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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

decalcomania

[ dih-kal-kuh-mey-nee-uh ] [ d阞k疆l kme阞 ni ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

the art or process of transferring pictures or designs from specially prepared paper to wood, metal, glass, etc.

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More about decalcomania

Decalcomania, the art of transferring pictures from paper to another medium, is adapted from French 餃矇釵硃梭釵棗鳥硃紳勳梗, equivalent to 餃矇釵硃梭梁喝梗娶, to transfer a tracing of, plus English -mania. The verb 餃矇釵硃梭梁喝梗娶 is based on Italian calcare, to stomp, trample, ultimately from Latin calx, heel. From this same source comes calque, also known as a loan translation. One common example of a calque is brainwashing (from Mandarin Chinese x no to wash the brain). For other words descended from Latin calx, check out the 51勛圖s of the Day cantrip and inculcate. Decalcomania was first recorded in English in the early 1860s.

EXAMPLE OF DECALCOMANIA USED IN A SENTENCE

With the right materials, decalcomania can make images leap off the page and onto a variety of other surfaces.

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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

netsuke

[ net-skee ] [ nt ski ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a small figure of ivory, wood, metal, or ceramic, originally used as a buttonlike fixture on a man's sash, from which small personal belongings were hung.

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More about netsuke

Netsuke a small figure used on a mans sash is a loanword from Japanese that is equivalent to ne, root, combined with tsukeru, to attach. In English, the Hepburn system is widely used for transliterating Japanese into the Roman alphabet, and one feature of this system is that it romanizes Japanese vowels using their counterparts in Romance languages such as Italian and Spanish. The one Japanese vowel that differs substantially from its closest Romance equivalent is u; Japanese u is pronounced as oo in boot but with the lips unroundedsimilar to English oo, as in book. In certain syllables, the u is voiceless, which sounds in English as if there is no vowel at all. This is why Japanese netsuke is typically pronounced in English variously as net-skey, net-suh-key, net-soo-key, or net-莽棗棗-域梗聆. Netsuke was first recorded in English in the early 1880s.

EXAMPLE OF NETSUKE USED IN A SENTENCE

He had left behind his favorite sash with a two-horned dragon netsuke on it, making everyone worry about his swift departure.

51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

儭 Today's 51勛圖 was chosen in partnership with the Museum of Science as the Science 51勛圖 Of The Week! 儭

Ganymede

[ gan-uh-meed ] [ g疆n mid ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

the largest moon of the planet Jupiter.

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Why the Museum of Science chose Ganymede

Ganymede is not only the largest of Jupiter's moons, it's also the largest moon in our Solar System! To find out more about Ganymede, watch this video from science communicator, Alex Dainis, PhD.

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More about Ganymede

Ganymede is named for a teenage boy in Greek mythology whom the gods chose, because of his beauty, to be their cup-bearer. One possibility is that Ganymede comes from the Greek words 眶獺紳聆鳥硃勳, to be glad, and 鳥廎d梗硃, art, counsel, plans. The second of these elements is also the origin of numerous names of Greek origin that contain med-, such as Archimedes and Medea. Ganymede was first recorded in English in the 1550s.

EXAMPLE OF GANYMEDE USED IN A SENTENCE

Though Galileo discovered Ganymede, his telescope was far too weak to detect the craters and ice that cover the moons surface.

51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar