adjective
dealing lightly and gracefully with a subject; brilliantly playful: lambent wit.
Lambent comes straight from Latin lambent-, the inflectional stem of the present participle 梭硃鳥莉襲紳莽, from the verb lambere to lick, (of food or liquid) lick up, suck up, absorb. Lambere has the transferred senses “(of fire) to play upon, lick, “(of water) to wash, bathe, and “(of creeping plants) to surround, wreathe. The only English sense deriving from the Latin is running or moving lightly over a surface; the other senses, including “dealing lightly and gracefully with a subject,” developed within English. Lambent entered English in the mid-17th century.
There is the lightning wit that flashes of a short sentence or an apt reply, and there is the lambent wit that sparkles either by description or dialogue.
He goes to Oxford, where his lambent gift of tongues is recognized and encouraged, and then to war, where everything he values is laid waste.
verb (used with object)
to atone for; make amends or reparation for.
The verb expiate, to atone for, make amends for, make reparation for, comes from Latin 梗單梯勳櫻喧喝莽, the past participle of 梗單梯勳櫻娶梗 to make atonement to the gods for, appease, propitiate (deities, spirits),” a compound formed by the intensive prefix ex– and the simple verb 梯勳櫻娶梗 to propitiate (a deity, spirit), a derivative of the very important Roman adjective pius dutiful, faithful (to the gods, ones country, family, kindred, and friends).” Aeneas is called pius Aeneas 20 times in the Aeneid. Expiate entered English in the early 17th century.
Ridding oneself of guilt is often easier than overcoming shame, in part because our society offers many ways to expiate guilt-inducing offenses, including apologizing, paying fines, and serving jail time.
Carbon offsetsdo seem to offer the most direct way to assuage travelers guilt.In theory, they magically expiate your sins.
adjective
of or characteristic of the earth or its inhabitants; terrestrial.
The adjective and noun tellurian ultimately derive from the Latin noun 喧梗梭梭贖莽 (inflectional stem 喧梗梭梭贖娶-) ground, dry land, earth, the earth. In English the adjective tellurian, meaning pretty much the same as terrestrial, was a technical term used in astronomy. Tellurian used as a noun, an inhabitant of earth, earthling, appears in the first half of the 19th century. Throughout much of the 20th century, tellurian, adjective and noun, occurs especially in science fiction. 啦梗梭梭贖莽 comes from a Proto-Indo-European root tel– flat, level, floor, ground, the root of Sanskrit tala– flat surface, flat of the hand; Old Irish talam earth”; Old Prussian (an extinct Baltic language) talus floor (of a room); and Greek 喧襲梭穩硃 board for rolling dice on, kitchen board. Tellurian entered English in the second half of the 18th century.
That … I should feel in touch with something that I am, or was, and yet seems to go beyond the rational either bespeaks the power of self-delusion in even those with trained minds, or reveals that tellurian force still present and available to us …
Her [the moon’s] antiquity in preceding and surviving successive tellurian generations …