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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

hero

[ heer-oh ]

noun

a person noted for courageous acts or nobility of character.

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Why we chose hero

Heroes are everywhere right now, and were teaming up with Rocket Mortgage by Quicken Loans to say thank you. Share your message of gratitude with #EveryoneKnowsAHero and @RocketMortgage. Watch below to learn more.

More about hero

The English singular noun hero is formed from the plural heroes, which comes from Latin 堯襲娶梗莽, the plural of 堯襲娶莽 (mythical) hero. 晨襲娶莽 comes from Greek 堯廎r莽 (plural 堯廎r梗莽) hero, a very ancient word that meant many things to the Greeks. A compound noun 喧娶勳莽襲娶棗堯梗勳, literally Thrice Hero, possibly the name of a deity Clan Ancestor (?), appears on a Linear B tablet from Pylos, dating to the 13th century b.c. In the Iliad, 堯廎r莽 means warrior, and often little more than man, and not a semidivine being. In later Greek, 堯廎r莽 was a semidivine being with his own cult, usually local, the only exception being Hercules (Heracles). (Greek 晨襲娶櫻域梭矇襲莽, also spelled 晨襲娶櫻域梭礙莽, means Glory of Hera. 晨廎r櫻 is the Greek feminine form of 堯廎r莽; she is a daughter of Cronus and sister and wife of Zeus. Her name occurs next to the name of Zeus on the same Mycenaean Greek text, which makes likely the assumption that Hera was already honored as the consort of Zeus.) Unfortunately, 堯廎r莽 and its derivative noun 晨廎r櫻, like 60 percent of Greek vocabulary, have no satisfactory etymology. The various etymologies proposed suffer from various degrees of improbability. Hero entered English in the 16th century.

how is hero used?

Amid all the bleak news about the coronavirus pandemic, its important to remember that there are so many heroes in America right now.

Lisa Lerer, "The Other Front-Line Workers," New York Times, April 2, 2020

Every crisis has its heroes, every disaster its displays of selflessness and sacrifice. … And now, amid the coronavirus泭pandemic, our health-care workers, doctors, nurses, EMTs and support staff who risk becoming infected themselveswho risk infecting their own familiesare making extraordinary sacrifices to care for the rest of us.

Ruth Marcus, "These are the heroes of the coronavirus pandemic," Washington Post, March 27, 2020

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51勛圖 of the day

force majeure

[ French fawrs ma-zhr ]

noun

Law.

an unexpected and disruptive event that may operate to excuse a party from a contract.

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More about force majeure

Force majeure, “superior force,” is a legal term in commercial and contract law for an unexpected, disruptive event that may excuse one party or both parties from a contract. The force majeure may be limited to what some jurisdictions term “acts of God,” such as floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, tornadoes, etc. The force majeure may also be broader in scope, including manmade events such as strikes, riots, crime, or other social unrest. Force majeure is unnaturalized in English; even the pronunciation of majeure is at least partly Frenchified. Force comes from Old French force, from Vulgar Latin fortia, a singular feminine noun use of the neuter plural adjective fortia strong, robust (things), from the adjective fortis, forte. Many Latin neuter plural nouns and adjectives, which end in –a, become in the Romance languages feminine collective singular nouns, also ending in –a: for instance, the Latin neuter plural gaudia joys, delights (singular gaudium) becomes joie in French and gioia in Italian, both feminine singular nouns. Majeure is the normal French development of Latin major– (the inflectional stem of major, majus g娶梗硃喧梗娶). Force majeure first appears in print in A digest of the civil laws now in force in the territory of Orleans. (1803)–all of the texts, however, are in French. The first appearance of force majeure in English is in Questions and answers on law: Alphabetically arranged, with references to the most approved authorities, Volume 2 (1841).

how is force majeure used?

Whats more, decisions about whether coronavirus qualifies as a force majeure event will affect entire supply chains, causing a ripple-down effectone broken obligation, or invocation of the clause, can domino into many others down the line.

Talib Visram, "What is 'force majeure'? The legal term you'll be hearing a lot during the coronavirus crisis," Fast Company, March 30, 2020

All tickets have a force majeure clause, which might get organizers off the hook of paying refunds if the coronavirus is deemed to be beyond Tokyo 2020s reasonable control.

Stephen Wade, "Tokyo's delayed Olympics: Who pays bills for another year?" Associated Press, March 25, 2020

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chyron

[ kahy-ron ]

noun

a text-based graphic overlay displayed at the bottom of a television screen or film frame, as closed captioning or the crawl of a newscast.

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More about chyron

Chyron is an altered spelling of earlier Chiron, the name of an electronic graphics platform developed by Systems Resource Corporation, later known as Chyron Corporation. In Greek mythology, Chiron is the name of a wise and beneficent centaur and teacher of Achilles, Asclepius, and others. Chyron entered English in the second half of the 20th century.

how is chyron used?

A good chyron demonstrates sound judgment, clarity, and wit. But the best chyrons are those that accompany segments that demonstrate the same things.

Emily Tamkin, "CNN public editor: No, it hasn't," Columbia Journalism Review, November 14, 2019

On television, scientists, journalists and chyrons keep warning us that the most important, civic-minded thing to do in the midst of the covid-19 pandemic is to stay away from other people.

Elahe Izadi, "Our TVs are full of characters spreading germs and now we can never unsee it," Washington Post, March 24, 2020

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