Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weather. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2022

Fulgent / Refulgence – Wordplay Wednesday™ 05/04/2022

Bursting through the Clouds in a Force of Nature!  

Better late than never, ya know, and we think your wait is worth it. ‘Cause we’re doubling down on this month’s Wordplay Wednesday! Two-for-one special in a spectacular show of light  ...

1) FULGENT (ʹfùl-jɘnt; 15c) adj. – 2) REFULGENCE (ri-ʹfùl-jɘns; 1634) n. – 1) dazzlingly bright : radiant; 2) a radiant or resplendent quality or state : brilliance. [WW-M #317]

It’s probable, those who follow the weather in-depth, and meteorologists who study and report its effects, will know this one well. Frequently assigned to electrical storms, lightning is often stunning in its refulgence.

The fulgent/refulgence duo work well in either fiction or nonfiction. In fact, anywhere you want to demonstrate brightly lit natural or artificial light, or want to describe a radiant persona.  

May's Monthly Song of Note ¯:
When I see the summer sun's brilliant rays bathing a dazzling dawn, Cat Stevens'
Morning Has Broken” is the perfect accompaniment. If only I could sing. It’s the feeling that counts though—the peace and appreciation of a spectacular breaking dawn and a meaningful song. Stevens’ fulgent tune hit #8 on WFIL/Philly’s May 15, 1972, music chart. It slipped from #6 the week before, beginning a slow slide back down the ranks.
     
Is Wordplay Wednesday/Penchant for Penning’s Song of Note
¯ for May the same as our Blast from Your Past’s, or its sibling site’s 39 and Holding Club? Of course not! We like to keep you entertained. And where can you see the whole music survey it’s culled from? Right here. Check ‘em out! You might find something you like ... 50 Years Ago this Month!
Mine is the sunlight | mine is the morning ...  

Word Challenge: FULGENT / REFULGENCE. Whichever context you need, color it bright, as you fit fulgent or refulgence into a dazzling month of inspired writings and casual conversations.

Write first for yourself … only then can you write for others. (L.Rochelle) 

Cheers to learning a new word today!

@PenchantForPen
@Irishwriter

Wordplay Wednesday is currently created for your literary pleasure every first Wednesday of each month. Thank you for stopping by! Learning knows no prejudices or boundaries, and it isn’t harmful to your health! Expanding your mind is a no-cost, simple joy. Do you feel that way too? What’s your inspiration? Share your creative genius and Wordplay Wednesday comments.

[LinDee Rochelle is a writer and editor by trade, and an author by way of Rock & Roll. She has published two books in her Blast from Your Past series (of three) about pioneering R&R Radio DJs. True behind-the-mic tales make GREAT Holiday and anytime Gifts available on Amazon (eBook and print): Book 1Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The First Five Years 1954-1959; and Book 2Rock & Roll Radio DJs: The Swinging Sixties. Coming soon … The Psychedelic Seventies!]

LR Notes: 1) Dictionary definitions are quoted from Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary – Eleventh Edition, unless otherwise noted. Yes, we sometimes present them out of “official” context—but that’s half the fun! Think of it as “creative context.” 2) a] Recent dictionary additions to definitions include a date of first use, if known; b] words in small caps indicate “see also.” 3) Neither I (LinDee Rochelle) nor Penchant for Penning are responsible for how you use information found here, that may result in legal action.
              
And please note, I do not receive compensation from any company or person for commercial or commodity links I may include in my posts.

E-N-Dzzzzzzzz  

 

 

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Wordplay Wednesday™ October 19, 2016 – Tyro



Forecast: High Pressure System with Chance of Clouds!  

By the end of October we begin to move from the unpredictable weather of fall into the even more erratic meteorological elements that dog us through winter.
 
Are you a novice meteorologist, or like most of us, don’t know (or often care) about the difference between cumulus and nimbostratus clouds? (Although the latter sounds kinda kinky.)
 
In view of the extreme weather conditions that may or may not be attributed to climate change or climate control—take your extreme choice—it’s good to know how and when your cumulus clouds could turn into a mind-twisting tornado. To begin …

TYRO (tīʹrō) n. – a beginner in learning something; novice; syn., amateur. [WW #82]

Put on your tyro hat—no, not the pointy one—and explore the world of clouds at Encyclopædia Britannica. Besides peaceful to observe, and great for spotting divine, heavenly animals, cumulus clouds can turn wicked in the right (or way wrong) conditions.
 
And before you say the pretty, puffy cumulus clouds couldn’t possibly be evil, read on dear tyro. According to Wiki: “A tornado is a violently rotating column of air that revolves while in contact with both the surface of the Earth and a cumulonimbus cloud or, in rare cases, the base of a cumulus cloud.”

Short-and-sweet is my mantra today (or rather tonight, by the time this is posted!) … so that’s our weatherized version of Wordplay Wednesday for this week! After another week or so of “Indian Summer,” we tyros will have an intelligent comment to make in casual conversation!  (Please, no racial complaints—it’s just a term that has been in use for more than two hundred years.)

Word Challenge: TYRO. Remember, there is a difference between stupid and ignorant. The latter means you’re simply uninformed—don’t be the former—learn something new every day! Can you fit tyro into your week of cloudy writings?



                       


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