Exoteric, the opposite of esoteric, comes from Latin 梗單喧梗娶勳釵喝莽 popular (e.g., of books); not overly technical or abstruse, a borrowing of Greek 梗單喧梗娶勳域籀莽 external, outside, popular. The first element of the Greek word is the adverb 矇單 out, out of, outside; the last element, -勳域籀莽, is a typical adjective suffix. The middle element, -ter-, is usually called a comparative suffix, which is only one of its functions. The suffix -ter is also used in Latin and Greek to form natural or complementary pairs, e.g., Latin 紳莽喧梗娶 our and vester your, and dexter right (hand) and sinister left (hand). The Latin adjectives correspond with Greek 堯襲鳥矇喧梗娶棗莽 our and 堯聆鳥矇喧梗娶棗莽 your, and 餃梗單勳喧梗娶籀莽 right (hand) and 硃娶勳莽喧梗娶籀莽 left (hand). 插娶勳莽喧梗娶籀莽 is a euphemism meaning better (hand) (獺娶勳莽喧棗莽 means best in Greek, as in aristocracy rule of the best). Exoteric entered English in the 17th century.
I was on a holiday, and was engaged in that rich and intricate mass of pleasures, duties, and discoveries which for the keeping off of the profane, we disguise by the exoteric name of Nothing.
Practical or exoteric alchemy was concerned chiefly with attempts to prepare the philosopher’s stone, a hypothetical transmuting and healing agent capable of curing the imagined diseases of metals and the real ones of man.
noun
a netlike formation, arrangement, or appearance; network.
Reticulation Is a derivative of the adjective reticulate (and the noun suffix -ion), of Latin origin. Reticulate comes from Latin 娶襲喧勳釵喝梭櫻喧喝莽 covered with a net, having a netlike pattern, a derivative of the noun 娶襲喧勳釵喝梭喝鳥 small net, a network bag, itself a derivative of 娶襲喧梗 net (for hunting, fishing, fowling). Reticulation entered English in the 17th century.
… Ralph Marvell, stretched on his back in the grass, lay gazing up at a black reticulation of branches between which bits of sky gleamed with the hardness and brilliancy of blue enamel.
Her appearance has changed as well, and I don’t mean just the intense reticulation of lines and wrinkles, the true stigmata of life.
Atweel is an alteration and contraction of Scots (I) wat weel, (I) wot well in standard if archaic English, meaning (I) know well in modern standard English. Unsurprisingly, atweel is found only in Scottish authors, the two most famous being Robert Burns (17591796) and Sir Walter Scott (17711832). Atweel entered English in the 18th century.
Atweel, I can do that, and help her to buy her parapharnauls.
Atweel, I dinna ken yet.