noun
a soft murmur; whisper.
Susurration, a murmur, whisper, ultimately comes from the Latin noun 莽喝莽喝娶娶櫻喧勳 (inflectional stem 莽喝莽喝娶娶櫻喧勳n-), a murmur, whisper, soft rustling, a derivative of 莽喝莽喝娶娶櫻喧(喝莽), the past participle of the verb 莽喝莽喝娶娶櫻娶梗. Unsurprisingly, 莽喝莽喝娶娶櫻娶梗 (and all its derivatives) is onomatopoeic not only in Latin, but also in other Indo-European languages, from the Proto-Indo-European root swer-, swor-, 莽滄廜– to buzz, hum. The same root supplies the name of small animals: for instance, the root variant swor– is the source of Latin 莽娶梗單 (stem 莽娶勳釵-) shrew, shrew mouse, Greek 堯羸娶硃單 (stem 堯羸娶硃域-) shrew, shrew mouse, hyrax and Greek 堯羸娶棗紳 beehive, swarm (of bees). The Germanic form swar– (from swor-) supplies English swirl and swarm, Old Norse svarmr uproar, tumult, and German schwirren to buzz (of an insect), whirr (of an arrow). Susurration entered English in the first half of the 15th century.
It must be the whisper of time as it bends over the horizon, a susurration of mortality none can escape.
Leaving the hotel and taking a stroll, I was reminded that the towns homey otherness is heightened at night. … The susurrations of palms … caress the ear.
noun
Chiefly British.
a vigorous discussion or dispute.
Argy-bargy, a vigorous discussion, dispute, appears in print in 1887, just 15 years after its original, argle-bargle. The argle of argle-bargle is a variant of argue. Yet another variant, argue-bargue, which gives away the entire etymology, appears in 1906. Argle entered English towards the end of the 16th century; its offspring all date from the second half of the 19th century.
There appears to have ensued more than two decades of argy-bargy over where the new hall should be located, during which time the merchants would meet at the Chamber of Commerce premises.
On the international scene, he can only be reassured by the strident argy-bargy between Moscow and Peking, despite some pundits’ predictions that the U.S. stand in Viet Nam could only induce harmony between the two great Communist powers.
verb (used with object)
to declare frankly or openly; own; acknowledge; confess; admit: He avowed himself an opponent of all alliances.
Avow, to declare openly, acknowledge, admit, has always had a formal air, a solemnity about it. It comes from Middle English avouen, advouen, awouen, from Old French avo(u)er, a regular phonetic development of Latin 硃餃措棗釵櫻娶梗 to call upon, summon (assistance), convoke (whose past participle 硃餃措棗釵櫻喧喝莽 is the source of the English verb and noun advocate). 插餃措棗釵櫻娶梗 is composed of the overworked preposition and prefix ad, ad- to, toward and the verb 措棗釵櫻娶梗 to call, a derivative of the noun vox, stem 措釵- voice, human voice. Avow entered English in the 13th century.
Search for the cause, find the impetus that bids you write. Put it to this test: Does it stretch out its roots in the deepest place of your heart? Can you avow that you would die if you were forbidden to write?
Scott achieved fame (and a baronetcy) as a poet, but he did not avow authorship of his novels until relatively late in his career.