noun
a person who excels in musical technique or execution.
We might refer to a gifted violinist, for instance, as a virtuoso. First recorded in English in the early 1600s with a now-obsolete sense of learned person, virtuoso is borrowed from Italian virtuoso a person with exceptional skill in the arts or sciences, in Italian used especially of musicians by the latter part of the 1500s. Italian virtuoso is a noun form of the adjective virtuoso skilled, virtuous. English virtuous (via Anglo-French) and virtuoso are indeed related. Both ultimately derive from Late Latin 措勳娶喧喝莽喝莽, which joins the Latin adjective-forming suffix –莽喝莽 full of with Latin 措勳娶喧贖莽 (inflectional stem 措勳娶喧贖喧-). Latin 措勳娶喧贖莽 means manliness, strength, courage. Apparently due to associations with honor and bravery (as of soldiers), the meaning of Latin措勳娶喧贖莽 was extended to moral excellence, hence English virtue. The root of 措勳娶喧贖莽 is vir man, which yields virile“manly” and virago, which evolved from heroic woman, female warrior to the unsavory “scolding woman, shrew.” The Proto-Indo-European rootwi-ro-, the source of Latin vir, resulted in Old English wer man, which survives in werewolf, literally man-wolf, a virtuosic vocalist, perhaps, in its own howling way.
What was it like to be the first pop virtuoso of the recorded erathe man whose earliest releases set the tune for Americas love affair with modern black music, and who went on to become one of historys most famous entertainers?
… he is a literary virtuoso who understands the charisma needed to make songs you can play in a club.
noun
anything seen as preserving or protecting some quality, condition, etc.: a bastion of solitude.
The English noun bastion still looks French. It comes from Middle French, from Upper Italian bastione rampart, bulwark, bastion, an augmentative noun formed from bastita fortified, from the verb bastire to build, from Medieval Latin 莉硃莽喧蘋娶梗, possibly of Germanic origin and akin to bastille tower, small fortress, bastion. Bastion entered English in the late 16th century.
… Notre Dame went from being a football school to being not just academically respected but a bastion of intellectual freedom and ideological pluralism ….
… he’d seen it as a bastion of the familiar and orderly, where negotiations took place the way they were supposed to, in high-backed chairs, with checkbooks and contracts and balance sheets.
noun
a descriptive name or designation, as Bald in Charles the Bald.
Appellative comes from the Late Latin grammatical term 硃梯梯梗梭梭櫻喧蘋措喝莽 pertaining to a common noun and 紳鳥梗紳 硃梯梯梗梭梭櫻喧蘋措喝鳥 “a common noun” (in contrast to 紳鳥梗紳 proprium a proper noun). 插梯梯梗梭梭櫻喧蘋措喝莽 is a derivative of the verb 硃梯梯梗梭梭櫻娶梗 to speak to, address, call upon, invoke. Appellative in the sense descriptive name,” as Great in Alfred the Great, is a development in English dating from the first half of the 17th century. Appellative in its original Latin sense entered English in the early 16th century.
In connection with this appellative of “Whalebone whales,” it is of great importance to mention, that however such a nomenclature may be convenient in facilitating allusions to some kind of whales, yet it is in vain to attempt a clear classification of the leviathan …
In addition too to this almost Cimmerian gloom was the agr矇ment of a penetrating rain, known perhaps to some of my readers by the gentle appellative of a Scotch mist …