noun
a movement made in order to deceive an adversary; an attack aimed at one place or point merely as a distraction from the real place or point of attack: military feints; the feints of a skilled fencer.
The English noun feint comes from Old French feinte, a noun use of the feminine past participle of the verb feindre to feign, pretend, dissemble. The Old French verb comes from Latin fingere to shape, form, fashion, the ultimate source of English faint, fiction, figment, and effigy. Feint entered English in the 17th century.
Antagonism in my family comes wrapped in layers of code, sideways feints, full deniability.
… it always had been understood that when the Germans did decide to take the desperate risk of trying to invade England they would make a feint in a couple of places, and, having drawn off the British fleet, would direct their serious attacks somewhere else.
The adjective treen dates to Old English (about 1000). Its original adjective meanings made of tree (i.e., wood), wooden; pertaining to trees or a tree are obsolete or rare in standard English. Its current sense as a noun meaning (small) articles or utensils made of wood, woodenware dates from the 20th century.
Much skill had they in runes, and were exceeding deft in scoring them on treen bowls, and on staves, and door-posts and roof-beams and standing-beds and such like things.
In old time we had treen chalices and golden priests; but now we have treen priests and golden chalices.
The English adjective frugivorous fruit-eating is used mostly in biology to describe animals that eat fruit. The first element, frugi-, is a combining form of Latin frux fruit, crops, produce related to the verb 款娶喝蘋 to enjoy the fruits or products or results of. From the form 款娶贖眶- English has frugal and frugivorous. From fructus, the past participle of 款娶喝蘋 (from an assumed 款娶贖眶喝蘋), English has fruit (from Old French, from Latin 款娶贖釵喧喝莽) and fructify (from Old French fructifier, from Latin 款娶贖釵喧勳款勳釵櫻娶梗). The second element, -vorous, ultimately comes from Latin 措棗娶櫻娶梗 to swallow ravenously, whence English has devour (from Middle French devourer, from Latin d措棗娶櫻娶梗 to swallow down, and voracious (from Latin 措棗娶櫻釵-, the stem of vorax ravenous, insatiable. Frugivorous entered English in the 18th century.
… the frugivorous bats, and the fruit-eating quadrumana, including the gorgeous mandrill, are the most highly-coloured of the Mammalia.
Fruit, by the way, was all their diet. … while I was with them, in spite of some carnal cravings, I had to be frugivorous also.