verb
to later revise an established element of a fictional story.
Retcon, to later revise (an established element of a fictional story), is a shortening based on the first syllables in retroactive continuity. This type of shortening is called syllabic abbreviation, and other common examples in English include fro-yo (from frozen yogurt), hazmat (from hazardous material), and sitcom (from situation comedy). Ultimately, retroactive is from Latin 娶梗喧娶, back, backward, combined with agere (past participle stem 櫻釵喧-), to do, while continuity is formed from Latin con-, with, together, combined with 喧梗紳襲娶梗 (combining stem tin-), to hold. Retcon was first recorded in the early 1980s.
EXAMPLE OF RETCON USED IN A SENTENCE
Though the first season showed the doctor naming the family spaceship after her favorite Norse god, later seasons retconned this and gave all the ships that same name.
noun
a traditional Hindu decoration on a floor or other flat surface usually made of powder, such as colored or dyed sand, chalk, crushed limestone, or rice flour.
Rangoli, a traditional Hindu decoration made of powder produced on a flat surface, is adapted from 娶瓊眶棗廎溺 in Marathi, a language native to central and western India with over 90 million speakers. Numerous languages of the Indian subcontinent inherit much of their vocabulary from the classical language Sanskrit, and Marathi is no exception. In this way, 娶瓊眶棗廎溺 comes from Sanskrit 娶硃廜g硃 color combined with 櫻措硃梭勳 l勳紳梗. Rangoli was first recorded in English in the early 1880s.
EXAMPLE OF RANGOLI USED IN A SENTENCE
The community came together to create a vibrant rangoli on the stone floor of the librarys lobby.
noun
the act of stretching oneself, especially on waking.
Pandiculation has been observed in most vertebrates, cold and warm-blooded. To find out more about pandiculation, watch this video from science communicator Maynard Okereke, better known as the Hip Hop M.D.
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Pandiculation, the act of stretching oneself, comes from the Latin verb 梯硃紳餃勳釵喝梭櫻娶蘋, to stretch, grimace, which derives from pandere, to spread out, extend. Pandere has three stems in English: pand-, pans-, and pass-. We can find pand- and pans- in expand and expansion, while pass- appears in compass and passport. Unfortunately, pandiculation is not related to panda, which was borrowed from one of the languages spoken in Nepal. Pandiculation entered English in the early 17th century.
EXAMPLE OF PANDICULATION USED IN A SENTENCE
After a long session of pandiculation, the bleary-eyed panda rose and set off in search of breakfast.