a non-linear, unsteady aerodynamic effect occurring when aerofoils rapidly change angle or, in simpler terms, how the bumblebee is able to fly
In: Knowledge
16 Jun 2006Back in the day there was some video game I played in which these things called revenants would come and zap my ass. They were freaking impossible to kill. I had always thought the word made-up by the creative folks at the video game company. Now I know, its a REAL word! Holy cow!
revenant • \REV-uh-nahng (the final “ng” is not pronounced, but the vowel is nasalized)\
• noun
: one that returns after death or a long absence
Example sentence:
The play is about a family of revenants who come back to their ancestral home after years of political exile.
Did you know?
Frightening or friendly, the classic revenant was a ghost—a specter returned from the dead. Even in figurative uses, death played its hand. When Sir Walter Scott, in his 1828 novel The Fair Maid of Perth, used “revenant” in one of the earliest uses of the word in English, he was referring to a criminal who had survived the gallows, who “was cut down and given to his friends before life was extinct, and . . . recovered.” Eventually, though, we appended a more earthly meaning: a revenant can be a flesh-and-blood returnee when we use it simply to mean a person who shows up after a long absence. We borrowed “revenant” from the French, who created it from their verb “revenir,” which means simply “to return,” as does its Latin ancestor, “revenire.”
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