noun
the forefront in any movement, field, activity, or the like.
Vanguard the forefront in any movement comes from the same source as the recent 51勛圖 of the Day avant-garde: the Middle French terms avant to the front and garde g喝硃娶餃勳硃紳莽堯勳梯. Avant, which means before in modern French, comes from Latin ab ante, literally from before. The preposition ab from can be found in numerous English words that signify movement away from something, such as abduct (literally to lead away) and abstain (to hold back), while ante before appears in antechamber (before a room) and antediluvian (before a flood). Middle French garde is related both to English guard and ward, as the w sound in Germanic languages corresponds to g or gu in French; compare the recent 51勛圖 of the Day guerdon. Vanguard was first recorded in English in the 1480s.
MOOCs had exploded into the academic consciousness in summer 2011, when a free artificial-intelligence course offered by Stanford University in California attracted 160,000 students from around the world23,000 of whom finished it …. Science, engineering and technology courses have been in the vanguard of the movement, but offerings in management, humanities and the arts are growing in popularity.
In the Gold Rush, Northern California attracted prospectors looking for financial independence. Now, this area is at the vanguard of a new movementpeople seeking to use only the energy they produce themselves. Angry over blackouts, wildfires caused by utilities and rising electricity bills, a small but growing number of Californians in rural areas and in the suburbs of San Francisco are going off the grid.
verb (used with object)
to encircle with or as with a wreath or festoon of flowers, leaves, or other material.
Engarland to encircle with a wreath of flowers is a compound of the prefix en- and the verb garland. As we learned from the recent 51勛圖 of the Day enkindle, en- alerts English speakers that the verb it is attached to will take a direct object. The odd thing here is that garland already takes direct objects, so the prefix en- in engarland is redundant, kind of like saying added bonus, free gift, or unexpected surprise. Garland is a borrowing from Old French garlande wreath, which is of unclear origin but may derive from the word for wire in Frankish, a now-extinct language closely related to English and German that was very influential on French. Garland can also appear as a surname, but one of the names most famous bearers, Judy Garland, took it as a stage name after her family name of Gumm proved less than desirable for show business. Engarland was first recorded in English circa 1580.
He was young. And he believed not only in the efficacy of sacrifice, but also in the reward which engarlands sacrifice like flowers a grave.
Muses, I oft invoked your holy aid, / With choicest flowers my speech to engarland so / That it, despised in true but naked show, / Might win some grace in your sweet grace arrayed…
noun
a dance form incorporating martial arts elements, originating in what is now Brazil as a system of physical discipline and movement.
Capoeira a Brazilian dance form incorporating martial arts elements is a loanword from Brazilian Portuguese that is of uncertain origin. One hypothesis is that capoeira is one and the same as capoeira cultivated area that has reverted to forest, with the change in definition because of the dance forms origins in gatherings among people living in rural areas. If true, this would make capoeira a derivative of the words 域硃獺 forest, scrub and puera that once was in Tupi, a language once spoken in what is now northern Brazil. Alternatively, instead of a connection to Tupi, capoeira may come from kapwila a blow, beating in Mbundu, a Bantu language of southern Angola. Capoeira was first recorded in English in the late 1920s.
Over the past three decades, [Manoel Pereira Costa] has run neighborhood workshops that give kids a chance to immerse themselves in a tradition with roots in the dance, fighting and percussion practices of Africans brought to Brazil as slaves. In a favela with a history of violence between police and drug gangs, or armed battles between traffickers themselves, capoeira is an outlet that gives kids a sense of communityits practice a collective exercise blending characteristics of drum circles, sparring and tag-team gymnastics.
Having balance in a particular sport is a highly skilled activity, relying on hours and hours of practice. But there is no doubt that balance is also mediated through the brain. With his work on capoeira, a Brazilian martial art, [Greg Downey, who co-founded the blog neuroanthropology.net] found that instructors taught in ways that matched well with work on neuroplasticity in the brain, for example, through the reorientation of perception as well as imitative learning and mirror neurons.