adjective
cleverly inventive or resourceful.
Ingenious comes from late Middle English ingenious intelligent, resourceful, quick-witted, from Old French 勳紳眶梗紳簿棗莽, engeignos, from Latin 勳紳眶梗紳勳莽喝莽 clever, talented, gifted.” 梆紳眶梗紳勳莽喝莽 is a derivative of the noun ingenium natural disposition, temperament, mood; natural ability, cleverness, and the adjectival suffix –莽喝莽, the source via Old French and Anglo-French of the English suffix –ous. Ingenious entered English in the second half of the 15th century.
She was an ingenious inventor whoplanteda seed that would blossom into some of todays most ubiquitous technology, including Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, cordless phones and cell phones.
Yet as ingenious as this inventor was, their toy did not spark a societal revolution.
verb (used with object)
to entertain lavishly or agreeably; delight.
Regale to entertain lavishly; delight comes from the French verb 娶矇眶硃梭梗娶 to feast, entertain, from the Old French noun regale, rigal(l)e, a derivative of gale festivity, feast, lavish meal. The prefix re– or ri– is borrowed from the verb (se) rigoler to amuse (oneself); (se) rigoler in its turn is a derivative of galer to make merry. The French present participle of galer is galant, which in Middle English becomes galaunt, galant merry, gay, gaily dressed, English gallant. Regale entered English in the second half of the 17th century.
It used to be that road-weary travelers would regale their nightly hosts with tales of rivers forded, vistas taken in, injuries sustained, and possibly even enemies vanquished.
One dinnertime, he regaled me with the story of how Lord Byrons challenge to Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley to write a ghostly tale led to the creation of Frankenstein.
verb (used with or without object)
to bend; turn; crinkle.
The uncommon verb crankle to bend, turn; crinkle is a frequentative verb derived from crank to rotate a shaft with a handle or crank. A frequentative verb is one that expresses frequent or repeated action. In English such verbs end in –er (as flutter from float, slither from slide) and –le (as dazzle from daze, bobble from bob). English frequentatives are a closed set, that is, English no longer produces frequentatives with the suffixes –er and –le. Instead, modern English expresses the frequentative by the plain present tense, e.g., I walk to school (habitually, usually), as opposed to the present progressive I am walking to school (right now). Crankle entered English at the end of the 16th century.
Two miles down, the river crankles round an alder grove.
She pleaded with Dagda not to take her child, but her pleading was no more than the sound that a river makes whenit crankles between stones.