Thursday, July 30, 2009

Crux

Quest
St.Croix
Veracruz
Psalm 17:1
A Prayer of David.

"Hear the right, O LORD, attend unto my cry, give ear unto my prayer, that goeth not out of feigned lips."
Bodie Methodist Church in Vintage look
Methodist Church, Bodie, CA
Chess: "Crux" "Santa Cruz" "Quest" "St.Croix" "croissant" "crescent" "Veracruz"

Croissant

A rich, crescent-shaped roll of leavened dough or puff pastry.

[French, from Old French creissant, croissant, crescent. See crescent.]

WORD HISTORY The words croissant and crescent illustrate double borrowings, each coming into English from a different form of the same French word. In Latin the word crēscere, “to grow,” when applied to the moon meant “to wax,” as in the phrase lūna crēscēns, “waxing moon.” Old French croissant, the equivalent of Latin crēscēns, came to mean “the time during which the moon waxes,” “the crescent-shaped figure of the moon in its first and last quarters,” and “a crescent-shaped object.” In Middle English, which adopted croissant in its Anglo-Norman form cressaunt, the first instance of our English word, recorded in a document dated 1399–1400, meant “a crescent-shaped ornament.” Crescent, the Modern English descendant of Middle English cressaunt, owes its second c to Latin crēscere. Croissant is not an English development but rather a borrowing of the Modern French descendant of Old French croissant. It is first recorded in English in 1899. French croissant was used to translate German Hörnchen, the name given by the Viennese to this pastry, which was first baked in 1689 to commemorate the raising of the siege of Vienna by the Turks, whose symbol was the crescent.

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