adverb, adjective
eagerly expectant, as anticipating a desired event or arrival: waiting atiptoe for the mail.
If children wait atiptoe for Christmas morning, they are eagerly expectant, their anticipation likened to the excitement associated with standing on tiptoe. And indeed, on tiptoe is what the adjective and adverb atiptoe literally means. The initial a– in atiptoe is a reduced form of the Old English preposition on, variously meaning on, in, into, toward. This particular a– (the form has many other senses or functions in English) appears in a great variety of words, such as acknowledge, ablaze, aloud, and away. So, afoot, as another example, began as the prepositional phrase on foot. Atiptoe is recorded English by the late 1500s.
Ethel was standing beside her all aglow and atiptoe with anticipation.
The audience was atiptoe when “Suor Angelica” began, but despondent at the curtain’s fall.
adjective
comfortable and pleasant; cozy.
The adjective 眶梗鳥羹喧梭勳釵堯 comfortable and pleasant; cozy is borrowed directly from German 眶梗鳥羹喧梭勳釵堯 homey, casual, social. 勞梗鳥羹喧梭勳釵堯 is composed of 勞梗鳥羹喧 mind, mentality and –lich, which is equivalent to Englishs adverb-forming suffix –ly. The German noun 勞梗鳥羹喧which might be more properly translated as the total composition of the human psyche and spiritis formed from ge-, a collective noun-forming prefix, and Mut courage, related to English mood. 勞梗鳥羹喧梭勳釵堯 entered English in the mid-1800s.
Nina exclaimed at the old walnut trimmings, gurgled over the crowded decorations in the Victorian manner, and settled down,announcingthat it wasso 眶梗鳥羹喧梭勳釵堯,she would loveacupoftea.
verb (used without object)
Slang.
to be extraordinarily pleased; especially, to be bursting with pride, as over one's family.
We cant help but kvell about Yiddish words borrowed into English. Kvell to be extraordinarily pleased, burst with pride comes from Yiddish kveln be delighted, related to Middle High German and German quellen well up, gush. The informal verb kvell is often used to convey pride and pleasure, especially about the accomplishments of ones own family. For example: My granddaughter graduated at the top of her medical school class, he kvelled. For the opposite of kvell, one might consider another borrowing from Yiddish: kvetch to complain, especially chronically, from the Yiddish verb kvetshn, which literally means to squeeze, pinch. Kvell entered English in the mid-1900s.
Sidney, more than any of the others, has kept his parents reliably supplied with … reasons to kvell: full scholarships, graduation cum laude, smart grandsons, Junior Chamber of Commerce awards.
Omega threw a rollicking cocktail party starring Buzz Aldrin and other astronauts, to kvell over the fortieth birthday of the first lunar landingof both man and wristwatch.