Peintfeuilles - m (French) painted leaves
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From French peinte "painted" and feuilles "leaves".

seen from Russia
seen from Philippines

seen from Brazil
seen from China

seen from Brazil

seen from Malaysia
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from China

seen from Brazil
seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from France
seen from United States
Peintfeuilles - m (French) painted leaves
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From French peinte "painted" and feuilles "leaves".
Hijekapdyall - m (Albanian) caught in the shadow of the devil
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Elements:
hije (Albanian) meaning "shadow, shade, spook, loom, ghost"
kap (Albanian) meaning "grab, catch, seize, hold, catch up, overcome"
djall, stylized to dyall (Albanian) meaning "devil, imp, demon, Satan"
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The picture is a shot from The Sorrows of Satan (1926), which is used as the cover of Bauhaus's "Bela Lugosi's Dead"
Aweleigen - f (Medieval Welsh) fine gold in the wind
From awel (Welsh) breeze, wind + ei (Medieval Welsh) gold + gen (Medieval Welsh) fair, fine, elegant
Kümüsabdira - m/f (Khakas) box of silver
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From Khakas kümüs "silver" and abdira "box".
More Physiological Conditions with Complex Names
Adhesive Capsulitis (Frozen Shoulder)
As its simple name implies, adhesive capsulitis is like a stiff neck but concentrated on the shoulder. While relatively rare, women between the ages of 40 and 60 are most prone to a frozen shoulder than men of the same age range. Pain in the shoulder is the first sign, which indicates swelling of the shoulder capsule and reduction in the amount of synovial fluid that acts as a lubricant.
Lumbago (Low Back Pain)
Among the most common conditions physiotherapists treat, low back pain is rather unique in terms of signalling pain. Just because your legs refuse to move doesn’t mean the problem is with the legs themselves. The lumbar segment of the spine connects the limbs of the lower extremities, meaning it’s responsible for that sector.
Prolapsus Disci Invertebralis (Slipped Disc)
This Latin term for a “slipped disc” often goes by the middle-ground term “spinal disc herniation.” When one of the 26 discs that make up the spinal column protrudes due to weakness or injury, it triggers pain. This is one of the few physiological conditions that may require surgery if damage is too extensive, but physiotherapists hope to avoid that.