noun
the arrangement of bones in the skeleton or a body part.
Ossature is a borrowing from French ossature, probably modeled on French musculature. The base of ossature is the Latin noun os (stem oss-) bone, which comes from the Proto-Indo-European root ost- bone. Greek derives from the same root 棗莽喧矇棗紳 bone (as in osteology), 籀莽喧娶硃域棗紳 potsherd (as in ostracize), and 籀莽喧娶梗棗紳 oyster (the English noun comes from Greek via Old French and Latin). Ossature entered English in the 19th century.
The ossature of its wings had been like the exquisite work of some Japanese cabinet-maker …
… thus the whole vault was furnished with an ossature or skeleton of ribs which was clothed upon by filling in with with arched masonry the triangular spaces or panels between rib and rib.
noun
a cemetery, especially one of large size and usually of an ancient city.
Necropolis, Greek for city of the dead, corpse city, first appears in the works of the Greek historian and geographer Strabo (c 63 b.c.-c 21a.d.). It was originally the name of the cemetery district in Alexandria, Egypt (founded by Alexander the Great in 323 b.c.). Greek 紳梗域娶籀莽 means corpse (its plural 紳梗域娶籀勳 means the dead); its combining form necro- forms the first half of necromancy (divination through communication with the dead, one of the blackest of the black arts). 捧梗域娶籀莽 comes from the Proto-Indo-European root nek- death, with a variant nok- to kill. From the same root Latin has the noun nex (stem nec-) murder, violent death (as in internecine, whose original English meaning was deadly). From the variant nok- Latin derives the verb 紳棗釵襲娶梗 to harm (source of nocent and innocent) and the adjective noxius guilty, delinquent, harmful, injurious. Greek 梯籀梭勳莽 city,” more properly “citadel, fortified high place, is related to Sanskrit 梯贖娶, puram city, as in Singapore Lion City, ultimately from Sanskrit 莽勳廜h硃- lion and 梯贖娶, puram. Necropolis entered English in the 19th century.
The column of mourners moved under the archway into the necropolis, progressing slowly up the hill towards a spot where Fidelma could see several other torches burning.
Just beyond an island of hemlocks the road divides into the cluttered plain of the necropolis, grey and white as an overexposed snapshot.
adjective
full of fear; fearful: The noise made them timorous.
Timorous, fearful, has several spellings in Middle English, e.g., tymerous, timerous, temerous, which all come via Old French temeros, timoureus from the Medieval Latin adjective 喧勳鳥娶莽喝莽 fearful, a derivative of the Latin noun timor fear, itself a derivative of the verb 喧勳鳥襲娶梗 to fear, be afraid. (There is no further reliable etymology for the Latin.) The English and French spellings tim- and tem- betray a confusion going back to at least the 14th century between derivations of the Latin verb 喧勳鳥襲娶梗 to fear and adverb temere rashly, recklessly (the source of the English noun temerity). From the English variant spelling timerous (fearful), English forms the uncommon noun temerity fearfulness, timidity, which is also spelled timerite and temerity, the latter spelling continuing that confusion. Timorous entered English in the 15th century.
Besides these fearful things, he was expected to do what terrified him into the very core of his somewhat timorous heart.
Though the fellow is far from being timorous in cases that are not supposed preternatural, he could not stand the sight of this apparition, but ran into the kitchen, with his hair standing on end, staring wildly, and deprived of utterance.