med_cat: (Basil in colour)
Nechama Chaya ([personal profile] med_cat) wrote in [community profile] 1word1day2023-10-31 07:33 am

Monday words: Chichevache and Bicorne

Chichevache [CHEESH-vahsh]
(n.)
 
- A medieval monster, said to have fed exclusively upon the flesh of patient wives, and was therefore very lean.
 
From Middle French “chicheface” from Old French “chincheface” from “chiche” (lean; skinny; miserly; parsimonious) + “face” (face) which was changed to “vache” (cow) when brought into English use by Chaucer.
 
Used in a sentence:
“Oh don’t you worry your pretty little head, darling; you are certainly safe from the gaping maw of the chichevache!”

Bicorne or Bycorne [BAHY-kohrn]
(n.)
 
- A medieval two-horned monster, said to have fed exclusively upon the flesh of patient husbands, and has therefore grown very large (yeah, right).
 
From Middle French “bicorne” (two-horned) from classical Latin “bicornis” (two-horned anvil)
 
Used in a sentence:
“Oh yeah? Well, don’t bother trying to hide if you see a bicorne coming your way, for I assure you that you are likewise quite safe!”

(from The Grandiloquent Word of the Day)
 

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