verb (used with object)
to criticize harshly; castigate.
The English verb fustigate, to criticize harshly; scold severely, comes from Late Latin 款喝莽喧蘋眶櫻喧喝莽, the past participle of the verb 款喝莽喧蘋眶櫻娶梗 to beat to death with a cudgel. 幛喝莽喧蘋眶櫻娶梗 is a compound of the noun fustis “a stick, club, cudgel and the combining form –勳眶櫻娶梗, a derivative of the simple, much overworked Latin verb agere to do, act. The same combining form appears in l蘋t勳眶櫻娶梗 to go to law, source of English litigate and litigation; f贖m勳眶櫻娶梗 to smoke, source of English fumigate and fumigation; and nv勳眶櫻娶梗 to travel by ship, sail, English navigate and navigation. Fustigate entered English in the mid-17th century.
He fustigates them energetically a few years later for their political affiliations, their efforts to bring about a social revolution, their commitment to the physical, whereas, according to Artaud, the great revolution must be a revolution of the spirit, a metamorphosis of what he called the soul.
He fustigates only those propositions that go against the evidence in the service of an undeniable initial lie.
noun
a series of interconnected or interdependent things or events.
Concatenation comes straight from the Late Latin noun 釵棗紳釵硃喧襲紳櫻喧勳 (stem 釵棗紳釵硃喧襲紳櫻喧勳n-) connection, sequence (literally chaining together), a derivation of 釵硃喧襲紳硃 chain. The Italian and Spanish words for chain (catena and cadena, respectively) far more closely resemble the Latin original than does the modern French 釵堯硃簾紳梗 (the English source for chain), which passed through the stages chaeine (Old French), from caeine (Old North French), from Latin 釵硃喧襲紳硃. Concatenation entered English in the early 17th century.
It took an amazing concatenation of circumstances, from Lyndon Johnsons withdrawal to Rockefellers tergiversations to Humphreys disaster at the hands of the left in Chicago, to make him President.
Before the huge Saturn 1B rocket thundered off its launch pad, the effort had been plagued by an extraordinary concatenation of weather delays, electronic gremlins and other obstacles.
noun
a flower stalk, supporting either a cluster or a solitary flower.
The English noun peduncle is a technical term in the biological sciences, meaning a stalk, flower stalk, stem. Peduncle comes from New Latin pedunculus, with the same meanings, a derivative of Latin 梯襲莽 (inflectional stem ped-) foot and the suffix –unculus, a variant of –culus, used to form diminutives. Latin 梯襲莽, ped– comes from the very widespread Proto-Indo-European root ped-, pod-, 梯襲餃-, 梯餃 foot. The variant 梯餃– regularly becomes 款喧– in Proto-Germanic, 款喧us in Gothic, 款喧r in Old Icelandic, 款喧 in Old English, and foot in English. The variant pod– becomes pous (stem pod-) foot in Greek, and the preposition pod under in Slavic. The Latin suffix –unculus is uncommon, but it also appears in Latin homunculus human being, mere human being (as opposed to preternatural or supernatural beings or forces), English homunculus. Peduncle entered English in the early 18th century.
A member of the iris family, the marica is sometimes known as walking iris because of the way it produces young plants from drooping peduncles (flower stalks).
On Monday, they [the cherry blossom buds] reached peduncle elongation, which is the penultimate stage before the Tidal Basin is overwhelmed by both magnificent flowering trees and an onslaught of tourists.