redolent
51fragrance — fragrance, perfume, incense, redolence, bouquet are comparable when denoting a sweet or pleasant odor. Fragrance usually suggests the odor diffused by flowers or other growing things, though it is applicable to odors that merely suggest the… …
52ἀνθοσμίαι — ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc nom/voc pl ἀνθοσμίᾱͅ , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc dat sg (attic doric aeolic) …
53ἀνθοσμίαν — ἀνθοσμίᾱν , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc acc sg (attic epic doric aeolic) ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc acc sg …
54ἀνθοσμίας — ἀνθοσμίᾱς , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc acc pl ἀνθοσμίᾱς , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc nom sg (attic epic doric aeolic) …
55ἀνθοσμίου — ἀνθόσμιος redolent of flowers masc/fem/neut gen sg ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc gen sg …
56ἀνθοσμίᾳ — ἀνθοσμίαι , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc nom/voc pl ἀνθοσμίᾱͅ , ἀνθοσμίας redolent of flowers masc dat sg (attic doric aeolic) …
57ἁλίπνοον — ἁλίπνοος redolent of sea masc/fem acc sg ἁλίπνοος redolent of sea neut nom/voc/acc sg …
58altar — [OE] The etymological notion underlying the word altar is that of sacrificial burning. Latin altar, which was borrowed directly into Old English, was a derivative of the plural noun altāria, ‘burnt offerings’, which probably came from the verb… …
59odour — [13] The Latin noun for ‘smell’ was odor. It was descended from the Indo European base *od , source also of the Greek verb ózein ‘smell’ (from which English gets ozone [19]), the Latin verb olēre ‘smell’ (ancestor of English redolent), and the… …
60olfactory — [17] Olfactory means etymologically ‘making smell’. It was borrowed from Latin *olfactōrius, a derivative of the verb olfacere ‘smell’. This in turn was a blend of olēre ‘smell’ (source of English redolent and related to odour) and facere ‘make’… …