She writh`d about, convuls`d with scarlet pain:
A deep volcanian yellow took the place
Of all her milder-mooned body`s grace;
And, as the lava ravishes the mead,
Spoilt all her silver mail, and golden brede;
Made gloom of all her frecklings, streaks and bars,
Eclips`d her crescents, and lick`d up her stars:
--Lamia by John Keat
lavan.
- Molten rock that reaches the earth's surface through a volcano or fissure.
- The rock formed by the cooling and solidifying of molten rock.
[Italian, perhaps from Latin lābēs, fall, from Latin lābī, to fall.]
WORD HISTORY Lava was appropriately named by people living near Mount Vesuvius. The only active volcano on the European mainland, Vesuvius has erupted frequently since Pompeii and Herculaneum were buried by it in A.D. 79. The Neapolitans who lived in the vicinity took the Italian word lava, meaning “a stream caused suddenly by rain,” and applied it to the streams of molten rock coming down the sides of Vesuvius. The term was then taken into Standard Italian, where it came to mean the rock in both its molten and its solidified states. The Italian word in all its senses was borrowed into English around the middle of the 18th century (1750 being the earliest date of record).
mail2 (
māl)
n.
- Flexible armor composed of small overlapping metal rings, loops of chain, or scales.
- The protective covering of certain animals, as the shell of a turtle.
tr.v.,
mailed,
mail·ing,
mails.
To cover or armor with mail.
[Middle English, from Old French maile, from Latin macula, blemish, mesh.]
brede
n. Archaic.
Ornamental embroidery or braiding.
mead2
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