[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Memorial (noun, adjective)
me·mo·ri·al [muh-mawr-ee-uhl, -mohr-]


noun
1. something designed to preserve the memory of a person, event, etc., as a monument or a holiday.
2. a written statement of facts presented to a sovereign, a legislative body, etc., as the ground of, or expressed in the form of, a petition or remonstrance.

adjective
3. preserving the memory of a person or thing; commemorative: memorial services.
4. of or pertaining to the memory.

OTHER WORDS FROM MEMORIAL
me·mo·ri·al·ly, adverb

WORDS RELATED TO MEMORIAL
ceremony, tombstone, statue, remembrance, headstone, plaque, mausoleum, remembering, obelisk, shaft, relic, tablet, inscription, column, pillar, keepsake, souvenir, record, token, monolith

See synonyms for memorial on Thesaurus.com

Origin: 1350–1400; Middle English < Late Latin memoriale, noun use of neuter of Latin memorialis for or containing memoranda. See memory, -al

EXAMPLE SENTENCES FROM THE WEB FOR MEMORIAL
Resist the urge to build your personal memorial, and take a selfie instead.
THE ULTIMATE ACADIA NATIONAL PARK TRAVEL GUIDE|VIRGINIA M. WRIGHT|FEBRUARY 8, 2021|OUTSIDE ONLINE

Johns Hopkins, benefactor of namesake hospital and university, was an enslaverThis movement has led many schools to remove Confederate monuments and symbols, rename buildings and establish memorials to those who were enslaved.
VA. HOUSE VOTES TO FORCE PUBLIC COLLEGES TO RECKON WITH TIES TO SLAVERY, CREATE SCHOLARSHIPS OR OTHER PROGRAMS|NICK ANDERSON|FEBRUARY 4, 2021|WASHINGTON POST

Another demands removal of the “Talbot Boys” memorial from the Talbot County courthouse on the Eastern Shore, thought to be the only Confederate monument on state property in Maryland.
AT BALTIMORE’S REGINALD F. LEWIS MUSEUM, A SHOW ON RECENT HISTORY THAT’S URGENTLY OF THE MOMENT|KELSEY ABLES|JANUARY 27, 2021|WASHINGTON POST

All that was missing was the Vietnam memorial coming to life and doing the wave.
WE LIVE IN A GOLDEN AGE OF CRINGE|SONNY BUNCH|JANUARY 27, 2021|WASHINGTON POST
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Inselberg - noun.

An inselberg, also called a monadnock, is a singular rock formation that appears on a more or less level plain. The most famous inselberg would be Uluru in Australia, but there are others around the world.

Inselberg originates from German--Inselberg, which means "island mountain". Geologist Wilhelm Bornhardt coined the word in 1900 when describing the many land features found in Eastern Africa.

Monadnock, or "smooth mountain" is thought to originate from the Abenaki, whose traditional territory is in the Eastern Canada and USA. In fact, there is a Mount Monadnock in New Hampshire.


Petermann Ranges (AU), Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, Uluru -- 2019 -- 3704-8.jpg
By Dietmar Rabich, CC BY-SA 4.0, Link


[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Whew, another semester is in the can, which means I should be able to fulfill my wordy Wednesday duties until September!

Munificent - adjective.

Here's another word from the cursed puzzle book of mine, which went into the recycling bin not too long ago. I like this word a lot though--it's unique!

To be Munificent is to be either extremely generous and giving or have that quality about you. For example, "My uncle Roger was always munificent with his time" or "When uncle Roger passed away, he left me a munificent amount of money in his will".
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Morgenmuffel - noun.

Today's word was suggested by [livejournal.com profile] weebleswobble. Can we agree that German has a lot of great words? To be a morgenmuffel is to be an extremely grouchy person upon waking--definitely not an earlybird!


Morgenmuffel warning sign in German
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
November 3, 2020

Madcap (adjective, noun)
mad·cap [mad-kap]


adjective
1. wildly or heedlessly impulsive; reckless; rash: a madcap scheme.

noun
2. a madcap person.

WORDS RELATED TO MADCAP
wild, stupid, rash, brash, foolhardy, foolish, frivolous, harebrained, heedless, hotheaded, ill-advised, imprudent, incautious, inconsiderate, lively, reckless, thoughtless

SEE SYNONYMS FOR madcap ON THESAURUS.COM

Origin: 1580–90; mad + cap

EXAMPLE SENTENCES FROM THE WEB FOR MADCAP
And it was as madcap, sharp, and romantic as the series was when it left off in May.
IMAGINE ANDY SAMBERG AS YOUR BEST MAN|KEVIN FALLON|SEPTEMBER 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST

But Poehler is, and has been throughout the run of her show, just as good: just as silly, just as madcap, just as witty.
WHAT'S TV'S FUNNIEST SHOW? OUR EMMY AWARDS COMEDY PREDICTIONS|KEVIN FALLON|AUGUST 21, 2014|DAILY BEAST

This was a madcap game, the ball hurtling from end to end, chased by tired legs of every hue.
STARS AND STRIPES 2, BLACK STARS 1: TEAM USA TAKES A WIN FROM GHANA|TUNKU VARADARAJAN|JUNE 17, 2014|DAILY BEAST

But for all its madcap zaniness, Woke Up Lonely easily refutes the idea that the novel is a staid, obsolete form of writing.
WHAT A REAL CULT NOVEL LOOKS LIKE|DREW TOAL|APRIL 5, 2013|DAILY BEAST
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Mutatis mutandis - phrase.

I'm going back to school again this year and my fibre classes are bursting with new words and phrases to share. I actually had to look up the meaning of some of them, including mutatis mutandis.

This Latin based phrase from the middle ages generally means:

  • with things changed that should be changed

  • having changed what needs to be changed

  • once the necessary changes have been made


It is sometimes used as an adverb in legal documents, but it's use is not limited to one area.

Here is how it is used in the reading assigned for this week, from The Language of Ornament by James Trilling:


A preferred material suddenly becomes unavailable; a discovery in the small print of the building code forces last minute
changes that have nothing to do with either practical function or artistic preference; clients suddenly decide to economize in the middle of a project. Mutatis mutandis, these things can happen in any art or craft. Each eventuality demands a physical adjustment, which is judged by the standards of taste and skill when its real cause is long forgotten.
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Mollify (verb)
mol·li·fy [mol-uh-fahy]


verb (used with object)
1. to soften in feeling or temper, as a person; pacify; appease.
2. to mitigate or reduce; soften: to mollify one's demands.

OTHER WORDS FROM MOLLIFY
mol·li·fi·ca·tion, noun
mol·li·fi·er, noun
mol·li·fy·ing·ly, adverb
mol·li·fi·a·ble, adjective
re·mol·li·fy, verb (used with object), re·mol·li·fied, re·mol·li·fy·ing.
un·mol·li·fi·a·ble, adjective
un·mol·li·fied, adjective
un·mol·li·fy·ing, adjective

WORDS RELATED TO MOLLIFY
mitigate, placate, appease, assuage, relieve, lessen, quell, lull, alleviate, pacify, ameliorate, allay, blunt, temper, lighten, compose, moderate, conciliate, ease, dulcify

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

Origin: 1350–1400; Middle English < Middle French mollifier < Late Latin mollificare, equivalent to Latin molli ( s ) soft + -ficare -fy

EXAMPLE SENTENCES FROM THE WEB FOR MOLLIFY
Meanwhile, on Friday, Holder made a round of calls to Capitol Hill in an attempt to mollify concerned lawmakers.
HOLDER’S REGRETS AND REPAIRS|DANIEL KLAIDMAN|MAY 28, 2013|DAILY BEAST

The appointments of Al-Sisi and Mekki are no doubt intended to mollify such concerns.
IS MORSY STAGING OR REVERSING A COUP?|HUSSEIN IBISH|AUGUST 13, 2012|DAILY BEAST

He was actually soft as mush, straining to mollify Hispanics without roiling his own nativist base.
IMMIGRATION COULD SINK MITT ROMNEY REGARDLESS OF SUPREME COURT RULINGS|ROBERT SHRUM|JUNE 26, 2012|DAILY BEAST

Obama moved to mollify them, although how well it worked is unclear; both Dunn and Romer have since left the administration.
9 JUICY BITS FROM RON SUSKIND’S BOOK|DAVID A. GRAHAM|SEPTEMBER 20, 2011|DAILY BEAST
[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com
(Apologies, I've been dealing with a sore arm which has made typing.... unpleasant)

mythistory [mith-ist-e-ry]
noun:
History mixed with myth; a mythologized version of history

Examples:

The first half of the twentieth century witnessed a general secularisation of the political discourse in most parts of the world. There were, nevertheless, notable exceptions. In the forties states were founded, based on self-validating 'mythistory', overtly on religious foundations and for specific faiths. (Sacred & secular in international relations, The Tribune India, Apr 15)

At this point McNeill coins the term 'mythistory', which he defines as an attempt to attain a better balance between 'Truth, truths, and myths'. (Leslie ChapmanHistory becomes myth, Touching The Real, May 19)

This artificial construct provides the narrative basis for the 'lessons of the past' which interpreters build into their formulations about the historical past (ie, the mythistory that explains why the interpreter's people are different from and better than other people) (Donald Ostrowski, Muscovy and the Mongols: Cross-Cultural Influences on the Steppe Frontier)

Origin:

Mid 18th century; earliest use found in Nathan Bailey (d. 1742), lexicographer and schoolmaster. From post-classical Latin mythistoria 'fabulous history' from classical Latin mȳthos or mȳthus + historia. (Oxford English Dictionary)


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[personal profile] med_cat

Mataeology [MAT-tey-AHL-uh-jee]
(n.)
-A useless or pointless discourse; worthless conversation.
-A discourse that is fruitless or in vain.

From Greek “mataios” (pointless) + “logia” (words).

Used in a sentence:
“Having long since grown weary of the droning mataeology, poor Cordelia decided that this was going to be the very last blind date arranged by her mother.”
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[personal profile] med_cat


Mordacious [mawr-DEY-shuhs]
(adj.)
- Denoting or using biting sarcasm or invective.
- Expressing severe criticism of someone.
- Prone to biting.

From Classical Latin “mordax” / “mordacis” (biting) from base of “mordere” (to bite)

Used in a sentence:
“His insistence that the remarks were merely mordacious witticisms was unconvincing and did nothing to improve the abhorrence of the quagmire created by said remarks.”

(from The Grandiloquent Word of the Day FB page)
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Malneirophrenia - noun.

The total opposite of last Wednesday's word, malneirophrenia is when you wake up from an unpleasant dream with a feeling of uneasiness or discontent.
[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

mot juste [moh zhyst]
noun:
The exact, appropriate word, the exactly right word or phrasing

Examples:

The interpreter paused, choosing le mot juste before speaking. (Mikkael A Sekeres, The Universal Language of Caring, The New York Times, Jan 2020)

Translating this book is not really about finding le mot juste because Döblin, who despised Thomas Mann’s fussy aestheticism, often seems little interested in the exercise himself. (Amanda DeMarco, 'Berlin Alexanderplatz' Review: A Low-Life for the Ages , The Wall Street Journal, 2020)

As Levitin writes in his commentary, "Flaubert was wrong when he spoke of 'le mot juste! The very nature of reality and language precludes such a thing. As all translators realize, we search for le mot juste, knowing we must settle for something that merely approaches it (Martha Collins & Kevin Prufer, Into English: Poems, Translations, Commentaries)

The mot juste is an expression which readers would like to buy of writers who use it, as one buys one's neighbour's bantam cock for the sake of hearing its voice no more. (Henry Fowler)

Origin:

English was apparently unable to come up with its own mot juste to refer to a word or phrase that expresses exactly what the writer or speaker is trying to say and so borrowed the French term instead. The borrowing was still very new when George Paston (pen name of Emily Morse Symonds) described a character's wordsmithery in her 1899 novel A Writer's Life thusly: "She could launch her sentences into the air, knowing that they would fall upon their feet like cats, her brain was almost painlessly delivered of le mot juste…." As English speakers became more familiar with the term they increasingly gave it the English article "the" instead of the French le. (Merriam-Webster)

'a brief and forcible or witty saying,' 1813; earlier 'a motto' (1580s, a sense now obsolete), from French mot (12c.) 'remark, short speech,' literally 'word,' cognate of Italian motto, from Medieval Latin muttum 'a word,' from Latin mutum 'a grunt, a murmur' (see mutter). Also compare bon mot. Mot juste (1912) is French, literally 'exact word,' the precisely appropriate expression in some situation. (Online Etymological Dictionary)


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[personal profile] med_cat
...as I didn't manage to post on Friday, I wanted to post today while it's still Shushan Purim ;)
~~~
Megillah

Pronounced meh-GILL-eh, to rhyme with "guerilla." Hebrew: "scroll"

1. Megillah usually describes the book of Esther, which is read in the synagogue during the Purim holiday; also the Book of Ruth (There are five megillahs in all.)

2. Anything very long, prolix; a rigmarole. The Book of Esther wanders through a crushing concentration of detail, and the devout sit through the long, long reading after a day of fasting.

3. In popular parlance: Anything complicated, boring, overly extended, fouled up. "He'll put you to sleep with that megillah." "Don't give me a megillah" means "Spare me the full, dull details."

(from Leo Rosten's "The Joys of Yiddish"--there are more examples and a joke in his book, if anyone's interested, let me know and I'll add those here)



Pur, Hebrew for "lot", hence the word "Purim", for casting lots.
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2020

Mimicry (noun)
mim·ic·ry [mim-ik-ree]


noun, plural mim·ic·ries.
1. the act, practice, or art of mimicking.
2. Biology. the close external resemblance of an organism, the mimic, to some different organism, the model, such that the mimic benefits from the mistaken identity, as seeming to be unpalatable or harmful.
3. an instance, performance, or result of mimicking.

WORDS RELATED TO MIMICRY
pastiche, pretense, imitation, mockery, apery, caricature, camouflage, parody, posture, mimesis, aping, parroting, mocking, mimetism, mimicking

SEE SYNONYMS FOR mimicry ON THESAURUS.COM

Origin: 1680–90; mimic + -ry

Read more... )
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Metempsychosis - noun. From the ancient Greeks comes the idea of metempsychosis, or where the soul, after death, transmigrates to another human or animal. It can be thought of as a synonym to reincarnation.

A fun starting point for learning about is, of course, on Wikipedia.
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[personal profile] med_cat
maravedi, n.
mar·​a·​ve·​di | \ ˌmarəˈvādē \

1 : an old Moorish gold dinar of Spain and Morocco
2a : a medieval Spanish unit of value equal to ¹/₃₄ real
b : a copper coin representing one maravedi


Etymology:
Spanish maravedí, from Arabic Murābiṭīn Almoravides, Muslim dynasty of the 11th and 12th centuries in North Africa and Spain, from plural of murābiṭ marabout

Example:

He who shies
At such a prize
Is not worth a maravedi,
Be so kind To bear in mind--
Faint heart never won fair lady!

(Gilbert and Sullivan, from "Iolanthe"--"If you go in, you're sure to win")

You can find the video and the lyrics of this song here; do take a look, it's quite entertaining.
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[personal profile] med_cat
marcescent (mahr-SES-uhnt) - adj., (bot.) withered but still attached.


As in brown leaves that stay on the tree. Taken in the 1720s from Latin, the stem of marcēscēns, present participle of marcēscere, wither/shrivel.

---L.

Crossposts: https://prettygoodword.dreamwidth.org/804037.html
You can comment here or there.


brought to you by [livejournal.com profile] prettygoodword--many thanks!
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Mirth (noun)
mirth [murth]


noun
1. gaiety or jollity, especially when accompanied by laughter: the excitement and mirth of the holiday season.
2. amusement or laughter: He was unable to conceal his mirth.

WORDS RELATED TO MIRTH
laughter, levity, hilarity, rejoicing, gladness, gaiety, joviality, revelry, sport, cheerfulness, amusement, hysteria, jocundity, entertainment, glee, happiness, frolic, festivity, merrymaking, lightheartedness

OTHER WORDS FROM MIRTH
mirth·less, adjective

Synonyms
See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com
1, 2. Mirth, glee, hilarity, merriment, jollity, joviality refer to the gaiety characterizing people who are enjoying the companionship of others. Mirth suggests spontaneous amusement or gaiety, manifested briefly in laughter: uncontrolled outbursts of mirth. Glee suggests an effervescence of high spirits or exultation, often manifested in playful or ecstatic gestures; it may apply also to a malicious rejoicing over mishaps to others: glee over the failure of a rival. Hilarity implies noisy and boisterous mirth, often exceeding the limits of reason or propriety: hilarity aroused by practical jokes. Merriment suggests fun, good spirits, and good nature rather than the kind of wit and sometimes artificial funmaking that cause hilarity: The house resounded with music and sounds of merriment. Jollity and joviality may refer either to a general atmosphere of mirthful festivity or to the corresponding traits of individuals. Jollity implies an atmosphere of easy and convivial gaiety, a more hearty merriment or a less boisterous hilarity: The holiday was a time of jollity. Joviality implies a more mellow merriment generated by people who are hearty, generous, benevolent, and high-spirited: the joviality of warm-hearted friends.

Antonyms
1. gloom.

Origin: before 900; Middle English mirthe, Old English myrgth. See merry, -th

Read more... )
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, Nov. 12, 2019

Malinger (verb)
ma·lin·ger [muh-ling-ger]


verb used without object
1. to pretend illness, especially in order to shirk one's duty, avoid work, etc.

OTHER WORDS FROM MALINGER
ma·lin·ger·er, noun

WORDS RELATED TO MALINGER
dodge, shirk, fake, loaf, sham

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

Origin: 1810–20; < French malingre sickly, ailing, equivalent to mal- mal- + Old French heingre haggard (perhaps < Gmc)

EXAMPLES FROM THE WEB FOR MALINGER
"Sheep," who has been disposed to malinger, is the worst of the lot.
ADVENTURES IN ALASKA|SAMUEL HALL YOUNG

One, of course, can readily see with what facility an individual of the type under discussion could malinger mental symptoms.
STUDIES IN FORENSIC PSYCHIATRY|BERNARD GLUECK

It was quick work; but Bowles had a college education—he had been only six hours a cowboy when he learned to malinger on the job.
BAT WING BOWLES|DANE COOLIDGE

No man ever essayed to malinger or to shirk a duty to which he had been allotted by the doctor.
SIXTEEN MONTHS IN FOUR GERMAN PRISONS|HENRY CHARLES MAHONEY
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 2019

Malediction (noun)
mal·e·dic·tion [mal-i-dik-shuhn]


noun
1. a curse; imprecation.
2. the utterance of a curse.
3. slander.

RELATED FORMS
mal·e·dic·tive, mal·e·dic·to·ry [mal-i-dik-tuh-ree] , adjective
un·mal·e·dic·tive, adjective
un·mal·e·dic·to·ry, adjective

RELATED WORDS
cuss, execration, commination, expletive, imprecation, anathema, whammy, denunciation, damn, damnation, oath, jinx, darn, damning, no-no

Synonyms
See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com
1. damning, execration.

Antonyms
1. benediction.

Origin: 1400–50; late Middle English malediccion < Latin malediction- (stem of maledictio ) slander ( Late Latin: curse). See male-, diction

EXAMPLES FROM THE WEB FOR MALEDICTION
Old Stubbs calls the May-pole a "stinking idol," and says it was brought home with "great veneration," hence his malediction.
TRADITIONS, SUPERSTITIONS AND FOLK-LORE|CHARLES HARDWICK

Has any malediction of Heaven doomed them to perpetual vassalage?
ABRIDGEMENT OF THE DEBATES OF CONGRESS, FROM 1789 TO 1856 (4 OF 16 VOL.)|VARIOUS

They listened with the calm of people for whom anathema, reprobation, malediction, and execration were their daily bread.
THE MIRACLE OF THE GREAT ST. NICOLAS|ANATOLE FRANCE

It was not clear to Lyon whether this malediction had for its object the original or the painter of the portrait.
A LONDON LIFE; THE PATAGONIA; THE LIAR; MRS. TEMPERLY|HENRY JAMES

Horror, shame, misery, and malediction; I have betrayed you.
ROMANCE|JOSEPH CONRAD AND F.M. HUEFFER

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