adjective
of or relating to military operations by both land and naval forces against the same object.
Amphibious and amphibian have several overlapping meanings in zoology and botany, but in the sense relating to combined military operations by land and naval forces against a common target, only amphibious is used. In the mid-1930s, at a time when air power was rapidly developing, the neologisms triphibian and triphibious were coined very useful for describing combined land, sea, and air operations, but an abominationtwo abominations, even, for purists. Amphibious ultimately comes from Greek 硃鳥梯堯穩莉勳棗莽 having a double life, used by science writers about frogs and plants. In later Greek the Neoplatonist philosopher Plotinus used 硃鳥梯堯穩莉勳棗莽 metaphorically to describe the human soul as an inhabitant of two worlds. 插鳥梯堯穩莉勳棗莽 is composed of two very common Proto-Indo-European roots, ambhi– on both sides, around and 眶滄梗勳-, gwey-, 眶滄蘋-, gwi– (with many other variants) to live. Ambhi– becomes 硃鳥梯堯穩 in Greek, as in 硃鳥梯堯勳喧堯矇櫻喧娶棗紳 amphitheater, literally, a place for watching from both sides. Ambhi– becomes amb(i)– in Latin, a prefix meaning around, both.., as in ambiguus unsettled, undecided. \ The Greek combining form bio– comes from 莉穩棗莽 life, from Proto-Indo-European gwios (gw– becomes b– in Greek under certain conditions). The root variant 眶滄蘋– is the source of Latin 措蘋喧硃 l勳款梗.” Amphibious entered English in the 17th century.
Through tactical and strategic unification the Allies successfully undertook the greatest amphibious landings yet attempted in warfare.
All the elements for the D-day attack were in place by the spring of 1944: more than 150,000 men, nearly 12,000 aircraft, almost 7,000 sea vessels. It was arguably the largest amphibious invasion force in history.
noun
a jumbled cluster or mass of varied parts.
The English noun agglomeration, a jumbled cluster or mass of varied parts, comes from Latin 硃眶眶梭棗鳥梗娶櫻喧喝莽, the past participle of 硃眶眶梭棗鳥梗娶櫻娶梗 to mass together, pile up, join forces, a derivative of 眶梭棗鳥梗娶櫻娶梗 to roll into a ball, collect into a dense mass. 勞梭棗鳥梗娶櫻娶梗 in turn is a derivative of the noun glomus (inflectional stem glomer-) a ball, a skein or ball of yarn. Glomus is related to the Latin nouns globus round body, round cake, sphere (English globe) and 眶梭襲莉硃 (also glaeba) lump or clod of earth (English glebe soil, field). Agglomeration entered English in the second half of the 17th century.
In our exuberance to build more green things, we need to focus on updating what weve already damaged. That dead mall could be a solar field. (It already has the power hookups.) That agglomeration of gas pumps could be a park-and-ride charging station for commuters traveling farther by train.
A galaxy is much more than a radiant agglomeration of stars. To modern astrophysicists, galaxies are more notable for their dark sides: their hidden material that is only seen by its gravitational pull upon the shiny stuff it seems to vastly outweigh.
verb (used without object)
to melt away.
Deliquesce, to melt away; become liquid, comes straight from Latin 餃襲梭勳梁喝襲莽釵梗娶梗 to become liquid, dissipate ones energy, a compound of the preposition and prefix 餃襲, 餃襲-, here indicating removal, and the verb 梭勳梁喝襲莽釵梗娶梗 to melt, decompose, putrefy. 郭勳梁喝襲莽釵梗娶梗 is an inchoative verb (also called an inceptive verb), meaning that the verb indicates the beginning, the inception of an action. In Latin (and in Greek) the suffix –sc– (Latin) and –sk– (Greek) changes a verb of state, such as 梭勳梁喝襲娶梗 to be liquid, be clear, to an inceptive verb. Derivatives of 梭勳梁喝襲娶梗 include liquidus clear, fluid (English liquid) and liquor fluidity, liquid character (English liquor). Deliquesce entered English in the mid-18th century.
My thoughts started to deliquesce and slide through my brain like melting cheese.
A subsequent painting in the album … sees Jeong render the white peaks in ink that fades from the top of the composition to the bottom, making the mountain range deliquesce as if in fog.