adjective
incessant: a stanchless torrent of words.
English stanchless is an awkward, uncommon word. Its meaning is obvious: unable to be stanched. Stanch comes from the Old French verb estanchier to close, stop and is probably from an unattested Vulgar Latin verb 莽喧硃紳喧勳釵櫻娶梗, equivalent to Latin stant- (stem of 莽喧櫻紳莽, the present participle of 莽喧櫻娶梗 to stand) and the causative suffix -勳釵櫻娶梗; stanticare means to make stand or stop. Stanchless entered English in the 17th century.
The flow of his language was slow, but steady and apparently stanchless.
The machine can only repeat, and if we repeated we should be machines and untrue to the stanchless creative mystery of the life within us.
adjective
resembling nacre or mother-of-pearl; lustrous; pearly.
The English adjective nacreous is a derivative of nacre mother-of-pearl. Nacre comes from Middle French nacre, from Medieval Latin nacchara, nacara, nacrum. Other Romance languages have similar forms: Old Italian nacacra, nacchera, Catalan nacre, and Spanish 紳獺釵硃娶, all meaning mother-of-pearl. The further origin of nacre is uncertain: the most common etymology is that it comes from Arabic 紳硃梁梁櫻娶硃 small drum, or from Arabic naqur “hunting horn,” a derivative of the verb nakara “hollow out,” from the shape of the mollusk shell that yields mother-of-pearl. Nacreous entered English in the 19th century.
Nacreous pearl light swam faintly about the hem of the lilac darkness; the edges of light and darkness were stitched upon the hills.
It should not have surprised them to find the angel in that preserved condition. The fingernails, nacreous as the inside of an oyster shell …
noun
a system of signaling, especially a system by which a special flag is held in each hand and various positions of the arms indicate specific letters, numbers, etc.
Semaphore came into English from French 莽矇鳥硃梯堯棗娶梗, a device for making and transmitting signals by line of sight. From the point of view of a purist or pedant, semaphore is a malformed word. The Greek noun 莽礙鳥硃 means mark, sign, token, and its combining form, which should have been used in semaphore, is 莽襲鳥硃喧-, which would result in sematophore. The combining form -phore comes from the Greek combining form -phoros carrying, bearing, a derivative of the verb 梯堯矇娶梗勳紳 to carry, bear. Semaphore entered English in the 19th century.
The gymnasts were like the diagrams to illustrate the semaphore alphabet, arms thrust firmly out in precise positions, a flag in each hand, the little figures in naval uniform like her brother, Ben, drawn over and over.
His younger brother admired his speed and what looked like his precision, though semaphore signals were a closed book to the major.