As a verb, wimple can mean to cover or veil something, or to ripple or meander like a stream.
As a verb, wimple can mean to cover or veil something, or to ripple or meander like a stream.
Word | wimple |
---|---|
Date | April 18, 2015 |
Type | verb |
Syllables | WIM-pul |
Etymology | Wimple is the name of the covering worn over the head and around the neck and chin by women in the late medieval period, as well as by some modern nuns. Its name is akin to Old Saxon wimpal and Middle Dutch wimpel, both of which mean "veil" or "banner." Like the word veil, wimple is also used as a verb meaning "cover" and was adopted by literary writers as a substitute for ripple and meander, especially when writing about streams. "Over the little brook which wimpled along below towered an arch," James Russell Lowell once observed. |
Examples | A thick fog wimpled the shoreline so that the only thing that could be seen from the distance was the light winking from the top of the lighthouse. "In retrospect, [The Sound of Music] may have been the first movie to introduce the concept of 'saboteur nun,' and made people think differently about the wimpled sorority." - James Lileks, National Review Online, December 9, 2013 |
Definition | 1 : to cover with or as if with a wimple : veil 2 : to ripple 3 : (chiefly Scottish) to follow a winding course : meander |
Tags: wordoftheday::verb
Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.
Next card: Word rebarbative traces back latin english beard repellent
Previous card: Word ailurophile english cat felines meaning april noun
Up to card list: Word of the Day