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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

palpebral

[ pal-puh-bruhl, pal-pee-bruhl, -peb-ruhl ]

adjective

of or relating to the eyelids.

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More about palpebral

The Latin noun palpebra (also palpebrum) eyelid is composed of the verb 梯硃梭梯櫻娶梗 to touch, stroke, caress and -brum, a suffix forming nouns of instruments, e.g., 釵硃紳餃襲梭櫻莉娶喝鳥 a stand for holding several candles, candelabra. 捩硃梭梯櫻娶梗 derives from a complicated Proto-Indo-European root 梯櫻梭- (from 梯梗梭-) and its many variants, e.g., pel-, 梯梗梭-, 梯梭襲-, etc. to touch, feel, flutter, float. A palpebra is something that flutters (quickly). The root is also the source of Latin 梯硃梭梯勳喧櫻娶梗 (of a pulse) to beat, pulsate, 梯櫻梯勳梭勳 butterfly, moth, and Old English 款襲梭硃紳 to examine by touch, English feel. Palpebral entered English in the mid-18th century.

how is palpebral used?

adrift on a gold-brown leather recliner, / the little finger of her left hand tapping / on the crocheted antimacassar, / palpebral twitches of chronic hypnagogia.

Rodney Jones, "Requiem for Reba Portis," Village Prodigies, 2017

In his palpebral vision, she beckoned.

Richard Fariña, Been Down So Long It Looks Like Up to Me, 1966
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51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

mump

[ muhmp, moomp ]

verb

to sulk; mope.

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More about mump

The rare English verb mump is akin to the equally rare Dutch mompen to mumble, grumble, and the magnificent German verbs mumpfen to chew with ones mouth full and mimpfeln to mumble while eating. The Germanic verbs most likely derive from a Proto-Indo-European root 鳥梗喝- be silent, from which English also derives mum silent, Latin 鳥贖喧喝莽 silent, mute, and Greek 鳥喝莽喧廎r勳棗紳 secret rite, mystery, a derivative of 鳥繳莽喧襲莽 an initiate, a derivative of 鳥喝梗簾紳 to initiate, instruct, teach, itself a derivative of 鳥繳梗勳紳 to close the eyes, mouth, or other opening (lest one reveal what is not to be revealed). Mump entered English in the 16th century.

how is mump used?

Up, Dullard! It is better service to enjoy a novel than to mump.

Robert Louis Stevenson, "Letter to his Mother, December 30, 1883" Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, 1997

Come, my dear fellow, do not spoil the excellent impression you have already made. I am sure to mump and moan is not in you …

John Collis Snaith, The Wayfarers, 1902
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar

51勛圖 of the day

excogitate

[ eks-koj-i-teyt ]

verb

to think out; devise; invent.

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More about excogitate

Excogitate comes from Latin 梗單釵眶勳喧櫻喧喝莽, the past participle of 梗單釵眶勳喧櫻娶梗 meaning to devise, invent, think out. It entered English in the 1520s.

how is excogitate used?

I wouldn’t put the question to you for the world, and expose you to the inconvenience of having to … excogitate an answer.

Henry James, Washington Square, 1880

The average politician knows fully as little or as much about railway management as he does about photographing the moon or applying the solar spectrum; yet, once upon a board of railway commissioners, he is required to excogitate and frame rules for an industry which not only supplies the financial arteries of a continent, but holds the lives as well as the credits of its citizens dependent upon the click of a telegraph or the angle of a semaphore …

Appleton Morgan, "The Political Control of Railways: Is It Confiscation?" Popular Science Monthly, February 1889
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar
51勛圖 of the Day Calendar