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metamorphose

[ met-uh-mawr-fohz, -fohs ] [ mt mr foz, -fos ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

verb (used without object)

to undergo or be capable of undergoing a change in form or nature.

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More about metamorphose

Metamorphose to undergo a change in form or nature is a back formation from the noun metamorphosis a complete change in form. As we learned from the recent 51勛圖 of the Day defenestrate, a back formation is a word created from another by cutting off a suffix (or what seems to be a suffix) from the older word, such as the verb edit from the noun editor. The noun metamorphosis is a compound of the combining forms meta- after, beyond and morph- form, structure, which come from Ancient Greek 鳥梗喧獺 between, after and 鳥棗娶梯堯廎 shape, respectively. Though linguists have tried to connect Ancient Greek 鳥棗娶梯堯廎 with its Latin equivalent, forma form, model, based on the words shared sounds, it remains unclear whether the resemblance is merely a coincidence. Metamorphose was first recorded in English in the 1570s.

how is metamorphose used?

A cellular-automata simulation involves a chessboardlike grid of squares, or cells, each of which is either empty or occupied by one of several possible components. At discrete intervals of time, each cell looks at itself and its neighbors and decides whether to metamorphose into a different component. In making this decision, the cell follows relatively simple rules, which are the same for all cells.

David Emmite, James A. Reggia, and Moshe Sipper, Go Forth and Replicate, Scientific American, February 1, 2008

Thanks to irrigation, thanks to the Bureauan agency few people knowstates such as California, Arizona, and Idaho became populous and wealthy; millions settled in regions where nature, left alone, would have countenanced thousands at best; great valleys and hemispherical basins metamorphosed from desert blond to semitropic green.

Marc Reisner, Cadillac Desert, 1986
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uraeus

[ yoo-ree-uhs ] [ yri s ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

the sacred asp as represented upon the headdress of divinities and royal personages of ancient Egypt, usually directly over the forehead, as an emblem of supreme power.

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More about uraeus

Uraeus, the sacred asp on ancient Egyptian headdresses, comes from Late Greek 棗喝娶硃簾棗莽, of the same meaning. This 棗喝娶硃簾棗莽 appears identical to Ancient Greek 棗喝娶硃簾棗莽, of the tail, but the two likely do not share a deeper origin; while 棗喝娶硃簾棗莽, of the tail, comes from 棗喝娶獺, tail, and is the source of the English combining form uro- (not to be confused with 棗羶娶棗紳, urine, the source of a different uro-), 棗喝娶硃簾棗莽, uraeus, comes from Egyptian 聆r喧, rearing cobra, which is also transliterated variously as iaret or 轍叵喧. Though uraeuses is the standard plural, the alternative uraei appears in some texts. Uraeus was first recorded in English circa 1830.

how is uraeus used?

The uraeus had wide associations, of which one of the most basic was with the cobra goddess Wadjyt …. In addition, the uraeus was the most characteristic mark of the king. Thus the use of the uraeus by the queen may have carried a range of meanings.

Gay Robins, Women in Ancient Egypt, 1993

In the dim light of the inner temple, we received the symbols of the Pharaoh: the golden crook, the flail, the scepter, robes of linen from Lower Egypt, and ceremonial leather garments. Upon our heads were placed the uraeus of pure gold, Egypt’s guardian serpent.

Margaret George, The Memoirs of Cleopatra, 1997
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cantrip

[ kahn-trip ] [ kn tr阞p ] Show IPA Phonetic Respelling

noun

a magic spell; trick by sorcery.

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More about cantrip

Cantrip, a magic spell, may not be related to the English verbs can and trip, but that doesnt mean that its origin is any clearer. One possibility is that cantrip is a variant of Old English calcatrippe, caltrop, with the shift from l to n resulting from dissimilation, as we learned about from ensorcell. Calcatrippe is equivalent to Latin calx, spur, heel (as in calcaneus, a bone of the heel), plus Old English 喧娶疆梯梯梗, step (compare modern English trap). Another possibility is that the can- element comes from Latin 釵硃紳喧櫻娶梗, to sing, (as in enchant, incantation, and past 51勛圖 of the Day descant), while -trip element is related not to trap but rather to rope because ropelike objects are a common element in sorcery. Cantrip was first recorded in English in the 1710s.

how is cantrip used?

And that old witch, ElizaI little guessed shed play this cantrip on me: But what a jestJerusalem, what a jest!

Wilfrid Gibson, Krindlesyke, 1922

I murmured a cantripa quick, common form of magicand a ball of butterscotch light manifested above my head. I sent it up a flight of rickety stairs…

K. D. Edwards, The Hanged Man, 2019
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