Same here. I am not a native speaker, but it seems like a relatively uncommon word. Maybe that's why we both read something else
jfengel•3h ago
It's technical jargon. Scientists used speak a mishmash of Greek and Latin, since those were common among educated people. That hung on for longer than was realistic, but it became a kind of slang for group recognition.
This department was named in the 1880s. They probably would just call it the Apple Department today, though I admit I still like the tone that sort-of-Greek-or-Latin rings.
jszymborski•2d ago
Would make for an interesting new placeholder image generator a la placecats.com
zephyrfalcon•2d ago
imranq•2d ago
throwaway2506i7•2d ago
jfengel•3h ago
This department was named in the 1880s. They probably would just call it the Apple Department today, though I admit I still like the tone that sort-of-Greek-or-Latin rings.