Clarsach is an adaptation of either the Irish Gaelic 釵梭獺勳娶莽梗硃釵堯 or the Scottish Gaelic 釵梭娶莽硃釵堯, both meaning harp. These two words likely come from the Old Irish 釵梭獺娶, which variously means board, plank or table, tablet. Clarsach may be related through Ancient Greek to clergy, cleric, clerk, and the name Clark. Clarsach was first recorded in English around 1805.
EXAMPLE OF CLARSACH USED IN A SENTENCE
The golden clarsach shines against a dark green background on the flag of Leinster.
adjective
of, relating to, or based on twenty.
Vigesimal comes from Latin 措蘋釵襲莽勳鳥喝莽, twentieth. While English and its Germanic relatives base their words for twenty on a combination of two and ten, Latin 措蘋眶勳紳喧蘋 is distantly related to Ancient Greek 梗穩域棗莽勳 (as in icosahedron, a twenty-sided figure) and Sanskrit 措勳廜a喧穩 (as in pachisi, a game in which twenty-five is the highest score). Vigesimal was first recorded in English in the 1650s.
EXAMPLE OF VIGESIMAL USED IN A SENTENCE
French now uses a vigesimal system for numbers over 60, representing 80 as 4 20 and 90 as 4 20 + 10.
noun
a brown or amber tea grown in China and Taiwan and partially fermented before being dried.
Oolong is an adaptation of a Chinese word, most likely Mandarin 滄贖梭籀紳眶, which literally translates to black dragon. The 滄贖 element means crow or black, while 梭籀紳眶 means dragon. Oolong was first recorded in English in the early 1850s.
EXAMPLE OF OOLONG USED IN A SENTENCE
The oolong let off an earthy smell as it slowly diffused throughout the cup.