janeandtonic has adopted no words, looked up 0 words, created 19 lists, listed 1926 words, written 2 comments, added 0 tags, and loved 1318 words.
Comments for janeandtonic
Favorite Lists
- Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness
- Words you can't find on the Thesaurus
- sacred, beautiful secret jewels.
- Deadlinitis
- certain slants of light
- Appearances
- reams of dreams
- Nihilarity
- Oddly specific words
- When I'm Feeling Windy
- Bedaphors
- A few of my favorite definitions from the Century Dictionary
- Knee Deep in Chic
- difficult words
- brain-fumes and other novelties
- Sunbeam
- Poetrie: The Naming of Cats
- • How to make a worker cry (derogative terms for professionals)
- The Oddympics
- Words About Words
- Logical Fallacies
- chromatic phrases
- color, light & sight
- beyond pale
- Marginilia
- dark and bright words of shine and fine define (design)
- These words are about words.
- Scribblative ✍
- liminal words
- Words of Whimsy & Grace
- Turning and Twisting Tours
- Phrases That Are One Word
- Thresholds
- "Vespers" by Penumbra
- Places and spaces
- haunting
- Strange Phenomena of the Mind
- inspired by science
- Mnemosyne
- Setting the Scene: Dark and Dreary
- Inteloquent
- Metawords
- Word Words
- Words about words
- states of mind: from absurdistan to zion
- metaphorical places
- Displacemattes
- Communication: Talk
- Communication: Distinct in use of Language
- A Long, Strange Trip
- complex emotion, single word
- Uncommon words for common occurances
- Interesting
- Mawidge is what bwings us togevaah
- new romantics
- las-palabras-de-amor
- desirables
- My God, It's Full of Stars!
- science fact or fiction
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- WF - nonce words and hapax legomena
- Guides
- To the Lighthouse
- moving constants
- Gallimaufry
- Thought-Provoking
- rememberers
- Underworld notes
- poetic substances
- Words descriptive of the colour of the sea
- songs for the dead
- I can see the colors running when they hear the music playing.
- Words describing singing voices
- Mondayish
- music
- Malfeas notes
- Descriptions of Sound
- A Night at the Opera
- Literary / Aesthetic
- Sweet spirits of cats a-fighting
- In The Colorhouse
- colourful
- A Dram Too Many
- The Other Side of Silence
- life, death, rebirth
- Lachrymose Words
- Seccotine
- Construction For Poets
- brushwords
- Driftology
- A Glossary of Filth
- To Darken or Cast a Shadow Over
- End in -kin
- Illuminated Manuscript
- phraseologue ⊃ x the y
- Fubbery and Blaflum
- My dick in your
- swishcheese and quantum leapfogs
- Not edible
- Things that might glow in the dark
- A whooshing of turpentine up my nostrils
- 'Wasted' Words
- potato phrases / words
- Drugs
- Psychonautica
- lunacy
- passive
- space
- go-come words
- It Hurts When I Do This
- an inkling, a feeling, an urge
- Quirkstyle
- More Light!
- on the road again
- Redundancing
- [Uni][verse]
- Up In The Air @ Wordnik
- whiskers
- Feline words -- meow!
- Gene Wolfe
- Finnegan
- Joycean Vocab
- Logolepsy
- gleaned words
- Dance Magic Dance
- dance dance revolution
- deep sleep
- bathy-, batho-
- botanical//dadaist//surrealism//jazz//beat//classical
- eyelashes
- The Chandlery
- Ponderable Plant Names
- vegetation
- Magic ingredients
- Obsolete & disused science terms
- CHEM - early chemistry terms
- Lavoiſier
- Book-names
- Clouds
- make-word
- Animal Identity Crisis
- fungous
- party animals
- the (chained) unbearable cuteness of beings
- Flying Scourge
- open list: the art of talking
- Writing
- Esoteric
- Consonant Storm
- Cloudy
- Smoke Words Get in Your Eyes
- Full Of Personality
- things that freak me out (animals)
- Odd-Ball
- Bubbles
- Gapeseeds and Muckworms: Compound Derogatives
- POL - scandalous (single words only)
- not to be
- Politrix
- POL - scandalous (words and collocations)
- Bill O'Reilly Word of the Day
- Dirty Deeds, Acts & Villainous Arcana
- Nincompoopery
- Noah's Park
- that's just beastly!
- dead phrases/words
- Hyphen Nation
- German Spelling Bee List
- Blitzkrieg
- Muddleheaded Wombat
- AFET - diplomacy
- Mountweazels
- Incorrectum
- Yet! More! Flora
- Grasses
- Flora
- Just Batty
- corner shit
- Fireclature
- Fictional music genres
- • Prime numbers in songs
- You Need Not Apply
- words that sound somewhat like 'elephant'
- ten-year-old argot / playground life
- The quaintest of Canada
- Things which make cool patterns on the wall when I turn on the overhead projector
- Words to Try to Use in Colloquial Speech Without Sounding Like a Pretentious Ass
- Anachronic Liquidators, Cyf.
- Sluts, Bitches, and Goddesses
- O'-ho
- phrases (more than 3 words)
- MYTH - spooky creatures
- Gaw
- A silent letter radio alphabet to annoy call centre staff
- birds
- Very oddly specific
- Wordnik Notebooks
- All Inclusive
- for when you just CAN'T
- singing the [Stygian] blues
- pith list: Fermat
- you're overthinking it again
- pith list: Clooney
- chess gambits
- but is it edible?
- something missing
- artifice of vice
- vespertine libertines
- writing: literally, the scribblements
- I'm sorry, thinking I'm about cats again
- pith list: Kafka
- pith list: Proust
- winningest
- disemvoweled
- eminence greyed out
- this word is more than one word
- HONK
Comments by janeandtonic
janeandtonic commented on the list singing-the--stygian--blues
inspo: Stygian blue, the chimerical color, an impossible color. a color you can only see as a spectral afterimage, the blue uncannily bright despite the fathomless dark.
consider then, the blues of melancholy: a progression from ineffable discontent to profound, cimmerian gloom. as if at twilight, a floating overlay of an impossible color suffuses the world, then deepens through navy, and midnight, ink, beyond.
and if there was a way to sing these blues, world-weighted, whiskey-soaked and creaky yet emotionally-keening, a few souls come to mind:
- Sia, wandering into the twilight, doll-like innocence still clinging: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZly12eGpNA
- Billie Holliday, who manages fill songs of summer such yearning wistfulness (saudade perhaps?) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uYUqbnk7tCY
- Tom Waits anything; whose voice sounds “like it was soaked in a vat of bourbon, left hanging in the smokehouse for a few months, and then taken outside and run over with a car.” -Daniel Durcholz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIZiWYK2md8
- this song, sung in many hues: the Animals (blue vitriol): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0sB3Fjw3Uvc Odetta (myrtled): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aaya8jYZBO8
"Chimerical colours don’t appear within the colour space of human vision. As the name suggests they are a construct of the mind. They can be created by inducing a natural process of the eye called colour fatigue. If you stare at a colour for a long time your eye will temporarily displace the colourspace by the opposing colour. So if you stare at yellow, then black, for a short time you will perceive that black to contain blue. The colour you are seeing is out of the range of visible colours. It is a pitch black blue; thus it is deemed an impossible colour." (1)
"Here’s a project for you: if the Greeks saw blue without a name for it, there is a name for a blue that no one can see: Stygian blue, which belongs to a theoretical classification called, alternately, impossible colours, forbidden colours, and chimerical colours. In 2005, philosopher Paul Churchland explained how you might try to catch it. First stare unflinchingly at a circle of blindingly saturated yellow on a grey sheet. By fatiguing your eye’s receptivity to the wavelength we use for yellow, you produce an afterimage of blue. Stare at a black sheet, and your eye falls into darkest, darkest underworld blue of the River Styx. Look inside it long enough, and you’ll see Homer with a finger to his lips." (2)
"Stygian colors: these are simultaneously dark and impossibly saturated. For example, to see "stygian blue": staring at bright yellow causes a dark blue afterimage, then on looking at black, the blue is seen as blue against the black, but due to lack of the usual brightness contrast it seems to be as dark as the black. The eye retina contains some neurons that fire only in the dark." (3)
1) http://www.luniere.com/2014/03/01/hyperbolic-orange-and-the-river-to-hell/
2) http://penguinrandomhouse.ca/hazlitt/feature/how-see-secret-blue
3) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Impossible_color#Chimerical_colors
4) http://soffus.tumblr.com/post/40493370483/why-isnt-it-possible-to-imagine-a-new-color
April 10, 2015
janeandtonic commented on the list pith-list--kafka
pith list: 1 person + 1 word to describe them. //the more resonance across shades of meaning, the better ;)
1 http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/avoir_le_cafard
Etymologyedit
This term originated from poetry writter Beaudelaire, in "Les Fleurs du mal" in 1857. Le cafard came to mean an extreme depression or sense of pointlessness.
Verbedit
avoir le cafard
(idiomatic) to have the blues
2 http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/cafard
Definition of CAFARD
: severe depression or apathy —used especially of white men in the tropics
Origin of CAFARD
French, literally, cockroach, from Middle French, cockroach, hypocrite, modification of Arabic kāfir infidel — more at kaffir
First Known Use: 1915
April 8, 2015