adjective
extremely sacred or inviolable.
Sacrosanct extremely sacred or inviolable comes directly from Latin 莽硃釵娶莽硃紳釵喧喝莽, which more correctly should be a phrase 莽硃釵娶 sanctus made holy by a sacred rite. 釦硃釵娶 is the ablative singular of the noun sacrum sacred object or place; sacrificial victim; religious observance or rite. Sanctus secured by religious sanctions, inviolate is an adjective use of the past participial of 莽硃紳釵蘋娶梗 to ratify solemnly, prescribe by law; consecrate. The Romans liked everything nice and tidy, legal, watertight, and 莽硃釵娶莽硃紳釵喧喝莽 is just such a word. In the 500 years of the Roman Republic, the Tribunes of the People (Trib贖n蘋 Plbis) defended the rights of the common people against the patricians, controlling the power of the magistrates, issuing vetoes right and left. The tribunes derived their power not from statute but from the oath that the plebeians swore to maintain the tribunes 莽硃釵娶sanctits, their sacrosanctity. Sacrosanct entered English in the 17th century.
The result is a standoff between two camps that regard the site as sacrosanct for very different reasons, and have spent years in a quiet tug of war between ancient traditions and modern regulations.
Voting in the United States of America is a sacrosanct right. It is both a precious obligation and a sacred opportunity we all have to participate in our democracy, and our voting process should be treated with the gravity and seriousness that it demands.
noun
a building, or architectural feature of a building, designed and situated to look out upon a pleasing scene.
Belvedere, a building, or architectural feature of a building, designed and situated to look out upon a pleasing scene, comes straight from Italian belvedere beautiful view, a compound of bel, bello beautiful (from Latin bellus pretty, charming) and the infinitive vedere to see (from Latin 措勳餃襲娶梗), here used as a noun meaning “view or sight.” In Italian architecture a belvedere is an upper story, or part of one, or even a small tower or kiosk that is open to the air on at least one side, affording a pleasing view and an opportunity to enjoy the cool air of the evening. Belvedere entered English in the first half of the 16th century.
In the early evening time Doctor Kemp was sitting in his study in the belvedere on the hill overlooking Burdock. … For a minute perhaps he sat, pen in mouth, admiring the rich golden colour above the crest ….
For them, it’s enough to sit in the belvedere and watch the tide turning and the geese migrating with the seasons.
Shivoo a loud party is an Australian colloquialism of uncertain origin. An earlier spelling, shiveau, appears at the end of the 18th century in the U.K. The nearly 20 spelling variants, including chevaux and cheveaux, lead some scholars to suggest that the origin of shivoo may be from the French phrase chez vous at your house. The Australian spelling shivoo dates from 1881.
The place was packed, there being more people present than at any previous moment of this festival … “What a show, Brian! What a shivoo! You can’t go to sleep yet. Here, I’ve brought you a drink to toast Old Ireland with.”
In that traditional lull between reporting season and the start of annual meetings, the balance of Australia’s most senior chief executives are clocking up air miles and enjoying the hospitality of investment bank JP Morgan at its annual Edinburgh shivoo.