noun
Informal.
something or someone regarded as remarkable, unusual, etc.: a dilly of a movie.
The noun and adjective dilly, like many slang terms, has an obscure etymology. One etymology is that dilly is an alteration of delightful or delicious; the suffix –y is either the native English adjective suffix –y (as in juicy), or the originally Scottish noun suffix –y (as in granny). Dilly was originally an Americanism, first appearing in print in the early 20th century.
It would be a dilly of a painting.
The two big numbers, and they were dillies, were La Toilette de la Cour by Anthony Philip Heinrich, and Albert Gehring’s The Soul of Chopin.
noun
one who is compassionate and helpful to a person in distress.
Samaritan as an adjective means pertaining to Samaria or the Samaritans; as a noun, it means a native or inhabitant of Samaria. Most commonly, however, Samaritan is short for Good Samaritan, after Jesus parable in Luke 10:30-37.泭釦硃鳥硃娶勳喧硃紳 comes from the Late Latin adjective 釦硃鳥硃娶蘋喧櫻紳喝莽 Samaritan (used as a noun in the masculine plural), from the Greek noun 釦硃鳥硃娶蘋喧襲莽 a Samaritan, a derivative of 釦硃鳥硃娶梗穩硃, the name of a city and region in Palestine. Greek 釦硃鳥硃娶梗穩硃 comes from Aramaic Shamerayin, from Hebrew 釦堯鳥娶繫紳, of uncertain meaning, but possibly from Shemer, the owner who sold 釦堯鳥娶繫紳 to Omri, king of Israel, in 1 Kings 16:24. Samaritan entered English before 1000.
That night, they slept in a goodSamaritan‘s home, washed dirty laundry, and showered for the first time since leaving home.
Kids want to counteract inequality, to be good samaritans and help the little guy.
verb (used without object)
to produce a shrill, grating sound, as a cricket does, by rubbing together certain parts of the body.
The English verb stridulate, to produce a shrill, grating sound like that of a cricket, is an English derivative of the English noun stridulation, which comes from French stridulation. The French noun is a derivative of the New Latin verb 莽喧娶蘋餃喝梭櫻娶梗 to produce a shrill, grating sound, a derivation of the classical Latin adjective 莽喧娶蘋餃喝梭喝莽, itself a derivation of the noun 莽喧娶蘋餃棗娶 a high-pitched sound. 釦喧娶蘋餃梗娶梗, the classical Latin equivalent of New Latin 莽喧娶蘋餃喝梭櫻娶梗, is related to Greek 喧娶穩堝梗勳紳 to buzz, squeak, and a little farther out of town, to Tocharian A trisk– to drone (Tocharian is the group name for two or three related Indo-European languages, now extinct, spoken in what is now Chinese Turkestan). The Latin, Greek, and Tocharian forms derive from the onomatopoeic Proto-Indo-European root (s)trei– to buzz, hiss. 釦喧娶蘋餃梗娶梗 and 喧娶穩堝梗勳紳 are related to Greek 莽喧娶穩紳單, 莽喧娶穩單 (stem 莽喧娶穩紳眶-, 莽喧娶穩眶-) owl, night raven, and to Latin strix (stem strig-) an owl, bird of ill omen, evil spirit, vampire. Either Latin strig– or Greek 莽喧娶穩眶– was the source of Vulgar Latin striga evil spirit, witch, hag, which becomes strega witch in modern Italian, as in the late Tomie DePaolas series of wonderful childrens books starring Strega Nona, Granny Witch. Stridulate entered English in the first half of the 19th century.
To stridulate, or chirr, one of the minor achievements of the cricket, your species is dependent on the intestines of the sheep and the hair of the horse.
Even so most often does the singing insect stridulate: it is celebrating life.