erinmckean has adopted the words erinaceous and janky, looked up 0 words, created 130 lists, listed 3887 words, written 896 comments, added 0 tags, and loved 4298 words.

Comments by erinmckean

  • "an abbreviation of do it" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "go away because I'm angry" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "cemented bricks" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "food emojis" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "gas that turns into liquid" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "a biscuit with fruit" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "someone who goes for a walk and strolls and whistles at the same time" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "When the rubbish people recycle plastic and use it for different things" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "confused" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "a large crowd" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "weak muscles" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • a "freaky creature" (from Aspendale Primary School, Melbourne)

    December 9, 2015

  • "I call it a kaleidophone,” he said.“The idea is that it will convert any rhythmical sound, such as music, into pleasing and symmetrical, but always changing, visual patterns." Prelude to Space, by Arthur C. Clarke

    November 22, 2015

  • "Grimdark is a subgenre or a way to describe the tone, style, or setting of speculative fiction (especially fantasy) that is, depending on the definition used, markedly dystopian or amoral, or particularly graphic in its depiction of violence. In most grimdark literature the supernatural is a passive force, controlled by humans—unlike supernatural horror where the preternatural forces are most often an active entity with agency." Is it Grimdark or is it Horror?

    November 5, 2015

  • Hmm. I was just able to add my favorite, Governor Moonbeam

    November 3, 2015

  • "Hey, there's another American on Ring City who's not a spy, a diplomat, or that deadly combination, the spiplomat." from Constellation Games

    October 31, 2015

  • I used to have a poster that read "Be a lert. The world needs more lerts!"

    October 29, 2015

  • that's a great idea, bilby! I'll see what I can do!

    October 27, 2015

  • "In college I took a literature course which examined Marilynne Robinson’s innovative use of spaces–especially the domestic space–in her novel Housekeeping. My teacher also mentioned that the book actually includes a neologism- the word “lucifactions,” used to describe light on water, in the scene where the girls are out on the lake." HTMLGiant

    October 27, 2015

  • It is an alternate spelling of the word wincey which is a kind of cloth. :-)

    October 22, 2015

  • "Sent to large numbers of correspondents using the reply-all button, memails contain no substance. Their sole function is to draw attention to the sender, using the fewest words possible. Recently received examples include "that's just great", "good news", "fantastic", or just plain "yup"." The Guardian

    October 15, 2015

  • Hi Valerie! Information about the Wordnik API is at developer.wordnik.com. Documentation is here: http://developer.wordnik.com/docs.html

    October 9, 2015

  • "Mr. Ascheim defines “becomers” not as a generation but as a life stage — “from your first kiss to your first kid,” or people roughly 14 to 34." NYTimes

    October 9, 2015

  • "Kronos’s promotional videos emphasize the risk of time theft by employees—“In a few minutes late?

    Taking a few extra minutes on a break? It adds up”—and some of the firm’s most invasive systems, which require employees to clock in with a finger scan, are meant to prevent “buddy punching,” when an employee clocks in a co-worker who hasn’t yet arrived." Harper's Magazine

    October 7, 2015

  • brelfie a selfie taken while breastfeeding: "The latest fad clogging up social media, heaping shame on those who dare commit the sin of bottle-feeding, is the brelfie: the tedious habit of posting a breastfeeding selfie, creating yet more #bressure on those who don’t, or can’t." Telegraph

    September 28, 2015

  • The acting in this film is superb and the language is even better. As Rose and Jimmy wander around town making up scenarios, she uses such descriptions as "figures on a nunswept pier," for the people in her line of vision. Wilmington Town Crier

    September 25, 2015

  • "So are you going to write it all down? What'll you call it?"

    "Figures on a Nunswept Pier." The Mirage

    September 25, 2015

  • "doorfoolia is when you start to push open an opaque door at the exact instant someone on the other side of the door pulls the door open so that you stumble forward pushing air." (from Don Moyer of Calamityware)

    September 25, 2015

  • "Jana Dambrogio, the Thomas F. Peterson conservator at M.I.T. Libraries, is analyzing how letter writers have tried through the ages to keep their correspondence sealed and unread until it reached the intended recipients. She has coined the word “letterlocking” to describe methods of folding and gluing pages to deter snooping." A Trove of ‘Letterlocking,’ or Vintage Strategies to Deter Snoops

    September 21, 2015

  • "A typogram is a word that, through the manipulation of the letterform itself, illustrates the meaning of the word." IAMALI Design

    September 20, 2015

  • "Cognitonaut is not something I own. It is something that anyone can be; an explorer of ideas." Bravo Child

    September 19, 2015

  • "His bizarre allegorical stories fashion fantastical yet oddly believable worlds which deftly fuse 'magic' and 'realism' in a way critics have termed: 'stoicheiotical fidelity'." Blacklist Publishing

    September 18, 2015

  • "This summer, a new, trendier one, emerged: NATU, for Netflix, Airbnb, Tesla and Uber." Monday Note

    September 7, 2015

  • "Here in Europe, the enemy is designated by acronyms. A year ago it was GAFA, for Google Amazon, Facebook, Apple." Monday Note

    September 7, 2015

  • "assigned female at birth"

    September 4, 2015

  • "Arguably I would say that your work is a form of hypercartoonism. It’s really sharp the same way hyperrealism is." Lisa Frank on Lisa Frank

    September 2, 2015

  • family + company: "In Issue No12, we take an insider's look at Zendesk’s impressive growth with co-founder Alexander Aghassipour; ustwo co-creator Matt ‘Mills’ Miller shows us how to create a ‘fampany’ of 250 employees while putting fun first; travelling photographer and designer Dan Rubin examines his new career path – powered by Instagram; science geek Ariel Waldman calls on the web community to participate in space exploration; Basecamp co-founder Jason Fried defies the startup hype and makes a case for longevity in business; and the father of web standards, Jeffrey Zeldman, reflects on the web that was and the web that will be."

    September 2, 2015

  • "A recent extension of the concept of genocide associates the prospect of nuclear destruction with the threat of 'omnicide' or 'anthropocide'—the killing of all groups and individuals." The Politics of Gender

    August 31, 2015

  • "And he told me about ngondi, the kinds of weather: mawalala is rain far off in the distance that doesn't ever come." The Poisonwood Bible

    August 28, 2015

  • "Big International NGO"

    August 28, 2015

  • I read "Reasonably well-known in Australia" and thought that it was applying to bilby and not DILLIGAF ...

    August 24, 2015

  • "names for categories of people (race, sexual orientation, nationality, etc.)" American Dialect Society

    August 24, 2015

  • "And spoffle seems a perfectly suitable word for a soft baffle to muffle the pop and spit of aspirations, given its sound and the words it sounds like." Sesquiotica

    August 24, 2015

  • "relaxed but still unsettling tracks from horror (or horror-themed) games." N4G

    August 24, 2015

  • OED has this as "A hurried accumulation of several points."

    August 22, 2015

  • I am learning so much from this list!

    August 21, 2015

  • First, there’s the fetching hybrid (or halforism?) called the gregueria. The gregueria was invented and named by the 20th Century Spanish writer Ramón Gómez de la Serna. He defined it as “humor plus metaphor,” a poetic joke:
    The couple of eggs we’re eating look like identical twins, and they’re not even third cousins.
    —GOMEZ DE LA SERNA
    from Short Flights

    August 19, 2015

  • To go quickly about any thing, to walk along smartly. Supplement to The Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language

    August 19, 2015

  • "I was drenched to the skin when a chap in a slicker Splashed up and he yelled, “It's the Midwinter Jicker! The Midwinter Jicker came early this year And it's not going to be very comfy 'round here."" I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew by Dr. Seuss

    August 19, 2015

  • "All the noises of an apology without the actual remorse" via @LindaHolmes

    August 12, 2015

  • Someone who uses words improperly, or who abuses metaphor.

    August 12, 2015

  • Thanks vendingmachine! Neither an unintelligible nor a dumb suggestion -- it's on the wishlist to improve! I don't have a date yet.

    It's a two-part improvement: one, to make the random words slightly less random in the boring way (to weight them more towards more interesting words) and also to link those "grammatical" definitions to the root form.

    Thank you!

    August 11, 2015

  • To be technical, Sophia is an “echoborg” – a living, breathing person who has temporarily given themselves over to become a robot’s mouthpiece. BBC

    August 5, 2015

  • "While working at Google, I developed pretotyping, a set of techniques, tools and metrics to help determine if a new product is The Right It, and to do so quickly, objectively and reliably." http://www.albertosavoia.com/

    August 5, 2015

  • "Bargemen not in constant employ, who assist occasionally in towing. East." A Dictionary of Archaic & Provincial Words, Obsolete Phrases, Volume 2

    July 31, 2015

  • How is this word not on any hat lists?

    July 29, 2015

  • "a real success. "That north show window of Shute & Haskell's is a 'lally-cooler,' " the Jan. 4, 1890, Salina, Kan., Republican noted." NPR History Department

    July 26, 2015

  • = false local "love this Berlin dev because you know the locals and fauxcals are losing their shit over ANY hint of gentrification" @rsporter

    July 26, 2015

  • does sleeping policeman count?

    July 21, 2015

  • It's miso-gy(n)-noir, noir as in black

    July 17, 2015

  • The distortion and devaluing of Black women’s gender identity is a curious feature of what Dr. Moya Bailey has termed “misogynoir,” which refers to the unique hatred of Black women and girls. Salon

    July 16, 2015

  • Thanks for the heads-up! :-) I'll see what I can do to make our comments more resilient, style-wise.

    July 15, 2015

  • "Charlie Loyd and I coined the term ultrastructure, for the cultural, political and regulatory systems around infrastructure, and I wrote these three narratives to think about what my commute would look like with a different ultrastructure, rather than the current default of ceding self-driving cars to private companies and the road to individual vehicles."

    July 13, 2015

  • Hi Prolagus! You can use < a href > tags to add links in the comments.

    July 10, 2015

  • "Perhaps the term metrosophy can better express this bond between the metropolitan and philosophical experiences. It is meant to help us see cities not only as hubs of economic activities but also as fountains of abstract meditations." Metrosophy: Philosophy and the City NYT, 6 July 2015

    July 9, 2015

  • "The overlooked word “woggin”, with many variants, was widely used by Yankee whalers for both the great auk (Pinguinus impennis) and for penguins (Spheniscidae), as documented in numerous logbooks and journals and at least two published sources. Although in use from at least 1762 until the 1860s, this word appears to be entirely unknown in scholarly literature and merits wider recognition both for understanding early accounts and for its potential for revealing new information about the extinct great auk." Whalers and woggins: a new vocabulary for interpreting some early accounts of the great auk and penguins

    July 6, 2015

  • I would love to take credit for this but I think it might have been something re-juggled on Flickr's end! Let's be very very quiet and hope they don't bump into it again. :-)

    July 1, 2015

  • Probably connected to parbuckle.

    June 22, 2015

  • "A 17th century English word that means “coming together through the binding of two ropes,” according to a 1627 publication housed at the New York Public Library’s Rare Book Division, was, until this month, dead to the digital world—and to almost every living person." The Word The Internet Didn't Know

    June 22, 2015

  • "Cohen found that the term “shyster,” slang for someone who acts in an unscrupulous way, was first used in 1843 by a crooked lawyer disparaging his rivals as incompetents. That’s what the word meant in British criminal slang, where it appeared as “shiser.”

    The lawyer used the term in a conversation with editor Mike Walsh, who misheard it and published it as “shiseters.” A new word was on the way to being born. Ultimately the word derives from an off-color word in German." The Rolla Daily News

    June 15, 2015

  • Ooh, also accolated.

    June 12, 2015

  • used in The Flame Alphabet by Ben Marcus: "I'd parry with oily fathery lameries."

    June 11, 2015

  • "He referred to a small canvas rucksack he habitually carried (one with a single strap that he slung over his shoulder), as his sacheverell – at least I assume it was spelt like Sacheverell Sitwell’s first name, but I never saw him write it down, and unfortunately he died before I could ascertain the origin of this bizarre ascription – it may be it was his private word entirely, and perhaps related to some incident that had occurred involving him and Edith Sitwell’s brother." The Guardian

    June 11, 2015

  • seems to be another way of saying 'dinosaur', in the sense of 'out of touch old person'.

    June 10, 2015

  • "Decompiculture is the cultivation of decomposing organisms. The term decompiculture was coined by Timothy Myles of the Urban Entomology Program at the University of Toronto." The Infinity Burial Project

    June 8, 2015

  • Thanks Warrior_mouse! I'm so sorry -- we do hope to make listing easier on mobile soon. In the meantime, I wish you a speedy recovery!

    June 7, 2015

  • Hi Warrior_mouse! nice to have you here! To start your own list, click on your username in the upper right-hand corner of the screen, and choose 'New List' from the dropdown. :-)

    June 6, 2015

  • At Wordnik we are truly blessed

    To have, as lyricist, qms.

    Although a recent awkward injury

    may make his typing a bit gingery

    we still daily receive of his best.

    May 30, 2015

  • "It sounds like something out of Footloose, but the Idaho Stop is not a dance.

    It is when a cyclist approaches a four-way or T-stop, and seeing no other vehicles or pedestrians in the vicinity, continues through, or slows to a rolling stop rather than a complete one." Global News

    May 27, 2015

  • I can't wait to read this novel.

    May 25, 2015

  • Panicked, I reached out to hoarding experts, who often refer to any kind of obsessive digital collecting as “infomania.” http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2014/12/17/i-m-a-digital-hoarder.html

    May 18, 2015

  • Submitting and resubmitting forms to check answers can lead to a form of the frustrating and often unsuccessful behavior sometimes called “pogosticking.” http://alistapart.com/article/inline-validation-in-web-forms

    May 18, 2015

  • The children grew up with boys zigzagging the street on home-built bikes and girls playing jumpsie with elastic ropes made of rubber bands. (http://www.sfchronicle.com/the-mission/a-changing-mission/)

    May 18, 2015

  • Millennials are generally the children of baby boomers, what some demographers call the “echo-boom.” Fortune

    May 18, 2015

  • A word being used by actor/director Stephen Amell to raise money/awareness for charity campaigns. He defines it as:

    1. The ability to speak freely, openly and honestly about anything; if you're going to say something, say it sinceriously.

    2. To initiate any action while spreading as much good karma as possible.

    May 14, 2015

  • Whoops, misnamed field! Fixed. :-)

    May 6, 2015

  • Looks like the PLU (price look up) codes are available here: http://www.plucodes.com/

    May 4, 2015

  • "Perhaps a bit crowded and joggly for rifle work," said Holmes. The Fifth Heart by Dan Simmons.

    May 3, 2015

  • used to mean "the land of meta" as in "I, as you might have guessed, can stay in metapotamia all day long." (from The Listserve, 3 May 2015)

    May 2, 2015

  • "A meronomy or partonomy is a type of hierarchy that deals with part–whole relationships, in contrast to a taxonomy whose categorisation is based on discrete sets." Wikipedia

    April 24, 2015

  • "We performed an ethnomycological study in a community in Tlaxcala, Central Mexico to identify the most important species of wild mushrooms growing in an oak forest, their significance criteria, and to validate the Cultural Significance Index (CSI)." The cultural significance of wild mushrooms in San Mateo Huexoyucan, Tlaxcala, Mexico

    April 23, 2015

  • hey Prolagus, great to see you!

    I miss those pronunciations too! I hope we'll have them back soon.

    April 15, 2015

  • "A priest, a horse, and a gelatologist walk into a bar ... OK, while this is clearly the start of a terrible joke, gelatology -- the study of laughter -- is a serious business." New Scientist, 13 May 2006

    April 11, 2015

  • "a word whose sound belies its meaning. Example: "doughty." It means brave, but—come on, seriously?" Kathyrn Schulz

    April 11, 2015

  • "For those of you who aren't able to commit to the full 33 minutes right now, let me gist-ify this for you because it's important." Upworthy

    April 8, 2015

  • "Reddit is brogressive. Liberal when it benefits their demographic, conservative when it benefits anybody else. Selectively liberal only when it is convenient for them. You'll see the same anti-welfare people pushing for student loan forgiveness and subsidies for education and job training. To be fair, these are all good things. It's just that if you're only liberal when it benefits your demographic, you have to ask yourself whether there is anything more to your values than what is good for your wallet."Reddit/r/news

    April 7, 2015

  • "On the contrary, it is so simple and self-contained that it is a holophrasm, a word that can serve as a complete sentence." What Part of “No, Totally” Don’t You Understand?

    April 7, 2015

  • My source told me it might be jargon specific to the Art Institute of Chicago. :-)

    April 7, 2015

  • fiction "filled with technologies inspired by predecessors from Classical Chinese antiquity" from Ken Liu

    April 7, 2015

  • another new one: silkpunk

    April 7, 2015

  • used in a kid's phrase, meaning 'chronologically': line up in agebetical order

    April 7, 2015

  • the placard next to a work of art in a museum or gallery that shows the bare details: title, creator, date

    April 7, 2015

  • a romantic partner (from heart + the -ner of partner

    April 7, 2015

  • availability/capability (coined by Hattie McDonnell)

    April 7, 2015

  • "Flakka is the latest derivative to come out of the designer-drug phenomena, a lineage that includes Ecstasy, MDMA, Molly and bath salts. Flakka contains the chemical compound alpha-PVP, a powerful and highly addictive synthetic stimulant, said Jim Hall, a Nova Southeastern University epidemiologist who studies substance use and drug outbreaks." Sun-Sentinel

    April 7, 2015

  • "So have you noticed lately, the in-vogue words, words like - I guess they always were in the dictionary but suddenly you hear them more and more - words like pejorative, charisma certainly, dichotomy - Susskindisms we call them (audience laughter). We use that in the pejorative sense, of course." from Bob and Ray The Two And Only (at about 5:01)

    April 6, 2015

  • author definition: "It is a flower, an invented one, description is in The Summer Tree." @guygavrielkay tweet

    March 30, 2015

  • "A word you can't spell no matter how often you look it up." Kathryn Schulz

    March 30, 2015

  • "A word you can't define no matter how often you look it up." Kathryn Schulz

    March 30, 2015

  • "And it seemed that amid all the burdens and sorrows, joy could still flower like a bannion in the wood." from The Summer Tree by Guy Gavriel Kay

    March 30, 2015

  • "Simply put an algorist is anyone who works with algorithms. Historically we have viewed algorists as mathematicians. But it also applies to artists who create art using algorithmic procedures that include their own algorithms." Algorists.org

    March 30, 2015

  • "Notel or 'notetel' - the name is a uniquely North Korean word combining 'notebook' and 'television' - are easily found on the black market for around 300 Chinese yuan ($48), and are also available in some state shops and markets." Reuters

    March 27, 2015

  • vendingmachine, maggiemae isn't a spammer, she's adding synonyms. Until we have a better way of adding related words, adding them in the comments is the only way.

    I'd very much like it if spam was reported directly (with the little thumbs-down icon) instead of with further comments. Actual spammers do not come back to Wordnik to read the comments anyway, and it can sometimes be offputting to nonspammers who simply haven't gotten the hang of the site yet. :-(

    March 22, 2015

  • So sorry -- had to delete last comment as it was breaking the community page after I deleted the spammy comment. :-(

    March 19, 2015

  • Recently, the topic has been re-introduced by David Estlund in his discussions of the legitimacy of “epistocracy”, a “rule of the knowers” or knowledge-based rule, referring to the Greek word episteme. source

    March 9, 2015

  • "an article composed of (or heavily relying on) gifs". Seen first here from @NicoleBlades: tweet

    March 9, 2015

  • MARGARET: (GENUINE) Susan, if I had a million more sisters, I'd want them all exactly like you.

    SUSAN: You're just saying that because I'm so sklonklish. Good night, Margaret. (from The Bachelor and the Bobbysoxer)

    March 5, 2015

  • ""Mooncusser" is the name that Cape Codders gave years ago to people who used to lure storm-tossed ships onto the reefs with a light on the shore." Mystery of the Mooncusser

    March 3, 2015

  • "The fire service in France is known as Sapeurs-pompiers, except in Marseille, where naval "sailor-firefighters", marins-pompiers, provide fire and rescue services." Wikipedia

    March 3, 2015

  • "A jumping jack (Canada & US) or star jump (UK and other Commonwealth nations), also called side-straddle hop in the US military, is a physical jumping exercise performed by jumping to a position with the legs spread wide and the hands touching overhead, sometimes in a clap, and then returning to a position with the feet together and the arms at the sides." Wikipedia

    March 3, 2015

  • Ooh! Also wasserman.

    March 3, 2015

  • A Balinese Lontar, is an ancient manuscript made out of dried palm leaves used for centuries to tell stories. Best of Bali

    February 27, 2015

  • No such thing as overposting! Especially not when the posts are so GOOD ... :-)

    Please, keep up the great work!

    February 26, 2015

  • "These are the videos that, instead of playing clips back-to-back, smash them all together in one simultaneous, terrifying fog of video art. Let’s call them “superfuses.”" Fusion

    February 25, 2015

  • "Here we report a new antibiotic that we term teixobactin, discovered in a screen of uncultured bacteria." Nature

    February 24, 2015

  • found another! barrad

    February 23, 2015

  • Hey qms here is a video of a rabbit stampede for you: YouTube

    February 17, 2015

  • "It was only over time, Lynch writes—over the century roughly between 1750 and 1850—that reading became a “private and passional” activity, as opposed to a “rational, civic-minded” one." The New Yorker

    February 16, 2015

  • "I have read two books more than a 100 times, for different motives and with different consequences. Hamlet I read a 100 times for my dissertation, The Inimitable Jeeves by PG Wodehouse a 100 times for comfort. The experience is distinct from all other kinds of reading. I’m calling it centireading." The Guardian

    February 15, 2015

  • Thanks vendingmachine! You can reach me at feedback@wordnik.com. :-)

    February 12, 2015

  • They do! I know there's a list but I'm not sure where it is right now. Maybe alexz put it together?

    I'll fix this one asap.

    Turns out the Flickr issue is on their side -- they may be blocking a range of IPs that includes ours. :-( I'm digging further.

    February 11, 2015

  • I'm trying to fix that now but seem to have broken other things in the process. Please bear with us (hangs up TECHNICAL DIFFICULTIES sign)

    February 11, 2015

  • "FUTURE DAYS is a book about that thing we point at when we say "Krautrock," which is a word that should never have been used and should never survive to the present day. I feel like that truth that the word just stuck and became a practical label isn't reason enough, but the fact remains that there really isn't another word that covers the entire movement. A movement that lasted from 1968 to, what, 1975? "Elektronische" doesn't necessarily cover everything, and neither does "kosmische."" (Warren Ellis, writing in Orbital Operations, 1 February 2015)

    February 1, 2015

  • Professor Lancy calls the American way of doing pick when green a “neontocracy,” in which adults provide services to relatively few children who are considered priceless, even though they’re useless. The Only Baby Book You’ll Ever Need

    February 1, 2015

  • Thanks oroboros!

    We should have pronunciation help on all words this year -- it's a data conversion issue, but we have new data coming in. :-) Sometimes the "hear" links will time out if the page has been open for a while; reloading the page should work!

    For the "support" and "feedback" links -- they should open a link in your preferred email program. If they don't, your browser may not be configured to open that kind of link.

    And thanks for noticing our DuckDuckGo friends! They have a great search engine and are using our API. :-)

    January 12, 2015

  • when a oven or hob is turned off and you are still cooking on the residual heat.

    January 12, 2015

  • If something is edible, you can eat it (and won't die), if something is eatable you actually WANT to eat it.

    January 8, 2015

  • "On the episode of the NBC program Welcome to Sweden that aired in the U.S. on July 31, 2014, the character Bruce Evans says a semla is "kind of like a donut exploding in your mouth."" Wikipedia: Semla

    January 7, 2015

  • "combination of malt and volcano. In the mashing process of beer brewing a maltcano is formed when sparging and the wort spurts out the top of the malt."

    January 7, 2015

  • "in Nottingham England the bodega social club is a name of hipster alternative bar. The word bodega has come to mean hipster/trendy/alternative/retro/indie."

    January 7, 2015

  • "Combination of mistake and tool meaning to use the wrong tool for a job. E.g. Using a brush to dig a hole."

    January 7, 2015

  • "to indulge excessively in an action or event"

    January 7, 2015

  • a generic term for any cute or adorable thing. "Oh, what a pupcake!"

    January 7, 2015

  • An assignment deadline that fills you with dread in the face of impending doom.

    January 7, 2015

  • "a particularly witty twitter exchange"

    January 7, 2015

  • A blend of nil and zilch.

    January 7, 2015

  • Messed up or disorderly; for instance when socks are wrinkly inside one's shoes, or when one's seat belt gets twisted.

    January 7, 2015

  • "Like the word inherit, but limited to characteristics obtained genetically. You can't hereditate money like you can inherit money, but you can hereditate hair color, or a big nose."

    January 4, 2015

  • A blend of awesome and incredible.

    January 4, 2015

  • A blend of stomach and tummy.

    January 4, 2015

  • A jumble or confusion of emotions, from Latin conturbo, meaning 'jumble, disturb' as well as the Latin word for perception, sensus.

    January 4, 2015

  • A blend of focus and concentration.

    December 31, 2014

  • Hi oroboros! Sorry I missed this. :-(

    The tags page isn't showing all tags right now, but it's on the list to fix. The bad gateway (bad gateway!) is gone, hopefully for good; and I will look at the links now! And the open list bug is also on the list -- luckily it's just the label that is wrong, not the behavior.

    If you have a minute could you let me know the browser and OS you are using? (e.g. Chrome on a Mac, Safari on iPhone)

    December 30, 2014

  • Something shiny, silvery, sparkly and scythe-like when traveling at high speeds

    (either the viewer or the thing itself). via Capra J'neva

    December 29, 2014

  • "Looking at photos or watching any kind of cat videos instead of doing what you should be doing." via Neon Wortschatz

    December 29, 2014

  • A blend of hand + sanitizer.

    December 29, 2014

  • I'm so glad y'all are here ... a quick update. Moving the servers (as part of our push to be a separate, not-for-profit) has broken a couple of things, including email notifications and the Community page, and the deploy process. :-(

    So we're working to get the deploy process fixed so that we can fix the other things. Please don't hesitate to email me if you find anything else we should know about it.

    Moving the servers has felt like nothing so much as pulling an old house off its foundations and trucking it down the street, and then trying to reconnect it all on the new site. (And then finding out the previous foundation used different gauges of pipe for everything.)

    Onwards!

    December 26, 2014

  • "McCawley, alias Quang, proposes a category of quasi-verbs, which Bopp expands to quasi-adjectives and quasi-adverbs, while Shad goes as far as proposing an entirely separate category of “frigatives”, to contain all and only swears." A Linguist Explains the Syntax of the F-Word

    December 14, 2014

  • This looks delicious! Like scrapple.

    December 10, 2014

  • "Tsukuroi, or the art of repair, is so revered in Japan that it is believed to create a new form of beauty, as the bowl demonstrates." Fixing Stuff, Repairing The World NYT 12/3/2014

    December 4, 2014

  • Gene Demby pointed out on Twitter that this dynamic was recently examined in “the first systemic empirical investigation into superhumanization, the attribution of supernatural extrasensory, and magical mental and physical qualities to humans.” The New Republic

    December 2, 2014

  • I think "R as in repeat" is especially diabolical ...

    November 21, 2014

  • "The major peculiarity of the chemical is its "endochronicity": when it is mixed with water, it starts dissolving before it contacts with water." Wikipedia

    November 19, 2014

  • I totally forgot that I made this list.

    November 18, 2014

  • "Now, at bedtime, it's not unusual for someone in my family to crack a grin and tell us he's off to strap on his snoremonica." From here: screwballcomics.blogspot.com

    November 9, 2014

  • found a new one! crust punk

    November 7, 2014

  • "Again, here's where I'm completely talking out of my smugnorance because I've never actually experienced the miracle of phone bumping — such as it is, assuming there is such a thing — and perhaps it's far more stable and reliable a method than this virgin knows." —Christopher Butler, Don't Think About the Future

    October 30, 2014

  • a goblin that leads people astray in the dark (OED)

    October 29, 2014

  • A ghost. (English Dialect Dictionary)

    October 29, 2014

  • Thank you! I've fixed it.

    You can always leave a comment, or email feedback@wordnik.com with any typo reports!

    October 28, 2014

  • found one -- bellock!

    October 18, 2014

  • "Lovecraft transcribed the pronunciation of Cthulhu as Khlûl′-hloo and said that "the first syllable of Khlûl′-hloo is pronounced gutturally and very thickly. The u is about like that in full; and the first syllable is not unlike klul in sound, hence the h represents the guttural thickness."" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cthulhu source: H. P. Lovecraft, Selected Letters V, pp. 10 – 11.

    August 21, 2014

  • from a column by Vic Fleming, who researched this phrase:

    1: A railway car that has been converted into a residence for railway workers, usually located in a rail yard.

    2. A railway-related structure that has some of the qualities associated with a residence and that is located beside a train track.

    3: A residential structure located near a railroad track.

    4: A restaurant or bar with a railroad theme, or one that is near a railroad track.

    5. A descriptive term used in some business names of establishments near railroad tracks.

    August 20, 2014

  • Heard this in a line from a song: "maybe I'm a chronic melancholoholic" by TRWBADOR (yes that's the name). (link)

    August 18, 2014

  • "This interesting name derives from the Olde English pre 7th Century "tigel", meaning tile, plus "wyrhta", a craftsman (a derivative of "wyrcan", to work or make), and was originally given as an occupational name to a maker of tiles." SurnameDB

    August 14, 2014

  • "The setat was equal to one square khet, where a khet measured 100 cubits. The setat could be divided into strips one khet long and ten cubit wide (a Kha)." Ancient Egyptian units of measure, Wikipedia

    August 8, 2014

  • a genre of films or media that features stereotypical characterization and glorification of "computer hacking" or "hackers" often including technologically implausible procedures.

    July 24, 2014

  • Hi alexz, I had this same exact issue on my iPhone4S, and it turns out there was a cache of some kind that was keeping the fix from loading in my mobile browser. Do you know how to clear the browser cache for Android?

    July 18, 2014

  • bilby I prefer you stay in a state of quantum superposition. Okay by you?

    July 17, 2014

  • hi alexz ... I just pushed an update to the site that should fix the n-1 list count problem on the community page.

    More fixes in the offing, I have carefully noted all the comments on this list. :-)

    July 16, 2014

  • Hi! I think the word you are looking for is zhuzh.

    July 13, 2014

  • This is a test. This station is conducting a test of the Emergency List System. This is only a test. If this were a real list there would be words here.

    July 11, 2014

  • "The flesh of a sheep that has died a natural death, as distinguished from braxy, which intimates that the animal has died of disease."

    July 11, 2014

  • Thirty-Machete Cheddar Element is probably one of the loveliest phrases I've ever run across. It's right up there with the Jerry McGeogheghan Galvanised Iron Workers' Apprentices' Left Hook Chowder Association.

    July 10, 2014

  • "Steady on, but it may appeal to those suffering from alogotransiphobia, the fear of being caught on public transport with nothing to read. A word coined in 1987 by a journalist, a novelist and a Washington DC saloon-keeper." cited in Authorisms, by Paul Dickson in the Times of London, July 7 2014

    July 8, 2014

  • Back in the days of yore there would be placeholder images marked in big letters FPO -- for position only.

    July 3, 2014

  • Hi pterodactyl! Deleted, and I'll look into why you weren't able to delete them yourself ... when you hover over a word on this list, do you see a little gray X off to the right? Clicking on that should delete a word.

    June 30, 2014

  • done!

    June 29, 2014

  • 'No ;they are like the British lollipop or suckabob,' asserted the young man boldly,' without tinsel or glitter, but honest and genuine, and' (from The Mystery of Mirbridge, by James Payn)

    June 19, 2014

  • A selfie taken by an elephant: https://twitter.com/bbcnews/status/472037020777603072

    June 3, 2014

  • Used to refer to realistic fiction about science and scientists.

    June 2, 2014

  • HI qms—I think the process is that anyone can add words to an open list but that only the creator of the list can remove words. I've gone ahead and used my Special Moderator Powers to remove capital-P Panacea.

    June 1, 2014

  • "This was no funnel cloud. “It’s composed solely of insects,” Scarpa wrote. “It’s not known for sure what kind of bugs made up this swarm, but they may be red locusts.” Scarpa noted that the mosquitornado approximated 1,000 feet in height." DeathandTaxesMag.com

    May 28, 2014

  • Catherine Hayward, fashion director at Esquire, is another grey-ite. She has what she calls a "mallard streak" of grey at the front of her head, which lends a sexy, Anne Bancroft aura. FT.com

    May 27, 2014

  • = bike revolution (from velocipede and revolution)

    May 24, 2014

  • TERF is an acronym for 'Trans-Exclusionary Radical Feminists'.

    May 14, 2014

  • Acronym: Fear Of Missing Out

    May 9, 2014

  • Snuffaluffphagy: The scientific term for eating a Muppet. from John Scalzi's Whatever blog.

    May 4, 2014

  • Not atmospheric pressure ... gravity! See here: http://phys.org/news/2014-04-physicist-dictionary-definition-dodgy.html

    April 24, 2014

  • thanks ry! Can you give me a bit more info on the glitchiness? An email would be awesome if you have time!

    I'm looking into a bunch of related encoding issues right now ...

    April 15, 2014

  • acronym for 'as many reps as possible' often used by Crossfit enthusiasts.

    April 13, 2014

  • "It’s only a few clicks beyond her red-carpet looks (Lanvin, Jil Sander when Raf Simons ran the place), Chanel ads, and W-­magazine fashion spreads (an ­amusing one was Juergen Teller’s 2008 shoot of different urban archetypes: a punk, a society lady, etc.) to see how she connects with those other fellow ­travelers, bohemeonauts like the late film director Derek Jarman; Luca ­Guadagnino, with whom she made I Am Love, in 2009; Wes Anderson, who directed her in The Grand Budapest Hotel; and Bong Joon-ho, the South Korean director with whom she did the upcoming sci-fi epic Snowpiercer." Vulture.com

    April 8, 2014

  • 'It has become known as wackaging, a blend from wacky packaging that was invented by the Guardian journalist Rebecca Nicholson in 2011." World Wide Words, issue 876

    April 7, 2014

  • A Yorkshire word meaning "Female frippery". English Dialect Dictionary

    April 7, 2014

  • "The huge ball of snow made by boys in rolling a snowball over soft snow." —English Dialect Dictionary

    April 3, 2014

  • As much as I love the surreality of this list, I'm going through and correcting the errors. :-)

    Thank you for listing them!

    March 10, 2014

  • hi qms! Great question. Right now we at Wordnik do not write any definitions ... we only show those from published dictionary sources. So if anthropophage isn't in one of our sources, we won't have a definition for it. I hope this makes sense!

    February 26, 2014

  • "There’s a lot we don’t know about our possible futures, but one thing we do: it’s got a software glitch in it, in the voicemail system, which is sending their voicemails back to our time. As these futurismo objects we call chronofacts. Huh. Weird." Future Coast

    February 21, 2014

  • "But now a new report from BI Intelligence finds that "reverse showrooming," or "webrooming,"—when consumers go online to research products, but then head to a bricks-and-mortar store to complete their purchase—is actually more common than showrooming and retailers are ready to capitalize on the trend." Reverse Showrooming

    February 15, 2014

  • Mexican Coca-Cola, which is made with cane sugar, not fructose.

    November 4, 2013

  • "Brand is precisely the sort of swaggering manarchist I usually fancy. His rousing rhetoric, his narcissism, his history of drug abuse and his habit of speaking to and about women as vapid, ‘beautiful’ afterthoughts in a future utopian scenario remind me of every lovely, troubled student demagogue whose casual sexism I ever ignored because I liked their hair." A discourse on brocialism

    November 3, 2013

  • test

    October 29, 2013

  • Hi Louise! I just left a note for you on GetSatisfaction, but just in case -- is there a chance you could have used a different email address previously? It sounds like you might have had a Facebook-connected account. If you could send me the names of any of your old lists I should be able to track down what's going on!

    October 24, 2013

  • "One of the very few formal scientific studies to look at the psychological consequences of blurting was performed in 2001 of the University of Texas at Austin. Authors William B. Swann and Peter J. Rentfrow not only organised a complex series of experiments to investigate the effects of various levels of blurting, but also devised the Brief Loquaciousness and Interpersonal Responsiveness Test (BLIRT) to quantify its effects. - See more at: http://www.improbable.com/2011/10/28/blirtatiousness/#sthash.lPQwpvgv.dpuf" Improbable Research

    October 15, 2013

  • "A prime example of academic Zizekophobia is The Truth of Zizek, a recent work that should perhaps be charged with false advertising. It is not really concerned with the truth of Zizek, but rather the truth about Zizek, as in “we’ve dug up all the dirt on Zizek.” The contributors are obviously driven to distraction by Zizek’s view that the faddish postmodernism that has proliferated in academia is implicitly the most advanced form of capitalist ideology, and that we need to make the “fateful step from ludic ‘post-modern’ radicalism to the domain in which the
    games are over." from Acting Up on Zizek

    October 7, 2013

  • Yes! We're going back through our old words of the day so that we can start showing words of the day on weekends, too. :-) Also, a lot of our early words of the day were pretty fun, but we had way fewer subscribers then, so they missed out ...

    September 15, 2013

  • I prefer to spell this with two r's, gnarrgh.

    August 21, 2013

  • Thanks ry -- it's not you, it's us. I'll add that to the fixit list.

    August 16, 2013

  • So many comments about this one lately ... Stand Down, Semantics Nerds

    August 15, 2013

  • Soring is an abusive and prohibited practice illegal under the U.S. Horse Protection Act of 1970 that is associated in part with the production of "big lick" movement in Tennessee Walking Horses. It involves using chemical agents such as mustard oil, diesel fuel, kerosene, salicylic acid, and other caustic substances on the pasterns, bulbs of the heel, or coronary bands of the horses, causing burning or blistering of the horses' legs in order to accentuate their gaits. These chemicals are harmful, usually quite toxic and sometimes carcinogenic, such that trainers must use a brush and wear gloves when applying them. The treated area is then often wrapped in plastic while the chemicals are absorbed. The chemical agents cause extreme pain, and usually lead to scarring. A distinctive scarring pattern is a tell-tale sign of soring, and therefore attempts may be made to cover the scarring with a dye, or the horse's legs may be treated with salicylic acid before the animal is stalled (as many cannot stand up after the treatment) while the skin of the scars sloughs off. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soring

    August 8, 2013

  • oh interesting!

    August 2, 2013

  • Thank you! I'll use that as a test case for bringing back the breaks ...

    August 2, 2013

  • thanks!

    We're hoping to bring back the comment editing soon ... please let us know of anything else you see that's wonky!

    August 2, 2013

  • On a suggestion from danama.

    July 31, 2013

  • Oh, belieb me, Belieber is already here. Great idea for a list! List here: fans-and-superfans

    July 31, 2013

  • Should definitely see the list double-dactyls

    July 29, 2013

  • Thanks oroboros! The HTML, she is broken. I expect it will be working again in 2-3 weeks, electrons willing. I'm sorry for the delay ... :-(

    (Any formatting that you enter is there, it's a problem on the display end.)

    July 20, 2013

  • I think you might mean previously.

    July 20, 2013

  • Hi CarlosG! If you want to add citations, leaving them as comments on the entry (such as cli-fi) is just fine.

    Thank you!

    June 6, 2013

  • The Cincinnati tax-exempt determinations unit, which employees refer to as "determs," is considered by employees one of the less-attractive IRS posts.

    Division in Dispute Followed Own Course, May 16, 2013

    May 23, 2013

  • hi bilby so it seems we had a y2k-type error in our all-time comments total, we're missing a place at the end. :-) It's on the fixit list.

    May 20, 2013

  • thanks marky -- we're seeing some high loads that we're looking into now, too.

    April 23, 2013

  • thanks marky! We're looking into it, there's a chance there was a regression on the server side of things ...

    April 22, 2013

  • dearest ruzuzu

    our genethliac wishes

    for a happy day

    April 22, 2013

  • "I've just learned a term so marginal it's not even in the newly revised M section of the OED, but useful enough to occur frequently in books about West Africa: moriman, plural morimen (sometimes written "mori man," "mori men"). It refers to people in Sierra Leone who earn a living from writing Arabic charms for magical amulets, and of course I wanted to know its origin. Assiduous googling made it clear that mori is a Mende word for 'Muslim' (morimo or moremo is "Muslim/mori man"), but the only suggestion I could find about its origin is in a footnote on page 211 of The Mende Language: Containing Useful Phrases, Elementary Grammar, Short Vocabularies, Reading Materials (London: Kegan Paul, 1908) by F. W. H. Migeod (available at Archive.org): "Mori, corruption of Moor, means magician, or Arabic charm writer, etc." Now, Moor goes all the way back to Latin Maurus 'inhabitant of North Africa,' so it's not unthinkable (as dear Prof. Cowgill used to say) that some related form is the source of the Mende word, but I have no idea whether it's plausible." from Language Hat.

    April 15, 2013

  • I've just seen "man-gagement" in the sense of "man-gagement rings"

    April 15, 2013

  • Thanks Renee! You're on the list, and will get our next monthly newsletter, which will go out next week. You should also begin receiving the word of the day email next week as well.

    April 5, 2013

  • the process of removing the whistling tip of a Nerf foam dart, to improve accuracy.

    March 22, 2013

  • I saw this in the context of (I think) promotional material, especially promotional material put up illegally in public places: "At the same time, Mercury did a snipe poster campaign in retail stores and on the streets with the image of the band and call letters of stations playing "Laid."" Billboard Feb 19, 1994

    and "It shall be unlawful for any person, persons, firm or corporation

    to post, stick, tack, or otherwise affix or cause to be posted,

    stuck, tacked or otherwise affixed any bill, snipe, poster, banner,

    notice or advertisement to or upon any building, outbuilding or

    part thereof, or upon any wall, fence, gate, post, sidewalk, tree,

    telegraph pole, telephone pole, awning or shelter pole in the City

    of Oakland, except on a regularly authorized bulletin board, bill-

    board or structure built especially for that purpose, and then only

    on consent in v/riting from the owner or authorized agent of the

    property on which the advertisement is to be placed." General municipal ordinances of the city of Oakland, California, in effect November 1, 1912

    March 13, 2013

  • nomophobia: fear of being without a cell phone (from "no" + "mobile" + phobia)

    March 13, 2013

  • In the sense of "showing or having a bad attitude."

    March 4, 2013

  • A blend of hormonal and mental.

    March 4, 2013

  • Randonee (according to the OED) comes from a French word meaning "a long uninterrupted walk."

    February 27, 2013

  • oh hernesheir & bilby, I didn't know how much I needed this word. Thank you!

    February 22, 2013

  • Thanks for the heads-up -- can you let me know what link you're trying to share? This one, or the wordnik.com/word-of-the-day link?

    February 13, 2013

  • Hi bilby! We've found the fix, and it will be deployed next week ...

    February 8, 2013

  • Hi bilby! We've found the fix, and it will be deployed next week ...

    February 8, 2013

  • This is a bird.

    February 6, 2013

  • I keep meaning to let you guys know that cat is the word looked up by the service we use (Pingdom) to test that the website is up and running. It's looked up every few minutes all day every day without fail (unless, of course, we're NOT up and running, in which case it does fail).

    It's like Schroedinger's Cat, actually -- until we look it up we don't know if Wordnik is alive or dead. :-)

    February 6, 2013

  • I'd rather be undermimed than overmimed.

    January 31, 2013

  • oh weird. Okay, will try to fix! Any way you could send a screenshot?

    January 30, 2013

  • Okay -- so this is what I'm seeing, which I'm assuming is not what you're seeing? (Small matter of username aside?)

    http://cl.ly/image/3d2W2c171E0L

    January 29, 2013

  • We use Flickr's safe filter ... which is, as you say, a good thing.

    January 29, 2013

  • Hi bilby! that should have a black background, I will try to see where it went ... can you let me know what browser you're using?

    January 29, 2013

  • Hi Smartypant! Your user information is active -- if you're logged out, your lookups won't register, so please do log in.

    January 28, 2013

  • Oh, thanks! The green words aren't synonyms ... they are words that are used in similar contexts. For example, mustard and mayonnaise aren't synonyms, but people talk about them in similar ways.

    Of course, even with that explanation the same-context words for Godzilla don't make all that much sense, either. Good thing we're working on updating that data, huh?

    January 22, 2013

  • We've added wordmaps to many of the words on Wordnik -- check them out in the Related section. This is still a beta feature, so feedback welcome!

    January 22, 2013

  • Thanks Mary-Ann ... we're updating our sources soon and with any luck cire will join the ranks of words with traditional dictionary definitions. :-)

    January 22, 2013

  • marky you're totally right, as usual. There is definitely a better way ... I can't find your email with the suggestion right now, could you resend to feedback and I'll make a ticket for it?

    Thanks!

    January 21, 2013

  • An alphome is a set of alphabetically ordered letters of which at least one arrangement is a word. For instance GHIMNOTU is an alphome because it can be rearranged to spell mouthing.

    January 11, 2013

  • hi bilby! Yes, I would love it if we could select the examples. There are some hard questions about sorting/indexing that have to get straightened out. :-(

    January 2, 2013

  • Hi Michel! We noticed you signed up for our Word of the Day, but our email address for you isn't working. Would you mind emailing us at feedback@wordnik.com so we can get you signed up?

    January 2, 2013

  • thanks marky -- that would be useful. I'm not sure if we have API support for that right now, I will check!

    December 22, 2012

  • Hi mpgrassfield, if you email us at feedback@wordnik.com (or use the feedback tab on this page) we can change your username for you. Just let us know what name you would like.

    Thanks!

    December 22, 2012

  • James Halliday, otherwise known as “substack”, has been making what he calls computer generated beepstep using two new modules: baudio (npm: baudio, License: MIT) and plucky (npm: plucky, License: MIT). DailyJS

    December 21, 2012

  • Oh, yes, I know those! I will see how easy that is to add. It must be, or it wouldn't be everywhere ...

    December 19, 2012

  • I agree! But I was slightly hoping for something related to the *FLYING* Karamozov Bros. :-)

    December 19, 2012

  • Dear Prolagus, thank you! I know it is frustrating not to be able to find what you need.

    We're working on a lot of these things but progress is (a lot) slower than we'd like.

    Can you give me more feedback on what you'd like the comment boxes to be like? And I'm not sure I understand the problem with clickable text with a link is -- is it a problem with putting in a href= type tags?

    Thank you again for the feedback. I know it comes from a good place ... I wish I had firm dates for certain improvements and updates.

    December 19, 2012

  • I feel I should add brostep. Great suggestion!

    December 14, 2012

  • "to slide or expose your passport, driver's license, company-issued ID card, and/or credit card to a machine that identifies you and/or your account." via Dennis Sonifer

    December 11, 2012

  • This is also a great name for a band.

    December 6, 2012

  • ooh, ry do it. I'm in.

    December 5, 2012

  • "Irish Nachos are like regular nachos but instead of tortilla chips there are crispy sliced of baked potatoes on the bottom!" What's Gaby Cooking?

    November 30, 2012

  • "We firmly believe that there is a time for tortoiseshell and a setting ideally suited for faux suede—which we insist ought to be called “fuede.”" Bureau of Trade

    November 28, 2012

  • "As mentioned earlier, you will need a heat press, but you then have the task of displaying the printed textile. If you are going to suspend it you may need capability for putting it into frames, creating hems for silicon strips known as kaydars, or to create eyelets, so you need some sewing and cutting capability." Printweek

    November 28, 2012

  • a combination thesaurus and index in one document.

    November 26, 2012

  • "Mastery of one and a half languages" (Herbert Pilch)

    November 26, 2012

  • The story is that “flow” is especially possible for people with an *autoletic* personality. That is, people with high levels of curiosity, persistence, low self-centeredness, and a high rate of performing activities for intrinsic reasons only. (from Dan Russell)

    November 21, 2012

  • a shoe-hat, like this one: http://images.metmuseum.org/CRDImages/ci/web-large/DT10720.jpg

    November 20, 2012

  • Thank you for letting us know! Could anyone have used your browser while you were logged in?

    November 19, 2012

  • the opposite of "onboard" -- to remove someone from an organization or company.

    October 18, 2012

  • Oh, that's a great list!

    October 18, 2012

  • Of hair: untidy, straggly. (Pennsylvania German)

    October 16, 2012

  • Oh, so glad you like the new terms of service! The vulgar and pornographic out is so that we can eject folks who add irrelevant vulgar and pornographic material. On-topic vulgar material is fine, as we maintain the use-mention distinction here at Wordnik.

    As to what is pornological? Well, I know it when I see it.

    October 11, 2012

  • Thanks marky -- it's our top-priority issue. Seems like a problem with lists over 1000 items right now. :-(

    October 6, 2012

  • dear pgmcc -- we don't seem to have an active email address for you; would you please email us at feedback at wordnik.com to update your email address?

    October 6, 2012

  • "Able to walk and text at the same time" (via email from Rod Kimball)

    October 4, 2012

  • She told police she identified some drug samples as narcotics simply by looking at them instead of testing them, a process known as "dry labbing." WSJ

    October 3, 2012

  • An easy way to sound like a creep is to add the word “ladies” to the end of things you say. It can be harmless too, but it just makes you a creep. “Yeah after college I spent two years in the peace corps, ladies?” The more harmless it is, the more of a creep you become. “I broke my arm. I need help, ladies?” FYDemetriMartin

    October 1, 2012

  • ""Entire clinical trials are run not as trials at all, but as under-the-counter advertising campaigns designed to persuade doctors to prescribe a company’s drug." Back in 2004, I coined the term experimercials for these pretend trials. See PubMed ID 15169734.

    Bernard Carroll." Economist

    September 30, 2012

  • It is sometimes called a syllabic abbreviation. Wikipedia

    September 20, 2012

  • 8-bit day is the 256th day of the year. Tantek

    September 19, 2012

  • a cross between a scarf and a shawl (Skud)

    September 18, 2012

  • AVA can stand for American Viticultural Area.

    September 7, 2012

  • Thank you! I need to pick up Moby Dick again ...

    August 21, 2012

  • Hi William! Welcome to Wordnik! You can create a list by clicking on your username in the upper right corner of the screen, and choosing "New List".

    Please let me know if you have any other questions!

    August 20, 2012

  • In the notice, the company accuses r/photobucketplunder of "fuskering," or "fusking," the act of using a piece of software to search through a private Photobucket album based on the likelihood that the photographs follow one of a few common naming systems. Gawker

    August 19, 2012

  • In the notice, the company accuses r/photobucketplunder of "fuskering," or "fusking," the act of using a piece of software to search through a private Photobucket album based on the likelihood that the photographs follow one of a few common naming systems. Gawker

    August 19, 2012

  • lazy loading sounds like a good idea ... I'll look into it! Thanks!

    July 29, 2012

  • a blend of "hassle" and "harass"?

    July 26, 2012

  • "Podfic is an audio recording of fanfic, read aloud by a fan (or several). The term is also used as a verb; someone may ask to podfic someone else's story." Fanlore.org

    July 5, 2012

  • "The male version of a tramp stamp shall hereby be know as a bro-brand" @gourneau

    June 26, 2012

  • great! thanks for taking a look!

    June 20, 2012

  • hi deinonychus -- I'm working on one here (favorites--52) but I'm having trouble getting it to work. One of these days ... :-(

    June 19, 2012

  • Thank you! These are all good suggestions ... I will look into the Community page stats issue asap.

    June 18, 2012

  • thanks oroboros! The bad news is that this is a known bug. The good news is that we have a fix for it, and it should be rolled out to the site early next week!

    Thanks again for reporting this -- I'm sorry for the hassle.

    June 17, 2012

  • List improvements are on the roadmap -- that's what we want to focus on. :-) I'm targeting the end of the summer, fingers crossed!

    June 16, 2012

  • Social entrepreneurs are known for the creativity and innovation they bring to bear on the gaps in development. Whether tackling water or education, energy or sanitation, social entrepreneurs develop inventive ways to bring new solutions to social challenges. But, in all this creativity, they may be missing one of the larger issues at hand: “employership,” or, the generation of jobs where none existed before. India Real Time

    June 16, 2012

  • Weird! Thanks for the update, I will try to sort it out!

    June 11, 2012

  • hi marky -- I'm still seeing it, can you let me know which browser it's gone missing in?

    June 11, 2012

  • Not as upsetting as the upsetting thermocouple.

    June 8, 2012

  • Thank you for adding the citations from Zuleika Dobson -- I really enjoyed that book. :-)

    June 6, 2012

  • Thanks rolig! There's also a Wiktionary definition at Pyrrhic.

    June 6, 2012

  • The phrase “Galapagos syndrome” or the tongue-twisting literal translation “Galapagozation,” became common here in the mid-to-late 2000s when talking about Japanese mobile phones, which were extremely advanced for the time, yet couldn’t be used outside the country. WSJ, May 30, 2012

    May 31, 2012

  • Yeah, that was me. :-( It looked okay in beta. I added the rollover to see who added to an open list, but the # of comments code is messing with the width. I'll fix it tonight.

    May 30, 2012

  • “We get swamped by people who bring us ‘meteorwrongs,’” says Carl Agee, director of the Institute of Meteoritics at the University of New Mexico. He says it’s extremely rare for alleged space rocks to turn out to be bona fide. WIRED May 2012

    May 29, 2012

  • Oh, thanks for letting us know, this is a good edge case. :-)

    May 22, 2012

  • Thanks for making me laugh out loud, Prolagus. Next time I'm up to my ass in alligators I will haul out the gator-juicer ...

    May 22, 2012

  • A "Twitter documentary", according to the PR email I got from Glamour magazine: "Wait, there’s more: a Twittermentary! Watch the magic unfold by following @glamourmag #makingsept."

    May 18, 2012

  • A scab across the upper lip, caused by overenthusiastic shaving.

    May 11, 2012

  • "Dangerism is a term which refers to the practice of maximising the perception of risk and the cultivation of fear and the accommodation of those fears by a "hardening" of safety measures, which then, in turn feed back into a greater yet perception of risk in an increasingly strident feedback howl, until an activity comes to be regarded (however irrationally) as being almost unthinkably dangerous." Aberdeen Cars

    May 10, 2012

  • Thanks Heather! The floating words were a little too slow for the homepage, but I hope they will get their own dedicated page soon.

    I'll see if I can't work Vahowwge into my daily conversation ...

    May 10, 2012

  • We use this word to test that everything is up and running, so it gets looked up a lot. We could filter it out, but we like cats. :-)

    May 10, 2012

  • "Hate on the web is banding together as "twitchfork mobs".

    A combination of Twitter and pitchfork, the term was first recorded in Urban Dictionary in 2009 but gained currency in the past year as a way of describing viral mobs who bombard their targets with verbal bile and threats of physical harm - mostly anonymously."

    Great Lakes Advocate

    May 9, 2012

  • Thanks marky ... I've made a ticket. That really bugs me, too.

    April 30, 2012

  • Forget a pampering makeover to help heal your broken heart this Valentine's Day. Go for a "digital breakover" instead, using a growing number of tech tools to save you from yourself or to sob on a safe shoulder in the ether. HuffPo

    April 26, 2012

  • "Doxing is the process of gaining information about someone or something by using sources on the Internet and using basic deduction skills. Its name is derived from “Documents” and in short it is the retrieval of “Documents” on a person or company." Treasure Sec

    April 25, 2012

  • The slenthem (also slentem or gender panembung) is a Javanese metallophone which makes up part of a gamelan orchestra. (Wikipedia

    April 23, 2012

  • Néo-Breton is a 'xenolect', that is, a slightly foreignized and largely synthetic, consciously normalized variety. From Elvish to Klingon, Michael Adams, 2011

    April 22, 2012

  • His aesthetic response to these losses was to scrawl very short poems -- what he called 'mirlitonnades' -- on any scrap of paper he could salvage: an envelope, beer mat, even a label from a bottle of Johnnie Walker Black Label whisky. Biographer James Knowlson notes that Beckett initially named these verse 'rimailles' or 'versicules' before settling on 'mirlitonnades', which some editors have translated as 'bird calls'; but, given the definition of mirliton in the Oxford English Dictionary, the name also recalls the buzzing or nasal quality of the sound produced by a musical instrument that resembles a kazoo. (From Elvish to Klingon, Michael Adams, Oxford 2011)

    April 22, 2012

  • I suggest "octopush"!

    April 11, 2012

  • a woman's dress that is too short.

    April 11, 2012

  • (pronounced in a peculiar way, something like "ceighp", the "eigh" being quickly given as in "weight") to sulk, and show that you are sulking; to cry obstinately and causelessly, but in a subdued way, like bleeding inwardly.

    April 11, 2012

  • To shoot a marble cunnithumb is to place it in the middle of the bent forefinger instead of poising it at the tip of the finger. It is considered a childish or effeminate way of playing marbles, and the marble is not discharged with anything like the proper force.

    April 10, 2012

  • a troublesome fellow, one that cumbers the earth, and does no good.

    April 10, 2012

  • short of intellect; slightly crazy.

    "Thah's getten bad luck top end, tha cumberlin." J.C. Clough

    April 10, 2012

  • a round flat piece of stone, but now more generally a piece of sheet iron, with a handle over the top, upon which various kinds of tea-cakes are baked. The article is not seen nearly so often as formerly.

    April 10, 2012

  • a change from excessive joy and feasting to mourning.

    April 10, 2012

  • a daffodil, in the county of Chester.

    April 10, 2012

  • A word used in scolding a child; also a sort of exclamation of surprise, or when sudden pain is felt. Thus, if a man took up a piece of iron which he unexpectedly found was too hot to hold he would, very likely, in dropping it make use of the exclamation.

    April 10, 2012

  • frisky, restive, said of a horse.

    April 10, 2012

  • the name given to a peculiar curl of the hat brim.

    April 10, 2012

  • thin gruel flavored with vinegar.

    April 10, 2012

  • a compressed form of "I agree":

    A: "We should go to the movies!"

    B: "Igree!"

    April 7, 2012

  • Thanks jsp ... could you let us know *which* app? Wordnik doesn't actually make any apps, but many apps use our APIs ...

    April 7, 2012

  • Hi jsp! Thanks for the feedback! Are you talking about the Wordnik.com site, or the word of the day, or perhaps about an app that uses our API?

    April 6, 2012

  • "Railroading fabric is nothing more than running the fabric 90 degrees from its normal direction. You simply turn the fabric sideways." Fabric Workshop

    March 17, 2012

  • I would like to give this list a ringing endorsement.

    March 15, 2012

  • Whorts = "winter shorts"

    March 3, 2012

  • Legitimizing something in the process of legitimizing something else.

    March 3, 2012

  • The process of making other cities more like Copenhagen, especially in regards to bike routes and green spaces.

    March 3, 2012

  • late twilight OED

    February 9, 2012

  • what about "aluminum shower"? Morbid but interesting ...

    February 3, 2012

  • oh thank you, good catch!

    February 1, 2012

  • "A shrill local rants against tourists, referring to them as wash-ashores; whereas anyone who lives here knows that a washashore is a resident who came from somewhere else." Where Am I Now When I Need Me

    January 24, 2012

  • "Millenium Grove was the 1850's revival campground, "Silicon Sandbar" the nascent electronics industry around Hyannis, a "washashore" is a phony Indian word for anyone not a native Cape Codder, "rural character" is a frequent wishful thinking phrase in the newspapers." Cape Cod Year 2

    January 24, 2012

  • Hi Allegria! When you're logged in, you can add any word to your favorites list just by "love"-ing it (click on the LOVE link to show a word some love). Your favorites can then be seen here: http://www.wordnik.com/users/allegria/favorites

    If you want to make another list (say, Allegria's Wordarama), choose "New List" from the drop-down (click on your username in the black menu bar).

    I hope this helps!

    January 24, 2012

  • hey marky! we don't have a way to disable Flickr right now ... sorry about that.

    January 23, 2012

  • "And the night before widow Wamford was vulpeculated of her brood goose." The words of John Eachard

    January 23, 2012

  • Yes - more information on our blog: http://blog.wordnik.com/stop-sopa-and-pipa

    (if you're desperate, mouse over the definitions in Chrome, anyway to see them)

    January 18, 2012

  • Hi susaneiland! If you're able to leave a comment, you're already logged in. Do you see your username in the top right corner of the screen, next to the search box?

    January 17, 2012

  • hi jennarenn -- the email for wordplay is an aol one, and it includes the string "frogs". Is that enough to narrow it down?

    January 17, 2012

  • derogatory term for rude Seattle Amazon employees: Seattle PI blog

    January 15, 2012

  • "Stickers is an actual woodworking term, not an ad hoc one. The little bits of wood you place between boards to allow air to circulate all around them, and helps to keep wood from warping from having only one side exposed to the air, are called stickers." Sippican Cottage

    January 15, 2012

  • A scorp is a type of knife with a curved, circular blade that's ideal for scooping out bowls, spoons, or masks. Woodcarving: 20 great projects for beginners & weekend carvers

    January 15, 2012

  • "business waffling" -- using jargon in an effort to sound smarter or to confuse others.

    January 12, 2012

  • Hi Reader! I'm sorry to take so long to reply to your comment ... you can find more information about using Wordnik at our "About" link, here: About Wordnik. Or you can always email us at feedback@wordnik.com.

    January 11, 2012

  • Ooh, thanks for pointing this one out!

    January 6, 2012

  • Thanks hernesheir! We're doing an extravigorous spam crackdown and sweep this weekend. :-)

    January 6, 2012

  • "quoted for truth"

    January 6, 2012

  • Thanks for the feedback! We're having trouble with the buttons (signup, logout) showing up in IE8 ... we're working to fix it. To log out, use this url: http://wordnik.com/logout

    January 5, 2012

  • A baseball cap with a back snap fastener.

    January 4, 2012

  • Ah. Yet another remnant of the great definition muddle of 2010. I remember it well. Should be tidied away soon.

    January 4, 2012

  • Shhhhhhh! Don't say that! (looks around cautiously)

    January 4, 2012

  • Hi teachus! How can we help?

    January 4, 2012

  • It is true that the rivers went nosing like swine,

    Tugging at banks, until they seemed

    Bland belly-sounds in somnolent troughs,

    That the air was heavy with the breath of these swine,

    The breath of turgid summer, and

    Heavy with thunder's rattapallax,

    That the man who erected this cabin, planted

    This field, and tended it awhile,

    Knew not the quirks of imagery,

    That the hours of his indolent, arid days,

    Grotesque with this nosing in banks,

    This somnolence and rattapallax,

    Seemed to suckle themselves on his arid being,

    As the swine-like rivers suckled themselves

    While they went seaward to the sea-mouths.

    Frogs Eat Butterflies, Snakes Eat Frogs, Hogs Eat Snakes, Men Eat Hogs, Wallace Stevens

    December 30, 2011

  • Hi parthibansekar -- here's how to get the Word of the Day via email: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ny_5pYeQ5-E

    December 30, 2011

  • 'Disimprovement’ is a wonderful word invented by an Irish client of ours. It means making things worse by trying to make them better. Gossage

    December 22, 2011

  • “I just Made Up A New Txt Abbr. just Now --------> LHAF !! " Laughing Hard As Fukk" @GaTrademark

    December 22, 2011

  • MAME stands for Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator.

    December 22, 2011

  • just the one? :-)

    December 21, 2011

  • Thanks oroboros -- seems like a transient error. Cash money should be cash money again now.

    December 14, 2011

  • “Man flavored yogurt... We call it bro-gurt” @Theafritz1

    December 7, 2011

  • Thanks marky! We really appreciate all the feedback you've given us as we work to make Wordnik better ...

    December 7, 2011

  • aw, zeke, I know you like a challenge!

    December 3, 2011

  • Thanks folks! I'm making tickets for all these requests and comments.

    Prolagus, we'll get those tag-comments back eventually. Tags don't have their own pages now, so it's a matter of figuring out where to put them ...

    November 29, 2011

  • Just enjoying that I can comment that there's a new new interface on the new interface page.

    Thanks so much to all who are giving us feedback, especially via the new feedback tab!

    (<-- over there)

    November 29, 2011

  • A brand name that has become a generic name for its product category, e.g. Kleenex and Xerox. A word was needed to describe the result of genericide, which is the process by which a brand name becomes a generic name for an entire product category. AllExperts.com

    November 28, 2011

  • My shirt has my company name logo-d on the back, and “Massage Therapist” with the company phone number on the back. Everyone can watch my ass as I attempt to sprint. Great. But really, what I hope they’re looking at is my t-shirt. What a great combination. Losing fat and gaining clients.

    Exercisvertising. Word. ThrivingMassageBiz.com

    November 28, 2011

  • Reps also tell me that the C-Max is an MAV or Multi Activity Vehicle. It’s a fancy new word to mean a passenger vehicle that’s a bit sleeker than either an SUV or minivan. Ford C-Max

    November 28, 2011

  • Oh, thank you hernesheir, those are all good points ... the eight syllables one is fixed in the new site, here's a sneak preview (http://cl.ly/343Z0J3g1T162H0k2Z3a)

    Although it's not showing all 140 words. I've put in a query about that.

    November 28, 2011

  • Hi Rolig! Only a few folks have access to the preview, which is the only place where you can see the "feedback" tab right now.

    November 25, 2011

  • Hi folks! We should (fingers crossed) have a preview version of the updated site ready in a day or so. If you would like to be on the list to see the preview version, would you email me at erin at wordnik?

    November 16, 2011

  • "Whereas the red-ocean strategy focuses on engaging and defeating the competition, blue-ocean strategy suggests that there is more opportunity in creating uncontested market space." It's all about the client: consulting for results

    November 11, 2011

  • Worthy of a visit from a Goodyear blimp. From http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/11/07/goodyear_blimp_blimpworthy/

    November 11, 2011

  • rolig -- we hired another UI wizard, Alex Le, who started Monday. I don't want to jinx it (or him) but (contrary to how the 'mythical man-month' would have it) lots of progress is being made!

    November 10, 2011

  • The description of an imaginary place.

    November 9, 2011

Show 200 more comments...

Comments for erinmckean

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.

  • I like how it says 'early adopter' on your profile!

    April 15, 2016

  • So, in the meantime, I'm proposing that we all hang out over the word community. :-)

    December 24, 2014

  • romar commented on the user romar

    Hi,

    Jut caught your presentation on TED (https://www.ted.com/speakers/erin_mckean) - really enjoyed it and the opportunity to sign up on your site...

    Bob Marconi

    March 23, 2014

  • Thanks oroboros! The HTML, she is broken. I expect it will be working again in 2-3 weeks, electrons willing. I'm sorry for the delay ... :-(

    (Any formatting that you enter is there, it's a problem on the display end.)

    July 20, 2013

  • Hi Erin - how come the HTML doesn't work anymore? Viz.: this is not in italics despite the appropriate code. Is the problem with my machine?

    July 20, 2013

  • hi lets be friend am a girl

    October 4, 2012

  • Thank you! These are all good suggestions ... I will look into the Community page stats issue asap.

    June 18, 2012

  • I would love to learn (and possibly I am not the only one) how many of my uploaded entries were entirely new to Wordnik (my net contribution). Is there a way to find it out?

    The general statistics on the Community main page doesn't seem to be refreshed, at all. It would look better from a PR point of view for Wordnik, if it did. Has it been forgotten?

    I may be the only one who uploads masses of collocations (do you need them?) but there had been tens of thousands collocations on Wordnik even before I started mass upload. It would be great to see in the statistics how many words (in the strict sense) and how many word combinations Wordnik has. Surely, it is not too difficult to keep URLs with and without the "%20" tag separate. Please make them appear separately if there is a way.

    June 16, 2012

  • Thanks Heather! The floating words were a little too slow for the homepage, but I hope they will get their own dedicated page soon.

    I'll see if I can't work Vahowwge into my daily conversation ...

    May 10, 2012

  • hey erin, what happened to the floating words? just doing a little blog post on Wordnik - we met last year at Thinking Digital... must remember to get bunnyskantch in sometime soon, but i have a new word now from my most eloquent daughter.... Vahowwge! I think it means Awesome / I'm happy!

    May 10, 2012

  • Thanks.

    By the way, I liked that link--the poem was pretty.

    February 1, 2012

  • *ahem*

    See astrothesia.

    :-)

    February 1, 2012

  • Thanks Erin! I'm afraid I let go of the wffrogs e-mail years ago. I can't believe I've been on wordie that long. :-/

    January 18, 2012

  • Thanks marky! We really appreciate all the feedback you've given us as we work to make Wordnik better ...

    December 7, 2011

  • so the site is working much better now. I can certainly tell the difference. fairly usable. I need to get used to the interface I suppose. some things I like, other things just not sure yet. the main thing is the site is working faster! thanks.

    December 7, 2011

  • Ruzuzu's was using the email address "ameworn.ew@gmail.com" but it's probably a throwaway.

    So weird! We're working to find a way to keep these "Uniclones" (b/c they are Unicode mimics) out.

    July 29, 2011

  • Can you figure out where ruzuzu's and hernesheir's clones originated?

    July 29, 2011

  • Thank you, Erin, and thank you, developers!

    And—O glory!—I can also access the word pages again. :-D

    July 5, 2011

  • Many thanks, Erin, John, and Tony for all your efforts! At last I seem to be able to view word pages. I guess it was that funny č in one of my list names that was causing the problem. How peculiar.

    June 22, 2011

  • Erin, as I just wrote by email. Once I cleared the cookies, I did get access to word pages, but after I logged in I started getting the error pages again. This is very frustrating.

    June 21, 2011

  • Erin, thanks for responding. I'm using a Mac OS 10.4.11 with Safari 4.0.5. Do I need to update something? (I'm posting on your profile page as well as the feedback page just in case.)

    June 20, 2011

  • testing comments

    June 19, 2011

  • work

    June 19, 2011

  • testing double brackets turtle

    June 19, 2011

  • ‘Lists,’ Exhibition at Morgan Library & Museum

    I told the Morgan Library they should invite you guys...

    June 6, 2011

  • thanks Marky! Fixed.

    May 25, 2011

  • your first link on pea coffee is a broken link.

    May 25, 2011

  • I have seen unabridged dictionaries of various sizes. Makes it more wonderful to wander.

    May 13, 2011

  • Goody! It's already swell the way it is--but I'm sure it'll clean up real nice.

    January 6, 2011

  • Thanks ruzuzu! We're continuing to tidy up the Century, so expect more niceness from it shortly. :-)

    January 6, 2011

  • I just wanted to say thank you for introducing me to the Century Dictionary--I'm starting to think of it as my new bff, and that wouldn't have been possible for me without Wordnik.

    January 5, 2011

  • A dear college friend of mine assisted TW for many years in putting together TED conferences and coauthored a book with him. My friend has moved on and is completing a dissertation on Iliazd's books and other art, shuttling between French Canada, Paris, and NYC.

    December 28, 2010

  • Hi Mollusque!

    Well, it might be hard to get Grant to work on Wordie, since he's now working down in San Diego for someone else ... but John's still here and working hard!

    The next big goal, sitewise, is to make it easier for people to contribute in fun and interesting ways. I'm not sure if definitions are the way to go, but we'll be testing all sorts of different things, for sure.

    Our goal for Wordnik is still the same: all the words, and everything about them. It's a big goal, but we'll get there ...

    Thanks!

    Erin

    September 2, 2010

  • Dear Erin,

    Could you spare John and Grant to work on Wordie for a while? They are spending all their time on another site called Wordnik, and the old Wordie spirit is slowly fading away. Two years ago, Wordie was rollicking along at up to 3000 comments a week. Wordnik limps along at one tenth that. Requests for routine fixes often take weeks to months to act on, and some functions/features that we had on Wordie still have not been implemented on Wordnik, making it harder for new users to get oriented and resulting in the loss of long-time stalwarts such as sionnach.

    I think the emphasis on portal and other automated functions ignores much of the potential of the site. What about crowd-sourcing? Maybe you could get a grant to train selected users in lexicographic principles and allow them to create and edit definitions. If one percent of the 50,000 users defined one undefined word per day, almost 200,000 definitions would be added per year. Other aspects of the site could also benefit from concerted attention. For example, a slightly upgraded related word function could be the basis of an extraordinary navigable network of words.

    Where do you see Wordnik going?

    Thanks,

    Mollusque

    September 2, 2010

  • I think it's fantastic that you were the first person to list Joe Miller.

    July 23, 2010

  • I watched your talks on YouTube this week, and they are inspired! I'll never look at ham the same way again. Oh, and you've inspired me to love the word "witticist" into existence.

    July 23, 2010

  • You probably think this song is about you.

    February 1, 2010

  • Thx Erin, that's what Grant was saying too. I appreciate the notice and look forward to using the list part of the API!!

    January 22, 2010

  • Hey marky, sorry not to get to this earlier -- there is a plan for a lists API. Watch the blog, we'll announce it there when it's fully cooked. :-)

    Thanks!

    January 22, 2010

  • Erin, will the API allow access to user lists? (just the words in the list primarily) thx! ;)

    January 19, 2010

  • Oh, lovely -- thank you!

    January 19, 2010

  • I played with your name.</>

    January 19, 2010

  • Add me to the list of fans of The Tetris Dress.

    December 30, 2009

  • Clothing, right, another of your fortes. I’ll have to pay more attention to that.

    Good luck with the scripts. I’ll keep my fingers crossed that you get the permissions.

    December 29, 2009

  • Thanks, I’ll keep them coming.

    Besides the writing I also love the acting, the scenery, the plots and the premises of the series. Only, those are hard to quote.

    Bryan Fuller ftw!

    December 29, 2009

  • Aw, thanks! Y'all are too nice. :-)

    December 7, 2009

  • Erin. I love your A DRESS A DAY blog!

    December 7, 2009

  • Hey watched your TED Talk. Gave it Funny, Inspiring, Informative! Like to meet you someday! (thx whichbe for turning me onto it) :D

    December 6, 2009

  • tank ewe!

    December 6, 2009

  • I just watched your TED talk--it's really inspiring. You rock.

    November 17, 2009