noun
any flag, banner, or standard, especially one that serves as a rallying point or symbol.
Originally an oriflamme was the banner or ensign that the French kings received before going into battle from the abbot of Saint-Denis, the site of a Benedictine abbey founded c626 in a city of the same name, located northeast of Paris, and named after Saint Denis, a martyr of the 3rd century who is venerated as a patron of the French people. Oriflamme means golden flame in Old French, from Latin aurea flamma golden flame, referring to the golden flames on the red background of the banner. Oriflamme entered English in the 15th century.
I was so afraid you might think we ought to sort of wave the oriflamme of our unfettered love.
… the huge and motley mass, throughout the Union, which marched under the oriflamme of the bank, had every where repeated and reiterated the same cry.
verb
to isolate or alienate (a person) from a native or customary culture or environment.
The root of deracinate to uproot is the Late Latin noun 娶櫻餃蘋釵蘋紳硃 root, from Latin 娶櫻餃蘋單 (stem 娶櫻餃蘋釵-), from which English derives radical and eradicate. Latin 娶櫻餃蘋單 comes from the Proto-Indo-European root 滄娶櫻餃- (and its variants) branch, root. The noun 滄娶櫻餃勳棗莽 becomes Latin 娶櫻餃勳喝莽 staff, rod, beam, radius (of a circle), ray (of light), from which, via French, English has ray (of light or energy). The suffixed form 滄娶櫻餃-mo- becomes Latin 娶櫻鳥喝莽 branch, twig, from which English derives ramify and ramification. Proto-Indo-European 滄娶櫻餃- becomes 滄娶喧- in Germanic, from which Old Norse derives 娶喧, which becomes root in English. Deracinate entered English in the late 16th century.
Our parents sent us to those schools to deracinate us, to obliterate our class markings.
In little more than a century, millions of human beings in Europe and America … have undertaken to deracinate themselves from the natural continuum and all that it has to teach us of Man’s relationship to the nonhuman more completely than ever before in the human past.
noun
a person who seeks solitude; recluse.
Solitudinarian was first recorded in 168595.
She was such a warm, beautiful woman, so popular, so very full of love and verve and yet you, her only son, are an anthropofugal solitudinarian.
… Charron says that no one with a capacity for public good and usefulness ought to neglect that capacity. Thus, the able solitudinarian is to be severely censured.