Pulcrus
Pulcrus is a Latin adjective meaning "clean," "neat," or "well-groomed." The word derives from the Proto-Italic root pulcare, which also gave rise to the Latin verb pulcra, meaning "to clean" or "to polish." In Classical Latin, pulcrus is often used to describe something that is orderly or aesthetically pleasing, whether relating to personal appearance, material objects, or abstract concepts such as ideas or arguments. For example, one might describe a well-arranged symposium as pulcrum, indicating both physical tidiness and moral propriety.
The adjective has a corresponding noun form, pulcrus or pulcret, meaning "purturbation" or "clutter," but this
Although pulcrus is not commonly used in contemporary English, its root has survived in the English word