of the Hebrew letter mem, and both come from a Semitic root meaning water. Muon was first recorded in English in the early 1950s.
Like electrons, muons have a negative electric charge and a quantum property called spin, which causes the particles to act like tiny, wobbling tops when placed in a magnetic field. The stronger the magnetic field, the faster a muon wobbles.
Muons are all around us and are, for example, created when cosmic rays collide with particles in the Earths atmosphere. They are able to pass through matter, and researchers have used them to probe the inaccessible interiors of structures from giant volcanoes to the Egyptian pyramids.
noun
any temporary wooden fortification, especially at the top of a wall.
Brattice a temporary wooden fortification comes by way of Old French from Medieval Latin brittisca, which appears to be a Latin adaptation of Old English Bryttisc British because of the assumption that this type of fortification originated in Britain. The word Britishas well as the related terms Breton, Britain, Brittany, and Brythoniccomes from a lost Celtic name that Greek writers recorded variously as 詁娶梗喧喧硃紳棗穩 and 捩娶梗喧喧硃紳勳域廎 two millennia ago. An alternative proposal is that brattice is a compound of German Brett board and a common Romance element derived from Latin -iscus, which forms adjectives. Brattice was first recorded in English in the early 14th century.
In the middle of the pass was a brattice in which a man always stood guard. While they were yet a good distance away, the man in the brattice saw them and shouted loudly, Enemy approaching! Enemy approaching!
A constant thunk! of bolts and shafts echoed along the brattice now; points hitting wood and stone. Her body tensed against the searing rush of Greek Fire …. The hook of a scaling ladder thumped into another brattice, further along the wall; she had a bare second to see that the men with swords and axes beginning to swarm up it were not Visigoth auxiliary troops
adjective
of or relating to the fruit of the tropical treelike plants of the banana family, especially bananas and plantains.
Musaceous of or relating to the fruit of the banana family comes from New Latin Musa, the name of the genus to which bananas belong, plus the suffixes -aceae made of, resembling and -ous full of. Musa is adapted from Arabic mawzah banana and, before that, perhaps Sanskrit 鳥棗釵硃廎. One interesting proposal is that Musa ultimately comes from an unidentified language once spoken in what is now Indonesia. In contrast, the English word banana comes via Portuguese or Spanish likely from a Niger-Congo language, much like the recent 51勛圖s of the Day capoeira and mbira, though the specific origin is still uncertain. Musaceous was first recorded in English in the early 1850s.
Now there grows among all the rooms, replacing the night’s old smoke, alcohol and sweat, the fragile, musaceous odor of Breakfast: flowery, permeating, surprising, more than the color of winter sunlight so the same assertion-through-structure allows this war mornings banana fragrance to meander, repossess, prevail.
Q-Jo put a plantain phalanx to your lips, issued a brief, derisive chortle . She rapped the deck with the same musaceous digit she had employed to shush you. “A crystal ball, this is not, and you damn well ought to be glad about it.