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Chew Chewing Ruminate Verb Cud Stomach Ruminating Derives

Ruminate means to contemplate or meditate deeply, or literally to chew cud. The word comes from the Latin for chewing over, applying to both thought and digestion.

Ruminate is a verb that means to contemplate or meditate, or to chew cud again. It originates from the Latin word for chewing food over, applicable both literally and figuratively to thinking.

Word ruminate
Date December 23, 2016
Type verb
Syllables ROO-muh-nayt
Etymology When you ruminate, you chew something over, either literally or figuratively. Literal rumination may seem a little gross to humans, but to cows, chewing your cud (that's partially digested food brought up from the stomach for another chew) is just a natural part of life. Figurative ruminating is much more palatable to humans; that kind of deep, meditative thought is often deemed quite a worthy activity. The verb ruminate has described metaphorical chewing over since the early 1500s and actual chewing since later that same century. Our English word derives from and shares the meanings of the Latin ruminari, which in turn derives from rumen, the Latin name for the first stomach compartment of ruminant animals (that is, creatures like cows that chew their cud).
Examples For her final column of the year, Francine ruminated on the subject of new beginnings.

"The presence of large forage particles or undigested grains may indicate that cows are not ruminating properly or that rumen passage rate is accelerated." — Paul Kononoff, Dairy Herd Management, 6 Apr. 2016
Definition 1 : to engage in contemplation : meditate
2 : to chew again what has been chewed slightly and swallowed : chew the cud

Tags: wordoftheday::verb

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