adjective
indicating the fiftieth event of a series: a golden wedding anniversary.
The adjective golden is obviously a compound of the noun gold and the suffix –en, which is used to form adjectives of source or material from nouns. The odd thing about golden is that it is first recorded only about 1300. Golden is a Middle English re-formation of gold and –en that replaced earlier Middle English gulden, gilden, gelden, gylden made of or consisting of gold, from Old English gylden, gilden g棗梭餃梗紳.
Golden age occurs in The Works and Days of the Greek didactic poet Hesiod (c700 b.c.) and has persisted throughout Western literature. Golden mean the perfect moderate course or position that avoids extremes entered English in the 1540s. Golden mean was also formerly called the golden mediocrity, a literal translation of Horace’saurea mediocrits(倏餃梗莽泭2.10).泭啦堯梗 golden mean as an ethical principle is usually associated with Aristotelian ethics, it being a virtue, the midpoint between two opposite extremes, as, for example, the virtue of courage being the golden mean between the two opposite vices of cowardice and foolhardiness.
The Americanism golden handcuffsa series of raises, bonuses, etc., given at intervals or tied to length of employment in order to keep an executive from leaving the company, dates to the mid-1960s; golden handshakea special incentive, such as generous severance pay, given to an older employee as an inducement to elect early retirement, dates to the late 1950s; and golden parachute an employment contract guaranteeing an executive of a company substantial severance pay and other perquisites in the event of job loss caused by the company’s being sold or merged, dates to the early 1980s.
Museums and towns across the country geared up for their own golden anniversary celebrations, including Wapakoneta, Ohio, Armstrong’s hometown that was serving up “cinnamoon pancakes” and “buckeye on the moon sundaes.”
Kurt and Verena Kuster will be celebrating their golden wedding anniversary.
adjective
common, commonplace, or vulgar: a plebeian joke.
English plebeian, adjective and noun, ultimately derives from the Latin adjective and noun 梯梭襲莉襲勳喝莽 pertaining to the common people, a commoner. The adjective also meant common, ordinary, everyday and was usually disparaging. 捩梭襲莉襲勳喝莽 derives from the noun plebs (also 梯梭襲莉襲莽, stem 梯梭襲莉-) the general citizenry (as opposed to the patricians).” Plebs (梯梭襲莉襲莽) is akin to Greek 梯梭礙喧堯棗莽 great number, multitude, the majority of people, the commons; the Latin and Greek nouns derive from a Proto-Indo-European 梯梭襲餃堯滄棗-, ultimately from the Proto-Indo-European root pele-, 梯梭襲– to fill. Plebeian entered English in the 16th century.
It outfitted all the high-touch areas of the penthouse (like the bannister on the staircase) in an antimicrobial coating, so you dont have to deal with such plebeian concerns as germs.
The British Prime Minister,Theresa May, dons bifocals when she appears before the House of Commons, as if to advertise her sympathetic connection to the plebeian indignities of embodiment.
noun
(often initial capital letter)
an inordinately wild fight or contentious dispute; brawl; free-for-all.
Donnybrook is the English spelling of the English pronunciation of Irish Domhnach Broc Church of (St.) Broc. Domhnach also means Sunday in Irish and comes from Latin (Dis) Dominica Lords (Day). Little is known of St. Broc, who founded a church in the 8th century at the location of Donnybrook Cemetery in Dublin, Ireland.
In 1204 the English King John (famous for the Magna Carta) granted a charter for an annual fair, at first like an American county fair, featuring livestock and produce, but later developing into a carnival, a medieval Irish Coney Island, beset with drunks and brawlers. During the 1790s campaigns against the fair began; prominent citizens purchased the royal charter, and they had the fair shut down in 1866. The Donnybrook Fair grounds are now the Donnybrook Rugby Ground.
Donnybrook entered English in the mid-19th century.
Now the New York hotel and restaurant workers’ local is threatening a “donnybrook” if it doesn’t get a contract at the Portman.
On Monday, when the panel conducted a hearing about theMueller report, there was a partisan donnybrook.