noun
light, playful banter or raillery.
Badinage playful banter is a French compound noun of badiner to joke, trifle and the noun suffix -age, naturalized in English. Badiner is a derivative of the noun badin joker, banterer, from the Proven癟al verb badar to gape, which in turn comes from unrecorded Vulgar Latin 莉硃喧櫻娶梗 to yawn, gape. Badinage entered English in the second half of the 17th century.
“The Importance of Being Earnest” … has delighted audiences for more than a century with its badinage, irreverence and frothy romance. The real stars of the play have always been the words, which tumble out in a scathing, literate, giddy gush.
So, with laughter and shouts and endless badinage and merriment, the guests take their places.
Plashy marshy, wet is a derivative of Middle English plash(e), plaice, place pool of standing water, marshy area, from Old English 梯梭疆莽釵 pool of water, puddle. The adjective suffix -y comes from Middle English -i, -ie, -y, from Old English -ig (compare the German suffix -ig), which is related to the Greek adjective suffix -ikos and Latin -icus. Plashy entered English in the mid-16th century.
The hare is running races in her mirth; / And with her feet she from the plashy earth / Raises a mist, which, glittering in the sun, / Runs with her all the way, wherever she doth run.
Suddenly I found myself face-to-face with a proud fastidious woman in confusion, hesitating, seeming to scruple at the prospect of having to step out of the Gallery and into the plashy road.
noun
the state of being obsessively infatuated with someone, usually accompanied by delusions of or a desire for an intense romantic relationship with that person.
Limerence obsessive infatuation with someone, usually accompanied by delusions of or a desire for an intense romantic relationship with that person was coined in 1977 by Dorothy Tennov, an American psychologist, in her book Love and Limerence: The Experience of Being in Love. Dr. Tennov says of her coinage: I first used the term amorance then changed it back to limerence… It has no roots whatsoever. It looks nice. It works well in French. Take it from me it has no etymology whatsoever.
What did Henry VIII’s poems express more feelingly than Shakespeare’s, and what did Don Juan, for all his reputation, probably never feel at all? The answer is limerence.
Like everything else he’d said, she passed this under the microscope of obsessional limerence.