EXAMPLES No matter how much we try to analyze it, the
question of which came first, the chicken or the egg, will be a matter of sempiternaldebate.
"But by Page 10, I knew I'd never read 'Moby-Dick.' The novel— if you can call such an idiosyncratic book by any generic name—hit me like a storm out of nowhere. It contained a wild deluge of thoughts and ideas and sempiternal images." — Amy Wilentz,Los Angeles Times, May 1, 2011
"But by Page 10, I knew I'd never read 'Moby-Dick.' The novel— if you can call such an idiosyncratic book by any generic name—hit me like a storm out of nowhere. It contained a wild deluge of thoughts and ideas and sempiternal images." — Amy Wilentz,Los Angeles Times, May 1, 2011
DID YOU KNOW? Despite their similarities, sempiternal and eternal come
from different roots. Sempiternal is derived from the Late
Latinsempiternalis and ultimately from semper, Latin
for "always." (You may recognize semper as a key
element in the motto of the U.S. Marine Corps: semper fidelis,
meaning "always faithful.")Eternal, on the other hand, is
derived by way of Middle French and Middle English from the Late Latin aeternalis and
ultimately from aevum, Latin for "age" or
"eternity." Sempiternal is much less common
than eternal, but some writers have found it useful. Ralph Waldo
Emerson, for example, wrote, "The one thing which we seek with insatiable
desire is to forget ourselves, … to lose our sempiternal memory, and to do
something without knowing how or why…."

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