Yare is an uncommon adjective meaning ready, prepared. As is usual for short words, Middle English shows more than two dozen spellings; Old English is more restrained, gearu and gearo being the most common (before the inflections are added). The Old English forms derive from the verb gearwian to prepare, equip. Gearwian is the Old English development of the Germanic verb garwian to prepare, equip, make. The noun garwi– equipment, adornment, a derivative of garwian, is the source for the Old Norse noun gervi, 眶繪娶措勳 apparel, equipment, source of English gear. The English noun garb comes via Middle French garbe grace, graceful figure, elegance, from Italian garbo form, grace, elegance (of dress), a derivative of the verb garbare to be pleasant, from Old High German garawi“dress, equipment, ultimately from Germanic garwian.
dismount thy tuck, be yare in thy preparation; for thy assailant is quick, skilfull, and deadly.
Bear up, gentle laddie, for we must be yare, Or of Bruin the bear else we may be ware.
noun
nourishment; nutrition.
Alimentation, nourishment, food, comes via Medieval Latin 硃梭勳鳥梗紳喧櫻喧勳 (inflectional stem 硃梭勳鳥梗紳喧櫻喧勳n-), ultimately a derivative of the Latin verb alere to nourish. The many English derivatives from alere include alumnus and alumna nursling, foster son, foster daughter, aliment (from alimentum food, nourishment, provisions), alimentary (from 硃梭勳鳥梗紳喧櫻娶勳喝莽 pertaining to nutrition; the alimentary canal runs from the mouth to the anus), alimony (from 硃梭勳鳥紳勳硃 food, support, nourishment), and alma 鳥櫻喧梗娶, literally nourishing mother (from the adjective almus nourishing). Latin alere comes from the Proto-Indo-European root al– to grow, make grow, nourish, source of Old Irish alim I nourish, Welsh al litter (of animals), Gothic alan to grow up, Old Norse ala to nourish, raise. Finally, the suffixed Proto-Indo-European form alto– grown, grown up becomes ald– in Germanic, the source of English old; the Germanic compound noun wer-ald, literally man age, life on earth, becomes weorold in Old English, world in English. Alimentation entered English in the late 16th century.
In mid-March, in the tense week before the British government announced its belated coronavirus-induced lockdown, certain everyday products became extraordinarily hard to find. Panicked buyers swept up fundamentals of alimentation and elimination: yeast, flour, bathroom tissue.
The effect and value of alimentation was a question for the philosopher as well as for the physiologist, and the gourmand gave utterance to a truism when he said that the destiny of nations depended upon the manner in which they were fed.
noun
integrity and uprightness; honesty.
Probity, integrity and uprightness, honesty, comes via Old French 梯娶棗莉勳喧矇 from Latin 梯娶棗莉勳喧櫻莽 (inflectional stem 梯娶棗莉勳喧櫻喧-) moral integrity, uprightness, honesty; sexual purity, a derivative of the adjective probus. Probus is composed of pro– forward and –bhwo– growing, the entire word meaning going forward, growing well. The element –bhwo– comes from the very complicated Proto-Indo-European root 莉堯梗喝-, bheu-, bhou-, bhwo-, 莉堯贖– (with still more variants) to be, exist, become, grow. The root appears in Latin fuisse to have been, 款喝喧贖娶喝莽 what is going to be, future, and 款蘋梗娶蘋 to become, English be and been, Lithuanian 莉贖喧勳 to be, Greek 梯堯羸梗莽喧堯硃勳 to grow, arise, become, and its derivatives 梯堯羸莽勳莽 nature and 梯堯聆莽勳域籀莽 pertaining to nature, natural. Probity entered English in the first half of the 15th century.
For an instant he had been tempted to accept the carriage as a gift, but probity never deserted him for very long, not to mention an unrelenting awareness of the importance of the appearance of things.
Coolidge ended up serving twice as long as Harding in the White House, sanitizing the place with his dignified, even endearing probity.