noun
an alphabetic script used originally for inscriptions in an archaic form of Irish, from about the 5th to the 10th centuries.
Ogham an alphabetic script used for inscriptions in archaic Irish is a loanword from Irish Gaelic, but the history of this word becomes murkier and murkier the farther back in time we go. A popular hypothesis is that ogham comes from Ogma, the name of a Celtic god who created the alphabetthat is, according to some legends. An alternative is that ogham derives from an ancient Irish word meaning point, as in the tip of a weapon, in reference to how ogham letters were inscribed on stone. The Irish Gaelic language today, as it has since the demise of ogham 1000 years ago, uses the Roman alphabet. Ogham was first recorded in English in the 1620s.
The script used in recording this early Irish is the unusual alphabetic system called Ogham . [M]ost of its characters consist of slashing lines, longer and shorter (notches being used at times for vowel characters), giving the impression that it was originally designed to be written by means of an ax or some similar sharp instrument, with wood serving as a medium.
Ogham is an ancient lettering system that uses patterns of parallel and crossed lines. “It is specifically Irish with some late use in Scotland, but even in Wales the ogham inscriptions are all in Irish,” Prof [Werner] Nahm says. “They started in the late fourth century. You find them in various places, on building materials and in subterranean structures.”
adjective
having a fantastic or deceptive appearance, as something in a dream or created by the imagination.
Phantasmagoric having a fantastic appearance is a compound of two elements. The first is phantasm apparition, fantasy, from Ancient Greek 梯堯獺紳喧硃莽鳥硃 image, vision. This, in turn, comes from the verb 梯堯硃穩紳梗勳紳 to bring to light, cause to appear, which is the source of many fant- and phant- words in English, from fantastic and fantasy to hierophant and phantom. The second element in phantasmagoric is likely to be either from Ancient Greek 硃眶棗娶獺 assembly, gathering (as in agoraphobia) or its derivative 硃梭梭襲眶棗娶穩硃 figurative language (as in allegory). Phantasmagoric was first recorded in English in the early 1810s.
When you take a tour through the main street, you will find bonfires at every step. They are built with branches collected by villagers a few days earlier in the forest around the village. The street lighting is dimmed to accentuate the almost phantasmagoric atmosphere around you.
adjective
of or having the nature of an original model or prototype.
Archetypal having the nature of an original model, the adjective form of the noun archetype, comes from Ancient Greek 硃娶釵堯矇喧聆梯棗紳 a model, pattern. The first element in 硃娶釵堯矇喧聆梯棗紳 is based on one of three related words硃娶釵堯廎 b梗眶勳紳紳勳紳眶, 獺娶釵堯棗莽 l梗硃餃梗娶, 獺娶釵堯梗勳紳 to be the first, commandall of uncertain ultimate origin. The second element is 喧羸梯棗莽 mold, type (earlier blow, impression), which may be distantly related to a variety of English st- words once connected to pushing, knocking together, cutting off, or sticking out, including steep, steeple, stepchild, stint, stock, stoop, stub, stunt, and stutter. Archetypal was first recorded in English in the 1640s.
Often cited as the archetypal Renaissance man, Leonardo came from an era in which the well-rounded individual, prolific and curious of mind, was highly valued.
In their book The Fourth Turning, Howe and Strauss identified four generational archetypes: Hero, Artist, Prophet, and Nomad. Each consists of people born in a roughly 20-year period. As each archetypal generation reaches the end of its 80-year lifespan, the cycle repeats.