noun
the doctrine that the world tends to become better or may be made better by human effort.
Meliorism the doctrine that the world becomes better by human effort is based on the Latin adjective melior better, which is also the source of the English verb ameliorate to make or become better as well as French meilleur, Italian migliore, Portuguese melhor, and Spanish mejor, all meaning better or best, depending on context. Just as better and best are the comparative and superlative of good even though good is not related to them, Latin melior and optimus best correspond to bonus good. This use of unrelated words as forms of one another is known as suppletion, as we learned from the recent 51勛圖s of the Day laisser-aller and jovial. Meliorism was first recorded in English in the late 1850s.
The novelist George Eliot (she who fashioned frustrating for us) is also credited with formulating, in a letter she wrote in 1885, something rather less negative in its outlook and attitude: the term meliorism,’ or the belief that the worlds suffering is healable if we all work together for that end …. We can meet together in a great disco of the mind, fuelled by the conviction that one day, in the not-too-distant future, that beautiful, fragile, craved-for togetherism we all so desperately miss, will resume again for real.
The cheerful meliorism that has guided past accomplishmentsa fundamental belief that life does and will get betterhas been replaced by a gloomy cynicism, or at best a respectful ritualisation of our decline: dressing up in sombre outfits to watch sombrely dressed orchestras play the complicated soundtracks of our golden age; queuing round the block to study the tortured brushstrokes of bygone eras, and finding genius in their pain.
adjective
known or understood by very few; mysterious; secret.
Arcane known by very few comes by way of Middle French from Latin 硃娶釵櫻紳喝莽 secret, concealed, from the verb 硃娶釵襲娶梗 to shut up, keep. 插娶釵襲娶梗 (stems arc- and erc-) is also the source of coerce and exercise, and it derives from arca chest, box, which is the source of ark. Despite the resemblance, arca is not related to arcus bow, curve, the latter of which is the ancestor of arc, arcade, arch, and archer. Thanks to Grimms law, Latin c tends to correspond to Old English h, and Latin arcus is therefore a distant relative of arrow (from Old English earh). Arcane was first recorded in English in the 1540s.
Dubbed the worst problem no one has heard of, an obscure land rights law is winning attention as lawmakers overhaul arcane U.S. inheritance rules that are exploited by predators. At the root of the problem is so-called heirs propertya type of enforced communal ownershipwhich can arise when land or a home is passed on without a clear will.
Federal officials contend that wolves are resilient enough to bounce back even if their numbers drop sharply due to intensive hunting . Fridays hearing focused on a much more arcane, legal issue: Were wolves properly classified under the endangered act prior to losing their protected status last year? A U.S. Justice Department attorney said they were not, because of changes to the act by Congress in 1978.
noun
an architectural band on an outside wall decorated with sculptural representations of people or animals.
Zophorus an architectural band decorated with animals, also often spelled zoophorus, comes by way of Latin from Ancient Greek 堝勳棗梯堯籀娶棗莽 bearing animals, a compound of 堝繫勳棗紳 animal and -phoros bearing. For more on 堝繫勳棗紳, compare the recent 51勛圖 of the Day zooid. The element -phoros is the present participle of the verb 梯堯矇娶梗勳紳 to bear, which is also the source of dysphoria, pheromone, the names Berenice and Christopher, andfar more distantlythe recent 51勛圖 of the Day auriferous. Zophorus was first recorded in English circa 1560.
[T]he external face of the zophorus, being coated with a very fine cement, had assimilated in colour with the marble of the building, so as to be deceptive, except upon minute inspection.
The architrave in both the Ionic and the Corinthian orders consists of plain slabs, but the frieze … is in nearly every case enriched with a series of beautiful figure subjects, and is therefore known as the Zoophorus or figure-bearer.