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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

kyoodle

[ kahy-ood-l ]

verb

to bark or yelp noisily or foolishly; yap.

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More about kyoodle

Kyoodle began as and still may be an Americanism. The word has no distinguished etymology (except for the vague label Imitative), which exactly fits the verb and also one of its noun meanings: mutt, noisy dog. Some distinguished American authors have used the word, however, including John Steinbeck, John OHara, and Sinclair Lewis. Kyoodle entered English in the late 19th century.

how is kyoodle used?

No living thing moved upon it, not even a medicine wolf to kyoodle to the invisible moon.

Richard Sale, The White Buffalo, 1975

But the dogs waved their tails happily and sought out a rabbit and went kyoodling after it.

John Steinbeck, Tortilla Flat, 1935
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

squamous

[ skwey-muhs ]

adjective

covered with or formed of squamae or scales.

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More about squamous

The adjective squamous is a direct borrowing of Latin 莽梁喝櫻鳥莽喝莽 covered with scales, scaly, a derivative of the noun 莽梁喝櫻鳥硃 scale (on a fish or reptile), metal plate used in making armor. The ultimate etymology of 莽梁喝櫻鳥硃 is unclear, but it is related to 莽梁喝櫻梭襲娶梗 to be covered or crusted in scales or dirt, and the derivatives of 莽梁喝櫻梭襲娶梗 include 莽梁喝櫻梭勳餃喝莽 having a rough surface and 莽梁喝櫻梭棗娶 roughness, dirtiness, filth. Squamous entered English in the 16th century.

how is squamous used?

The back was piebald with yellow and black, and dimly suggested the squamous covering of certain snakes.

H. P. Lovecraft, "The Dunwich Horror," Weird Tales, April 1929

They speak no known tongue and are said to sacrifice sailors to their squamous, fish-headed gods, likenesses of whom rise from their stony shores, visible only when the tide recedes.

George R. R. Martin, Elio M. García, Jr., and Linda Antonsson, The World of Ice and Fire, 2014
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

lunula

[ loo-nyuh-luh ]

noun

something shaped like a narrow crescent, as the small, pale area at the base of the fingernail.

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More about lunula

The uncommon noun lunula is restricted to anatomy, biology, and archaeology or art history. Its a straightforward borrowing of Latin 梭贖紳喝梭硃, literally little moon, but meaning crescent-shaped ornament (one of its senses in English). The only common meaning for this uncommon noun is the pale, crescent-shaped are at the base of a fingernail or toenail. 郭贖紳喝梭硃 is a diminutive of 梭贖紳硃 moon, which is disconcertingly similar to Russian 梭喝紳獺 moon. (The cognate Polish 喝紳硃 means glow.) Both the Slavic and the Latin nouns derive from the same Proto-Indo-European source, 梭棗喝域莽紳櫻, the same source as Avestan raoxshna- shining; a light. (Raoxshna is also used as a proper female name that in Greek is rendered 賊堯單獺紳襲 Roxane. The original Raoxshna/Roxane was a Bactrian princess born c340 b.c.; she married Alexander the Great in 327 b.c., and was poisoned in prison in 310 b.c.). Proto-Indo-European 梭棗喝域莽紳櫻 becomes in Old Prussian the plural noun lauxnos stars, and Middle Irish luan moon. All of these forms derive from the very common Proto-Indo-European root leuk- and its variants louk- and luk- light, bright. Lunula entered English in the 16th century.

how is lunula used?

It refuses to grow back, the nail of this one finger, the lunula destroyed, a moon permanently obliterated by one smash of his interrogator’s pistol.

Vaddey Ratner, Music of the Ghosts, 2017

I … wore only a simple shift of amber-and-brown plaid wool, and only ghillies, ovals of calfskin, laced around my feet. No golden tore, no silver lunula, nor am I royal of stature or of mien.

Nancy Springer, The Kingmaker, Firebird Soaring, 2009
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar