New Meanings Exercise

Brainstorm a link between two English words. From this, write a topic sentence. Then create a unified, coherent paragraph describing first the unique meanings of each word, then the new meaning that is created by their linkage.

Examples

"My word is halfish, pronounced HAFF-ish. Half means one divided by two: "He ate half an apple." Fish is a kind of aquatic chordate with scales and gills: "The fish swims in the sea." When put together they make a halfish -- a sort of banana split for sushi lovers—only a sliced-in-half, raw fish instead of a banana."
- Abe

"A window is a see-through shape used to look in or out of something, normally a house or other dwelling. And an orb is a sphere of some sort. So a windoworb is an orb that you use to see through something, namingly an eye, since you can use it to see out of your head, and it's a sphere."
- Rachael

"Spirit means your essence, your soul, or your life eneergy.  To flow means to be in motion, to circulate, to be active, or ever-moving.  When you like the two meanings together, you get...flowing life-force, ever-active, soul-circulating essence. This new word could mean your blood because your blood is your ever-flowing life energy."
- Brett