noun
the world, or mortal or earthly life: this vale of tears.
Vale泭may be familiar to some readers from the woeful expression vale of tears, which casts the world as a place of sorrow and difficulty.泭Vale, a valley, a low-lying piece of land usually having a brook, comes from Middle English val, valle, vaile (and more variants), from Old French val, vau, vauls (and more variants), from Latin 措硃梭梭襲莽 (inflectional stem valli-) valley. Vale in its literal sense as a geographical feature dates from the second half of the 14th century; the extended, figurative sense, the world, mortal life, earthly existence, dates from the first half of the 15th century.
all he really wanted to do in company was to make jokes, to turn the world upside down and laugh at it, to enrich and enliven this vale of tears with a little fantasy.
As Keats witnessed more and more sufferinghis brother Toms death; the infectious illnesses sweeping Londonhe connected his aesthetic vision to lived experience, and wrote in a letter that life is a vale of soul-making: Do you not see how necessary a world of pains and troubles is to school an intelligence and make it a soul?
noun
sleepwalking.
Somnambulism, sleepwalking, comes via French somnambulisme from New Latin somnambulismus, a pretty transparent compound of the noun somnus sleep and the verb 硃鳥莉喝梭櫻娶梗 to walk, take a walk, stroll, source of English amble. Somnus is the Latin result of the very common Proto-Indo-European root swep-, swop-, sup– to sleep. In Latin, the derivative noun swepnos (or swopnos) becomes sopnos, then somnus. The derivative noun supnos becomes 堯羸梯紳棗莽 in Greek. Another derivative noun, swep–os-, becomes sopor– “sleep” in Latin (via swop–os-, then sopor-), as in English soporific causing sleep. Swepnos becomes swefn sleep, dream in Old English and sweven dream, dream-vision in Middle English. William Langland, usually considered to be the author of Piers Plowman, fell into a merveilouse swevene, a curious dream, one May morning in the Malvern Hills in Hereford and Worcestershire, England, and Piers Plowman is the narrative of his dream. Somnambulism entered English at the end of the 18th century.
Sleepwalking, or泭somnambulism, doesnt always involve walking. A person is said to be sleepwalking if they are performing a complex tasktalking, sitting up in bed, getting dressedwhile in a state of deep sleep, according to the National Sleep Foundation.
Out and about, I spotted drowsy or dozing people everywhere; and I realized that a kind of mechanized mass somnambulism is an essential component of modern life ….
noun
something easily done, fixed, etc.: He was really worried about my finishing the fence repairs on my own, but it was a doddle.
Doddle, something easy to do or fix, is a British colloquialism of uncertain origin. Some say it comes from Scottish doddle a small lump of toffee (and therefore attractive and easy to make away with). Some say doddle may come from the verb dawdle to waste time, idle. Doddle may also be a variant of the verb toddle to move with short unsteady steps (as a toddler does). Doddle entered English in the first half of the 20th century.
But it is a delusion to think we can solve Earths problems by relocating to Mars. I completely disagree with Musk and with my late colleague Stephen Hawking on that, because dealing with climate change on Earth is a doddle compared with泭terraforming Mars.
This [journey] would have been a doddle on Highway 1 at any other time of year, but a succession of winter storms had blocked the coast road with landslides in half a dozen places.