English postern comes from Old French posterne, originally a concealed exit from a fort, a sally port, later a small door, a back door. Posterne is an alteration of Old French posterle a back door, back way,” from Late Latin posterula a small back door or gate; back way, byway, a diminutive noun formed from the adjective posterus (coming or being) after or in the future and -ula, the feminine form of the common diminutive noun suffix -ulus. The -n- in posterne is likely due to the influence of the Old French adjectives interne (from Latin internus) and externe (from Latin externus). Postern entered English in the early 14th century.
It was the second gate, a postern in the north wall, that accounted for the most noticeable change.
A practicable postern was ajar on the yellow wood of the studded gates.
noun
Chiefly Scot., Irish. a professional storyteller of family genealogy, history, and legend.
There are several English spellings, e.g., shanachie, seannachie, for the exotic Irish and Scottish noun meaning storyteller, oral historian, genealogist. The word in Scots Gaelic is seanachaidh (seanachaidhe in Irish) meaning historian, antiquarian, chronicler, from sen old, ancient and 釵贖勳莽 matter, affair. Sen is from Proto-Indo-European sen(o)- old, most obvious in Latin senex old man, 莽梗紳櫻喧喝莽 senate, and 莽梗紳梗釵喧贖莽 old age. Senos appears in Greek in the noun 堯矇紳棗莽 year, and the adjective 堯矇紳棗莽 last years; and in Baltic (Lithuanian) as 莽廕緯硃莽 old, and 莽廕緯勳莽 old man. Sennachie entered English in the 16th century.
… I do not think he could falsify a folk-tale if he tried. At the most he would change it as a few years’ passing from sennachie to sennachie must do perforce.
My schoolfellows like my stories well enough-better at least, on most occasions, than they did the lessons of the master; but, beyond the common ground of enjoyment which these ex-tempore compositions furnished to both the “sennachie” and his auditors, our tracts of amusement lay widely apart.
noun
any musical instrument having a keyboard, especially a stringed keyboard instrument, as a harpsichord, clavichord, or piano.
English clavier comes from Old French clavier keyholder, keybearer, as if from Medieval Latin 釵梭櫻措勳櫻娶勳喝莽 (formed from 釵梭櫻措勳莽 key, which becomes clef or 釵梭矇 in French, and the common noun suffix -櫻娶勳喝莽, which becomes -ier in Old French). French clavier also meant “a bank or row of keys on a musical instrument, a keyboard,” which is the first sense of the word in English, dating from the early 18th century. German and the other Germanic languages specialized the meaning to keyboard instrument with strings (particularly the clavichord), which English adopted in the mid-19th century.
Herr Gleissner composed twelve songs with clavier accompaniment.
An engraved portrait that a German artist made of Buchinger, in 1710, includes thirteen surrounding vignettes that picture him at tables, bearing his instruments and props, but just one depicts him in action, playing a hammered clavier.