
SIMOON
[noun]
1. dry hot dusty wind of deserts.
2. a strong suffocating
sand-laden wind of the deserts of Arabia and North Africa Also called samiel.Etymology:
from Arabic samūm, “poisonous”, from sam, “poison”, from Aramaic sammā, “poison”.

SIMOON
[noun]
1. dry hot dusty wind of deserts.
2. a strong suffocating
sand-laden wind of the deserts of Arabia and North Africa Also called samiel.Etymology:
from Arabic samūm, “poisonous”, from sam, “poison”, from Aramaic sammā, “poison”.

NEMESTRINUS
[noun]
1. Roman mythology: God of the forests and woods.
[adjective]
2. inhabiting forests or groves.
Etymology: Latin.

CIRCUMFORANEOUS
[adjective]
wandering, especially from street to street; vagrant.
Etymology: from Latin circumforaneus, from circum-, “round” + -foraneus, from forum, “market place”.

LISSOME [aka LISSOM]
[adjective]
1. lithesome or lithe, especially of body; supple; flexible.
2. agile, nimble, or active; moving with ease; limber.
3. elegant and thin.
Etymology: variant of lithesome, Middle English lith(e), Old English līthe; cognate with Old Saxon līthi, German lind, “mild", from Latin lentus, “slow”.

NEMORICOLINE
[adjective]
living in a forest or grove.
Etymology: ultimately from Latin nemori-, (stem of nemus), “grove” + colere, “to inhabit”.
We all carry our own scars.
It’s your choice if you hide them in darkness and shame or weave flowers and kisses around them.
Everything passes. Everything fades. The good, the bad, sun and moon and stars and old love, rusted pain and dark secrets. But nothing passes without digging into your soul and leaving you breathless, changed, different.
Nothing leaves you behind as the human you were before.