plural noun
amusing or witty remarks or writings.
幛硃釵襲喧勳硃梗 is a Latin plural noun meaning skillfulness, cleverness, wittiness. It is a derivative of the adjective 款硃釵襲喧喝莽 clever, good-humored, whimsical, which has no reliable etymology. In the olden days, in less enlightened and progressive times than our ownsay about 1850facetiae was used in book catalogs as a euphemism for pornography (now also called erotica). Facetiae entered English in the 16th century.
Even the facetiae of the gallant expressman who knew everybody’s Christian name along the route, who rained letters, newspapers, and bundles from the top of the stage … failed to interest me.
… you had better beware how you excite that comic vein to its fullest current of facetiae.
adjective
unable or unwilling to act prudently; shortsighted.
Myopic ultimately comes from the Greek noun 鳥聆梯穩硃 nearsightedness, which in Greek has no extended or metaphorical meaning. (The suffix –ic is English, not Greek, i.e., there is no Greek adjective 鳥聆梯勳域籀莽.) 紼聆梯穩硃 is a compound formed of the verb 鳥羸梗勳紳 to close the eyes or mouth, which is close kin to the Latin 鳥贖喧喝莽 inarticulate, dumb, silent (English mute). The same 鳥羸梗勳紳 appears in the noun 鳥聆莽喧廎r勳棗紳 secret, secret rite (English mystery) and its adjective 鳥聆莽喧勳域籀莽 connected with the mysteries (English mystic). The second element of myopia, –梯穩硃, is a combining form of 廜囷莽 (stem 梯-) eye, face, countenance.” Myopic in its original sense entered English at the end of the 18th century; the sense unable or unwilling to act prudently developed in English at the end of the 19th century.
The belief that simply running a data set will solve for every challenge and every bias is problematic and myopic.
Science provides us with a new perspective on our place in the cosmos and a better understanding of ourselves as human beings. It helps us overcome our otherwise myopic preconceptions about how the world works.
verb
to be indecisive or evasive to gain time or delay acting.
The current, somewhat negative, meaning of temporize, to be indecisive or evasive to gain time or delay acting, is a relatively modern development of Middle French temporiser to pass the time, await ones time, from Medieval Latin 喧梗鳥梯棗娶勳堝櫻娶梗 to delay, equivalent to Medieval Latin 喧梗鳥梯棗娶櫻娶梗 to delay, put off the time. All of the medieval words are derivatives of Latin tempor-, the inflectional stem of tempus time, which has no certain etymology. Temporize entered English in the 16th century.
I’ll temporise till we are all dead and buried.
He is as likely as any man I know to temporizeto calculate what will be likely to promote his own reputation and advantage …