adjective
causing or tending to cause happiness.
The adjective felicific 鈥渢ending to cause happiness,鈥 is a term used in ethics, a branch of philosophy. The word is formed from the Latin adjective 蹿脓濒颈虫 (stem 蹿脓濒墨肠颈-) 鈥渉appy, lucky鈥 and the English combining form -fic 鈥渕aking, producing,鈥 from Latin -ficus. Felicific entered English in the 19th century.
Bentham was advancing his felicific calculus (though without much actual mathematics to back it up) as the scientific solution to the problems of morality and legislation.
The problem is that as more humans run their felicific calculations and decide to live in pleasant places, their presence changes the balance.
verb (used with object)
to change (letters, words, etc.) into corresponding characters of another alphabet or language: to transliterate the Greek 围 as ch.
The verb transliterate is formed from the Latin preposition and prefix trans, trans- 鈥渁cross, on the other side of鈥 and the noun 濒墨迟别谤补 (littera) 鈥渓etter.鈥 Transliteration is only changing the letters of one alphabet into those of another, for example, from Greek 未蠈纬渭伪 into Latin dogma. Transliteration does not provide a pronunciation or a translation. Transliterate entered English in the 19th century.
Up on the bridge, Captain Orlova was looking thoughtfully at a dense mass of words and figures on the main display. Floyd had painfully started to transliterate them when she interrupted him.
In many of the early stories Chekhov uses proper names that sound comic, carry comic allusions, or are in other ways meaningful. Simply to transliterate such names fails to convey to the English reader an element that is present in the original and sometimes extremely important.
adjective
extremely angry; furious: He became apoplectic at the mere mention of the subject.
Apoplectic, 鈥渟tricken with apoplexy,鈥 comes from Late Latin 补辫辞辫濒脓肠迟颈肠耻蝉 (also 补辫辞辫濒脓肠迟耻蝉), from Greek 补辫辞辫濒脓办迟颈办贸蝉 鈥減aralyzed鈥 and 补辫贸辫濒脓办迟辞蝉 鈥渄isabled by a stroke.鈥 础辫辞辫濒脓办迟颈办贸蝉 and 补辫贸辫濒脓办迟辞蝉 are derivatives of the verb 补辫辞辫濒脓蝉蝉别颈苍 (also 补辫辞辫濒脓迟迟别颈苍) 鈥渢o cripple by a stroke, disable in body or mind,鈥 a compound of the prefix apo-, here with an intensive force, and the verb 辫濒脓蝉蝉别颈苍, 辫濒脓迟迟别颈苍, 辫濒脓驳苍媒苍补颈 鈥渢o strike, hit, thrust at.鈥 By the 19th century apoplectic developed the sense 鈥渇uriously angry,鈥 as in Jane Austen鈥檚 Mansfield Park (1814), 鈥淎 short-necked apoplectic sort of fellow,鈥 and Charles Dickens鈥 Pickwick Papers (1837), 鈥淎 gentleman with an apoplectic countenance.鈥 Apoplectic entered English in the first half of the 17th century.
At the White House, Washburne was apoplectic. “Of all the times to let him go, this is the worst!” Washburne marched about the room waving his arms ….
Lenders were apoplectic. They warned CFPB officials that such a tight restriction, however well-intentioned, could cut off access to mortgages for many home buyers and damage the housing market further.