noun
Botany.
a small fruit, especially one of those forming an aggregate fruit, as the raspberry.
Fruitlet is a perfectly transparent word, used as a technical term in botany. The first syllable, fruit, comes from Old French fruit, a regular development from Latin 款娶贖釵喧喝莽 enjoyment, produce, results. The diminutive suffix –let comes from Middle French –elet, from Latin –櫻梭梗 (the neuter of the adjective suffix –櫻梭勳莽), or from the Latin diminutive suffix –ellus and the Old French noun suffix –et (-ette). Fruitlet entered English in the second half of the 19th century.
… in the raspberry the separate fruitlets are all crowded close together into a single united mass, while in the strawberry they are scattered about loosely, and embedded in the soft flesh of the receptacle.
… the eyes, or diamond fruitlets, on the surface have soft or smooth tips.
verb (used without object)
to move with a sinuous or wavelike motion; display a smooth rising-and-falling or side-to-side alternation of movement: The flag undulates in the breeze.
Something that undulates, as a flag or rhythm, moves side to side or rises and falls like a wave. Indeed, its origin is Latin unda wave, via 喝紳餃喝梭櫻喧喝莽 waved, wavy, composed of –ula, a diminutive suffix, and –櫻喧喝莽, a past participle suffix. Unda泭also yields English泭abound, abundant, inundate, redound, redundant, and泭surround. Latin泭unda in turn泭comes from the Proto-Indo-European root wed– water, wet, ultimate source of the names of two substances that may cause some to undulate, as it were, on their feet: vodka (via Russian) and whiskey (Irish or泭Scots泭Gaelic). Best to stay hydrated, another derivative of wed-, via Greek 堯羸餃娶 w硃喧梗娶. Undulate entered English in the 1600s.
At the end, the national anthem is played, and our flag undulates all day on its very tall mast and unfurls as it ascends majestically.
There is a strange, dull glow to the east, from the sea; it undulates softly, rotates, like a net that has captured nothing.
Lulu was originally a piece of American slang. Slang terms have notoriously difficult origins, and lulu, also spelled loulou and looly, has no reliable etymology. Lulu first entered English in the mid-1850s.
… Marty loved to point out any big or little step and say to her, “Watch out. It’s a lulu.”
I started to work at the knot, which was a lulu.