brainybabe has adopted no words, looked up 0 words, created 18 lists, listed 293 words, written 296 comments, added 0 tags, and loved 0 words.

Comments by brainybabe

  • It was pretty to see from the letters, which were evidently

    exchanged with some frequency between the young mother and the

    grandmother, how the girlish vanity was being weeded out of her

    heart by love for her baby. The white "Paduasoy" figured again in the letters, with almost as much vigour as before. In one, it was being made into a christening cloak for the baby. It decked it when it went with its parents to spend a day or two at Arley Hall. It added to its charms...

    --Elizabeth Gaskell, ''Cranford''

    March 21, 2010

  • His letters were a curious contrast to those of his girl-bride. She was evidently rather annoyed at his demands upon her for expressions of love, and could not quite understand what he meant by repeating the same thing over in so many different ways; but what she was quite clear

    about was a longing for a white "Paduasoy"--whatever that might be; and six or seven letters were principally occupied in asking her lover to use his influence with her parents (who evidently kept her in good order) to obtain this or that article of dress, more especially the white "Paduasoy."

    - Elizabeth Gaskell, ''Cranford''

    March 21, 2010

  • see also padusoy

    March 21, 2010

  • see also paduasoy

    March 21, 2010

  • It was pretty to see from the letters, which were evidently exchanged with some frequency between the young mother and the grandmother, how the girlish vanity was being weeded out of her heart by love for her baby. The white "Paduasoy" figured again in the letters, with almost as much vigour as before. In one, it was being made into a christening cloak for the baby. It decked it when it went with its parents to spend a day or two at Arley Hall. It added to its charms ... ''Cranford''

    ''

    March 20, 2010

  • Now used to mean "grow quickly". But in the original novel, it first appeared (IIRC) in response to a question from a sympathetic adult to a slave child: "Who brought you up?" And poor ignorant Topsy disclaimed all knowledge of her early childhood: "I guess I just growed!"

    January 3, 2009

  • frog's born

    January 3, 2009

  • Not to be confused with the econowife in Margaret Atwood's ''Handmaid's Tale''.

    January 3, 2009

  • See also Belle Epoque.

    January 3, 2009

  • Not to be confused with belly pork.

    January 3, 2009

  • Wordnet is not accurate, or certainly not complete. "Chador" is mainly used for the all-covering outergarment, usually black, worn by certain observant Muslim women. It is prevalent in Arab countries. It is often worn with a niqab (faceveil) and gloves. Compare with burqa.

    December 30, 2008

  • Blue in Afghanistan. See also chador for overall billowing cover, and niqab for the faceveil.

    December 30, 2008

  • A face veil used by some observant Muslim women, leaving only the eyes uncovered. The niqab itself is a small piece of cloth tied on over the headscarf (often known as the hijab, although this word is more accurately translated as "modesty"); cf the burqa, an all-in-one tent-like garment brought to Western attention via Afghanistan. The niqab is particularly prevalent in Arab countries. It is almost invariably black, and is worn with a chador (a loose overgarment) and, often, gloves.

    December 30, 2008

  • From New Dictionary of Farrier Terms and Technical Language by Dave Millwater.

    A membrane sac that holds synovial fluid to lubricate moving parts in horse's legs.Example: Navicular Bursa

    December 30, 2008

  • A sarcastic put down, a malignant thrust. (A collection of such sayings by Kenneth Williams.)

    December 29, 2008

  • milk, OJ, screwdrivers, water, greentea, sloegin

    December 29, 2008

  • bawl, giggle, scowl, flirt, debate, ponder

    December 29, 2008

  • compress life into haiku; can't breathe

    December 29, 2008

  • who what why when where how

    December 29, 2008

  • Well, I certainly want it to be open, and to garner as many suggestions as possible (hence the challenge)! It would be great if you could set it up as an open list, if you think that would be a better solution.

    December 29, 2008

  • An aphrodisiac fruit. Close cousin to the lingonberry of Scandinavia, but can be distinguished by its erect stalk. Original habitat in India; transplanted to California and now spreading.

    December 29, 2008

  • A sand-fairy, as invented by E. Nesbit for a trilogy of children's novels, in the first of which, "Five Children and It", the psammead is the it. From that first novel: "eyes that were on long horns like a snail’s eyes, and it could move it in and out like telescopes; it had ears like bat’s ears, and its tubby body was shaped like a spider’s and covered with thick soft fur; its legs and arms were furry too, and it had hands and feet like a monkey’s�?.

    From Wikipedia:

    The Origin of the Psammead: The five children find the Psammead in the gravel-pit, which used to be seashore. There were once many Psammeads but the others died because they got cold and wet. It is the only one of its kind left. It is thousands of years old and remembers Pterodactyls and other ancient creatures. When the Psammeads were around, they granted any wishes, mostly food for the families. The wishes would turn into stone at sunset if they were not used that day, but this doesn't apply to the childrens' wishes because what they wish for is so much more fantastic than the wishes the Psammead granted in the past.

    The creature is frighteningly ugly, bad-tempered and is quite malicious, as it deliberately abuses the wishes the children make, causing the results to be alarming and unexpected. The children quickly regret meeting the creature, yet their desires to make more wishes push aside their qualms about the Psammead.

    The name Psammead, (pronounced “Sammyadd�? by the children in the story) appears to be an inventive Greek pun coined by Nesbit (from the Greek ψάμμος "sand" after the pattern of dryad, naiad, oread, etc.) upon the name of “Samyaza�? the leader of the Grigori (“Watchers�?, from Greek egrḗgoroi) supernatural creatures of antediluvian myth. Knowing the pun's in-joke, shows the logic at work behind the creature's phobia of water “nasty wet bubbling sea�?, and why the eyes are placed watchfully upon the end of long horns like a snail's eyes.

    December 29, 2008

  • The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. One of the sequels, A Horse and His Boy.

    December 29, 2008

  • E. Nesbit's classic children's novel, "Five Children and It", where the "it" in question is a psammead.

    December 29, 2008

  • The recent American best-seller Eat, Pray, Love.

    December 29, 2008

  • These can be published books, or ones you would like to see written, or existing books that you think need retitling.

    December 29, 2008

  • Twin sister to gonorrhea. An excellent name for a dog, as when you take it for a run in the park and it disappears, you can bellow "Klah -mih -- dee -- yah!" (lovely clear vowels) and be reasonably certain that there won't be lots of other dogs with the same name bounding up, which would not be the case had you named your mutt Fido.

    December 29, 2008

  • The name of one of the ugly elder sisters in ''King Lear''. Also, an excellent name for a dog, as when you take it for a run in the park and it disappears, you can bellow "Gono -- rrheeee -- ah!" (lovely clear vowels) and be reasonably certain that there won't be lots of other dogs with the same name bounding up, which would not be the case had you named your mutt Fido. See chlamydia.

    December 29, 2008

  • In chapter 27 of ''Far From the Madding Crowd'', Bathsheba goes to visit her red-coated Captain Troy, who has promised to show her his swordplay. (Stop giggling, this is not a euphemism.) He describes certain cuts and thrusts, and the fair maiden interjects:

    "How murderous and bloodthirsty!"

    TO which our dashing captain replies:

    "They are rather deathy."

    December 29, 2008

  • C U next Tuesday -- the title of a recent book on "bad" language.

    December 29, 2008

  • Graham Norton is a chat show host in Britain, charming, camp, outrageous, with a late night programme laced with sexuality, not mere innuendo. An American guest expressed surprise on air at what British presenters could get away with. "I even hear people say "fuck" and the editors don't bleep it. Is there any word you're not allowed to use?" Without missing a beat, Norton replied, "Cunt".

    December 29, 2008

  • "Cun" is a word in a southern French dialect, possibly Occitan, which means "wedge", as in the ancient mechanical tool still in use today to split things. The wedge shape is triangular (and the downward facing equilateral triangle has been used for millenia as shorthand for the female genitalia, and by extension, some would say, the goddess -- see Marija Gimbutas and Old Europe) and the function of the wedge is to transform. A pretty good description of a cunt, no?

    December 29, 2008

  • Description of the ears of an old boxer.

    December 29, 2008

  • Description of the ears of an old boxer.

    December 29, 2008

  • Powered by German chocolate ginger biscuits now (what are *they* called? Vanishes down rabbit-tunnel of chasing random associations): I would quite like a FaceBook-like feature that shows you which Wordies are online, but ONLY if people sign up to it, or at the very least can opt out.

    December 28, 2008

  • Boiled wheat, usually with milk, eggs, dried fruit. Occasionally strengthened with alcohol. Served with meat (cf pudding in the savoury sense) or as a farmhouse breakfast on Christmas Day, way back when in post-medieval England. Also spelled "furmenty", "formity", and other variants. An important plot component in Thomas Hardy's ''The Mayor of Casterbridge''.

    December 28, 2008

  • Some people have a shorter attention span than others.

    December 28, 2008

  • What is the word for the biggest baby in a group? I started this list so we can ask for help.

    December 28, 2008

  • A tool in the farrier's armoury: "A driven tool with a tapered, rectangular shaft which is used to punch, clean out, resize, or repitch nail holes in horseshoes. When punching a new nail hole, the pritchel is used only to punch through the bottom of the hole made by the forepunch and/or creaser or fuller. The pritchel should be used when steel horseshoes are at dull red or black heat." -- New Dictionary of Farrier Terms and Technical Language, published by Dave Millwater (There's a lot more there, if anyone else is curious.)

    December 28, 2008

  • Yes, I checked, but brose gives no hint as to its composition.

    December 28, 2008

  • A website that operates smoothly, no matter what browser is used.

    December 28, 2008

  • As in Project Gutenberg e-texts: no formatting, browser-agnostic material.

    December 28, 2008

  • See onanism. Dorothy Parker named her canary Onan, because he spilled his seed upon the ground.

    December 28, 2008

  • What's a brose? Anything like ambrosia?

    December 28, 2008

  • "like being savaged by a dead sheep" -- British political insult

    December 28, 2008

  • @Yarb, thanks, I see that, but I *think* I was thinking of something else, some other display of numbers next to words or lists.

    December 28, 2008

  • That's OK. Those are lists I've liked the look of; if you want to see mine you have to click somewhere on the top of my page. I still don't know what all the numbers are for, beside each list. Contributors? Contributions? Number of people who have marked it as a favorite?

    Are you a fan of ''Cold Comfort Farm''? I have a list on that, I think.

    December 28, 2008

  • What's a walking bag? And if you took a -cide with you, wouldn't that indicate a penance, like a pilgrimage with peas in one's boots? (For those Wordies too young to realise, that's a pebble-like dried legume, not mushy peas!)

    December 27, 2008

  • The traffic cop/cones, like all other civil servants in Iceland, are on a go-slow till the bankrupt government figures out how to pay them. They are moonlighting as moden art sculptures at vernissages.

    December 27, 2008

  • Welcome to Wordie! I got started about a week ago, and look how far I got....

    December 27, 2008

  • In a healthcare context, can refer to the back of the hand, as in, "Remember to wash your hands: knuckles, wrist, dorsum and all." Plural dorsa or dorsums?

    December 26, 2008

  • Corio - Possibly with symbols.

    Telegram from Mark Twain , ignorant of new book sales, to publisher: ?

    Publisher to Mark Twain: !

    December 26, 2008

  • Oh dear, I thought it was a list. What did I do wrong? (Lemon polenta cake almost demolished.)

    December 26, 2008

  • Wikipedia says:

    A pyxis (plural pyxides) is a type of Greek pottery used by women to hold cosmetics, trinkets or jewellery.

    December 26, 2008

  • Yes, absolutely. I wasn't making myself clear. A pyxis is a small and often beautifully decorated container, used primarily for cosmetics and perfumes: concentrated sticky non-edible things, i.e. unguents. But I heard an educated person (as opposed to all those illiterate drop-outs who discuss Greek pottery) refer to it as a container for ungulents, a non-existant word. Presumably this person had the word for hoofed mammals echoing in his brain, and it came out more like that than anything else. It amused me.

    December 26, 2008

  • Wasn't it referred to on the Johnny Carson Show as "that hairy thing Scotsmen have below their kilt"?

    December 25, 2008

  • Too funny. I swear I just heard this referred to as a container for ungulents. Presumably a mishearing of ungulate.

    December 25, 2008

  • Too funny. I swear I just heard this referred to as a container for ungulents.

    December 25, 2008

  • Hey! Here's a blog of a qallunaaq woman in Iqaluit who is compiling her own dictionary of Inuktitut. (Phrases right next to each other in her lexicon are "Are you drunk?" and "photocopier]".) She gives "nassaq" as two hats, of indeterminate style, and "nasaq" as one (and "nasait" for 3). But she also says that she isn't sure about any of these, and welcomes corrections.

    Nunavut newbie

    December 25, 2008

  • Have a cool Yule.

    December 25, 2008

  • Joyeux Noel.

    December 25, 2008

  • Bonus points for IPA and correct accents where necessary.

    December 25, 2008

  • I have a few more ideas. Such is the power of cake.

    More roll-over info, esp. for numbers. By all means keep the clean look, but do like xkcd and give us more when we float the mouse. I am not sure what most of the numbers mean. The word's ranking? How many people have entered it? How many lists it is on? How many words link to it?

    Features from Wikipedia that I appreciate: redlinks for as-yet-unentered words, which might also flag up misspellings, typos, and alternate spellings -- including pesky half-merged words (why no drawing room? Ah, look at drawing-room instead). To go with that, a preview option, to minimise embarrassing oneself (I am a terrible typist).

    Some way of telling, when I look at a highlighted word, whether it is worth clicking. Maybe hover over and see how many comments it has, or any citations, or the first few words of the latest comment (sort of abbreviated from the main page).

    That's enough for now.

    December 25, 2008

  • Traditionally, every evening sheep are encouraged to rake out (spread far out to graze) on to the fells and moorland, returning to the lower ground by the next morning. The flock ranges over very large areas, ensuring an even grazing of the available ground. Even within a hefted flock there are subgroups - different groups of sheep on different "cuts" of the hill. At the autumn markets these animals are often listed in the sales catalogue under the name of the farm and the cut they belonged to.

    From the 2001 foot and mouth epidemic, in The Guardian

    December 25, 2008

  • Traditionally, every evening sheep are encouraged to rake out (spread far out to graze) on to the fells and moorland, returning to the lower ground by the next morning. The flock ranges over very large areas, ensuring an even grazing of the available ground. Even within a hefted flock there are subgroups - different groups of sheep on different "cuts" of the hill.

    From the 2001 foot and mouth epidemic, in The Guardian

    December 25, 2008

  • "Hefted" is the term for sheep or cattle that belong to a certain patch of land. A truly hefted flock or herd consists of sheep or cattle which have been bred for generations on the same piece of land, and they always instinctively return to this land.

    Hefted animals are frequently more aware of what to do when a severe storm strikes. For instance, on a bad night they might not go out as far on the exposed hills.

    From the 2001 foot and mouth epidemic, in The Guardian

    December 25, 2008

  • I have heard proxitarian, on a par with vegetarian (a human who exercises choice over what to eat) rather than with carnivore (an animal which doesn't).

    December 25, 2008

  • The main use in British English is to describe a semi-detached house, often of Tudorbethan style. Sandi Toksvig, a BBC presenter of multiple talents, came out of the closet in the mid-1990s, and was dropped like a hot potato by Save the Children, for whom she acted as a sort of ambassador. She exploited this to comedic effect in a stand-up routine, in which she recounted her mother's reaction to the whole hullabaloo: "It's terrible what they said about you in the press! I just can't believe it. They called your house a semi!"

    December 25, 2008

  • I pronounce it geomancy.

    December 25, 2008

  • The perfectly good English word for what is more widely known as feng shui

    December 25, 2008

  • I have a few ideas. What about a spell-check, to offer suggestions, not auto-correct one's typing? Especially for search?

    Or if implementing that in the full monty would be too much, what about some hyphen power in the search? If a new user looks for multislacking and finds nothing, could the software suggest multi-slacking? Or if that is too complicated (and I can see it might be, to suggest where to break a word), how about the reverse, i.e. entering the latter and being guided to the former. And could I extend this request to include a space as an additional variable, as well as the hyphen (multi slacking)?

    One final request and then I'll go and eat some more of that cake I promised you (lemon polenta, no royal icing): at the top of the page I can see

    "BrainyBabe has added 251 words, 17 lists, 225 comments, and 57 tags". I can click on the lists, comments, and tags, and marvel at just how much time I've wasted/spent here in the last few days, but I cannot click on words. Is this a bug or a feature?

    As for other requests below, I'm with Jakob Nielsen on the open-in-new-window idea: don't. Don't take control of my computer and make it do things I didn't specifically request it to do.

    Thank you and merry merry!

    December 25, 2008

  • Shells are classic symbols of the yoni -- think Venus on the half-shell, the slippery flesh of bivalves, the iridescent mother of pearl gleam that coats their inner surface.

    December 25, 2008

  • Groan! Was it a very bad cold that kept her awake?

    The root is more commonly seen personified (dosser, not to be confused with tosser) or rendered in bricks (dosshouse).

    December 25, 2008

  • Hot water bottle, huskie, brr

    December 25, 2008

  • James Mann Wordie led an expedition to the Arctic in 1934. The Wordie Ice Shelf in Antarctica is dramatically retreating. What would be the three most important words you would take with you on a polar expedition? (Nouns, adjectives, whimsey, all welcome.)

    December 25, 2008

  • Thanks for the invitation! But now what do I do? I am not the sort to challenge anyone to a duel!

    December 24, 2008

  • I've always liked this word, once for being etymologically a blackberry (in fact, I have a Latin-lover friend who calls her email/phone thingie a Morula, just to be different), and once for being more embryonic than an embryo.

    December 24, 2008

  • This is what I thought they wer actually called! So Wordie has disillusioned me at long last!

    December 24, 2008

  • When I see others playing with large stuffed objects, I tend to get out of the way. I do see the virtues of the smorgasbord metaphor, though. I'm getting hungry too.

    December 24, 2008

  • I am charmed by your confession of a "chaste intellectual crush"; no one else has ever done so and it has lifted my day.

    I web-wandered over to your site and found myself reading the whole of the Wilbur chronicles: they deserve wider publication! Very funny (except for the twist in the tail.)

    December 24, 2008

  • Oh! I always thought it referred to the refridgerated ones, you know, for supermarkets.

    December 24, 2008

  • My intention was to gather words that are recognisably French, not those that have been fully digested and absorbed into colloquial English, as for instance "entrepreneur" has been. ("The problem with the French is that they have no word for entrepreneur.")

    One sign of the word's relatively recent welcome into English would be, as with gite, that Anglophones make an effort to use French pronunciation.

    December 24, 2008

  • Oh! It had never occured to me! Did Waugh go in for that sort of wordplay?

    December 24, 2008

  • Stiff upper lip?

    December 24, 2008

  • "He's supposed to have a particularly high-class style: 'Feather-footed through the plashy fen passes the questing vole' ... would that be it?"

    "Yes," said the Managing Editor. "That must be good style."

    -- Scoop

    December 24, 2008

  • "Village"? Really? I don't see it, myself.

    December 24, 2008

  • There can be no doubt that it is little incidents like this which are gradually breaking down the inter-racial barriers, and making for a more perfect comity and understanding between the various nations of the world. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Her experiences in London had led her to believe that the best way of not exciting suspicion was to make oneself conspicuous. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "an airman johnnie" - a passing nameless chap who happens to have an airplane

    -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Ie a euphemism for drunk.

    December 24, 2008

  • Mr Stickle, who was alone, had dined with his customary excess of wisdom, and was feeling, in the transatlantic sense of the expression, good. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • The provincials: those dogged but lumbering fellows who are never quite up with the fashions however much they perspire after them. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • The censorious interest taken by one half of the world in the amorous adventures of the other. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Scales, though he was always spending money, was not at all well off; he did not pay for the house himself. A most obliging building society, which existed solely for the purpose of enabling impecunious Englishmen to feel that their homes were their castles, did that. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Scales, though he was always spending money, was not at all well off; he did not pay for the house himself. A most obliging building society, which existed solely for the purpose of enabling impecunious Englishmen to feel that their homes were their castles, did that. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Scales, though he was always spending money, was not at all well off; he did not pay for the house himself. A most obliging building society, which existed solely for the purpose of enabling impecunious Englishmen to feel that their homes were their castles, did that. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Scales, though he was always spending money, was not at all well off; he did not pay for the house himself. A most obliging building society, which existed solely for the purpose of enabling impecunious Englishmen to feel that their homes were their castles, did that. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Actors, esp. pl. luvvies. British coloquialism, but not slang.

    December 24, 2008

  • Especially the air kiss of luvvies, ie actors.

    December 24, 2008

  • Love, the most tactless, the most bohemian of gods, had appeared just when he was not wanted, and smitten Scales boisterously between the shoulder-blades.

    -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Love, the most tactless, the most bohemian of gods, had appeared just when he was not wanted, and smitten Scales boisterously between the shoulder-blades.

    -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Their own careers being at the most dilettante affairs, they were free from such exigencies themselves.

    -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Their own careers being at the most dilettante affairs, they were free from such exigencies themselves.

    -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Up to now, Dudley Scales had always got on very well with convention; but now that convention quarrelled with his desires, he began to discover that he had no respect for it whatsoever, and never had. To hell with conventions! But on second thoughts, perhaps it need not come to that. Perhaps Yashima would permit herself to be conventionalized. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Up to now, Dudley Scales had always got on very well with convention; but now that convention quarrelled with his desires, he began to discover that he had no respect for it whatsoever, and never had. To hell with conventions! But on second thoughts, perhaps it need not come to that. Perhaps Yashima would permit herself to be conventionalized. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Up to now, Dudley Scales had always got on very well with convention; but now that convention quarrelled with his desires, he began to discover that he had no respect for it whatsoever, and never had. To hell with conventions! But on second thoughts, perhaps it need not come to that. Perhaps Yashima would permit herself to be conventionalized. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • It was another matter to supplant her in the part of a corpse at a mock funeral. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Now he tasted the rare and godlike joys of the man who sees his flights of hyperbole come true. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • See also past master.

    December 24, 2008

  • Lady Bellwether was a past mistress in the art of restraining her compliments just one step short of libel (and what's more, could do it just as well in French). -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • A number of young men and maidens were there, engaged in decorating the furniture with unstudied poses, and their interiors with the inevitable cocktails. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • See also char.

    December 24, 2008

  • She darted about the room like a charwoman in torment, now straightening a cushion, now folding a Special Racing Edition, now hustling a shameful pile of lingerie behind a modest curtain. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • An excuse is the English people's word for the falsehood they tell when they wish to avoid a social obligation. They do not tell the truth on these occasions, fearing, and with some reason, that the truth would give unnecessary offence. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • His strength was as the strength of ten double whiskies. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Their connubial dialogue was one continuous rattle of changed subjects. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Golf, though it has many merits as a game, has few as a religion. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • She liked to see the crowds, she did; it was the same with a great many others. Indeed, among all those thousands, Yashima herself was perhaps the only one who was actuated by nothing more than vulgar curiosity. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • She liked to see the crowds, she did; it was the same with a great many others. Indeed, among all those thousands, Yashima herself was perhaps the only one who was actuated by nothing more than vulgar curiosity. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • A life monotonous even in its dissipations. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • If the county made a habit of shaking hands with chars, however could one know whom not to know? - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    (NB the definite article, meaning the landed gentry)

    December 24, 2008

  • If the county made a habit of shaking hands with chars, however could one know whom not to know? - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • But independent thought was a dangerous and unpopular diversion. One so often saw it recoil; and then what was the result? - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • He came to a standstill in front of her, and perused her with the expression of an intensely interested haddock. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • He came to a standstill in front of her, and perused her with the expression of an intensely interested haddock. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • One evening, after that meal which the Otchkinsons, observing a finer distinction than the Ramerils, called dinner when they had company, but supper when they were alone... - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • One evening, after that meal which the Otchkinsons, observing a finer distinction than the Ramerils, called dinner when they had company, but supper when they were alone... - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • One evening, after that meal which the Otchkinsons, observing a finer distinction than the Ramerils, called dinner when they had company, but supper when they were alone... - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • That's all right then....

    December 24, 2008

  • People would say of him excusingly that he was a self-made man, the inference being that almost anyone else would have made a better job of it. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • In 1898 he afforded a safety-bicycle. In 1903 he afforded Mrs Otchkinson. In 1907 they jointly afforded George. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Rises in salary had been the landmarks in his life, the clues to its red-letter days. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • These people walked upon a tightrope of seemliness and propriety. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "Children, look what Mummy's brought! A new Nanny! Come and say 'How do you do?'" - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    (Note the use of "nanny" instead of "nurse" -- what would Nancy Mitford have said about its U-ness?)

    December 24, 2008

  • The truth was, the Otchkinsons had risen in the world, and would have felt happier now in a road with a longer pedigree. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • The road into which the car eventualy turned with a hoot of familiarity was quite a new road -- rather a rough diamond. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Everybody in Nostandley has intent and occupied experessions, as though they were bent on sucking the last drop out of life, by some patent process known only to themselves. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "I can't do two things at once," muttered Mr Otchkinson, recklessly snatching his left hand from the wheel to make sure that the hand-brake was still where it ought to be. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Mrs Otchkinson was good with her car, and invariably offered people lifts unless they asked for them, in which case she argued that they were undesirable characters. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Mrs Otchkinson was good with her car, and invariably offered people lifts unless they asked for them, in which case she argued that they were undesirable characters. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Would she ever understand this paradoxical people, Yashima thought. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • The illustrious visitor seemed discomposed. She rose from her chair a little too quickly, and pulled off her glove a little too emphatically. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • See citation at drawing-room.

    December 24, 2008

  • See also drawing room.

    December 24, 2008

  • See also drawingroom.

    December 24, 2008

  • In the drawing-room sat quite the grandest lady Yashima had yet seen in England. ... Merely to be in the same room as her must surely be a social event of magnitude. - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Night and day he toiled to unseat the emissary of the powers of evil; and he never received a penny piece for his trouble; he did it all for the sheer hate of the thing. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Night and day he toiled to unseat the emissary of the powers of evil; and he never received a penny piece for his trouble; he did it all for the sheer hate of the thing. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Night and day he toiled to unseat the emissary of the powers of evil; and he never received a penny piece for his trouble; he did it all for the sheer hate of the thing. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Colonel Gathersoles, O.B.E., was a warrior with his country's colours blazoned all over his face. He had red veins down his nose, a white moustache, and mild blue eyes. The mildness was nature's camouflage. -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "A certain City gentleman, a man of exemplary character and simple tastes, modest, retiring, industrious, friend to animals, ex-scoutmaster, and good son to his mother, had absent-mindedly issued to the public an alarming amount of debenture scrip which, through some clerical inadvertence, was worth less than the paper it was printed on." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Aka designer dyke. Attractive gay woman. Doesn't wear dungarees.

    December 24, 2008

  • No offense meant. Reclaim the streets, and the gutters and margins.

    December 24, 2008

  • Evelyn Waugh's lost novel, in which an incompetent nature writer is mistaken for a round-the-world yaughtsman, and more or less shanghai'd onto a small sailing boat which sets out for the Horn of Africa and never arrives.

    December 24, 2008

  • Evelyn Waugh Words (the list)

    December 24, 2008

  • Go out and get drunk again. To undo the work of the strenuous detox.

    December 24, 2008

  • Oh. I never heard it used in a disparaging way, more with respect and awe. "Sisters are doin' it for themselves", climbing the greasy pole of corporate and literary success. Glitterati definitely has a hint of the dismissive, mwah mwah darling, must dash, got to see my ghostwriter.

    December 24, 2008

  • If it is a word used in Antarctica, what is its connection to Inuktitut?

    December 24, 2008

  • John -- (Funnily enough, a cake has been baked for me today, something that happens about, oh, never, so I take that as a Sign, given what I promised you yesterday.) No, not a list of lists, which I can see is provided for under "Your words", but more of a way to nest lists. For example, I could put Loan words from Inuktitut and Loan words from French into a higher-level list called, wait for it, Loan words. I am thinking of Wikipedia's categories, some of which are far from tidy but all of which do,in my experience, help the web-wanderer waste time far more productively.

    December 24, 2008

  • "At the time of Yashima's arrival, one of the most firmly established institutions in the social life of England was the weekend: that is to say, the law by which, on the fifth or sixth day of the week, those who did work abandoned it, and fled into congenial surroundings to recover, while those who did none bestirred themselves, and went and did none somewhere else." --''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "But how can that be? They come to delight their eyes with something beautiful," said Yashima, "and they leave it desecrated? That is barbarism." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "How scrumptious!" she cried. "I say, you must come and stay with us. Come now!" - ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "He searched in his pocket, and offered Yashima a small oblong ivory talisman -- one of those "cards" which the English are in the habit of distributing lavishly among their acquaintance, believing them to be endowed with magical powers of strengthening the bond between giver and recipient, and even, upon occasions, of creating a bond where none previously existed." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "Surely in England she would escape into another sphere, a refuge from the inexorable twentieth century, a world that had never heard of Arabia, with its hustle, its dread of not being dernier cri..." -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • "Do you never burn to hold the gorgeous West in fee?" -- ''Yashima, or, The Gorgeous West'' by R T Sherwood, 1931.

    December 24, 2008

  • Oh, bum. And there I thought I was getting to grips with Wordie. *Sigh*

    December 24, 2008

  • For us in 2008, it really only has one meaning. But maybe in his day another meaning was primary, or at least fairly well represented in the mix? (Trying to be generous.)

    December 24, 2008

  • Hmm. Well, I can see that I put my lists in the comments by mistake, but it should be OK with them above, right?

    December 24, 2008

  • Oops!

    The fur trade has always been important in Canada, from the days of the voyageurs to post-war fur fox farming (which I believe supported Alice Munro's childhood).

    December 24, 2008

  • Especially the more educated subset thereof; mega-famous writers. Coined from literati; see also cliterati.

    December 24, 2008

  • I assume it was coined after glitterati (or gliterati), celebrity writers.

    December 24, 2008

  • I'm glad to have been the focus of such a thoughtful explanation of Wordie's charms. I am learning tricks bit by bit: I have just realised that I can nest lists by creating a supralist and adding a list title as a "word" within it. I think.

    December 24, 2008

  • Thank you for the assistance!

    December 24, 2008

  • A mere chit of a girl.

    December 24, 2008

  • Uh...that was my point. He didn't have much fun, did he? Serial shipwreck victim. Even pissing out the fire in the queen's palace, which should have got him a medal, led to arrest.

    December 23, 2008

  • Makes about as much sense as the original

    December 23, 2008

  • The mischievous tomboy goes in for fur-dying.

    December 23, 2008

  • Robert Louis Stevenson doesn't get far in the Cevannes, as he finds his luggage is still at the last inn.

    December 23, 2008

  • Oh, wait, that's what the original was.

    December 23, 2008

  • Property development in the wild west of China, with deals sealed over dim sum, guns on the table.

    December 23, 2008

  • A male nanny.

    December 23, 2008

  • The difficulties of being a manny.

    December 23, 2008

  • So much depends on finding the right man.

    December 23, 2008

  • No more clinging white shirts!

    December 23, 2008

  • Fertility rites blessed by Robin Goodgfellow, onthe warm flanks of the Vale of the White Horse

    December 23, 2008

  • Roger McGough, abridged.

    December 23, 2008

  • Christopher Robin grows up, but continues to visit the changing of the guard at Buckingham Palace.

    December 23, 2008

  • Daisy Ashford turns ten and improves her spelling.

    December 23, 2008

  • Paying partial attention to several things at once, none of which are economically productive. Listening to Radio 4, hanging out on the Wikipedia refdesks, scouring bookshelves for amusements to add to Wordie, wondering what Firefox add-ons to install.

    December 23, 2008

  • Wendy Cope, employed by Amis pere, tediously crystalises a hot drink.

    December 23, 2008

  • Was the birthday jewel ever stolen? Master storyteller Wilkie Collins leaves us on the edge of our chaises longues.

    December 23, 2008

  • "A lesbian is the rage of all women condensed to the point of explosion."(1970 essay). Ecofeminist Anne Cameron gets really, really angry.

    December 23, 2008

  • Alice Munro's lyrical description of beekeeping as a metaphor for all human relationships; rural Ontario as a microcosm for the buzzy world.

    December 23, 2008

  • Chiang Yee, acknowledged master of calligraphy, turns to martial arts to vent his frustrations with the casual racism of mid-century Britain.

    December 23, 2008

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Comments for brainybabe

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  • BB, not sure you realize that it's possible to edit comments? Just wondering if you prefer having three or more comments in a row on a page for some aesthetic or other reason, if it's possible to edit the first one to include the other information as well.

    December 29, 2008

  • BB, I hope you are having fun on Wordie. As you probably noticed, it's a very peculiar community... By the way, we are also on

    facebook,

    Flickr, and

    Twitter.

    December 29, 2008

  • @Yarb, thanks, I see that, but I *think* I was thinking of something else, some other display of numbers next to words or lists.

    December 28, 2008

  • I am a fan of CCF.

    December 28, 2008

  • The numbers beside your favourited lists simply denote the order in which you favourited them, with 1. being most recent.

    December 28, 2008

  • That's OK. Those are lists I've liked the look of; if you want to see mine you have to click somewhere on the top of my page. I still don't know what all the numbers are for, beside each list. Contributors? Contributions? Number of people who have marked it as a favorite?

    Are you a fan of ''Cold Comfort Farm''? I have a list on that, I think.

    December 28, 2008

  • I realise now that they're not your lists. Sorry.

    December 28, 2008

  • What's the W C Fields Lexicon about? Would the fellow in the bright nightgown fit in there? I like your Japanese aesthetic list, its very instructive.

    :)

    December 28, 2008

  • I added clettering stick after I saw your comment on cletter. I'm new here myself but so far it seems fun.

    December 27, 2008

  • I'm glad to have been the focus of such a thoughtful explanation of Wordie's charms. I am learning tricks bit by bit: I have just realised that I can nest lists by creating a supralist and adding a list title as a "word" within it. I think.

    December 24, 2008

  • Sionnach, thank you for that lovely description of Wordie. It's exactly that way for me. I think I'll memorize your comment and recite it aloud every day, just for fun.

    And BB, I'll just add that if you give the site a bit more time and figure out some of its quirks, it may grow on you. If not--well, that would be a shame and we'd be sorry to see you go. But everyone has different tastes, and maybe you're seeking a less "organic" site for your purposes. Either way, good wishes.

    December 23, 2008

  • This is true. I have gotten around this problem (not solved it) by finding those other terms and placing in the comments a link back to the other ones. That way anyone who comes across those pages will know about the others.

    December 23, 2008

  • Welcome, BB. And what a welcome!

    December 23, 2008

  • Yes, I understand it doesn't matter, but if I enter cletter, not knowing that there is already clettering or clettering stick, then I lose out from not seeing others' contributions, links, citations, etc.

    December 23, 2008

  • *saves this page for future reference*

    BrainyBabe, I second what everyone else said, but also wanted to point out that it doesn't matter how many Cold Comfort Farm lists there are. It isn't a reference site—nobody's coming here except us weirdos that like to make lists, play with lists, add and delete things from lists... so it doesn't matter. We have complete freedom!

    We do make sporadic and (for me) halfhearted attempts to keep track of things. For example, I have a list called "Conversations for the Ages," and jennarenn has two lists, "Conversations," and "Chitchat." She chose to separate the items into "real" conversation and idle banter she found entertaining. (I didn't.)

    There's also a list of Tunies, Prosies, and at least one Legislationie (I'm the guilty party), for example. I do try to link things back to either word pages or other lists—if I start a list and discover similar ones, I'll put links in my list descriptions just to try to point users to other stuff, but nothing's required. You just browse the buffet and see what you like.

    So sionnach's potluck analogy certainly applies. There's something here for everyone, including the fact that sometimes nothing's here that you like (at this point that's unlikely), so you have to add it yourself. :)

    Hope you stick around. Have fun.

    December 23, 2008

  • I think of Wordie as a giant, ongoing potluck of verbal delicacies. You can show up at any hour of the day or night; it's nice if you bring something to the party, but perfectly acceptable just to browse and see if what other people have contributed tickles your fancy. You never really know what you might find: the buffet tables aren't particularly well-organized, at first you're not even sure where to drop off your own delicious covered dish, or whether anybody even appreciates the larks' tongues in aspic you've slaved away at.

    But the locals seem friendly, in that low-key Lutheran Lake Wobegon kind of way, and you've always had a hankering to find out whether ludefisk is really as disgusting as it sounds. Next thing you know you're deep in conversation with that cute exchange student about something called casu marzu, while trying to eavesdrop on a conversation about otter poop at the next table.

    Before the night is over, you will know more about specific names for animal excrement than you ever thought possible. Or maybe it's terms from heraldry. Weird phobias. Really satisfying insults. Horrible jobs of yesteryear. Truly bizarre placenames. Certainly nothing that you expected when you stopped by.

    Sure, it's all a little random. And if you are on the prowl for some specific topic, it might take a while to track it down. But you can always plant a seed and see what develops. In the meantime, you never know what you might learn. After a while you start to realize that it's precisely the slightly random nature of things that gives the site its particular goofy charm.

    December 23, 2008

  • Wordie evolves. When we think of gizmos we want we ask John Christmas for them over on features. The other thing to note is that users have come up with numerous ways, some of them quite subtle, of interacting with the site and other people here. Have fun.

    P.S. If you leave too soon I may have to throw jelly beans at you.

    December 23, 2008

  • Hi BrainyBabe, welcome to Wordie. In answer to a few of your questions: to alphabetize a list, choose "sort: alpha" under the list name. To find current conversations, go to "Most commented on" on the home page. Some great older conversations are flagged on the lists linked on the comments under conversations.

    December 23, 2008

  • Yeah, I see that, but I can't even find the good conversations easily. And when I look at the old ones, it is hard to figure out what is idiolect and basically , private banter, and what is intended as wiser / wider (Freudian typo) discourse.

    December 23, 2008

  • I don't use wordie for anything; for me it's just a place for larking around and having fun with words and people who like words. Other people use it for various things, but it's never going to rival Wikipedia in either utility or sophistication (or anything else, really).

    Some of wordie is covered by rss feeds, though I haven't used them. I just scan the recent comments list when I get the chance.

    December 23, 2008

  • Thanks, Prolagus and yarb. I am having fun, but don't know if I will stick around or not. Aside from my lists being an external memory, I can't see easy ways to usefulness. Like, I spent this time adding "Cold Comfort Farm" words, and only later discovered that someone has a list of them already. I appreciate (i.e. understand) that this is a stripped-down site, but don't necessarily appreciate (i.e. like) it. For example, I didn't see your helpful commments till I came looking for them; Wikipedia has welcome messages (not automated) and pings you with new messages. I'm not saying WOrdie should do this, just that I am taking a while to figure out how to get the best from this. Tips?

    December 23, 2008

  • Hello - I've been enjoying your contributions. Welcome to the wonder that is wordie.

    December 23, 2008

  • PS I can see (on your Wikipedia page) that you speak some Italian... I'm from Italy!

    December 23, 2008

  • Hi!

    A good way to have people comment on your words is to be the first one to comment on them. Your words will appear on the central column of the home page, and it'll be easier for us to notice them. We are always happy to join a good conversation...

    December 23, 2008