noun
the amount by which the contents fall short of filling a container, as a cask or bottle.
If ever there was a Scrabble word, ullage is that word. In Anglo-French the word is spelled ulliage; Old French records many spellings, e.g., ouillage, (h)eullage, 組勳梭梭硃眶梗; Middle English has ulage, oylage. The French noun ultimately comes from ouil eye, also bunghole, from Latin oculus eye. The very common Romance suffix -age, prolific in English, comes from Late Latin -agium, a suffix for forming nouns, a derivation of Latin -櫻喧勳釵喝鳥, the neuter of the adjective suffix -櫻喧勳釵喝莽. The suffix -櫻喧勳釵喝莽 is an extension of -櫻喧喝莽, the past participle ending of first conjugation verbs. Ullage entered English in the 15th century.
“And what about the ullage?” she said. We both looked at her. … “The ullage. The part of the bottle that’s empty, under the cap.”
… inspectors stroll casually from hatch to hatch, measuring ullage (the air space between the top of the oil and the top of the tank) with a long rule.
noun
a display of daring; brilliant performance.
The noun bravura is still unnaturalized in English. The word is obviously Italian, ultimately derived from the adjective bravo, which French borrowed from Italian as brave (English brave comes from French). Further etymology of bravo is unclear: some claim it to be from an assumed Vulgar Latin brabus (Latin barbarus) barbarian (Roman authors remarked on the impetuous bravery of Celtic and Germanic warriors). The Italian suffix -ura (-ure in French) comes from the Latin noun suffix -贖娶硃. Bravura entered English in the 18th century.
“Nothing wins more loyalty for a leader than an air of bravura,” the Duke said. “I, therefore, cultivate an air of bravura.”
The acting, though by no means homogeneous, has its share of bravura.
adjective
walking on the whole sole of the foot, as humans, and bears.
The adjective plantigrade comes from the Latin noun planta sole (of the foot) and the verb 眶娶硃餃蘋 to take steps, step, walk. The Proto-Indo-European root ghredh- to step, stride is not very common, and all current English words are borrowings from Latin, e.g., gradual, grade, and verbs ending in -gress, e.g., ingress, regress, transgress. Planta, however, is another story: it shows the infix n, but its Proto-Indo-European root is the very common plat-, plet-, plot- flat, broad. Plat- is the source of the Lithuanian adjective 梯梭硃喧羅莽 wide, broad, the all but identical Greek adjective 梯梭硃喧羸莽 flat, wide (as in platypus “flatfoot”), the English adjective and noun flat, the noun flet (also flett) dwelling, hall, familiar to readers of Beowulf and J.R.R. Tolkiens Lord of the Rings (probably the same crowd), and flan (the Spanish custard). Plantigrade entered English in the 19th century.
When later the old man slipped back into the night, the bear lifted itself and nosed briefly about its prison and the open gate, then walked out favoring one leg, its plantigrade shuffle derelict and comic in the darkness.
Cats and many other carnivores walk upright on their toes, a stance known as digitigrade, as opposed to the plantigrade stance found in humans and bears.