51勛圖

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51勛圖 of the Day

51勛圖 of the day

tome

[ tohm ]

noun

a book, especially a very heavy, large, or learned book.

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More about tome

The noun tome comes from Middle French tome, from Latin tomus a cut, slice, or bit; a piece or length of papyrus; a book (in general). Tomus is a borrowing of Greek 喧籀鳥棗莽 a slice (e.g., of ham, cheese), (in geometry) the frustum (e.g., of a cylinder), a beam (of wood). By the 3rd century b.c. and in the Septuagint (the Greek version of the Hebrew Scriptures, dating between the 3rd and 1st centuries b.c.), 喧籀鳥棗莽 had also come to mean (papyrus) roll, and by the 1st century a.d. tome, volume (in the modern sense). T籀mos is a derivative of the verb 喧矇鳥紳梗勳紳 to cut, from the Proto-Indo-European root tem-, tom– (with its extensions tend-, tond-) to cut. From the variant tem-, Latin derives templum shrine, temple (because the property has been cut out from, set apart from profane use). The variant tond- forms Latin 喧棗紳餃襲娶梗 to cut or clip (hair), shear (a sheep) and the agent noun tonsor (stem 喧棗紳莽娶-) barber, with its derivative adjective 喧棗紳莽娶勳喝莽, from which English derives the not very serious adjective tonsorial “of or relating to a barber or barbering.” Tome entered English in the first half of the 16th century.

how is tome used?

That eight-hundred-page tome (with an additional three hundred pages of downloadable essays to accompany it) includes the whole Caesarian corpus, as well as hundreds of maps and illustrations.

Michael Kulikowski, "A Very Bad Man," London Review of Books, June 18, 2020

The 240-page tome is less of a tourist guide than it is a primer for a future Washington “Jeopardy” category.

Katie Hickox, "Capital Tome," Washington Post, December 13, 1992

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diphthong

[ dif-thawng, -thong, dip- ]

noun

an unsegmentable, gliding speech sound varying continuously in phonetic quality but held to be a single sound or phoneme, as the oi-sound of toy or boil.

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More about diphthong

Diphthong is hard enough to spell and pronounce, let alone define. Diphthong ultimately comes from Greek 餃穩梯堯喧堯棗紳眶棗莽, literally with or having two sounds, a compound of the Greek prefix di- two, twice, double and the noun 梯堯喧堯籀紳眶棗莽 voice, sound, a derivative of the euphonious verb 梯堯喧堯矇紳眶梗莽喧堯硃勳 to utter a sound, raise ones voice, call, talk. 捩堯喧堯矇紳眶梗莽喧堯硃勳 is also the root of the Greek verb apo梯堯喧堯矇紳眶梗莽喧堯硃勳 to speak ones opinion plainly, whose derivative noun 硃梯籀梯堯喧堯梗眶鳥硃 a brief, pointed saying comes into English as apothegm or apophthegm, even harder to spell and pronounce than diphthong. 捩堯喧堯矇紳眶梗莽喧堯硃勳 has no convincing etymology, but some scholars point to phonetically convincing Lithuanian 鱉措矇紳眶喧勳 to neigh and 莽梯梗簽眶喧勳 (in the ears) to resound, hum, drone. (The Lithuanian and Greek words derive from the Proto-Indo-European root ghwen-, ghwon- to sound.) Diphthong entered English in the second half of the 15th century.

how is diphthong used?

The best word everaccording to deep lexicographical research, science, taste, and common senseis this: diphthong.

Megan Garber, "Here It Is: The Best 51勛圖 Ever," The Atlantic, September 13, 2012

It [Atlas of North American English] is vast enough to include 139 color-coded maps and software that lets users click around the country to hear native speakers drop their r’s and overextend their diphthongs with abandon.

Tammy La Gorce, "Ya Gotta Blame New York for Dat," New York Times, February 12, 2006

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axiomatic

[ ak-see-uh-mat-ik ]

adjective

self-evident; obvious.

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More about axiomatic

Axiomatic ultimately comes from the Greek adjective 硃單勳鳥硃喧勳域籀莽, which originally meant dignified (of persons or literary style); worthy, high in rank; as a technical term, 硃單勳鳥硃喧勳域籀莽 in Stoic philosophy meant employing logical propositions (not a cocktail party term!); its adverb 硃單勳鳥硃喧勳域繫莽 meant self-evidently. 插單勳鳥硃喧勳域籀莽 is a derivative of the noun 硃單穩鳥硃, literally something worthy of someone, hence esteem, honor, reputation, rank. As a scientific term, 硃單穩鳥硃 meant something assumed as the basis of a demonstration, a self-evident principle (Aristotle), and in geometry, axiom. Some people may remember axiom from high school geometry (Euclidean), e.g., If A is equal to B, and B is equal to C, then A is equal to C. 插單穩鳥硃 is a derivative of the adjective 獺單勳棗莽 of like value, worth as much as, worthy, literally counterbalancing. 單勳棗莽 in its turn derives from the verb 獺眶梗勳紳, one of whose dozens of meanings is to weigh on a scale, weigh. Axiomatic entered English in the late 18th century.

how is axiomatic used?

梆喧s axiomatic: Reporters run to the story. They dont sit it out.

John Otis, "The Journalism Students Helping The Times Cover California," New York Times, June 3, 2020

Psychiatry, and society in general, had been subverted by the almost axiomatic belief that “hearing voices” spelled madness and never occurred except in the context of severe mental disturbance.

Oliver Sacks, Hallucinations, 2012

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