The English adjective hyetal is very uncommon, used only in meteorology. The Greek noun ό means “rain”; the noun í means “rainy weather”; both nouns derive from the verb ý “to rain.” In English and other languages (German, for example), verbs of weather and natural phenomena are impersonal (e.g., it is raining, es regnet; it is snowing, es schneit). In Greek, however, such verbs are personal, Zeus or another god being understood as the subject if not explicitly named; thus ý means to a Greek not “it is raining,” but “Zeus is raining,” and Աí “Zeus is snowing.” Hyetal entered English in the 19th century.
grand cause has operated to disturb the ordinary rate of hyetal precipitation … is a question to be studied by climatologists.
Hyetal regions, mean annual cloudiness, co-tidal lines, cyclonic rotations, and progressive low pressure systems are not charming in themselves.
plural noun
Sociology. folkways of central importance accepted without question and embodying the fundamental moral views of a group.
The Latin noun ōŧ is the plural of ō “custom, habit, usage, wont.” The Latin noun, whether singular or plural, has a wider range of usage than English mores has. ō may be good, bad, or indifferent: in Cicero’s usage the phrase ō mājōrum “custom of our ancestors” is roughly equivalent to “constitution”; ō sinister means “perverted custom,” literally “left-handed”; and Horace used to walk along the Via Sacra as was his habit (ō). Mores entered English in the late 19th century.
… as Lincoln now feared, with the passing of this noble generation, “if the laws be continually despised and disregarded, if their rights to be secure in their persons and property, are held by no better tenure than the caprice of a mob, the alienation of their affections from the Government is the natural consequence.” To fortify against this, Lincoln essentially proposed that the national mores of America—taught in every classroom, preached in every church, proclaimed in every legislative hall—must revolve around “reverence” to the laws …
… the artist has always considered himself beyond the mores of the community in which he lived.
adjective
Music. all; all the voices or instruments together.
The Italian word tutti means “all,” i.e., all the instruments or voices of an orchestra together. Tutti is the masculine plural of tutto “all,” from Vulgar Latin tottus (unattested), from Latin ōٳܲ. Tutti entered English in the 18th century.
He used to say that music could be either about almost nothing, one tiny strand of sound plucked like a silver hair from the head of the Muse, or about everything there was, all of it, tutti tutti, life, marriage, otherworlds, earthquakes, uncertainties, warnings, rebukes, journeys, dreams, love, the whole ball of wax, the full nine yards, the whole catastrophe.
You will hear the very obvious difference in volume between the tutti notes and the immediately following music, which is still forte but is played by fewer instruments.