noun
a word or phrase that appears only once in a manuscript, document, or particular area of literature.
The phrase hapax legomenon, “a word or phrase appearing only once in literature,” comes from Greek á貹 legomenon, composed of the adverb á貹 “once, one time” and the neuter singular present passive participle óԴDz “(being) said,” from the verb é “to say.” (Hapax is also used by itself in English as a noun; the plural of hapax legomenon is hapax legomena.) One famous hapax—as far as these things go—is the adjective 辱úDz in the phrase áٴDz… 辱úDz in the clause “(Give us this day our) daily bread,” in the Lord’s Prayer in the gospels of St. Matthew and St. Luke. The Greek noun áٴDz means “wheat bread, bread (in general)” and presents no problem. 辱úDz may mean “(enough) for today, today’s, next day’s, necessary, sufficient.” 辱úDz is variously translated in Latin: one of them, ܴdzī徱Գܳ “daily,” is an inadequate, even wrong translation of 辱úDz, but it was used in Tyndale’s translation of the Bible (1534) and the King James Bible (1611), and it is used today in most modern English translations. Hapax legomenon entered English in the late 17th century.
I have no such grand designs in this essay, nor could I possibly discuss all of the hapax legomena in just The Lord of the Rings, not even in the most cursory fashion because there are more than five thousand of them.
The adjective φολκός is an absolute hapax legomenon in the Greek language: it occurs only here and in some ancient scholia, lexica, and commentaries on this very passage.
noun
a very challenging and innovative project or undertaking.
Moonshot, “a launching of a spacecraft to the moon,” a transparent compound of moon and shot, entered English in 1949, near the beginning of large-scale rocket development in the U.S. Moonshot in its extended sense “a challenging and innovative project” first appears in 1967.
Jennifer Granholm, the energy secretary, called the U.S. plan to tackle climate change “our generation’s moonshot.”
Moonshots don’t begin with brainstorming clever answers. They start with the hard work of finding the right questions.
verb (used without object)
to vibrate violently.
Judder as a verb means “to vibrate or shake violently,” and as a noun, “violent shaking.” It is first recorded in 1926 and refers to the shaking of automobiles (or their parts); it was later applied to aircraft. Judder has no precise etymology: it may be a combination of jolt or jerk and shudder, or it may be a variant pronunciation of shudder.
Huw stalks through both sets of automatic doors, which judder and groan.
Other times, the vehicle’s robotic brain appeared confused, lingering at an all-way stop and juddering when a group of pedestrians crossed in front.