[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

lacuna [luh-kyoo-nuh]

noun:
1 a gap or missing part, as in a manuscript, series, or logical argument; hiatus.
2 (Anatomy) one of the numerous minute cavities in the substance of bone, supposed to contain nucleate cells.
3 (Botany) an air space in the cellular tissue of plants.

Examples:

Following a doctrine of necessity invoked by the National Assembly to rescue Nigeria from impending constitutional crisis thrown up by a lacuna in the nation’s legal framework, the then Vice President Goodluck Jonathan had to complete the remaining tenure of his principal under the invocation of the doctrine of necessity by the then David Mark-led Senate. (Umar, How Jonathan’s Candidacy Will Strengthen North-South Alliance, This Day, February 2022)

It was already known that these early vertebrates had bone cells, but we knew little about how the cells were connected to each other, as well as anything about the detailed structure of the lacuna, or cavities, in which the bone cells were located in the living animal. (Fossils provide new insights into the evolution of bones, Advanced Science News, April 2021)

Whereas with a cultured man there is no gap or lacuna between his opinions and his life. Both are dominated by the same organic, inevitable fatality. (John Cowper Powys, The Meaning of Culture)

Origin:

'blank or missing portion in a manuscript,' 1660s, from Latin lacuna 'hole, pit,' figuratively 'a gap, void, want,' diminutive of lacus 'pond, lake; hollow, opening'. The Latin plural is lacunae. The word has also been used in English from c 1700 in the literal Latin sense in anatomy, zoology, botany. The adjectival forms have somewhat sorted themselves: Mathematics tends to use lacunary (1857), natural history lacunose (1816), and lacunar is used in architecture of paneled ceilings (1690s), so called for their sunken compartments. Leaving lacunal (1846) for the manuscript sense. (Online Etymology Dictionary).

Exploring the etymology of lacuna involves taking a plunge into the pit - or maybe a leap into the lacus (that's the Latin word for 'lake'). Latin speakers modified lacus into lacuna and used it to mean 'pit,' 'cleft,' or 'pool.' English speakers borrowed the term in the 17th century. It is usually pluralized as lacunae; however, lacunas is an accepted variant plural. Another English word that traces its origin to lacuna is lagoon, which came to us by way of Italian and French. (Merriam-Webster)


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

amaranthine [am-uh-ran-thin, -thahyn]

adjective:
1 unfading; everlasting
2 of purplish-red color
3 of or relating to an amaranth


(click to enlarge)


Examples:

It strives to juxtapose the oriental and western cuts, hence presenting amaranthine and solitary style in their imprinted glamorised world. (Mubashir Ahmed, Of oriental taste, The News, June 2019)

It is for this crown of amaranthine glory, or blessed eternal salvation, that we are to watch and labor with fear and trembling. (Charles Ebert Orr, Food for the Lambs; or, Helps for Young Christians)

There were amaranthine blossoms, broad as salvers, supported by arm-thick stems that trembled continually. (Clark Ashton Smith, 'The Garden of Adompha')

See the modest green of the heath and its plants, rosy, amaranthine, which distil honey for the bees and fragrance for the butterflies. (Theodore Rousseau, cited by Charles Sprague Smith, Barbizon Days)

Origin:

1660s, 'unfading, undying,' poetic (apparently coined by Milton), also amarantine; see amaranth, name of a mythical unfading flower + -ine (1). From late 19c of a purple color similar to that of the flowers of the ornamental plant so-called. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Long ago poets conceived of a flower that did not fade and christened it amaranth. The appellation is rooted in the Greek word amarantos, meaning 'immortal' or 'unfading', and amarantus, the Latin name of a flower (probably Celosia cristata). The word amaranthine emerged as an adjective of the imaginary flower and subsequently of anything possessing its undying quality. Amaranth also names a real plant (genus Amaranthus), an herb that some consider a weed and others grow for its colorful leaves and spikes of flowers. (Merriam-Webster)


[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com
venter:

noun:

In zoology:

1. the abdomen or belly, the undercarriage of an animal
2. a bellylike cavity
3. a bellylike protuberance

In law:

1. the womb
2: a wife or mother who is the source of offspring
3. in venter, conceived but not yet born

Origin:  Latin, venter meaning belly. First known use 1535-1545

Related: adj: ventral, of or related to the belly; abdominal 
med_cat: (Default)
[personal profile] med_cat

Solenoglyphous, adj.: (Sol-e-NOG-li-fus), having fangs that fold into the mouth:

"Your solenglyphous fangs are spectaculah!
They are awesome (to use the vernaculah)
'Cause they fold up inside
Till you open up wide--
I asp-pire to be like you!"

Signed: Dracula

(Beverley Sharp, Montgomery, Ala)

(from the Washington Post's Style Invitational contest in July 2016; the challenge was including one of the words from the list of words used in the 2016 National Spelling Bee in a funny poem)

[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com
salp or salpa:  plural:  salps or salpae.

Noun:  Salpae are small, squishy oceanic animals that resemble jellyfish, but are actually more closely related to humans. They are chordates and possess a dorsal nerve cord similar to the spinal cord in vertebrates. Their rudimentary body structure is often referred to when creating models of how modern verterbrates might have evolved.

Salpae have a complex life cycle consisting of two main phases.  Courtesy of Wikipedia: "The solitary life history phase, also known as an oozoid, is a single, barrel-shaped animal that reproduces asexually by producing a chain of tens to hundreds of individuals, which are released from the parent at a small size.

The chain of salps is the 'aggregate' portion of the lifecycle. The aggregate individuals are also known as blastozooids; they remain attached together while swimming and feeding, and each individual grows in size. Each blastozooid in the chain reproduces sexually (the blastozooids are sequential hermaphrodites, first maturing as females, and are fertilized by male gametes produced by older chains), with a growing embryo oozoid attached to the body wall of the parent. The growing oozoids are eventually released from the parent blastozooids, and then continue to feed and grow as the solitary asexual phase, thus closing the lifecycle of salps."





Etymology: New Latin, Greek, French 1510-1520 meaning "fish." Modern use of the word used to describe this particular creature began in the mid 1800s.


Aren't they lovely??
[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com
trophallaxis: [trof-uh-lak-sis]

noun:

Trophallaxis is the the transfer of food, nutrients, and other secretions by mouth-to-mouth or mouth-to-anus feedings within a community. This behavior can be found in colonies of insects such as bees, ants and termites, and it some species, is a form of communication as well as nutrition.  It is also the method by which gray wolves, vampire bats, and many species of birds feed their young.

etymology:  Coined in 1918 by entomologist William Morton Wheeler. T
roph- + Greek állaxis "exchange"
[identity profile] trellia-chan.livejournal.com
senescence: [si-nes-uhns]
Noun:

1. (in
biology) The state or process of aging, especially in humans; old age.
2. (in cell biology) Ceasing to divide by mitosis because of shortening of telomeres or excessive DNA damage.
3. (in gerontology) Old age; accumulated damage to macromolecules, cells, tissues and organs with the passage of time.
4. (in botany) Fruit senescence, leading to ripening of fruit.



Origin:  1650-60  From Latin: senescere: to grow old.

Related form:

adjective: senescent: growing old, aging.

marcescent

Jan. 17th, 2013 07:30 am
[identity profile] prettygoodword.livejournal.com
marcescent (mahr-SES-uhnt) - adj., withering but not falling off.


Usage is largely botanical. Can be used of leaves -- for example, those of some oaks turn brown but stay on the tree through the winter to finally fall in the spring -- or of blossoms -- such as of some squashes. The lower fronds of palm trees also comes to mind, which depending on the species can stay on for far longer than a pruner might desire. As for the word itself, it was borrowed in the 1720s from Latin marcēscēns, the past participle of marcēscēns, to shrivel, grow weak, the inchoative (an "about to begin" form) of marcēre, to wither, ultimately from the PIE root *merk-, to decay/die (which also gives us mortal).

The brown, marcescent leaves of stayed on her potted rubber plant long after she moved out, leaving it behind.

---L.
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