redolent = wohlriechend —— redolent of sth. = nach etw. duften; stark an etw. erinnern
“It is hoped they will recreate scents that mimic the chemical and manufacturing processes REDOLENT of the Industrial Revolution.”
BBC NEWS - University smells project to recreate historic industrial and perfumed aromas
redolent
adjective
- smelling strongly of something or having qualities (especially smells) that make you think of something else
Cambridge Dictionary
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ORIGIN
c. 1400, of flowers, food, etc., “having or diffusing a fresh and sweet scent,” from Old French redolent “emitting an odor” and directly from Latin redolentem “emit a scent, diffuse odor”, from red- + olere “give off a smell”.
The meaning “odorous or smelling” of (or with) something was in use by 1700.
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SMELLING MR JOHNSON
As the great lexicographer Samuel Johnson paused to rest on a London park bench one hot summer’s day, his profuse sweating caused a young woman sitting next to him to exclaim:
“Sir! You smell.”
‘’No, Madam,’’ he replied, ‘’You smell, I stink.’’
Dr. Johnson was taking delight at pointing out the grammatical ambiguity of a verb both transitive and intransitive.
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SYNONYMS (for nice smells)
ambrosian, aromatic, balmy, flowery, fragrant, heady, honeyed, mellow, perfumed, scented, scent-laden, sweetly perfumed, sweet-scented, musky, woodsy
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SMUGGLE OWAD into a conversation today, say something like:
“The air was REDOLENT of cinnamon and apple.”
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THANKS to Florian for suggesting today’s OWAD!
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HERZLICHEN DANK to all readers helping me keep OWAD alive with single or monthly donations at:
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Paul Smith