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sojourn

[ soh-jurn ]

noun

a temporary stay: during his sojourn in Paris.

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More about sojourn

The noun sojourn means “a temporary stay.” The verb sojourn, to stay for a time, reside temporarily, has several dozen Middle English spellings: sojournen, sojourni, suggorn, suggeourn, etc. The Middle English forms derive from equally exuberant Old French forms, for example, sejorner, sojorner, sojourneir, sojurner, and Anglo-French forms, for example, sojurner, sujurner. The French forms derive from an unrecorded Vulgar Latin verb 莽喝莉餃勳喝娶紳櫻娶梗 to stay for a time, a compound of the preposition and prefix sub, sub-, here meaning a little, for a while and the Latin verb 餃勳喝娶紳櫻娶梗 to live for a long time, a derivative of the Latin adjective diurnus belonging to the daytime, occurring every day. Sojourn entered English in the 13th century.

how is sojourn used?

Nevertheless, in this mansion of gloom I now proposed to myself a sojourn of some weeks.

Edgar Allan Poe, "The Fall of the House of Usher," Burton's Gentleman's Magazine, 1839

He begins to conjecture how much he has gained and lost during his long sojourn in the American republic.

James Baldwin, "Encounter on the Seine: Black Meets Brown," Notes of a Native Son, 1955

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d矇j vu

[ dey-zhah voo, vyoo; French dey-zha vy ]

noun

the illusion of having previously experienced something actually being encountered for the first time.

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More about d矇j vu

The late, great social philosopher Lawrence Yogi Berra is credited with saying Its d矇j vu all over again, referring to Mickey Mantle and Roger Maris constantly hitting back-to-back home runs for the Yankees in the early ’60s. This Yogi-ism aside, d矇j vu, literally “already seen,” is the illusion of having previously experienced something actually being encountered for the first time, a term used in psychology. The phrase is French; it was first used and perhaps coined by Emile Boirac (18511917), a French philosopher and parapsychologist. 嗨矇轍 already comes from Old French des ja from now on; des comes from Vulgar Latin dex or de ex, a combination of Latin prepositions 餃襲 of, from and ex out, out of. Ja now, already, comes from the Latin adverb jam with the same meaning. Vu comes from Vulgar Latin 措勳餃贖喧喝莽 or 措梗餃贖喧喝莽, equivalent to Latin 措蘋莽喝莽, past participle of vi餃襲re to see. 嗨矇轍 vu entered English in the early 20th century.

how is d矇j vu used?

Trapped in a time loop: Thats how one man felt because of his recurring episodes of deja vu.

Bahar Gholipour, "A strange case of deja vu, again and again and again." Washington Post, January 5, 2015

A person experiencing d矇j vu is no more likely to accurately predict what they’re going to see around the next corner than someone who is blindly guessing.

Michelle Starr, "Scientists Have Recreated 嗨矇轍 Vu in The Lab, And It's Less Spooky Than You'd Think," ScienceAlert, March 6, 2018

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bellicose

[ bel-i-kohs ]

adjective

inclined or eager to fight; aggressively hostile; belligerent; pugnacious.

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More about bellicose

Bellicose comes directly from Latin 莉梗梭梭勳釵莽喝莽 warlike, fond of war, ultimately from the noun bellum war, warfare and the adjective suffix –莽喝莽 full of, abounding in, the source, via Anglo French and Old French, of the English suffixes –ose and –ous. The usual classical form bellum comes from preclassical duellum (the further origin of the noun is unknown), which remained in classical Latin as a poetic and archaic variant of bellum. Duellum in Vulgar and Medieval Latin developed the sense an arranged combat between two people, according to a code of procedure, English duel, from a mistaken etymological connection with duo t滄棗. Bellicose entered English in the second half of the 15th century.

how is bellicose used?

I was always inappropriately dressed, and inappropriately calibrated in tone: In one instance, I was too deferential; in another, too bellicose.泭

Ta-Nehisi Coates, "My President Was Black," The Atlantic, January/February 2017

Although North Korea has often sounded incorrigibly bellicose, it has proved to be a shrewd strategist capable of judging when to throttle up the tensions and when to pull back on them.

, "For North Korea, Blowing Hot and Cold Is Part of the Strategy," New York Times, June 24, 2020

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