noun,
Music.
the tuning of a stringed instrument in other than the usual way to facilitate the playing of certain compositions.
The musical term scordatura comes, as many musical terms do, from Italian. In English and Italian, scordatura is the tuning of a stringed instrument in an unusual way to facilitate the playing of certain compositions. Italian scordatura is a derivative of scordato out of tune, past participle of the verb scordare to be out of tune. Scordare is a somewhat reduced form of Latin 餃勳莽釵棗娶餃櫻娶梗 to be at variance, quarrel, disagree, formed from the prefix dis- apart, asunder and cord-, the stem of the noun cor h梗硃娶喧. Scordatura entered English in the second half of the 19th century.
The alternative tuning, known as scordatura, is not some minor technical detail. Each new configuration is a secret key to an invisible door, unlocking a different set of chordal possibilities on the instrument, opening up alternative worlds of resonance and vibration.
Scordatura in some violin concertos provides additional evidence for Vivaldis tendency to extend the advantages of playing on open strings to additional keys.
adjective
(of pie or other dessert) served with a portion of ice cream, often as a topping: apple pie la mode.
In French the phrase la mode in the current fashion is a shortening of la mode de in the style of (X), a meaning extant in U.S. English. But to most Americans la mode means a dessert, typically a wedge of pie, topped with ice cream, a meaning that has been current in U.S. English since the early 1890s but not in British English. la mode entered English in the 17th century.
If your server mentions apple-and-caramel pie a la mode, don’t hesitate.
You can find a hotel, convenience store, and pay-per-use showers there; more important, though, you can find blueberry pie a la mode.
noun
something causing superstitious fear; a bogy.
Hobgoblin is a compound of the nouns hob and goblin. Hob (also Hobbe), a pet form or nickname of Robin or Robert, was used as early as the 15th century as a shortened form of Robin Goodfellow, a.k.a. Puck (as in Shakespeares A Midsummer Night’s Dream) and a.k.a. Hobgoblin (i.e., the common noun used as a personal name). Goblin comes from Middle English gobelin goblin, gobolin a devil, incubus, fairy, from Middle French gobellin. Further etymology is uncertain and speculative: The French forms may come from Medieval Latin 眶棗莉梗梭蘋紳喝莽, from an unrecorded Late Latin gobalus, cabalus domestic sprite, from Greek 域籀莉硃梭棗莽 malicious knave, mischievous genie. The Latin suffix –蘋紳喝莽 and French suffix –in complete the word. Hobgoblin entered English in the first half of the 16th century.
A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines.
The enemy was very real, literally an existential foe … not just the hobgoblin of alleged McCarthyite paranoia.