adjective
lacking in vitality or intelligence; stupid, dull, or clumsy.
The British adjective gormless, lacking in vitality or intelligence; stupid, dull, or clumsy, with the variant spellings gaumless and gawm(b)less, is probably a respelling of gaumless by r-less speakers. Gaumless comes from the Northern English and Scots noun gaum heed, attention, from Old Norse gaumr, with the same meaning. Gormless entered English in the mid-18th century.
Lockdown is liftinghooray. But oh, no. Back come the phombies, and more gormless than ever. You remember the phone zombies. Maybe you call them wexters, people who walk and text simultaneously, oblivious to traffic or the old ladies they knock into bus shelters because they must reply to U out l8er? right here, right now.
The rare noun droke has two meanings: a valley with steeply sloping sides and a thicket of small trees or bushes. Droke is restricted pretty much to Canadathe Atlantic Provinces (New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island) and the Northwest Territories. Droke has no established etymology; but the dialects of the West Country, a loosely defined area of southwest England comprising Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, and Somerset (at least), record the nouns drock “a wooden part of a plow” and droke “a furrow or ditch; an underground watercourse.” Droke entered English in the second half of the 18th century.
We sometimes went berry picking in nearby areas, but we were cautioned not to wander too far because in certain drokes, small valleys, lived fairies who might spirit us away.
There’s more, but they’re not all worth a mention. Except for me and Mom over in Frogmarsh. And Jas Kelly, he’s up the droke a piece.
adjective
immeasurably small; less than an assignable quantity.
Infinitesimalcomes from New Latin 勳紳款蘋紳蘋喧襲莽勳鳥櫻梭勳莽, 勳紳款蘋紳蘋喧襲莽勳鳥喝莽, a compound of Latin 勳紳款蘋紳蘋喧喝莽 unspecified, indefinite, unrestricted, unlimited, infinite and the adjective suffix –襲莽勳鳥喝莽, which was extracted from v蘋c襲莽勳鳥喝莽 twentieth (where the suffix is original) and applied to form ordinal numbers from 20 to 1,000; thus infinitesimal literally means infinitieth. Infinitesimal entered English in the mid-17th century.
The story is both pleasantly seamy and inconsequential, as pat and flimsy as a mad-science soap opera. Its psychological dimensions are infinitesimal; its social context is nonexistent.
The problem with the intentional walk isn’t just that it robs baseball’s best players of a chance to hit. The issue is that it’s a waste of time in an already plodding game. … But major leaguers keeping going through the motions on the almost infinitesimal chance that the pitcher might get the yips and throw it away.