What are some dark Latin words?
Stygian,’ ‘Umbra,’ and Other Words for Darkness
Stygian. Definition: extremely dark, gloomy, or forbidding. Umbra. The Latin word for shade or shadow is umbra, a word that has spread its shadow over a wide range of words in English. Crepuscule. Tenebrous. Gloaming. Somber. Caliginous. Photophobic.
What is the Roman word for dark?
ater, atra, atrum: black (dark) (atrabilious) fuscus, -a, -um: dark (obfuscate) ravus, -a, -um: gray. canus, -a, -um: gray or white (hair)
What is the Latin root for dark?
The Latin root word, tenebrosus, simply means “darkness.” Definitions of tenebrous. adjective. dark and gloomy. “a tenebrous cave”
Does NOX mean night?
-nox- comes from Latin, where it has the meaning “night. ” This meaning is found in such words as: equinox, noctambulism, nocturnal, nocturne.
Does Stygian mean black?
Something that’s Stygian is dark, murky, and probably a little melancholy.
What are some evil words?
OTHER WORDS FOR evil
1 sinful, iniquitous, depraved, vicious, corrupt, base, vile, nefarious.6 wickedness, depravity, iniquity, unrighteousness, corruption, baseness.9 disaster, calamity, woe, misery, suffering, sorrow.
What is Caliginosity?
Noun. caliginosity (countable and uncountable, plural caliginosities) darkness; obscurity.
What are some edgy words?
edgy
excited.restless.skittish.tense.uneasy.uptight.anxious.critical.
Is Nox Latin?
the Latin for “night,” and the name of the “goddess of night.” See Nyx.
What is chaos in Latin?
Chao. More Latin words for chaos. chaos noun. shapeless mass, infinite empty space, lower world, nether world. chaus noun.
What is Greek word for darkness?
σκοτάδι {n} darkness (also: dark, gloom)
What is a ordure?
Definition of ordure
1 : excrement. 2 : something that is morally degrading.
What does Nyctophile mean?
n. a strong preference for darkness or night.
What does Lux mean in Latin?
Latin, light — more at light.
What is the meaning of Nex?
murder, slaughter, killing.
Who said Carpe Noctem?
The aphorism is taken from one of the Roman poet Horace’s Odes, written around 23 BCE, a beautiful ballad about the poetic fleetingness of life. Carpe diem’s sibling, carpe noctem and meaning “seize the night,” is an, er, darker take.