adjective
glowing or glittering with ruddy or golden light.
It is one thing to see greatly varying descendants of Proto-Indo-European words in its daughter languages, as for instance in the very common (and easy to handle) Proto-Indo-European root bher-, bhor- to carry, bear, bear children, which appears as bhar- in Sanskrit, pher- in Greek, fer- in Latin, and ber- in Slavic, Armenian, and Germanic (English bear). It is another thing to see wildly variant forms of a Proto-Indo-European root within one language, but Latin offers a good example from the Proto-Indo-European root reudh-, roudh-, rudh- red. (The root variant roudh- becomes raud- in Germanic, 娶襲硃餃 in Old English (the 襲硃 is a diphthong from au) and red in English.) Roudh- is also the source of Latin 娶贖款喝莽, a dialect word meaning red, tawny and also a proper name Red (rufous and Rufus in English). Roudh- also yields Latin 娶莉喝莽 red (of oxen and other animals),” 娶莉喝娶 oak, red oak” (the adjective 娶莉喝莽tus “of oak, oaken, strong becomes robust in English). The root variant rudh- yields Latin ruber r梗餃, rutilus glowing red, with its derivative verb 娶喝喧勳梭櫻娶梗 “to glow with a bright red or golden color, whose present participle stem rutilant- becomes English rutilant. Rutilant entered English in the 15th century.
Sometimes, when reading one of his works, I wonder whether Mr. Lawrence has not mistaken his medium, and whether it is not a painter he ought to have been, so significant is for him the slaty opalescence of the heron’s wing and so rutilant the death of the sun.
She looks up occasionally, between cross stitches, to gaze upon the steady stream of tourists stopping to admire the rutilant, shimmering sandstone folds unfurling 4,000 feet below.
noun
anything used or serving to decorate or complete: the trimmings of a Christmas tree.
It is quite a jump to go from Byrhtnoth, Ealdorman of Essex, arranging his men in battle order (trymian) against the Vikings (recorded in the magnificent Old English poem The Battle of Maldon) to cranberry sauce and creamed onions with the Thanksgiving turkey. The Old English adjective trum strong, firm is the source of the verb trymian, trymman to encourage, strengthen, prepare. The Old English noun trymming, derived from the verb, means strengthening, confirmation, edification, establishment. The modern spelling trimming first appears in the first half of the 16th century with several meanings. One is the repair or preparation of equipment, especially fitting out of a ship, e.g., trimming of the sails. A second sense, all but contemporaneous with the first, is adornment, dressing ones hair or beard, dressing up. A third sense of trimming, perhaps associated with the notion of dressing (up), is a rebuke, a beating, that is, a dressing down. In the early 17th century, trimming, especially in the plural, and typically in the phrase “all the trimmings,” meant ordinary accessories (as for a house or cooked meat). In the early 19th century, trimming acquired the meaning pieces cut off, cuttings, scraps.
It was after eleven when William in his socks made his way to the attic where the trimmings for the tree were stored.
Painting china, carving wood, button-holing butterflies and daisies onto Turkish towelling, and making peacock-feather trimming, amused her for a time …
verb
Chiefly Midland and Southern U.S. to crouch, squeeze, or huddle (usually followed by down, in, or up).
Scrooch to crouch, squeeze, huddle was originally a U.S. colloquial and dialect word. It is probably a variant of scrouge to squeeze, crowd, itself a blend of the obsolete verb scruze to squeeze and gouge. To make things even more unclear, scruze itself is a blend of screw and bruise. Scrooch entered English in the 19th century.
When you want to get up again, you sort of scrooch forward and the chair comes up straight so you don’t have to dislocate your sciatica trying to get out of the pesky thing.
Myr Korso, please tell him to scrooch down if he has to be there.