noun
influential media pundits collectively.
Punditocracy, originally an American term, composed of pundit learned person, authority, maven and the thoroughly naturalized suffix –cracy “rule, government,” is a snarky noun used to refer to the elite members of the news media (also known as the commentariatanother snarky noun). Pundit comes from Sanskrit 梯硃廜廎勳喧硃, an adjective and noun meaning learned, learned man (in Sanskrit language and literature, Hindu religion, philosophy, and law), also used as a title like Doctor. Punditocracy entered English in the mid-1980s.
Meanwhile, imagination is in short supply among the energy punditocracy.
Max was the forehead of today’s mass punditocracy, presaging Glenn Beck, Keith Olbermann, and the rest of today’s flesh-and-blood bloviators.
adjective
of, relating to, or adapted to a dry environment.
Xeric is an adjective used in ecology, botany, and biology in general to characterize a very dry environment or an organism that can grow in such an environment. Xeric comes from Greek 單襲娶籀莽 dry, withered, and it appears to be obviously related to the Greek noun 單梗娶籀紳 dry land, mainland, but the long 襲 and the short e are problematic. If 單襲娶籀莽 and 單梗娶籀紳 are related, they will come from the Proto-Indo-European root kser– (also ks襲r-) dry, source of Latin serescere to become dry, ser襲nits dry, bright, clear weather or sky (English serenity), and ser襲nus clear, cloudless, fine (English serene). Xeric entered English in the first half of the 20th century.
At the island’s opposite end is the Southeast Peninsula, a wilderness of salt ponds and xeric vegetation.
These increasingly xeric (hot and dry) conditions restricted the range of large game animals and this, coupled with human predation and environmental stress, drove many game species … to extinction.
noun
a person who has attained eminence in his or her field or is an inspiration to others: one of the luminaries in the field of medical science.
楚紳眶梭勳莽堯泭梭喝鳥勳紳硃娶聆泭comes from Middle English luminari(e) light (especially of the sun or moon), lamp, source of spiritual light, shining example of holiness, earthly glory, from Old French luminarie, luminaire, from Medieval Latin 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶勳硃 (plural of梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶梗), from Late Latin 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶勳硃 lights, lamps, used in the Vulgate for the lights in the Jewish temple in Jerusalem and in Christian churches. (The Vulgate is the Latin version of the Bible, prepared chiefly by St. Jerome at the end of the 4th century a.d.). In Latin of the classical period, 梭贖鳥勳紳櫻娶梗 meant merely window, window shutter. Luminary entered English in the late 15th century.
I have been accustomed to consider him a luminary too dazzling for the darkness which surrounds him ….
She had been a luminary of the British folk revival in the nineteen-fifties and sixtiesa ballad singer with a steady, almost austere approach to melody, a demure presence, and a true, heartbreaking voice.