noun
the quality that makes a thing what it is; the essential nature of a thing.
Quiddity, with its conflicting senses, the essential nature of a thing and a trifling nicety of subtle distinction, ultimately comes from the Medieval Latin noun 梁喝勳餃餃勳喧櫻莽 (stem 梁喝勳餃餃勳喧櫻喧-), literally whatness, formed from the Latin interrogative pronoun quid what and the abstract noun suffix –勳喧櫻莽, the source via Old French –勳喧矇 of the English suffix –ity. Quiddity entered English at the end of the 14th century.
… that gift for creating idioms may be a clue to the quiddity of his genius.
If, argues he, we could only find out exactly what humour is ‘in its quiddity,’ we could keep ourselves humorous, or at any rate bring up our children to be so.
verb (used without object)
to shrink; flinch; quail: an unsteady eye that blenched under another's gaze.
The history of the verb blench is complicated. The uncommon Old English verb blencan to cheat, deceive is the direct source of Middle English blenchen, blenken, blinchen, blinken to move suddenly, dodge, avoid, mislead, deceive. The various Middle English forms yield both English blench to shrink, flinch and blink to wink the eyes, be startled.
But art historians should not blench at the sight of dreadful paintings, any more than doctors should blench at the sight of blood.
… the actor blenches as he reads the instruction ….
verb (used without object)
to conduct oneself or perform showily or ostentatiously in an attempt to impress onlookers: The senator doesn't hesitate to grandstand if it makes her point.
The noun grandstand, the main seating area of a stadium, racetrack, parade route, etc., dates from the second half of the 18th century and was originally spelled as two words. The verb grandstand, to conduct oneself or perform showily or ostentatiously in order to impress onlookers, was originally used in baseball and dates from the early 20th century.
The debt limit debate allows politicians to grandstand on fiscal responsibility.
He used his political platform to grandstand over Italys Catholic identity and repeatedly found ways to poke European Union officials in the eye.