verb
to flourish; develop: a writer of commercial jingles who blossomed out into an important composer.
Blossom in both the noun and the verb senses dates back to Old English. The Old English verb 莉梭莽喧鳥勳硃紳 to bloom, blossom, effloresce is a derivative of the noun 莉梭莽喧鳥, 莉梭莽喧鳥a, 莉梭莽鳥硃 blossom, flower. The English words blossom, bloom, and blow (a yield or display of blossoms) are all Germanic derivatives of the Proto-Indo-European root bhel-, 莉堯梭襲-, 莉堯梭– (and other variants) to thrive, bloom. In Latin the root appears in 款梭莽 (inflectional stem 款梭娶-) flower (which via Old French yields English flower, flour, and flourish). English florescent comes straight from Latin 款梭娶escent-, the inflectional stem of 款梭娶escns, the present participle of 款梭娶escere to come into bloom. Other English derivatives from Latin include floral and folium leaf, which becomes, again through Old French, English foil. Greek has the noun 梯堯羸梭梭棗紳 leaf, whose most common English derivative is probably chlorophyll.
… the beauty of their island only blossomed the further through time they moved away from it.
This bit of utilitarian Web ephemera [the hashtag], invented with functionality squarely in mind, has泭blossomed泭into泭a marvelous and underappreciated literary device.
noun
something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being artlessly mannered or stylized, or self-consciously artificial and extravagant.
Many explanations have been offered, but the etymology of泭camp泭“something that provides sophisticated, knowing amusement, as by virtue of its being artlessly mannered or stylized, or self-consciously artificial and extravagant” remains obscure. The term泭entered English in the early 1900s.
Indeed the essence of Camp is its love of the unnatural: of artifice and exaggeration.
From RuPauls Drag Race to the current celebration of all things Warhol and泭Banksys self-destructing painting, Mr. Bolton sees the explosion of camp as a partial riposte to the corresponding rise of extreme conservatism and populism.
The rare, archaic verb wilder to lead astray is pronounced with a short –i– as in children, not a long –i– as in child. The etymology of wilder is difficult: it looks like a frequentative verb formed from the adjective wild, or an irregular derivative from wilderness that was influenced by wander. Wilder entered English in the early 17th century.
Many an older head than his has been wildered by that fatal uniformity, that endless wilderness of green, those seeming tracks, which only lead deeper and deeper into the heart of the deadly scrub.
… in such a manner as to wilder the soul into vast and unthought-of horrors.