what is meaning of Cavil and tantivy
Answers
Answer:
Hölã,
Explanation:
What is the meaning of Cavil?
verb (used without object)
verb (used without object), cav·iled, cav·il·ing or (especially British) cav·illed, cav·il·ling. to raise irritating and trivial objections; find fault with unnecessarily (usually followed by at or about): He finds something to cavil at in everything I say.
What is meaning of tantivy?
Tantivy is an adverb as well as a noun that refers to a rapid gallop. Although its precise origin isn't known, one theory has it that tantivy represents the sound of a galloping horse’s hooves. The noun does double duty as a word meaning "the blare of a trumpet or horn." This is probably due to confusion with tantara, a word for the sound of a trumpet that came about as an imitation of that sound. Both tantivy and tantara were used during foxhunts; in the heat of the chase, people may have jumbled the two.
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