ōtium
ō-十-औं
Time Free
1 From Middle English celer, seler, from Anglo-Norman celer, Old French celier (modern cellier), from Late Latin cellārium, from Latin cella, the part of a temple where the image of a god stood; altar, sanctuary, shrine, pantry. Doublet of cellarium.
° 倫敦: Lúndūn, Loudoun (Scottish Gaelic: Lughdan, Lugudunon, which roughly translates as The Fortress of Lugh, skilled with a spear and an able ruler) located in the northern part of the Commonwealth of Virginia in the United States. The county is named for John Campbell, Fourth Earl of Loudoun―a parish in East Ayrshire, Scotland that lies between five and ten miles east of Kilmarnock―and governor-general of Virginia from 1756 to 1759.
* From the Médoc dialect of southwestern France; possibly Late Latin caput nigrum, in this sense "black vine."
² The word "Sauvignon" is believed to be derived from the French sauvage meaning "wild" and to refer to the grape being a wild Vitis vinifera vine native to France.
3 Lightness (lack of mass), levity
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