sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

wabi-sabi [wah-bee-sah-bee]

noun:
a Japanese aesthetic concept that finds beauty and serenity in objects, landscapes, designs, etc., that are simple, imperfect, and impermanent; a way of living that focuses on finding beauty within the imperfections of life and accepting peacefully the natural cycle of growth and decay

Examples:

Take for example the concept of 'wabi-sabi,' which is so important in Japanese aesthetics. The phrase literally means 'forlorn and aged' and refers to an appreciation of a simple, austere aesthetic. It's exemplified by the kind of simple rustic-looking tea houses found in traditional Japanese gardens. (Damian Flanagan, Edging Toward Japan: How a dying tree taught me the true meaning of wabi-sabi, The Mainichi, July 2024)

The team looked to Japanese wabi-sabi for the hotel interiors and used reclaimed wood for many of the finishes (Emily Zemler, How the lavish hotel in 'Murder at the End of the World' evolves into a futuristic fortress, Los Angeles Times, December 2023)

Wabi-sabi creations often result from a flow of naturally occurring elements, as opposed to manipulating the raw materials to the artist's will. Thus, the artist is seen as a conduit, not an independent creator. (Matt Johnson, Wabi-Sabi and the Psychology of Imperfection, Psychology Today, September 2024)

Charlotte Wong, a counselling psychologist, tells Young Post how a Japanese philosophy called wabi-sabi can help us deal with pressure and be more accepting of our mistakes. (Doris Wai, How Japanese wabi-sabi philosophy can help teens de-stress, accept their flaws, find self-love, South China Morning Post, November 2023)


(the above article's picture, because it is beautiful; click to enlarge)

med_cat: (Default)
[personal profile] med_cat

Woofits

Next time you can’t make it to that 8 am class at university, you might want to email your professor and tell them you have the woofits. Hopefully, they’ll be too embarrassed to ask what that means and you won’t have to admit that you’ve got a hangover. 

Example: 

Dear Professor Jones, 

Sadly, I’ve got the woofits today and will be spending the day in bed. 

Sincerely, 

Lucy



Enjoy the others below--"woofits" is from the second list ;)

finance.yahoo.com/news/13-wonderful-old-english-words-170000109.html

www.lingoda.com/blog/en/old-english-words/

simplyn2deep: (Hawaii Five 0::team::red cup)
[personal profile] simplyn2deep
December 10, 2024

Wayworn (adjective)
wayworn [ wey-wawrn, -wohrn ]


adjective
1. worn or wearied by travel: She was wayworn after the long trip.

Origin: First recorded in 1770–80; way + worn

Example Sentences
Alhaji Kamara lifted the wayworn visitors to their first road win of the season last Friday at Kansas City, smashing his first MLS touch into the net 33 seconds after replacing Neagle in the 86th minute.
From Washington Post

The complexion sustains as great a change: it is no longer flushed with gaiety and excitation, but pale and wayworn, indicating a profound mental and bodily exhaustion.
From Project Gutenberg

She offered to give him lodging in her house, until Tuesday, and inviting him in she immediately prepared some dinner for him, which, though it was very frugal and plain, was received with great thankfulness by the weary and wayworn traveler.
From Project Gutenberg

To the wayworn soul you give your balm, Your cup of peace, your string d psalm, Your grace of bud and flower.
From Project Gutenberg

This home, though rude, was the abode of good cheer, in which the wayworn traveler and especially the minister of the gospel, always found a welcome.
From Project Gutenberg

Now YOU come up with a sentence (or fic? or graphic?) that best illustrates the word.
simplyn2deep: (Default)
[personal profile] simplyn2deep
Tuesday, Mar. 19, 2024

Winsome (adjective)
win·some [win-suhm]


adjective
1. sweetly or innocently charming; winning; engaging: a winsome smile.

OTHER WORDS FROM WINSOME
win·some·ly, adverb
win·some·ness, noun
un·win·some, adjective

WORDS RELATED TO WINSOME
appealing, captivating, cute, delightful, engaging, absorbing, alluring, attractive, charismatic, dainty, delicate, desirable, elegant, enamoring, enthralling, eye-catching, fascinating, glamorous, inviting, irresistible

See synonyms for: winsome / winsomely / winsomeness on Thesaurus.com

ORIGIN: First recorded before 900; Middle English winsom, Old English wynsum, equivalent to wyn(n) “joy” (see wish) + -sum -some

HOW TO USE WINSOME IN A SENTENCE
However, if the public allows Mulaney to reinvent himself, to have a significant say in the next iteration of his collectively constructed public persona, it probably won’t be as a winsome newborn babe in the woods.
JOHN MULANEY WAS PERFORMING A ROLE ALL ALONG | AJA ROMANO | SEPTEMBER 10, 2021 | VOX

Hopeful and winsome, it’s a deceptively simple show, but one that’s leading a conversation about how and under what conditions outsiders are able to speak for themselves.
THE 10 BEST TV SHOWS FROM THE FIRST HALF OF 2021 | INKOO KANG | JULY 1, 2021 | WASHINGTON POST

The search for love lands the protagonists of two new winsome comedies in some unlikely pockets of London.
ROM-COM ‘STARSTRUCK’ AND COMING-OF-AGE COMEDY ‘WE ARE LADY PARTS’ ARE THIS MONTH’S HIDDEN TV GEMS | INKOO KANG | JUNE 16, 2021 | WASHINGTON POST

This woman, the story’s chief human character—there’s also a marvelous, winsome canine—is played by Tilda Swinton, who molds the text into an invisible yet tactile sculpture, a shape in the air that speaks of wordless insecurities and fears.
THE BEST MOVIES OF 2021 SO FAR | STEPHANIE ZACHAREK | MAY 25, 2021 | TIME

John Burningham’s winsome illustrations have never looked so winsome.
WHY READ WHAT EVERYONE ELSE IS READING? A GUIDE TO THIS SEASON’S HIDDEN GEMS. | MICHAEL DIRDA | DECEMBER 2, 2020 | WASHINGTON POST
calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Wersh - adjective.

Apparently a Scottish version of another adjective, wearish, wersh describes anything tasteless, pale or sickly, squeamish or even cold.

Alas I could not find many good examples, but the Words With Friends bot used the word against me, so at least it's cromulent!
calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Wakame - noun.

Wakame (Undaria pinnatifida), is an edible species of seaweed popular in Asian cooking. However, although it has been farmed for hundreds of years, it's also considered an invasive species. Pronounced wuh·kaa·may.


CSIRO ScienceImage 952 Undaria pinnatifida Japanese kelp.jpg
By CSIRO, CC BY 3.0, Link


calzephyr: Scott Pilgrim generator (Default)
[personal profile] calzephyr
Waddy - noun.

Waddies, also called a nulla-nulla or boondi, is a heavy and pointed club traditionally used as a weapon, for hunting or as a tool by Indigenous Australian people.


Arrernte Keulen EthnM.jpg
By User:FA2010 - Own work, Public Domain, Link


sallymn: (words 6)
[personal profile] sallymn

woebegone [woh-bi-gawn, -gon]

adjective:
1 beset with woe; affected by woe, especially in appearance
2 showing or indicating woe

Examples:

Those woebegone souls must prostrate themselves in front of judges, begging their honors to declare them complete and total failures. (Ron Lieber, Student Loan Borrowers Don't Deserve 'Forgiveness'. They Deserve an Apology., The New York Times, May 2022)

The run-down, two-story house, located in the woebegone former timber town of Aberdeen near the Olympic National Forest, can be moved into as is or uprooted from its foundations and carted off for display elsewhere, selling agent Edward Fitz said. (Rock hero Kurt Cobain’s childhood home for sale , The Express Tribune, September 2013)

She was so absorbed that she almost fell over the woebegone little figure on the step. (Mary Finley Leonard, The Story of the Big Front Door)

He stood before me the most woebegone, heartbroken man I ever saw. (Sarah Margan Dawson, A Confederate Girl's Diary)

Origin:

c 1300, in expressions such as me is wo bigone 'woe has beset me,' from woe + begon, past participle of Middle English bego 'to beset, surround, overwhelm,' from Old English began 'go over, traverse; inhabit, occupy; encompass, surround'. The verb is now obsolete, and its only survival is the fossilized past participle in this word. (Online Etymology Dictionary)

Woebegone is first recorded in The Romance of Guy of Warwick, of about the year 1300. At that date, people would say things like 'me is woe begon', grief has beset me. Notice the word order, with me as the indirect object of the sentence, but put first. The verb here is bego, which has been obsolete for something like four hundred years, but which in medieval times had a variety of senses, such as to go round, surround or beset.

Over time, the link between woe and begone, the past participle of bego, became so close that they fused into a single adjective, so tightly linked that they survived shifts in language and the loss of the verb bego. For some centuries it retained this sense of 'afflicted by grief', oppressed with misfortune, distress, sorrow or grief. Shakespeare uses it this way in Henry IV:

    Even such a man, so faint, so spiritless,
    So dull, so dread in look, so woe-begone,
    Drew Priam's curtain in the dead of night
    And would have told him half his Troy was burnt.

This quotation in particular was so well known that it contributed to a revival of woebegone in a subtly altered sense at the beginning of the nineteenth century, not meaning somebody actually beset by woes, but somebody whose appearance makes them look as though they are.

We're now a long way from that medieval romance, but in continuing to use the word we retain a small vestige of middle English as a linguistic fossil. Several other archaic forms in woe have also survived, such as 'woe is me'and 'woe betide you', presumably because there's a continuing need for formulaic lamentatory utterances. (World Wide Words)


med_cat: (Default)
[personal profile] med_cat
Wishing everyone who celebrates a very Merry Christmas, and a wonderful weekend to everyone who does not :)
~~~



Wassail [wah-SEYL]
(n.)
- A spiced ale or mulled wine drunk during celebrations for Twelfth Night and Christmas Eve.
- A hot drink that is made with wine, beer, or cider, spices, sugar, and usually baked apples and is traditionally served in a large bowl especially at Christmastime.
- Lively and noisy festivities involving the drinking of plentiful amounts of alcohol; revelry.
(v.)
- To drink plentiful amounts of alcohol and enjoy oneself with others in a noisy, lively way.
- To go from house to house at Christmas singing carols.
From Middle English “wæs hæil,” “wæs hāl,” “was-hail,” or “washayl” (be hale or whole) from Old English “wæs,” “wes” from imperative “wesan” (to be) + “hail” or “hale” (in good health) from Old Norse “heill”
Used in a sentence:
“Excessive wassailing is strongly discouraged, as it can lead to imprudent behavior and surrendering to cacoethes.”

(Credit: Grandiloquent Word of the Day)
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Woonerf - noun

Your city may have a woonerf--except you may know it as a "home zone" or a "complete street" concept. Meaning "living yard" or "residential grounds" in Dutch, woonerfs are a way of playing with or altering urban spaces. They may focus on pedestrians, be car-free, use traffic calming methods or a combination of all three. Woonerfs can encourage community-building or take back public streets from cars. Some woonerfs may be regulated or others, like one in my hometown, a more casual affair to curb car traffic between a community hall and baseball diamond.
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
December 22, 2020

Wreath (noun, verb)
wreath [reeth]


noun, plural wreaths [reethz, reeths]
1. a circular band of flowers, foliage, or any ornamental work, for adorning the head or for any decorative purpose; a garland or chaplet.
2. any ringlike, curving, or curling mass or formation: a wreath of clouds.
3. a. a curved section of a handrail.
b. Also called wreath·piece. a curved section of a string.

verb (used with or without object)
4. to wreathe.

OTHER WORDS FROM WREATH
wreathlike, adjective

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH WREATH
wraith, wreathe, writhe

WORDS RELATED TO WREATH
bouquet, garland, ringlet, festoon, circlet, crown, bay, band, loop, coronet, laurel, ring, chaplet, lei, coronal

SYNONYMS FOR WREATH
See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

Origin: before 1000; Middle English wrethe, Old English writha something wound or coiled; akin to writhe

EXAMPLE SENTENCES FROM THE WEB FOR WREATH
Plus “The stump of a pipe he held tight in his teeth/And the smoke it encircled his head like a wreath”?
KEEP CHRISTMAS COMMERCIALIZED!|P. J. O’ROURKE|DECEMBER 6, 2014|DAILY BEAST

He will then visit the Western Wall and lay a wreath at the Holocaust memorial at Mount Herzl.
THE POPE’S RISKY TRIP TO THE HOLY LAND|BARBIE LATZA NADEAU|MAY 23, 2014|DAILY BEAST

A wreath of green leaves is placed on her head where a red band stands out against her white-blond shaved head.
HALLUCINATING AWAY A HEROIN ADDICTION|ABBY HAGLAGE|MAY 4, 2014|DAILY BEAST

For Coming Soon, Gordon's initial plan was to make and then display her wreath paintings in a low-budget California tract house.
KIM GORDON: GOING SOLO AFTER SONIC YOUTH, AND WHY SHE IDENTIFIES WITH ‘GIRLS’|ANDREW ROMANO|APRIL 10, 2014|DAILY BEAST
[identity profile] calzephyr77.livejournal.com
Weltschmerz - a German word encapsulating the feeling of world weariness and melancholy. It was coined by German Romantic author Jean Paul.

Weltschmerz is not a new phenomenom--Paul passed away in 1825--and surely he gave a name to something long intangible.


The melancholic figure of a poet leaning on an inscribed blo Wellcome V0049085.jpg
By https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/obf_images/f2/6e/0d3655d36db92fb364463512b7c6.jpg
Gallery: https://wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/image/V0049085.html
Wellcome Collection gallery (2018-04-05): https://wellcomecollection.org/works/c3d6q7ns CC-BY-4.0, CC BY 4.0, Link


[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

wunderkind [voo n-der-kind, wuhn-]
noun:

a child prodigy, someone who succeeds in a competitive or highly difficult field or profession at an early age

Examples:

Cuco Hawthorne wunderkind Cuco has come a long way from self-producing his lovelorn solo pop tracks in his bedroom. (Andrea Domanick, Best live music in L.A.: Robyn, Cuco, XXL Freshman and more, Los Angeles Times, July 2019 )

Wunderkind backstroker Missy Franklin won gold at the tender age of 17. (Kevin Fallon, ‘Today’ Show Promo Gaffe and More Biggest London Olympic Fails, Aug 2012)

There I met the dazzling wunderkind Paul Samuelson. When I was browsing in the Berkeley library and came across early issues of Econometrica, Samuelson’s contributions caught my eye. (Lawrence R. Klein, Lecture at Trinity University in October 1984, published in Lives of the Laureates, edited by William Breit and Barry T Hirsh)

Origin:

German : Wunder, wonder, prodigy (from Middle High German, from Old High German wuntar) + Kind, child. (Free Dictionary)

1883 in English (earlier as a German word in German contexts), from German Wunderkind, literally "wonder-child." (Online Etymology Dictionary)


[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, May 14, 2019

Wine (noun, adjective, verb)
wine [wahyn]


noun
1. the fermented juice of grapes, made in many varieties, such as red, white, sweet, dry, still, and sparkling, for use as a beverage, in cooking, in religious rites, etc., and usually having an alcoholic content of 14 percent or less.
2. a particular variety of such fermented grape juice: port and sherry wines.
3. the juice, fermented or unfermented, of various other fruits or plants, used as a beverage, sauce, etc.: gooseberry wine; currant wine.
4. a dark reddish color, as of red wines.
5. Pharmacology , vinum.
6. something that invigorates, cheers, or intoxicates like wine.
7. British.
a. a social gathering at which wine is the major beverage.
b. a party, especially one held by university students, for drinking wine.
8. Obsolete. intoxication due to the drinking of wine.

adjective
9. dark red in color.

verb (used with object)
10. to supply with wine: He wined his cellar with rare vintages.

verb (used without object)
11. to drink wine.

Idioms
12. new wine in old bottles, something new placed in or superimposed on an old or existing form, system, etc. Matt. 9:17
13. wine and dine, to entertain lavishly: They wined and dined us in order to get us to sign the new contract.

RELATED FORMS
wine·less , adjective
win·ish , adjective

CAN BE CONFUSED
whine

See more synonyms on Thesaurus.com

Origin: before 900; Middle English (noun), Old English win (cognate with Dutch wijn, German Wein, Old Norse vin, Gothic wein ) « Latin vinum (cognate with Greek oînos )

Read more... )
[identity profile] simplyn2deep.livejournal.com
Tuesday, Apr. 30, 2019

White (adjective, noun, verb)
white [hwahyt, wahyt]


adjective
1. of the color of pure snow, of the margins of this page, etc.; reflecting nearly all the rays of sunlight or a similar light.
2. light or comparatively light in color.
3. (of human beings) marked by slight pigmentation of the skin, as of many Caucasoids.
4. for, limited to, or predominantly made up of persons whose racial heritage is caucasian: a white club; a white neighborhood.
5. pallid or pale, as from fear or other strong emotion: white with rage.
6. silvery, gray, or hoary: white hair.
white as snow )
[identity profile] sallymn.livejournal.com

woolgathering [wool-gath-er-ing]
noun:
1. Indulgence in aimless thought or dreamy imagining; absent-mindedness.
2. gathering of the tufts of wool shed by sheep and caught on bushes.

Examples:

Really, God thought with annoyance, this woolgathering —at such a moment! (Damon Francis Knight, The Worshippers)

His efforts to explain his success keep wandering off into sunny vales of academic woolgathering (Washington Post, 1998)

Origin:

Woolgathering once literally referred to the act of gathering loose tufts of wool that had gotten caught on bushes and fences as sheep passed by. Woolgatherers must have seemed to wander aimlessly, gaining little for their efforts, for in the mid-16th century "woolgathering" began to appear in figurative phrases such as "my wits (or my mind) went a-woolgathering" - in other words, "my mind went wandering aimlessly." From there, it wasn't long before the word woolgathering came to suggest the act of indulging in purposeless mind-wandering. (Merriam Webster)


[identity profile] prettygoodword.livejournal.com
wigeon or widgeon (WIJ-uhn) - n., any of three common freshwater dabbling ducks of the genus Mareca (formerly Anas); a fool.


The three being the Eurasian wigeon (M. penelope), the American wigeon (M. americana) and the Chiloé wigeon (M. sibilatrix) of South America -- but usually the first is what's meant. All three are related to mallards and have a similar shape, though with different coloring in the male:


Thanks, WikiMedia!

The name dates to around the start of the 16th century, but where it came from and how it came to be a now rare if not obsolete term of abuse is unknown.

---L.
med_cat: (Default)
[personal profile] med_cat


(Source for pic and definitions: https://www.brownielocks.com/words.html)

We'd had ergophobic (afraid of work) and tragematopolist (seller of candy) here before.

Here's the rest:

Lubitorium: a service station

Wabbit: (Scottish) exhausted or slightly unwell.

Woofits: an unwell feeling, especially a headache; a moody depression

Calamistrate: to curl one's hair. From a Latin word meaning "curling iron".
med_cat: (Default)
[personal profile] med_cat
More w-words is always good, isn't it? ;))
~~

willowwacks, n.

New England. a wooded, uninhabited area.

Examples:

They couldn't believe anyone could just walk out of the willowwacks, Navy SEAL or not. Aaron Gwyn, Wynne's War, 2014

There aren't many airports in eastern Canada; you look at one like Upper Blackville, out there in the spruce-and-fir willowwacks, and wonder what it's doing there. The AOPA Pilot: Voice of General Aviation, Volume 37, 1994

Etymology:

Willowwacks is of uncertain origin.

(Source: dictionary.com Word of the Day, Jan. 12, 2017)
[identity profile] ersatz-read.livejournal.com
wonky (wŏng′kē), adj.
1. Shaky or unsteady.
2. Out of alignment.
3. Not functioning properly; unreliable.

4. Excessively interested in minor details; wonkish.

As far as I recall, I didn't hear "wonky" used in that 4th sense until very recently.  But now I hear it all the time in WPR news stories.  Have others heard it used in that 4th sense?  Where/when?
According to this site, "wonky" in that 4th sense dates from the late 20th century, and is related to the more common term 'wonk'  (someone excessively interested in minor details, especially political details).  It looks like the origin of 'wonk' is unknown.

The unsteady/unreliable meaning of "wonky" is from the early 20th century, possibly from Middle English wankel, unsteady.  (And no, there is no obvious etymological link between this term and 'wanker'.)

I have (infrequently) heard the term "wonkish" in reference to someone interested in details.  That article discussed "wonkish" as well, which appears to be a recently-coined American variant used for the 4th sense of "wonky".

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