adjective
spiritual or supernatural.
The Latin source for numinous is the noun numen (inflectional stem 苍奴尘颈苍-), derived from the verb –nuere 鈥渢o nod the head as a signal of assent or command.鈥 The verb –nuere occurs only in compounds such as adnuere (annuere) 鈥渢o beckon, nod, assent to,鈥 formed from the preverb ad-, an-, meaning 鈥渢o,鈥 plus –nuere. The phrase annuit coeptis, 鈥淗e (God) has favored our undertakings,鈥 is the motto on the reverse of the Great Seal of the U.S. and is also printed on the reverse of a one-dollar bill. Annuit coeptis is an adaptation of a line from from Vergil’s Aeneid. The Latin neuter noun suffix -men forms concrete nouns from verbs. The meanings of numen range from 鈥渁 nod of the head, inclination, bias,鈥 to 鈥渄ivine or supernatural power (which also possesses poets and prophets, and offers protection),” to “the expressed will of a god, divinity.鈥 Numinous entered English in the mid-17th century.
This confrontation becomes more dramatic if the numinous power takes a personified form鈥攐f a spirit, ghost, devil, revenant, nightmare, witch or some other human or non-human entity.
The Periodic Table, by contrast, was a Jacob鈥檚 ladder, a numinous spiral, going up to, coming down from a Pythagorean heaven.
noun
a sudden, alarming amazement or dread that results in utter confusion; dismay.
Consternation comes from the Latin noun 肠艒苍蝉迟别谤苍腻迟颈艒 (inflectional stem 肠艒苍蝉迟别谤苍腻迟颈艒n-) 鈥渦nsettlement, confusion, disturbance, disorder,鈥 a derivation of the verb 肠艒苍蝉迟别谤苍腻谤别 鈥渢o throw into confusion, drive frantic, shock.鈥 颁艒苍蝉迟别谤苍腻谤别 most likely derives from the verb 肠艒苍蝉迟别谤苍别谤别 鈥渢o strew over, cover, calm (the sea), bring down, fell,鈥 a compound of the intensive prefix con– (a variant of com-) and the simple verb sternere 鈥渢o lay out on the ground, spread out,鈥 from the Proto-Indo-European root ster-, 蝉迟别谤蓹-, 蝉迟谤脓-, steru-, streu– 鈥渢o spread out, stretch out.鈥 The root is the source of Sanskrit 蝉迟峁涐箛腻虂迟颈 鈥渉e throws down, strews,鈥 Greek 蝉迟辞谤苍媒苍补颈 and 蝉迟谤艒苍苍媒苍补颈 鈥渢o stretch out, make level, make one鈥檚 bed,鈥 Old Irish sernim 鈥淚 spread out,鈥 Albanian shtrin 鈥淚 spread out.鈥 The variant streu– lies behind Gothic straujan 鈥渟trew,鈥 Old English 蝉迟谤脓owian 鈥渢o scatter鈥 (English strew), and 蝉迟谤脓aw 鈥渉ay, straw鈥 (English straw). Consternation entered English in the early 17th century.
Deepfakes have inspired much consternation over their potential to destabilize public discourse.
I was standing shaving at my glass, when I suddenly discovered, to my consternation and amazement, that I was shaving鈥攏ot myself鈥擨 am fifty鈥攂ut a boy.
noun
extreme preoccupation with and indulgence of one's feelings, desires, etc.; egoistic self-absorption.
The usual sense of solipsism is 鈥渆xtreme preoccupation with and indulgence of one’s feelings or desires; egoistic self-absorption,鈥 and not the philosophical sense 鈥渢he theory that only the self exists or can be proved to exist.鈥 Solipsism comes from New Latin 蝉艒濒颈辫蝉颈蝉尘耻蝉 鈥渆xtreme self-centeredness,鈥 formed from the Latin adjective 蝉艒濒(耻蝉) 鈥渓one, alone,鈥 the pronoun and adjective ips(e) 鈥渉imself, herself,鈥 and –ismus, a noun suffix borrowed from Greek –颈蝉尘贸蝉, forming action nouns from verbs ending in –铆锄别颈苍 (-颈锄腻谤别 in Latin), as bapt颈蝉尘贸蝉 鈥渄ipping, baptism鈥 (baptismus in Latin), from bapt铆锄别颈苍 (bapt颈锄腻谤别 in Latin). A literal translation of 蝉艒濒颈辫蝉颈尘耻蝉 would be the ungainly 鈥渕yselfaloneism.鈥 Solipsism entered English in the first half of the 19th century.
Murdoch’s fiction frequently offers work as the way out of the self-serving fantasies of solipsism, even simple labor proving therapeutic.
鈥淟ady Bird鈥 takes its protagonist through adolescent solipsism to recognition and gratitude ….