verb (used with object)
to suppress; omit; ignore; pass over.
Elide comes straight from the Latin verb 襲梭蘋餃梗娶梗 to strike out, crush, smash, a compound of the preposition and prefix 襲, 襲-, a variant of ex, ex-, here indicating deprivation or loss, and the combining form –梭蘋餃梗娶梗, from laedere to wound, injure, damage. 梭蘋餃梗娶梗 and elide both have the legal sense to nullify, invalidate, and the grammatical or prosodic sense to omit a vowel or syllable in pronunciation, as formerly in English thembattled plain, and in French 梭h棗鳥鳥梗, or Italian 梭u棗鳥棗. Laedere has no known etymology. Elide entered English in the 16th century.
These videos slyly elide the long hours that lie between seeing how something is done and knowing how to do it.
They confused her, made her angry, as though the whole middle section of her lifethe part where she was supposed to grow to adulthood, bear children, be a young mother, and watch her children grow to adulthoodhad simply been elided.
adjective
associated with something by chance rather than as an integral part; extrinsic.
Adventitious comes from the Medieval Latin adjective 硃餃措梗紳喧蘋喧勳喝莽, from Latin 硃餃措梗紳喧蘋釵勳喝莽 coming from without, from abroad, foreign, external, made or happening by chance, casual. 插餃措梗紳喧蘋釵勳喝莽 is a derivative of the verb 硃餃措梗紳蘋娶梗 to come to, arrive at, reach (formed from the preposition and prefix ad, ad– to, toward and the simple verb 措梗紳蘋娶梗 to come, be on the way, approach) and the suffix –蘋釵勳喝莽, used for forming adjectives from the past participle stems of verbs (here, advent– from adventum). The zoological or botanical sense appearing in an abnormal or unusual position or place, as a root dates from the second half of the 17th century. Adventitious dates from the early 17th century.
It is not founded on organic strength, the delicate, ennobling mark of a good endowment, of sound blood and a sound character, but is in a curious way something adventitious, accidental, perhaps even usurped or stolen.
This is exhausting, of course, but far less so than the tenor of a normal museum, which groups works by adventitious categories of period and style.
verb (used with object)
to render or make devoid of freshness or originality;泭喧娶勳措勳硃梭勳堝梗: Television has often been accused of banalizing even the most serious subjects.
Banalize to render or make banal, trivialize dates only from the mid-20th century. Banalize is a derivative of the adjective banal lacking freshness or originality, trite, hackneyed. Banal comes from Old French banal, banel communal, open to the public, from ban public proclamation, edict, (in ecclesiastical usage) an official notice of an intended marriage, given three times in the parish church of each of the betrothed, usually used in the plural banns or bans. In secular life, ban in feudal times meant a summons from a lord or sovereign to a vassal to perform military service. Any American male of a certain age who has ever received a letter personally addressed to him from The President of the United States, beginning with Greeting: would consider a ban like that as anything but banal.
Once the human tragedy has been completed, it gets turned over to the journalists to banalize into entertainment.
… these poets suffer by living in an anti-Romantic hollow, when the lyric occasion is no longer a noble and high thing, (let alone a public thing) but has been banalized and domesticated.