verb (used without object)
to vibrate violently.
Judder as a verb means to vibrate or shake violently, and as a noun, violent shaking. It is first recorded in 1926 and refers to the shaking of automobiles (or their parts); it was later applied to aircraft. Judder has no precise etymology: it may be a combination of jolt or jerk and shudder, or it may be a variant pronunciation of shudder.
Huw stalks through both sets of automatic doors, which judder and groan.
Other times, the vehicles robotic brain appeared confused, lingering at an all-way stop and juddering when a group of pedestrians crossed in front.
adjective
of or relating to money.
Pecuniary, relating to money, comes from the Latin adjective 梯梗釵贖紳勳櫻娶勳喝莽, a derivative of 梯梗釵贖紳勳硃 property, possessions, wealth, money, itself a derivative of 梯梗釵贖 flock, herd, farm animals, livestock being a very important source of wealth in early farming societies. 捩梗釵贖 and its related nouns are derivatives of the Proto-Indo-European noun peku– sheep, from the root pek-, pok- to pluck, fleece, card (wool, flax). Peku- is the source of Umbrian pequo cattle (Umbrian was an Italic language spoken in Umbria, north of Rome), Greek 梯籀域棗莽 and 梯矇域棗莽 sheeps wool, fleece, and Lithuanian pekus cattle. By regular phonetic change peku- becomes fehu– in Proto-Germanic, becoming Gothic faihu possessions, property, German Vieh cattle, beast, brute, Old English feoh, fioh, feh cattle, property (in cattle), Middle English fe, feo, feh livestock, herd of livestock, movable property, wealth, money. Modern English fee charge, payment, sum paid, but also landed estate, inherited estate, comes partly from the Middle English and Old English nouns, but fee in the sense inherited estate, feudal estate also comes from Old French fieu, fief estate in land and Anglo-French fe, fee, fie, from Germanic fehu. Pecuniary entered English in the early 16th century.
Whatever Mr. Pensons civic convictions, he also has a pecuniary interest in the outcome.
As of last year, nearly half of Americas middle-aged adults found themselves members, willing or not, ofwhats been called the sandwich generation, so named because these people have a child below them and an aging parent above them. … Given the pecuniary strain involved, it’s surprising that, about 150 years ago, parents might have gone out of their way to set up a situation like this.
Everyone, unfortunately, has had experience with a nudnik, a persistently dull, boring pest. Nudnik is plainly a Yiddishism, a derivative of the Yiddish verb nudyen to bore, pester. Nudyen may come from Polish 紳喝餃堝勳 to weary, bore, or Russian nudit to wear out (with complaints, pestering). The Yiddish suffix –nik, adopted into English as a noun suffix that refers to persons, usually derogatorily, involved in a political cause or group (such as beatnik, peacenik), is also of Slavic origin. The personal suffix –nik appears in English as early as 1905, but the launch of the Soviet satellite Sputnik, literally traveling companion, popularized –nik ad nauseam. Nudnik entered English in the first half of the 20th century.
Mr. Daniels is one of those quintessential New York characters: a confessed nudnik. Dozens of times a year, he telephones city officials about local irritants, from the lack of sidewalk curb cuts to accommodate wheelchairs to a mound of asphalt left on a sidewalk after a repaving job.
We lie to protect our privacy (“No, I don’t live around here”); to avoid hurt feelings (“Friday is my study night”) … to escape a nudnik (“My mother’s on the other line”) …