noun
a distinctive scent, usually described as earthy, pleasant, or sweet, produced by rainfall on very dry ground.
Petrichor is an uncommon word used in mineral chemistry or geochemistry to describe the pleasant scent of rain falling on very dry ground. Petrichor is a compound of the Greek nouns 梯矇喧娶櫻 rock, stone (as in petroleum rock oil) and 蘋釵堯廜r, the juice or liquidnot blood!that flows in the veins of the Olympian gods. About 60 percent of ancient Greek words have no satisfactory etymology; 蘋釵堯廜r is one of them. Petrichor was coined by two Australian chemists, Isabel Joy Bear and Richard Grenfell Thomas, in 1964.
I surfaced from the tunnel in a shack, where the air was close and smelled of petrichor.
So whether rainfall reminds you of summer soccer games, puddle-splashing with siblings or a terrifying storm, thank (or blame) the planets [sic], microbes and minerals that give petrichor such a distinctive odor.
noun
a diversion or entertainment.
The English noun divertissement comes directly from the French divertissement amusement, entertainment, diversion. Divertisse- is the long stem of the verb divertir to amuse, entertain; it comes from Latin 餃蘋措梗娶喧梗娶梗 or 餃襲措梗娶喧梗娶梗 to turn away, divert, make a detour, digress; the French suffix -ment, from the similar Latin noun suffix -mentum, denotes action or resulting state. Divertissement entered English in the 18th century.
Featuring an uncomplicated plot and easily relatable personalities, this is a divertissement compared with the thematic heft of Like Father, Like Son.
My place in your life is a divertissement, and when it ceases to be that it will be no good to you.
The verb cozen has a doubtful ancestry. One plausible etymology has cozen associated with the noun cousin (i.e., the relative), modeled on the French usage of the verb cousiner to call cousin, i.e., to claim fraudulent kindred to gain some profit or advantage. A second etymology derives cozen from Italian cozzonare to engage in horse trading, cheat, from cozzone, from Latin 釵棗釵喧勳紳-, the inflectional stem of 釵棗釵喧勳 a dealer, broker. Cozen entered English in the 16th century.
He had come to cozen me into letting him use me in return for a mockery of an honor.
Let us cozen it with a golden shrewdness.