adjective
invested with or possessing full power.
The adjective plenipotent,invested with or possessing full power, comes from Late Latin 梯梭襲紳勳梯棗喧梗紳喧– (stem of 梯梭襲紳勳梯棗喧襲紳莽), which is composed of 梯梭襲紳勳-, the combining form of 梯梭襲紳喝莽 full and potent-, the combining form of 梯棗喧襲紳莽, the present participle of posse to be able, have power. Plenipotent is not as common in English as its close relative, the adjective and noun plenipotentiary (as a noun, plenipotentiary usually refers to a diplomat with full power to conduct business or negotiations.) Plenipotent entered English in 1639; plenipotentiary in 1646.
In his youth he drudged 12 hours a day, at a salary of 4 shillings a week ($1.00). Last week he welcomed to the sumptuous mayoral board a company of diners plenipotent and distinguished.
Nature, impassive andplenipotent, waits to reward or punish us.
noun
a word or phrase that appears only once in a manuscript, document, or particular area of literature.
The phrase hapax legomenon, a word or phrase appearing only once in literature, comes from Greek 堯獺梯硃單 legomenon, composed of the adverb 堯獺梯硃單 once, one time and the neuter singular present passive participle 梭梗眶籀鳥梗紳棗紳 (being) said, from the verb 梭矇眶梗勳紳 to say. (Hapax is also used by itself in English as a noun; the plural of hapax legomenon is hapax legomena.) One famous hapaxas far as these things gois the adjective 梗梯勳棗繳莽勳棗紳 in the phrase 獺娶喧棗紳 梗梯勳棗繳莽勳棗紳 in the clause (Give us this day our) daily bread, in the Lords Prayer in the gospels of St. Matthew and St. Luke. The Greek noun 獺娶喧棗莽 means wheat bread, bread (in general) and presents no problem. 楚梯勳棗繳莽勳棗紳 may mean (enough) for today, today’s, next days, necessary, sufficient. 楚梯勳棗繳莽勳棗紳 is variously translated in Latin: one of them, 梁喝棗喧蘋餃勳櫻紳喝鳥 daily, is an inadequate, even wrong translation of 梗梯勳棗繳莽勳棗紳, but it was used in Tyndales translation of the Bible (1534) and the King James Bible (1611), and it is used today in most modern English translations. Hapax legomenon entered English in the late 17th century.
I have no such grand designs in this essay, nor could I possibly discuss all of the hapax legomena in just The Lord of the Rings, not even in the most cursory fashion because there are more than five thousand of them.
The adjective 怷弇庥 is an absolute hapax legomenon in the Greek language: it occurs only here and in some ancient scholia, lexica, and commentaries on this very passage.
noun
a very challenging and innovative project or undertaking.
Moonshot, a launching of a spacecraft to the moon, a transparent compound of moon and shot, entered English in 1949, near the beginning of large-scale rocket development in the U.S. Moonshot in its extended sense a challenging and innovative project first appears in 1967.
Jennifer Granholm, the energy secretary, called the U.S. plan to tackle climate change our generations moonshot.
Moonshots dont begin with brainstorming clever answers. They start with the hard work of finding the right questions.