Comments by milosrdenstvi

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  • I would note that gangerh's definition does not make something a good word. Words can be made up and mutually understood, but linguistically some neologisms are just yucky.

    November 26, 2009

  • A while ago I saw a video on the internet of Erin McKean talking about lexicography. It pissed me off for some reason I can't remember, and now all I do remember is that she said that loving a word makes it real, which I whole-heartedly agree with, with the caveat that love should not be applied mindlessly, but only to such words as are inherently lovable. (Shoot me, I'm a Platonist in a post-modern world...)

    November 25, 2009

  • I think this wins, for me at least, "Most Interesting & Eye-catching Front Page Word."

    November 25, 2009

  • Actually, this is a legit word (pronounced 'reet'), not a misspelled allcap. It stands for "Real Estate Investment Trust", and is a sort of financial corporation.

    November 23, 2009

  • I do not speak it in vanity, but simply record the fact, that I was not unemployed in my profession by the late John Jacob Astor; a name which, I admit, I love to repeat, for it hath a rounded and orbicular sound to it, and rings like unto bullion.

    -- Bartleby the Scrivener

    November 21, 2009

  • I never was much for the random word feature, but I tried it just now, just to see what I might come up with. After about twenty tries, I randomed my last name.

    I was inspired do this after seeing madmouth's comment directly after reading Eliot's "The Hollow Men".

    November 21, 2009

  • I think we should all get off the internet and be picnickers. Over at the Porch.

    November 21, 2009

  • And fast the white rocks faded from his view,

    And soon were lost in circumambient foam;

    -- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

    November 20, 2009

  • "But one sad losel soils a name for aye..."

    -- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

    November 20, 2009

  • I think I would just say Wordniks. -nik is a perfectly good Slavonic suffix similar to our dear old -ie. Besides, that double k is frightful.

    November 20, 2009

  • IS AWESOME

    November 19, 2009

  • I think you mean synecdoche.

    November 19, 2009

  • Hmm, that makes a bit more sense than "drawest". See the last line of the poem "The Hound of Heaven".

    November 19, 2009

  • I got tired of forever seeing pygopagus, and though I rarely favorite words I did so to inimitable in hopes of changing the state of affairs. Nothing did. Does the "Recently favorited words" fail to update?

    November 19, 2009

  • Any ideas what this means?

    November 19, 2009

  • The example is rather hilarious: "The solemn unction with which he pronounced this twaddle is beyond description."

    November 19, 2009

  • For quite a while when young I supposed this to be the past tense of infrare. Infrared rays...I still see it! Similarly, I thought it very possible to misle someone.

    November 19, 2009

  • Akin to Aristophanes, that great old Greek comedian.

    November 19, 2009

  • Named for Franz Mesmer, early hypnotism researcher.

    November 19, 2009

  • See also PLOUGHED.

    November 19, 2009

  • sionnach -- not that usage, but "a lot of people cake"...

    I guess it's just similar to "a lot of people golf" vs. "a lot of people play golf" ... but still, I shuddered when I saw it first.

    November 18, 2009

  • OK now, I'm all for the wonderful adaptability of the English language, but that just made me wince.

    November 18, 2009

  • Just noticed something that makes me really happy! I added a word to a list that I hadn't realized I'd already added it to, and it didn't add it twice!

    November 18, 2009

  • "To return to this scintillating topic of conversation..."

    November 18, 2009

  • As a young child I was amused by a joke about an accident in a restaurant, involving the fall of Turkey, the ruin of Greece, and the breaking up of China...

    November 17, 2009

  • Probably found somewhere on the Argentine.

    November 17, 2009

  • There seems to be a natural limit to the length of this list. I hope this limit will expand soon.

    November 17, 2009

  • Case sensitivity is weirding me out -- to wit: for every Polish and turkey there are hundreds of other words that owing to negligence are getting stuck into two pages for one idea. Also, bracket links at the beginning of sentences (as pointed out by uselessness)...

    Not a complaint. Just an eyebrow-raise.

    November 17, 2009

  • The addax, it must be noted, is not gregarious.

    November 16, 2009

  • The WordNet definition of bilby is rather amusing. "bandicoot with leathery ears like a rabbit". Perhaps mostly for the word bandicoot.

    November 16, 2009

  • Something I've thought about for a while..."randomness" is a virtue of the 21st century...people are praised for being "funny and random" -- for doing the unexpected, for being able to produce something unconnected out of context..."randomness" is a saving grace in any social situation...normality and conformity are not noticed and not particularly cool.

    I'm not sure of all the implications of this, yet...

    November 13, 2009

  • I'm a little worried about how hard everything is to find. It took me a few minutes of obliviousness to realize that I could get to all the old Wordie by clicking the tiny little "Zeitgeist" link waaay at the bottom. Similarly, it took me really too long to realize that if I wanted a Wordie-style look at a word, I had to click "Comments". This makes me apprehensive for two reasons: one, it is more difficult for regulars, and two, it reduces the chances that newbies will discover and fall in love with the world of comments.

    Also, I miss having a ready access to my list of lists from the home page.

    November 13, 2009

  • Unfortunately.

    November 10, 2009

  • In Georgian the very common prefix sa- means "place of". Hospitals, for example, are "sameditsina", place of medicine. The country itself is "Sakartvelo", place of Kartulis or Georgians.

    Terror, "sazareli", place of loss...

    Lamp, "sanati", place of light...

    Justice, "samartliani", place of truth...

    Foundry, "sadnobi", place of melting...

    The place where you go to get khinkali (a delicious sort of dumpling) is the sakhinkle (or something morphologically similar...I never did learn how to spell it, or the case system of how to derive it...)

    November 10, 2009

  • Three syllables only.

    November 8, 2009

  • "orexis" = 'appetite'; more basically 'yearning'; "orego" (the root) = 'I reach for'

    November 7, 2009

  • SpspoCH phPHPTS?

    November 6, 2009

  • Unfortunately not...that would be probably more up rolig's alley.

    November 4, 2009

  • "no" seems well-nigh universal, among Indo-Europeans at least...

    ...except in Czech it means "yes"...

    November 4, 2009

  • which grass?

    November 2, 2009

  • I generally spell rigmarole and pronounce rigamarole. As hard as I try, I can't keep the slight schwa from interloping. Much as how I can barely keep commandment from four syllables.

    October 31, 2009

  • Seems also like a candidate for

    October 31, 2009

  • In what is hopefully not fitting at all, this was listed as my 1000th word.

    October 31, 2009

  • umbrageous?

    October 29, 2009

  • And also the Greek δίκη, which means Justice.

    October 29, 2009

  • ...made of down, of course. *makes face*

    October 28, 2009

  • I get very annoyed at Scrabble players, when they "legally" play such "words" as oe and ae. You don't look clever, you look dumb. I don't care what type of lava it is.

    October 28, 2009

  • From John Donne's Meditation XVII. Translated loosely: "Now this bell, tolling softly for another, says to me, Thou must die."

    This Meditation also contains the famous phrases "No man is an island" and "Ask not for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for thee."

    October 28, 2009

  • Well, they share the root dactyl, from Greek daktulos, meaning "finger".

    October 25, 2009

  • What does "imbriferous" mean?

    October 24, 2009

  • As opposed to zweihander

    October 24, 2009

  • "Golliwog's Cakewalk" is a rather fun piano piece by Debussy.

    October 24, 2009

  • Can I be schadenfreude?

    October 22, 2009

  • hothead; lunkhead; upheaval, packhorse

    October 21, 2009

  • Czech uses single letters a lot for prepositions - though I think you might have them all; v (in), z (from), s (with), u (at), k (to), o (concerning).

    October 20, 2009

  • If you write it in cursive, it looks just like a y with two dots on top.

    October 20, 2009

  • Or a misspelling of prude...

    October 20, 2009

  • I know of no other word in English which has such a wide-spread variant pronunciation of the common Americans around me. I do not pronounce the t, but many people do.

    As dgstone has alluded to -- you've got to be able to make the hilarious puns with orphan!

    October 19, 2009

  • Related to bumblebee -- possibly etymologically through Greek bombulos, but possibly only onomatopoetically.

    October 19, 2009

  • They do share the Greek root "ex-" -- "out of". Ex-hodos is a road out. Exotikos is a variational lengthening of some adverbial form of the root. Something from way out there.

    October 14, 2009

  • I totally had a dream last night where somebody said to somebody else "What in the name of Gandhi's swimfins are you doing, Mr. Piker?"

    October 14, 2009

  • Ah well, it didn't stop the Colonies from becoming States. ('76 added together equals 13!!)

    October 14, 2009

  • See aphelion for similar comments.

    October 13, 2009

  • I'm guessing the spelling is purposefully inadquat.

    October 12, 2009

  • Absolutely not. Euclid only uses Q.E.D. when he has finished proving something. If he wants you to assume something he will use the language "Let there be a...", and pull out something either from a previous proposition, or from his definitions, postulates, and common notions.

    October 12, 2009

  • Had a brief interaction on Facebook today with my old host mother which ended with her calling me genacvale. I was pleased to know what she meant.

    October 12, 2009

  • Braiding these is fun.

    October 11, 2009

  • The biggest problem, for me at least, is wondering whether it's a good trade-off to smack it.

    Let's not add this to the Porch list.

    October 11, 2009

  • The Trisagion prayer of Eastern Orthodoxy, in Georgian.

    Transliterated:

    tsmidao ghmerto, tsmidao dzliero, tsmidao ukvdavo, shegvitsqalen chven.

    Translated:

    Holy God, holy Almighty, holy Immortal, have mercy upon us.

    October 10, 2009

  • Strangely enough, it was my first college roommate, also a Baltimore native, who taught me "bumbershoot", a few years ago.

    October 10, 2009

  • From Radio Prague:

    Tady dávají lišky dobrou noc - literally, “the foxes give goodnights here,�? which means there’s nothing going on here, you’ve found yourself in such an armpit of the world, that there is no one to talk to you, and only foxes left to tell you goodnight.

    October 9, 2009

  • GLOUCESTER. The king is in high rage.

    CORNWALL. Whither is he going?

    GLOUCESTER. He calls to horse, but will I know not whither.

    Shakespeare, King Lear, II.iv

    October 9, 2009

  • The slatternly woman ran her guns out and returned the broadside with promptitude.

    "Door, indeed! you poor whey-faced drab, you dare to say the word door to me, a respectable woman, as Mister Tripes here knows me well, and have a score against me behind that there wery door as you disgraces, and as it's you as ought to be t'other side, you ought; for it's out of the streets as you come, well I knows, an' say another word, and I'll take that there bonnet off of your head, and chuck it into them streets and you arter it. O dear! O dear! that ever I should be spoke to like this here, and my master out o' work a month come Toosday, and this here gentleman standing by! But I'll set my mark on ye, if I get six months for it--I will!"

    Thus speaking, or rather screaming, and brandishing her baby, as the gonfalonier waves his gonfalon, the slatternly woman, swelling into a fury for the nonce, made a dive at Dorothea, which, but for the interposition of "this here gentleman," as she called the coalheaver, might have produced considerable mischief. That good man, however, took a deal of "weathering," as sailors say, and ere either of the combatants could get round his bulky person, the presence of a policeman at the door warned them that ordeal by battle had better be deferred till a more fitting opportunity. They burst into tears, therefore, simultaneously, and the dispute ended, as such disputes often do, in a general reconciliation, cemented by the consumption of much excisable fluid, some of it at the expense of the philanthropic coalheaver, whose simple faith involved a persuasion that the closest connection must always be preserved between good-fellowship and beer.

    After these potations, it is not surprising that the slatternly woman should have found herself, baby and all, under the care of the civil power at a police-station, or that Gentleman Jim and his ladye-love should have adjourned to sober themselves in the steaming gallery of a playhouse.

    G.J. Whyte-Melville, M. or N., Similia similibus curantur. Suggested by Wordnik as a citation for this word and turns out to be quite interesting, for a little while at least. As I quite enjoy Victorian novels this one might go on my reading list.

    October 9, 2009

  • .

    .

    .

    Unless the giddy heaven fall,

    And earth some new convulsion tear;

    And, us to join, the world should all

    Be cramped into a planisphere.

    .

    .

    .

    Andrew Marvell, The Definition of Love

    October 9, 2009

  • Do we know of any other instance of oe being pronounced this way?

    October 9, 2009

  • The soil of this vast depression is entirely argillaceous, and therefore impermeable, so that the waters remain there and make of it a region very difficult to cross during the hot season.

    -- Jules Verne, Michael Strogoff

    October 9, 2009

  • But to what sort of a vehicle should he harness his horses? To a telga or to a tarantass? The telga is nothing but an open four-wheeled cart, made entirely of wood, the pieces fastened together by means of strong rope. Nothing could be more primitive, nothing could be less comfortable; but, on the other hand, should any accident happen on the way, nothing could be more easily repaired. There is no want of firs on the Russian frontier, and axle-trees grow naturally in forests. The post extraordinary, known by the name of "perck-ladnoi," is carried by the telga, as any road is good enough for it. It must be confessed that sometimes the ropes which fasten the concern together break, and whilst the hinder part remains stuck in some bog, the fore-part arrives at the post-house on two wheels; but this result is considered quite satisfactory.

    Michael Strogoff would have been obliged to employ a telga, if he had not been lucky enough to discover a tarantass. It is to be hoped that the invention of Russian coach-builders will devise some improvement in this last-named vehicle. Springs are wanting in it as well as in the telga; in the absence of iron, wood is not spared; but its four wheels, with eight or nine feet between them, assure a certain equilibrium over the jolting rough roads. A splash-board protects the travelers from the mud, and a strong leathern hood, which may be pulled quite over the occupiers, shelters them from the great heat and violent storms of the summer. The tarantass is as solid and as easy to repair as the telga, and is, moreover, less addicted to leaving its hinder part in the middle of the road.

    -- Jules Verne, Michael Strogoff

    October 8, 2009

  • According to Wiki:

    "It consists of a line of cats fixed in place with their tails stretched out underneath a keyboard. Tails would be placed under the keys, causing the cats to cry out in pain when a key was pressed. The cats would be arranged according to the natural tone of their voices.

    The instrument was described by German physician Johann Christian Reil (1759-1813) for the purpose of treating patients who had lost the ability to focus their attention. Reil believed that if they were forced to see and listen to this instrument, it would inevitably capture their attention and they would be cured."

    October 8, 2009

  • I came to a conclusion yesterday; that I could conscientiously use ambiguous singular 'they' but not generic singular 'they'.

    Ambiguous 'they' is when I specifically do not wish to specify a gender, although the person in question usually has one.

    "One of my friends was in Wyoming last month, and they saw a moose there."

    I know of people, using 'they' this way, almost always use it as a euphemism for 'she', but I suspect that is an aberration.

    Generic 'they' is when 'they' is used to refer to a non-specific person of singular number, which could be either male or female.

    "Every person must stand on their own two feet."

    I prefer the historical alternative of using the masculine singular pronoun to double as a generic. I have no exquisite reason beyond that I find it more euphonious, and it is a construct already in existence within the language, which I do not consider particularly nice to remove.

    I cannot, however, honestly use the masculine singular in a case of deliberate ambiguity. Thus my preferred use there of 'they'.

    They as a plural generic, of course, I have no trouble at all with.

    October 8, 2009

  • Sometimes, I will draw a circle and write this in the middle of it, and give it to a friend.

    That way, he will never be able to complain that he never got a round tuit.

    October 8, 2009

  • Sorry; I should have cited Shakespeare, sonnet 130.

    October 8, 2009

  • "My mistress, when she walks, treads on the ground..."

    October 8, 2009

  • By looking away from your computer screen, naturally.

    October 8, 2009

  • Sometimes trying to access website receive:

    Error 503 Service Unavailable

    Service Unavailable

    Guru Meditation:

    XID: 1373340549

    Varnish

    October 8, 2009

  • Also a really good poem by Andrew Marvell.

    October 6, 2009

  • I have met with but one or two persons in the course of my life who understood the art of Walking, that is, of taking walks, who had a genius, so to speak, for sauntering; which word is beautifully derived "from idle people who roved about the country, in the middle ages, and asked charity, under pretence of going à la sainte terre" — to the holy land, till the children exclaimed, "There goes a sainte-terrer", a saunterer — a holy-lander. They who never go to the holy land in their walks, as they pretend, are indeed mere idlers and vagabonds, but they who do go there are saunterers in the good sense, such as I mean. Some, however, would derive the word from sans terre, without land or a home, which, therefore, in the good sense, will mean, having no particular home, but equally at home everywhere. For this is the secret of successful sauntering. He who sits still in a house all the time may be the greatest vagrant of all, but the Saunterer, in the good sense, is no more vagrant than the meandering river, which is all the while sedulously seeking the shortest course to the sea. But I prefer the first, which indeed is the most probable derivation. For every walk is a sort of crusade, preached by some Peter the Hermit in us, to go forth and reconquer this holy land from the hands of the Infidels.

    Thoreau, Walking.

    October 6, 2009

  • Came across French words "chaud" and "froid" today. Meaningful???

    October 6, 2009

  • I would be obliged for anybody's additions on Words with 'aunch' in them.

    October 6, 2009

  • I had a professor call one of my papers 'inchoate' once. Fortunately it was only a conference over a draft.

    October 4, 2009

  • The opposite of inchoate, no doubt.

    October 4, 2009

  • Clearly a thing we should change; and I would encourage you in your efforts, Mr. Pterodactyl.

    October 4, 2009

  • Both of these in the modern day tend to be pronounced with some value of "e", but in actuality, in their origin as Latin digraphs, they were pronounced "ai" as in "aisle" and "oi" as in "oil", being the effective transliterations of Greek αι and οι.

    October 2, 2009

  • See also bicorne.

    October 1, 2009

  • Today, I ran across Glagolitic mass. One is inspired to think of immense piles of some ancient disgusting thing, but...

    October 1, 2009

  • See, these are verbs; Georgians have the idea to use one verb to tell you absolutely everything. And apparently they can now be colloquial for endearment. Great.

    They've conveniently split up the verb parts for you (not the syllables)...you'll see that the root for genatsvale is 'tsval' and the root for shemogevle is 'vl'. Everything else is there to tell you mood, tense, and person. Really the only thing I know is that the g means that something's happening about the second person. It could be active or passive; one of the other letters controls that. The 'she' probably also refers to the second person but I don't even know why. I don't know the screeve system at all, but depending whether you want to be present, imperfect, conditional, perfect, pluperfect, aorist, optative, future, subjunctive (present, future, or perfect) the modifying letters are all different -- and that's not even getting into preverbs, pronominal markers, ergativity (which messes with the noun cases) or verbs of motion; and perish the thought if you want to have a participle or gerund because there are new formants and augments for all of those.

    Seriously. I can work with Georgian nouns. But throw a verb at me and I probably won't even be able to find the root.

    October 1, 2009

  • ...that says "shemogevle". It's probably a verb and I have no idea what it means because Georgian verbs have augments from hell.

    October 1, 2009

  • I'm pretty sure subjunctive mood is only in conditional statements. Or maybe that's just my Greek coming out.

    September 30, 2009

  • One hundred and forty four - twelve twelves. See also great gross.

    September 30, 2009

  • Twelve gross, or 1728 of something.

    September 30, 2009

  • Not quite sure what the definition of this one would be.

    September 29, 2009

  • See conversation on flaming piano.

    September 29, 2009

  • bilby: brilliant!

    c_b: Understood, but even laying aside that we are in many ways past the Middle Ages, having replaced the barbarity of the trebuchet with the machine gun, the atomic bomb, and international terrorism -- livestock corpses are livestock corpses. If it hadn't been set on fire and launched from trebuchet it would have been eaten, if not by one creature then by another. Even if it is somewhat hork-inducing I can abide a flaming livestock corpse. But for God's sake, don't set the piano on fire.

    September 29, 2009

  • LEAR

    Hear me, recreant, on thine allegiance, hear me;

    Since thou hast sought to make us break our vow,

    Which we durst never yet, and with strained pride

    To come between our sentence and our power,

    Which nor our nature nor our place can bear,

    Our potency made good, take thy reward.

    - King Lear

    September 29, 2009

  • The trebuchet is cool. I respect the trebuchet. If they want to shoot burning things out of their trebuchet that's cool too. But don't set the piano on fire. Even an old broken piano that doesn't have any hope of being fixed deserves the respect of being properly taken apart and junked. You wouldn't set the body of your dead sister on fire and shoot it out of a trebuchet. That sort of thing just shouldn't be done. There's a sort of basic decency with which you treat beautiful things, even in old age. If it's a perfectly good piano it's more like rape. It's been created for a beautiful purpose and all these recreants can think of is to destroy it and violate it for their own miserable pleasure. For God's sake, don't set the piano on fire.

    September 29, 2009

  • That's so sad.

    September 29, 2009

  • Haven't the foggiest, really. But now that you mention it, I expect I'm probably wrong.

    September 27, 2009

  • Back at the porch yesterday. I did notice this time two grand old trees (I think they were maples?) with a hammock between.

    September 27, 2009

  • Apparently a misspelling, though somewhat common, of tranche, and meaning an allotment of funds.

    September 26, 2009

  • FLUELLEN

    There is an aunchient lieutenant there at the pridge, I think in my very conscience he is as valiant a man as Mark Antony; and he is a man of no estimation in the world; but did see him do as gallant service.

    Shakespeare, Henry V III.6

    September 26, 2009

  • As in to craunch the marmoset.

    September 26, 2009

  • Thanks to all contributors!

    September 26, 2009

  • yclept?

    September 26, 2009

  • I read this in the preface to a book. It seemed quite interesting and useful and generally British.

    September 26, 2009

  • Nor with the Honduras, a country in Central America.

    September 26, 2009

  • No - but it was directly after being frighted half to death by the sudden appearance of a bat in the house!

    September 25, 2009

  • A poem by Andrew Marvell.

    September 25, 2009

  • Happy to oblige. I used this in conversation a few weeks ago, the doing so giving me great delight.

    September 25, 2009

  • Hmm...after a bit of research, found this on Wiki:

    "Treasure trove" literally means "treasure that has been found". The English term "treasure trove" was derived from tresor trové, the Anglo-French equivalent of the Latin legal term thesaurus inventus. In 15th-century English the Anglo-French term was translated as "treasure found", but from the 16th century it began appearing in its modern form with the French word trové anglicized as "trovey", "trouve" or "trove".

    So perhaps it doesn't come apart from "treasure", and for good reason! Say it ain't so.

    September 25, 2009

  • Funny but I was just thinking of this tonight, and came up with encyclopedic. Not sure...

    September 25, 2009

  • Can anyone think of usage outside the common, alliterative, almost-one-word-by-now "treasure trove"?

    September 25, 2009

  • This word combines in itself the separate loves that I hold for doubt and ubiquitous. Qualifying it to rank near the top in the list of Awesome Words.

    September 25, 2009

  • I'm pretty sure it would be sphinkes.

    As in phylax and phylakes, no doubt.

    September 24, 2009

  • WordNet's definitions make me wonder -- what's the relation between a spectrum and a specter? Clearly, things that we see...

    Also, awesome poem.

    September 23, 2009

  • Well, I was mostly looking from the porch, not at it.

    September 23, 2009

  • And there is a lovely children's novel, The Twenty-One Balloons, set amidst Krakatoa and its fabulous diamond mines. (You never did know about those, did you? Or the intellectual colony set up there in the 1880s? Hmm....)

    September 23, 2009

  • Incidentally, a beautiful word in Charlotte's Web.

    September 22, 2009

  • *assumes nonchalant air which can't quite rid itself of a note of brag*

    And a mighty fine view it was, too...

    September 22, 2009

  • How vainly men themselves amaze

    To win the palm, the oak, or bays,

    And their uncessant labors see

    Crowned from some single herb or tree,

    Whose short and narrow-vergèd shade

    Does prudently their toils upbraid;

    While all the flowers and trees do close

    To weave the garlands of repose.

    Fair Quiet, have I found thee here,

    And Innocence, thy sister dear!

    Mistaken long, I sought you then

    In busy companies of men:

    Your sacred plants, if here below,

    Only among the plants will grow;

    Society is all but rude,

    To this delicious solitude.

    .

    .

    .

    Andrew Marvell, "The Garden"

    September 22, 2009

  • Eliot's notes on those lines are for once somewhat helpful:

    "The following lines were stimulated by the account of one of the Antarctic expeditions (I forget which, but I think one of Shackleton's): it was related that the party of explorers, at the extremity of their strength, had the constant delusion that there was one more member than could actually be counted. "

    September 18, 2009

  • Who is the third who walks always beside you?

    When I count, there are only you and I together

    But when I look ahead up the white road

    There is always another one walking beside you

    Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded

    I do not know whether a man or a woman

    —But who is that on the other side of you?

    T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land

    edit: shoulda checked. Of course they quoted it in the article.

    September 18, 2009

  • Weirdnet!

    September 18, 2009

  • For when you're out of stock in Georgia:

    დი�?ხ, ჩვენ �?რ გვ�?ქვს ბ�?ნ�?ნები; დღეს ბ�?ნ�?ნები �?რ გვ�?ქვს.

    (diakh, chven ar gvakvs bananebi; dghes bananebi ar gvakvs.)

    September 17, 2009

  • A very old English round. Mostly intelligible to modern ears. And yes, verteth is what you think it is.

    Sumer is icumen in

    Lhude sing cuccu!

    Groweth sed and bloweth med

    And springth the wode nu!

    Sing cuccu!

    Awe bleteth after lomb,

    Lhouthe after calve cu.

    Bulluc sterteth, bucke verteth,

    Murie sing cuccu!

    Cuccu, cuccu, wel singes the cuccu,

    Ne swik thu naver nu.

    Sing cuccu nu, sing cuccu!

    September 14, 2009

  • Sumer is icumen in, lhude sing cuccu!

    September 14, 2009

  • I think it sounds delightful. (Often enough I don't eat anything at all until mid-day, but fruits, especially scrumptious fruits, always hold a rating of 'delectable'.)

    September 13, 2009

  • *SNIGGER*

    September 13, 2009

  • And here I was hoping for something wholesomely disgusting, like casu marzu.

    September 13, 2009

  • Not that I'm advancing this as a good suggestion, mind you, but if such a different 'home page for the regulars' existed, would wordie.org still direct to it?

    September 12, 2009

  • "Draw, you rogue, or I'll so carbonado your shanks."

    Kent, King Lear II.ii

    September 11, 2009

  • Not actually too far off. Episode derives from Greek epi (above or in addition) + eis (into) + hodos (road or way) so an epeisodos was something coming in additionally. The rough breathing drops out in things like that, unless there's a t or p for it to merge into. (see aphelion!)

    September 11, 2009

  • On the West Coast, and in Canada, they use this to prefix the names of highways; "take the 405". It was rather astounding to me the first time I heard it.

    September 11, 2009

  • Question (actually the only thing I'm a little apprehensive about): do we keep Palatino? It's so pretty...

    September 11, 2009

  • Sounds useful!

    September 10, 2009

  • Found it again, in the very first chapter of "Michael Strogoff."

    September 9, 2009

  • Though thousands of people use Wordie, really there's only about twenty or thirty 'regulars' who provide 100% of the spirit of the place. It's a social community and a pretty tight one as the internet goes. I'm guessing a feeling of a lot of us is "the madcap days are over". I don't think this has to be. Things will feel different for a while. We're definitely growing up a bit. But I don't think we have to lose the Wordie spirit. At least, I hope not.

    September 9, 2009

  • I remember noticing, a while ago, that a similar thing had happened with insufferable assmarmot.

    September 9, 2009

  • I say, this has been running through my head all week now. I'm waiting for a chance to drop it in conversation.

    September 8, 2009

  • I saw this word for the first time about two months ago in Don Quixote. Now, I see it EVERYWHERE in EVERYTHING that I read. Even on CRAIGSLIST. For cryin' out loud!

    September 7, 2009

  • Etymologically: apo-strophe, a from-turning (or turning-from, I guess)

    September 7, 2009

  • Etymologically: kata-strophe, a down-turning.

    September 7, 2009

  • Not to be confused with the გ, naturally. Remember: ბ for bomb, გ for gas can! (Letters are b and g respectively)

    September 3, 2009

  • It's surprisingly good -- don't let the bubbly bright green liquid fool you. Tastes a bit like grass, only very sugary and fizzy.

    September 3, 2009

  • limonati -- "lemonade", but not as you might expect! To be sure, the English word on the bottle is lemonade, but within is actually the best grape soda you've ever tasted. Other flavors available: cream, pear, raspberry, and tarragon.

    September 3, 2009

  • I'm throwing you ჰ (hae) as well. I can't find any words with it that aren't proper names or Latin derivatives.

    September 3, 2009

  • tsivi -- cold.

    September 3, 2009

  • მზეში (mzeshi) - sunny. There's an amusing story with მზეში, ცივი ბივ�? კ�?ი�?, but let me add those other words first.

    September 3, 2009

  • mtvare (pronounced mi-twar-ay) -- moon.

    September 3, 2009

  • mze - sun.

    September 3, 2009

  • dzalian - very.

    September 3, 2009

  • ghmerti - God. A very important word and part of a prayer that I learned and will post if I can get all the right characters together. (having two different t's and two different p's and four different k's makes things difficult!)

    September 3, 2009

  • ati - ten.

    September 3, 2009

  • tskhra - nine.

    September 3, 2009

  • rva - eight. (it is not easier to say rwa!)

    September 3, 2009

  • shvidi - seven. Everybody says "shwidi". You're pretty much allowed to do that to ვ whenever it's easier.

    September 3, 2009

  • ekvsi - six.

    September 3, 2009

  • khuti - five.

    September 3, 2009

  • otkhi - four

    September 3, 2009

  • sami - three.

    September 3, 2009

  • ori - two.

    September 3, 2009

  • erti - one.

    September 3, 2009

  • An example of how easy it is to learn the Georgian alphabet from dual-language street signs in Tbilisi. You will see the above Georgian, and below English KOR STANDARD BANK. The transliteration of the Georgian is Kor Standart Banki. This is all over the place. Piece of cake, see?

    September 3, 2009

  • All it reminds me of -- is that it's the beginning of September, when I was a tender & callow fellow, and so on.

    September 2, 2009

  • Also a jazz standard...

    September 2, 2009

  • In Aristophanes's comedy The Frogs, this is the ingenious nonce onomatopoeia used for the voices of the chorus of - yup, you guessed it.

    β�?εκεκεκέξ κοάξ κοάξ!

    September 1, 2009

  • vagal down?

    September 1, 2009

  • I prefer insufferable assmarmot.

    September 1, 2009

  • I bought a collection of Anna Akhmatova's poetry the other day, solely on the recollection of this conversation. It doesn't appear to have The Cellar of Memory, though.

    September 1, 2009

  • Sometimes called a loft bed, I guess.

    August 30, 2009

  • I was served "alpenbutter" when flying Lufthansa. I derived much amusement thereby.

    August 29, 2009

  • Oops.

    August 29, 2009

  • Too cool.

    August 28, 2009

  • No doubt about it!

    August 28, 2009

  • I think there are very few words that I like the SOUND of as much as this one.

    August 28, 2009

  • Related to hebetude, no doubt.

    August 28, 2009

  • The word "poet", too, comes from the Greek poietes, meaning maker.

    August 28, 2009

  • I love that book!

    August 28, 2009

  • Well, the two older alphabets are never used anymore. I saw some inscriptions that used them in some old churches, but otherwise nothing. jil (ჯ) is commonly written in handwriting rotated 45 degrees with the horizontal bar shortened and the bottom hook larger. Aside from that they have their varieties of typefaces, some of which are really confusing just like some English ones. (You could tell a Chinese restaurant by the faux Asian lettering, just like in America!)

    August 26, 2009

  • Hmm...looks like you've found 23 of the 33 Georgian letters so far. If you like hide and seek you can probably find a few more in the words I've already put up. A lot of letters look ridiculously similar, especially in type and when hand-written. ban and gan are near indistinguishable, as are p'ar, k'an, vin, tsan, and hae, as are san and khan, as are un and shin, as are dzil and man (though I don't think I've put up any words with dzil yet). I could have mercy on you and just give you the rest of them. At any rate, I don't think I saw a single word with zhan in the whole time I was there (except for proper names) so here is ჟ for your taking.

    On the other hand, be thankful for a unicameral alphabet, for once!

    August 26, 2009

  • This (ts') is my favorite Georgian letter. I call it the Umbrella.

    August 25, 2009

  • pepela -- butterfly.

    August 25, 2009

  • gogo -- girl. I learned one or two Georgian songs with this as a very important word.

    August 25, 2009

  • deda -- mother.

    August 25, 2009

  • mama -- father. Not mother, which is დედ�? (deda).

    August 25, 2009

  • bichi -- boy. Not girl as you might expect. See also მ�?მ�?.

    August 25, 2009

  • And of course, five seconds later I remember ბიჭი.

    August 25, 2009

  • ch'ikch'iki -- the sound of a bird chirping. Presented for the benefit of the worthy mollusque, because I don't know any other words with ჭ, it being really kind of rare.

    August 25, 2009

  • *envisions pronouncing qroqqa as ყრ�?ყყ�?*

    ...I don't actually know if that's possible, but it would a humdinger of a throatful!

    August 25, 2009

  • sakhli - house. This probably follows the sa- prefix being 'place of' rule (see ს�?ქ�?რთველ�?) but I never did learn what this derived from.

    August 25, 2009

  • qiqini - to croak.

    August 25, 2009

  • baqaqi -- frog. Notable for containing two of the elusive ყ. Georgians would repeat a tongue-twister "the frog in the water croaks" (ბ�?ყ�?ყი წყ�?ლში ყიყინებს; baqaqi ts'qalshi qiqinebs) and blithely smile as we attempted it.

    Notice ts'qalshi, a variant of ts'qali (წყ�?ლი) which I have already posted. In Georgian, the suffix "shi" means "in" -- so water is made to "in water". Similarly Tbilisi/Tbilishi means 'in Tbilisi' (and Tbilisi DOES have an i in that first syllable!); sakhli (ს�?ხლი) means house, sakhlshi means 'at home.'

    August 25, 2009

  • See also ბ�?ყ�?ყი.

    August 25, 2009

  • There we go! The elusive ყ can be described as an "ejective voiceless uvular plosive".

    August 25, 2009

  • A sound unique to Georgian. I don't know the technical name but you make it by trying to crush ice cubes in the back of your throat. It takes a lot of practice and is in practically every word you want to say.

    August 25, 2009

  • lamazia -- it is beautiful. (lamazi is the adjective; adding -a to an adjective adds 'it is'.)

    Frequent use of this word is one of the keys to being loved by Georgians. (Point at the mountains, not at the people. That was a different word that I never learned well enough to remember.)

    August 25, 2009

  • ts'avidet -- let's go! Another one of those words I heard a lot.

    August 25, 2009

  • sakartvelo -- Georgia.

    The prefix sa- means "place of". A samedetsino (ს�?მედიცინ�?) is a hospital. A kartveli (ქ�?რთველი) is a Georgian. So the literal name of the country is "place of the Georgians".

    August 25, 2009

  • gaumarjos -- cheers. This is said after toasts at the many traditional Georgian feasts (supra) and literally means "victory to it". I learned one of the Georgian declensions off of this word:

    gaumarjot - victory to them

    gagimarjos - victory to you

    gagimarjot - victory to you (pl.)

    gagvimarjos - victory to me (somewhat impolite)

    gagvimarjot - victory to us

    It took a while of saying "gaumarjos" while the table around me was chorusing "gagimarjot" for this all to sink in. And in the meantime they tell me my pronunciation (specifically my Americanized extra-long diphthongy vowels) is quite funny.

    August 25, 2009

  • dila mshvidobisa -- good morning. And in fact, nobody will notice if you say "dilam shvidobis". Don't tell the Georgians but they are really bad at pronouncing all their letters. The city Mtskheta (მცხეთ�?) will often be called simply "sketa".

    August 25, 2009

  • gamarjoba -- hello.

    The word is gamarjobat when speaking to a group of people, or to someone who you've met for the first time.

    August 25, 2009

  • ghvino -- wine.

    One of the few cognates. The Georgians assert that they invented wine, and the Europeans borrowed the idea and word from them. (None of us can pronounce two consonants at the beginning of a word anyway! Especially ღ, it's kind of rough. A bit like a French r, in fact.)

    August 25, 2009

  • ludi -- beer. Sometimes people say biva but I was made to understand that is a Russian word.

    August 25, 2009

  • ts'qali -- water.

    The Georgians were repeatedly astounded that all the American wanted was წყ�?ლი, წყ�?ლი, preferably with ICE which isn't even sold anywhere in Georgia. I mean, it's my natural reaction after a hot day in the sun (which there are many of summertime in Georgia!) Their natural inclinations are rather to ლუდი or especially ღვინ�?.

    August 25, 2009

  • miqvarkhar -- I love you

    One needs only hear this pronounced once to wonder what strange visions the Georgians have of love. (Alternatively just look up the letters ყ and ხ somewhere.)

    August 25, 2009

  • ch'kara -- quickly.

    August 25, 2009

  • *suddenly and guiltily remembers the promised and planned Georgian list*

    *starts yelling at self*

    ჩქ�?რ�?! ჩქ�?რ�?! (chk'ara, chk'ara!) (faster, faster!) (a word that I got intimately acquainted with.)

    August 25, 2009

  • Don't forget the sour prentices.

    August 24, 2009

  • Has nothing to do with timbits, apparently.

    August 23, 2009

  • This "word" both fascinates and bothers me. In the way, I guess, that every word repeated a million times over sounds weird...but how is it, that "used" + infinitive came to mean the same thing as "formerly" + past tense? I can't figure it out at all. "It had been my use to ...." I guess?

    Similar musings, though the connection is clearer, on supposed to meaning "it is a good idea" or "humanity generally does it this way".

    These words are used so frequently as idiom that I want to take them out of the language and replace them with yoosta and sposta. That way the obvious etymology won't jump out of everybody's sentences and bother me. Sometimes I use "supposed to" in a way that makes sense with current definitions of "suppose", just because it makes me feel good, but I can't do it with "used to".

    August 22, 2009

  • I use this word all the time, mostly as a substitute for "existent".

    July 28, 2009

  • Caesar sic in omnibus.

    July 27, 2009

  • The next planet was inhabited by a tippler. This was a very short visit, but it plunged the little prince into deep dejection.

    "What are you doing there?" he said to the tippler, whom he found settled down in silence before a collection of empty bottles and also a collection of full bottles.

    I am drinking," replied the tippler, with a lugubrious air.

    "Why are you drinking?" demanded the little prince.

    "So that I may forget," replied the tippler.

    "Forget what?" inquired the little prince, who already was sorry for him.

    "Forget that I am ashamed," the tippler confessed, hanging his head.

    "Ashamed of what?" insisted the little prince, who wanted to help him.

    "Ashamed of drinking!" The tippler brought his speech to an end, and shut himself up in an impregnable silence.

    And the little prince went away, puzzled.

    "The grown-ups are certainly very, very odd," he said to himself, as he continued on his journey.

    -- Antoine de Saint-Exupery

    July 24, 2009

  • *leaves today*

    Might not have too much in the way of internet. Will not have too much in the way of time. Have a good time 'till I come back!

    June 29, 2009

  • Isn't there a pun in there somewhere, "Fleance fled" or something like that?

    June 29, 2009

  • Not to be confused with a poinsettia?

    June 28, 2009

  • Is there a similar word for alcohol?

    June 27, 2009

  • Have a look at the Wikipedia article. What a fascinating etymology!

    June 27, 2009

  • Sweet! I live in Ellicott City! I had no idea the porch was so close!

    June 27, 2009

  • They have since made it into the Governor's desk.

    Where in MD do you live, dc?

    June 27, 2009

  • I do not have my lexicon with me, unfortunately. μέντοι is a particle that I've forgotten the precise function of. I think it can be used to connect two clauses. Don't think there's a μέντος or μέντως, unless it's in modern Greek. I think that madmouth was speaking of an actual candy called Euridice?

    June 25, 2009

  • Skipvia's comment of about a year ago: are you a pianist? I practically never meet anybody else who can improvise. It's most of what I do at the piano, because I am inherently lazy...I do not have synaesthesia, but I do have absolute pitch, which means each of the twelve tones has a unique sound to me, a sound which is often very vaguely associated with an emotion, or occastionally a colour or vowel sound. I've never been able to get at them clearly enough to work out a table of all them, and they change from time to time. I've also never been able to figure out if this is why I can improvise so easily. But it is incredibly satisfying to be able to transfer my emotions directly to my fingers.

    June 24, 2009

  • "Their name, their years, spelt by th' unletter'd Muse,

    The place of fame and elegy supply:

    And many a holy text around she strews,

    That teach the rustic moralist to die."

    -- Thomas Gray, "Elegy Written in a Country Church-yard

    June 18, 2009

  • I knew a Ukrainian whose last name was Baklaiev, pronounced with two syllables.

    June 18, 2009

  • I love this word and do it often, both in the sense of walking and talking.

    June 18, 2009

  • "To become more in an interesting condition" actually quite nearly approximates the literal translation of the Greek Facebook for the English "in a relationship".

    June 18, 2009

  • My Middle English resources tell me the vowel is going to be like our "oo". As in "you", or "house" in Canadian. And that the "gh" is going to be like a Scottish ch, but in the back of the mouth. (It's in the front of the mouth with vowels such as e and i, in which case it sounds more like a sh.)

    June 18, 2009

  • I mean...the list isn't *so* bad...a lot of the words are very sparkly, and most of them very clever. I would applaud any poet who was able to work any of them into his work, though they seem, as sionnach pointed out, more the province of W.S. Gilbert, or Ogden Nash, or some other comic.

    More likely probably some other Victorian, now that I think about it. But I like the Victorians.

    June 17, 2009

  • See, I was hoping for *resofinculum being an actual word for wire hanger :) but thanks!

    June 17, 2009

  • See also bubonics.

    June 17, 2009

  • The dialect of English spoken by boobs.

    June 17, 2009

  • Tintinnabulation??

    June 17, 2009

  • I finally decided today that this is my favourite word.

    June 17, 2009

  • The lion is the king of beasts,

    And husband of the Lioness.

    Gazelles and things on which he feasts,

    Address him as "Your Hioness".

    There are those who admire that roar of his,

    In the African jungles and veldts,

    But I think wherever a lion is,

    I'd rather be somewhere eldts.

    - Ogden Nash

    June 17, 2009

  • I remember Dr. Seuss rhyming "month" with "one'th", or something to that effect.

    June 17, 2009

  • Anyone know the etymology? It seems like it ought to be Latin, but I can't find anything.

    June 17, 2009

  • Yup -- I'm going to try to pick up the language as I can, but I don't know how much I'll come home with.

    Can I make a shameless plug? Give us money!

    June 13, 2009

  • I am prone to this. What would be the verb? Noctivagation? I have a similar problem with peripatetic - peripateticism, I suppose...

    June 13, 2009

  • "Oh, how Botticellian! How Fra-Angelican!"

    -Gilbert & Sullivan, Patience

    June 13, 2009

  • See on no vegemite or marmite, promise.

    June 13, 2009

  • Heh, not to worry. :) *goes off to wiki to look up this drinkish thing*

    "...milk beverage with chocolate and malt, produced by Nestlé and originating from Australia...name derives from the famous Greek athlete Milo of Crotona, after his legendary strength..."

    "...was a 6th century BC wrestler...said to have burst a band about his brow by simply inflating the veins of his temples...died when, trying to rend a tree asunder, his hands became trapped in the cleft of its trunk, and a pack of wolves surprised and devoured him."

    ?!?!!

    June 13, 2009

  • Wow. Just...wow.

    June 13, 2009

  • From Greek deipnon (lunch) + sophistes (a wise man)

    June 12, 2009

  • Aw, you forget me so easy? Don't do that...

    June 12, 2009

  • Nobody else I know really understands Old Bay...

    June 12, 2009

  • Where is my "-icated"? Are you asking where it is locicated?

    Seriously, I don't know what you mean by substanticating that suffication.

    June 12, 2009

  • καλὸς Ï„á½° καλά.

    June 11, 2009

  • Wordle is a pretty cool website. When I discovered it and began telling friends, they all said "wait, didn't you show this one to us already?" and I had to explain the difference between Wordle and Wordie.

    June 11, 2009

  • Aye, not to disparage the eximious "phlogis-" in any way. Just saying "-icated" is a minipleasure each time.

    June 11, 2009

  • Other end meaning Eastern Shore or other end meaning Virginiaish? But sure, no problem.

    June 11, 2009

  • I mean...sure. Aside from a general animosity against politicians I have nothing against the place. It's actually rather pretty.

    I guess I have a very special loathing for DC, the sort of affectionate hatred you can only really have for a hometown. You never miss a chance to disparage it, but you secretly have a very soft spot about it. I don't know if anybody else has that feeling.

    June 11, 2009

  • There's also something incredibly satisfying about an '-icated' suffix. Not entirely sure why.

    June 11, 2009

  • Annapolis, Maryland is a very pretty place in its own right. But the culture and studentry of St. John's College are a unique intellectual beauty that I don't think you could find anywhere else.

    I should make a St. John's list. *mutters*

    June 11, 2009

  • A sport played once a year at my school and as far as I know nowhere else. Teams are divided between seniors/freshmen and sophomores/juniors (the Ends vs. the Means). Teams attempt to pass a ball through a goal. The game ends after three goals, three hospitalizations, or three in the morning. The rules are no weapons, no vehicles, no armor, and no animals.

    June 11, 2009

  • I get to go to Georgia in two weeks! I'll be spending almost a month there. It's really exciting; I'm going to be helping found a Great Books College. Did I mention it was in GEORGIA?

    Language tough as anything I've ever seen, though. Pfui!

    June 11, 2009

  • Ah! Do you also structure partnership relationships between your worms?

    June 11, 2009

  • Thanks! Although, now that I've thought about how I wanted to pose the question for a while, I figured out pretty much all I wanted was overstatement. Psh.

    June 11, 2009

  • There's a list I found once which offered to help make up words for concepts that we don't know or have the name of. I can't find it now. Can anyone help? Or I could just describe my problem here, I guess...

    June 11, 2009

  • Julys. It only looks funny because we aren't used to seeing -ys. But it's one of our grammatical necessities because (to me at least) it is improper to change about a proper name when pluralizing in English.

    One week from now I will be visiting my friend D. McKelvy, and his family, the McKelvys. They are not McKelvies. Nor are they McKelvy's, despite the wanton deviance to this construction by those who abhor virtue. One of them is a McKelvy, and two are McKelvys. Same for July and Julys.

    June 11, 2009

  • Never go back.

    June 11, 2009

  • *dashes to piano, begins playing swing dance tunes*

    June 11, 2009

  • Ooh! I'm too poor to bribe, but this means I get a chance to use the power of sophistry!

    June 10, 2009

  • Hmmm...all a college student can offer is coffee in Annapolis, or more likely Baltimore if it's summertime...

    June 10, 2009

  • Wow, what a find. This will be useful in my regular philosophical discussions. I envision referring to my companions' "nescient points of view".

    June 10, 2009

  • Actually Maher-shalal-hash-baz, meaning something I can't quite remember (speed the spoil, hasten the booty? something like that. at any rate, a name of some sort.)

    June 10, 2009

  • But we went back to the Abbey, and sat on,

    So much the gathering darkness charmed: we sat

    But spoke not, rapt in nameless reverie,

    Perchance upon the future man: the walls

    Blackened about us, bats wheeled, and owls whooped,

    And gradually the powers of the night,

    That range above the region of the wind,

    Deepening the courts of twilight broke them up

    Through all the silent spaces of the worlds,

    Beyond all thought into the Heaven of Heavens.

    Tennyson, The Princess (Conclusion)

    June 10, 2009

  • I had a friend who coined monogambic and digambic as generic terms for skirt-like and pant-like garments. I think it came from the Italian for leg.

    It's at least a useful concept to have a word for, although I've never heard one used in general English.

    June 9, 2009

  • Literally οἴ-μοι, or "ah, me!"

    June 8, 2009

  • Let him be to me a spirit. A message, a thought, a sincerity, a glance from him, I want, but not news, nor pottage. I can get politics, and chat, and neighbourly conveniences from cheaper companions. Should not the society of my friend be to me poetic, pure, universal, and great as nature itself?

    -- Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Friendship"

    June 6, 2009

  • There's what I get for not re-checking my facts on Wiki before posting...reesetee is right. There does exist a Wawa, ON which I was aware of having a friend who grew up near, but I made too many connections.

    (Did I mention the word is onomatopoeic? If you can't tell, I think that's totally awesome.)

    June 6, 2009

  • This is the Chippewa (Ojibwa) Indian word for goose. Hence, on those ubiquitous convenience stores across the northeastern US and Canada, you can see small drawings of geese. The stores were actually named after the town of Wawa, Ontario, which was named after the geese.

    This word is onomatopoeic.

    June 6, 2009

  • A tremendously useful word. I learned it from C. S. Lewis.

    June 5, 2009

  • procrustinate: to have your time wasted by means of being tortured. See Procrustes.

    June 5, 2009

  • What's interesting is entering a single letter, and seeing how the popularity of beginning with that letter has changed over time.

    June 4, 2009

  • How do you guys pronounce this? I'd been using short u for both since I first saw this, but it occurred to me the other day that the humour value is greatly increased with a long u in the first syllable. I don't know how to use IPA...

    June 4, 2009

  • 'Collect' is actually the original meaning of the Greek root λ-γ, whence λόγος, λέγω, etc. The later and more common senses came to be counting money, making an account of something, and then generally speaking and saying. (There are about a dozen important definitions of λόγος, with several dozen more minor senses. A fascinating, fascinating, word, made even more interesting by the Gospel of John's appropriation of it as the best description for Jesus Christ.)

    In most of Ancient Greek, yes, if you wanted to say 'collect' you would use συλλέγω, although it could also be used for "I discuss". However, I don't think there's really any precedent for using συλλέγω in an English word for collection. -phile seems to be fairly well entrenched. I despise constructions such as 'keyophile', however; probably because I find the blatant mixing of roots, especially with random 'o' stuck in middle, somewhat ugly. I don't have a problem with mixing roots, I just like it to be a little more subtle. Key collector is fine.

    Interestingly, the English word colLeCt is the only one where survives the Indo-European root which gave rise to the λ-γ construction in Greek.

    June 4, 2009

  • Aha, here was the other recent one.

    June 3, 2009

  • defenestly!

    June 3, 2009

  • My experience with anecdotes seems different from the perfected kind that others here seem to have; I've always thought of them as those stories about our own lives that we always have and always seem to have this social or philosophical need to share. Whether they're outrageously funny or tremendously interesting or not, they're a way to share experiences with friends and others around us. With the right people, that's a valuable, even a precious thing.

    Then of course there are those remarkable human beings who have an endless store of those tales, all of them fascinating. Maybe that sort of person would be an anecdotalist, whereas what I'm describing is just people telling anecdotes.

    June 3, 2009

  • From Latin e(x) + grex, out of the herd. Originally used as a compliment, later came to be used ironically which is the meaning it has today. Strangely a similar thing seems to have happened to gregarious.

    June 3, 2009

  • egregious has a pretty cool etymology.

    June 3, 2009

  • not at all, not at all :)

    June 3, 2009

  • See also yarb-spinner.

    June 3, 2009

  • α�?τὸν ακουόντων πε�?ὶ τῆς Ελλήνικης! (Let's hear it for Greek!)

    *catches fufluns*

    By Dionysus!

    June 3, 2009

  • Yes. λάθε is the aorist imperative of the root verb λανθάνω. The original meaning of λανθάνω seems to be "to escape the notice of", which is a fascinating meaning for a verb. But it also generally has to do with becoming unknown, unseen, hiding, obscuring, and forgetting -- this last of which is where λήθη comes in, a derived noun meaning a forgetting or forgetfulness. As a proper noun Λήθη it is Lethe, the river in the underworld from which spirits drink and forget their mortal lives.

    One of the greatest debates among Greek scholars is concerning the word ἀλήθεια, the adjective meaning Truth. In Greek the prefix α- is a privative, or sometimes opposition or negation; however, not all words beginning with α- are privatives. The debate is whether ἀλήθεια is in fact ἀ-λήθεια - making truth a lack of hiddenness.

    In essence there really isn't enough data to make a firm statement either way. It would be a fascinating derivation if it were true, and in fact many Greek philosophers writing long after the development of the language assert it as a folk etymology. In the meantime it remains as a dissertation topic for aspiring Ph.D. students everywhere.

    *end Greek out*

    June 3, 2009

  • The imperative is actually on the other word - so a more accurate translation would be "Obscure your life."

    June 2, 2009

  • I was never sure how you made those bold lines in the first place.

    June 1, 2009

  • Good catch...as well as whosoever and other relations. Any besides the sisters and the cousins (whom we reckon up by dozens), and the aunts?

    May 30, 2009

  • On a different note, I just thought of this today.

    Are who and whom the only words in the English language where wh- takes the h sound instead of the w? I suppose there's whore, also, and its derivatives, but otherwise the vast majority of words are the other way. Can anyone think of others? Or give a reason why this is?

    May 30, 2009

  • I read an interesting use of this in Don Quixote the other day, of a galley slave that had turned Muslim and become a shipmaster. Turns out we get this word from the Spanish renegado, and that Cervantes's use was the original one - a Christian who had denied the faith and turned Muslim. The Latin root is renego, to deny -- as in renege.

    May 30, 2009

  • But long ere scarce a third of his passed by,

    Worse than adversity the Childe befell;

    He felt the fulness of satiety:

    Then loathed he in his native land to dwell,

    Which seemed to him more lone than eremite’s sad cell.

    Byron, Childe Harold's Pilgrimage

    May 30, 2009

  • Tralalalation...

    May 29, 2009

  • If I were a minstrel I'd sing you six love songs

    To tell the whole world of the love that we share

    If I were a merchant I'd bring you six diamonds

    With six blood red roses for my love to wear

    But I am a simple man, a poor common farmer

    So take my six ribbons to tie back your hair

    May 29, 2009

  • *hears Greek mentioned*

    The root γ�?μνος (gymnos) means naked or unclad. From such, the verb γυμνάζω (gymnazô), to train naked, or to exercise, as the exercises of the ancient Greeks were generally done in the nude. Hence γυμνάσις (gymnasis), exercise, and γυμνάσιον (gymnasion), a place for exercises, Latinised as gymnasium.

    A friend of mine coined, from various Greek roots, the γυμνασφαλάκμυς (gymnasphalakmys) or naked mole-rat.

    May 29, 2009

  • I've been known to use our feet are the same for auf wiedersehen.

    May 28, 2009

  • Mind, they say, rules the world -- and what rules the mind but the body? And the body lies at the mercy of that most omnipotent of all mortal potentates: the Chemist.

    Wilkie Collins, The Woman in White

    May 27, 2009

  • Interesting, thanks!

    My perception of this word was doubtless influenced by Roald Dahl's poem:

    In the quelchy quaggy sogmire,

    In the mashy mideous harshland,

    At the witchy hour of gloomness,

    All the grobes come oozing home.

    You can hear them softly slimeing,

    Glissing hissing o'er the slubber,

    All those oily boily bodies

    Oozing onward in the gloam.

    So start to run! Oh, skid and daddle

    Through the slubber slush and sossel!

    Skip jump hop and try to skaddle!

    All the grobes are on the roam!

    May 27, 2009

  • Any relation to gloom, anyone know? Gloaming always calls gloom to mind for me -- not really the depressing part of it, just the dark part.

    Strangely, though it sounds a lot like gloat, the meanings aren't too similar. And gloat is another one of those words that I would say sounds an awful like what it means.

    May 27, 2009

  • This came, we should note, of the definition of man as "a featherless biped".

    May 27, 2009

  • Where I live in Annapolis, slang for a midshipman (cadet at the United States Naval Academy). Probably more commonly spelled middie. Actually slightly derogatory. The middies would refer to one of their own colloquially as a mid.

    St. John's College, my school, is just across the street (and over a brick wall - theirs, not ours). We're referred to as Johnnies. Which leaves the ubiquitous townie for everyone else.

    May 26, 2009

  • Remarkable comparing the number of listings of this spelling vs. the more common in usage mustache. I agree that it is so much cooler with the extra letter. But I can't really say why.

    May 26, 2009

  • Good God, are you *trying* to stalk me?

    May 25, 2009

  • Kde domov můj? I've adapted that from a rhetorical patriotic question into a sort of a motto for life.

    May 25, 2009

  • I expect it's French?

    May 25, 2009

  • Composing scales beside the rails

    That flanked a field of corn,

    A farmer’s boy with vicious joy

    Performed upon a horn:

    The vagrant airs, the fragrant airs

    Around that field that strayed,

    Took flight before the flagrant airs

    That noisome urchin played.

    He played with care “The Maiden’s Prayer;�?

    He played “God Save the Queen,�?

    “Die Wacht am Rhein,�? and “Auld Lang Syne,�?

    And “Wearing of the Green:�?

    With futile toots, and brutal toots,

    And shrill chromatic scales,

    And utterly inutile toots,

    And agonizing wails.

    The while he played, around him strayed,

    And calmly chewed the cud,

    Some thirty-nine assorted kine,

    All ankle-deep in mud:

    They stamped about and tramped about

    That mud, till all the troupe

    Made noises, as they ramped about,

    Like school-boys eating soup.

    Till, growing bored, with one accord

    They broke the fence forlorn:

    The field was doomed. The cows consumed

    Two-thirds of all the corn,

    And viciously, maliciously,

    Went prancing o’er the loam.

    That landscape expeditiously

    Resembled harvest-home.

    “Most idle ass of all your class,�?

    The farmer said with scorn:

    “Just see my son, what you have done!

    The cows are in the corn!�?

    “Oh, drat,�? he said, “the brat!�? he said.

    The cowherd seemed to rouse.

    “My friend, it’s worse than that,�? he said.

    “The corn is in the cows.�?

    The moral lies before our eyes.

    When tending kine and corn,

    Don’t spend your noons in tooting tunes

    Upon a blatant horn:

    Or scaling, and assailing, and

    With energy immense,

    Your cows will take a railing, and

    The farmer take offense.

    - "The Harmonious Heedlessness of Little Boy Blue", by Guy Wetmore Carryl

    May 22, 2009

  • As in raggle-taggle ruminant, no doubt.

    May 20, 2009

  • Actually, the Greek is Ἀ�?ιστοτέλης, which is most directly transliterated this way...thanks to the influence of Latin, everybody says Aristotle.

    May 19, 2009

  • Whoa! Cool!

    May 11, 2009

  • "Swine flew? When pigs fly!"

    May 11, 2009

  • isn't it typically, when spelled quaintly, yoghurt? I've never seen this form...

    I happen to be an immense fan of yoghurt. Yogurt is just boring.

    May 11, 2009

  • idiosyncrasy, used of Benjamin Harrison

    May 6, 2009

  • Not, I'll not, carrion comfort, Despair, not feast on thee...

    -Gerard Manley Hopkins

    May 5, 2009

  • sing, sing a merry madrigal

    May 4, 2009

  • croatian? or some south slavic?

    May 4, 2009

  • Pronounced with four syllables (long final e) and hard ch.

    May 3, 2009

  • To put off until the day after tomorrow...

    May 1, 2009

  • The most common form of beetle as verb. Which is pretty cool.

    May 1, 2009

  • *waits for the inevitable taking of penumbrage*

    April 30, 2009

  • This is such a beautiful word.

    April 30, 2009

  • delightful!

    April 30, 2009

  • the hell?

    April 29, 2009

  • As mentioned elsewhere, kleptomaniac is a possibility, provided one is careful to pronounce a long o on the second syllable.

    April 29, 2009

  • While considering kleptomaniac for the Schwa-free challenge we found kleptomaniacal for this one...

    April 28, 2009

  • I was too much quaffing the septembral juice last night, and this phrase kept running through my head...I suppose that's a good thing.

    April 27, 2009

  • My inner Greek scholar always rankles when people make light of the silent p and other dropped consonants (mnemonic, bdellium, phenophthalein, gnu) ... pedants like me continue to pronounce them. p-terodactyl. It's not incredibly difficult. It's actually kind of fun. And the ancient Greeks did it. So why can't we?

    It's one of my sillier linguistic perfectionisms. In other words, whenever I rant about it, you should pay no attention.

    April 23, 2009

  • There's probably a good pun in here somewhere.

    April 22, 2009

  • I took umbrage the other day after someone made a pun about "shady comments". I was very pleased with myself.

    April 21, 2009

  • When I was first introduced to this, I comically confused it with echidna. I was very sick at the time.

    April 16, 2009

  • Any visions for how this is pronounced? I always want to say "onomatopoetical".

    April 11, 2009

  • i take umbrag

    March 31, 2009

  • Probably should be "Logoi Hellenou".

    March 26, 2009

  • Ha, ha, ha!

    March 23, 2009

  • See also aegrotat.

    March 22, 2009

  • Apparently just another of those tlas.

    March 22, 2009

  • Three letter acronym.

    March 22, 2009

  • A spectacular word for indicating amazement. Why, it's prodigious!

    March 21, 2009

  • I always thought of it in terms of a heartbeat.

    March 21, 2009

  • A very useful, polite, and pretentious expansion of BS. I don't think that's actually its origin, but as far as I've been able to tell they are interchangeable.

    March 21, 2009

  • Not to be confused with tendentious.

    March 21, 2009

  • Made me laugh!

    March 21, 2009

  • A further etymology is from philo, to love, and melos, honey, because apparently nightingales love honey, or were believed to.

    March 21, 2009

  • This is an incredibly useful word. I generally use it insincerely when I hear formal speakers go on at length about much they like their hosts.

    March 21, 2009

  • Apparently a favorite of Jules Verne, or at least his translators, describing sundry characters, by my remembrance, in "From the Earth to the Moon", "Around the Moon", "Journey to the Center of the Earth", "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea", "The Mysterious Island", and "In Search of the Castaways". There very well may be more.

    March 21, 2009

  • "I mean, he's a bit of an autochthonous hebetator, but otherwise a really great guy."

    Another great quote from my life...

    March 21, 2009

  • A sort of cold-blooded creature whose internal temperature varies. From Greek "poikilos" or "many-coloured".

    March 21, 2009

  • Thrilling synonym for procrastinator. I love it.

    March 21, 2009

  • I must say, that is the happiest a website has made me in long time! _Extremely_ satisfying.

    March 21, 2009

  • For some reason I always thought this was some kind of derogatory joke, changing "Liverpool" to "Liverpuddle".

    March 20, 2009

  • Aside from "be", which, as I am told, is irregular in every language but Quechua (this may or may not be correct), there is only one verb in the English language which has completely different stems for two of its tenses or cases. There are significant changes in vowel (i.e. see vs. saw) and sometimes a single consonant gets changed around a bit (i.e. have vs. had) but only in go does the past tense change to something completely different: went.

    I am told that there used to be a lot more of these in English, but most of them dropped out. (There are still plenty in languages such as Greek.)

    Interestingly, went appears to come to us by way of wend, or maybe wended. This can be seen in the Prologue to the Canterbury Tales:

    And specially from every shires ende

    Of Engelond to Caunterbury they wende,

    The hooly blisful martir for to seke...

    March 20, 2009

  • This word has been made forever funny to me by knowing two completely different people with a last name pronounced this way but spelled differently in each case. (Trop, Troup)

    (If either of you see this, hi!)

    March 20, 2009

  • One of my more favorite quotes from my life, shushing someone who'd brought up a somewhat delicate subject:

    "Go find yourself a decent ten-foot pole and learn to use it."

    March 20, 2009

  • Found on cereal boxes: "Fortified with 17 different vitamins & minerals!!" Which always makes me want to use 'fortified' in some similar yet incongruous way with something completely different, for humorous effect.

    March 20, 2009

  • "Hats. They have two purposes: to be doffed and to be worn at rakish angles."

    From a Facebook group...what can I say?

    March 20, 2009

  • "All and sundry then repair to a nearby tree to commit simony, petty larceny, tergiversation, and misfeasance, evict a few widows and orphans, and enact more laws."

    - Will Cuppy, "The Crow"

    from "How to Tell Your Friends from the Apes"

    March 20, 2009

  • There's an awfully good book by a Greek fellow named Longinus (actually, scholars are unsure whether his name was Longinus, Dionysus, or Dionysus Longinus, but they usually go with the first) called On the Sublime, sometimes translated badly as On Great Writing. Very good thoughts about what sets the sublime apart from the mere extremely beautiful and interesting.

    March 20, 2009

  • now this is a good word.

    March 20, 2009

  • I suppose condemn might have something to do with damn?

    March 20, 2009

  • "No, you're not, you chuckle-head, you're singing the Judge's song from Trial by Jury."

    -- Three Men in a Boat

    March 20, 2009

  • Mud, mud, glorious mud!

    Nothing quite like it for cooling the blood!

    So follow me, follow

    Down to the hollow

    And there we will wallow

    In glorious mud.

    - The Hippopotamus Song

    March 20, 2009

  • I was always fond of the answer filagry, which I have seen in legitimate (19th-century) writing as a variant of filagree.

    March 20, 2009

  • Sounds like the bass section in the choirs I've sung in.

    March 20, 2009

  • how closely is this related to condemn? I feel as if I could almost use them interchangeably.

    March 19, 2009

  • I have really rather a tendency to overuse this word -- not so much as an intensifier really than as an offset for the parts of my sentences.

    March 19, 2009

  • A story is told of this redoubtable lady, that she once emptied a bucket of urine upon the head of Socrates, whereupon he replied, "After the thunder must come the rain."

    March 19, 2009

  • I wonder what the essential difference between this and a rodomontade is.

    March 19, 2009

  • as in taximeter cabriolet, or taxicab.

    March 19, 2009

  • Oh, but that's so dull. Ligatures? Who needs ligatures?

    March 19, 2009

  • you can add prefixes to some of the ones you have...enhearten, foreshorten, enlighten...as well as embolden...I think the en- em- prefix will do well by you.

    March 19, 2009

  • Piglet.

    March 19, 2009

  • why, you've outdone yourself, sir!

    March 18, 2009

  • The opposite being zemblanity.

    March 18, 2009

  • mmm...it is U+1D15 in Unicode...so probably you don't have the right fonts.

    It looks a little like this: http://www.decodeunicode.org/data/glyph/196x196/1D15.gif

    March 18, 2009

  • "A jovial swain should not complain of any buxom fair / Who mocks his pain and thinks it gain to quiz his awkward air."

    An ingenious couplet notable for containing all letters of the English alphabet save one.

    March 18, 2009

  • A most useful and curious creature. Anybody have any clue what it could be used for?

    March 18, 2009

  • When used in music it is from the Italian and partakes of two syllables.

    When used as a synonym for something one is good at it derives from the French through the sport of fencing, and only has one.

    This is really not that difficult. This however continues to be one of the stock stupidities that people commonly refuse to correct because "everyone else does it that way". Well, everyone else who's uneducated, at least.

    March 18, 2009

  • Not to be confused with a monad.

    March 15, 2009

  • No! He's using the phascolomian option!

    March 14, 2009

  • You know, some people have no trouble at all screwing up.

    January 19, 2009

  • "Crows hold courts of justice where sentence is passed upon Crows who do not know the mayor. After much cawing by the judge and a jury of the usual sort the defendant is torn to pieces to teach him a lesson. All and sundry then repair to a nearby tree to commit simony, petty larceny, tergiversation, and misfeasance, evict a few widows and orphans, double-cross one another, and make more laws. After a good laugh they hold evening prayers and go to roost in the wrong nests."

    Will Cuppy, "How To Tell Your Friends From The Apes"

    January 12, 2009

  • Used of rivers: 'the nettopherous Scamander'

    November 9, 2008

  • Duck-carrying.

    November 7, 2008

  • The thought gives paws to all who ponder...

    September 27, 2008

  • I got into a ramshackle contraption, driven by a knock-kneed, broken-winded somnambulist, which his owner, in a moment of enthusiasm, during conversation, referred to as a horse.

    -Jerome K. Jerome, Three Men in a Boat

    September 24, 2008

  • Surprisingly, this word is pronounced properly "a-phelion" instead of the common "ap-helion", as in Greek the pi + rough breathing elides to phi. Granted, in the more ancient pronunciation phi *is in fact pronounced as an aspirated pi, but that approaches pedantry. For comparison see ephemeral.

    September 19, 2008

  • looks like WeirdNet to me

    August 28, 2008

  • Come on, Washington deserves it...

    August 26, 2008

  • Useless when pronounced.

    August 25, 2008

  • Tickled pink that I recognized four, and two of rolig's, and guessed two more.

    August 25, 2008

  • Oh, I HATE it when they write rhos like that! Only slightly better than the kappas that are indistinguishable from chis!

    August 24, 2008

  • Wooo, Ballamer!

    August 24, 2008

  • * Resident punnist begs to inform that there is a sort of major conflagration known as a "three-alarmer".

    August 23, 2008

  • Goes well with keratinous. "My keratinous excrescences have been rather growing rapidly of late!"

    August 23, 2008

  • I DON'T KNOW THE MEANINGS OF ALL OF THOSE WORDS, BUT HERE ARE SOME:

    TECTONIC: OF OR RELATING TO THE GERMAN NATION

    HALCYON: A SORT OF A KINGFISHER BIRD

    AMALGAM: WHEN MIXED RACES GET MARRIED

    BELLIGERENCE: THE ACT OF RINGING A BELL

    AMORPHOUS: RESEMBLING A MORPHO BUTTERFLY

    ABSOLUTISM: HAVING OR BEARING A PREFERENCE FOR ABSOLUT VODKA

    GERRYMANDERING: THE ACT OF TORTURING SALAMANDERS BY CALLING THEM ALL GERRY

    TURPITUDE: A FANBOY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND AND THEIR ATHLETIC TEAMS, CALLED THE TURPS.

    HOPE THESE HELP

    August 23, 2008

  • A useful and bombastic way to say improper. By analogy with iniquitous and hypocritous.

    August 23, 2008

  • Which explains someone being dastardly.

    August 23, 2008

  • I had a friend who was once a Charismatic, and parodied speaking glossolalia with the mantra "shamela shamela shamela shamela shamela shamela"

    August 23, 2008

  • See daemon.

    August 22, 2008

  • No, more like "Why dost thou look askance at me?"

    August 22, 2008

  • similar to a trichobezoar, I suppose

    August 22, 2008

  • In fact, there are 42 letters in the top ten most wordied! (Take that statement how you want.)

    August 22, 2008

  • point taken

    August 22, 2008

  • Lincoln had a way of being eloquent without being flowery; he realized that the key to great speaking is sentence structure in basic English with a few choice words thrown in, rather than a thousand polysyllables all in a gangling heap.

    August 22, 2008

  • I've always been partial to the numbers 22 and 47, myself...although 83 is really nice as well, and of course you can't forget 129.

    August 22, 2008

  • What I meant by archaism is that the use of 'deserts' in the English language is solely restricted to this construction. Anything else, one would you 'what he deserved' or something.

    August 22, 2008

  • The speeches of Lincoln are some of the finest uses of the English language in existence. They rank directly with the King James Bible and Shakespeare.

    August 21, 2008

  • Aye, that was my source for a good number of them...I decided 100 was enough for a good flavouring...

    August 21, 2008

  • Anybody familiar with this ignivomous rhetoric? Any favourites that I missed?

    August 21, 2008

  • But it's not cacti and cow skulls -- it's getting what you deserve. I suppose you might call it an archaicism for 'deservings'.

    August 21, 2008

  • Probably true. I was actually unsure. Note that my examples can be construed either way.

    August 21, 2008

  • Useful as a modifier of intensity: "passing strange that the moon should be purple to-night!" "That's passing early for Joe to be awake."

    August 21, 2008

  • I do wish you wouldn't be like this. I as well as a number of other people have really appreciated what you've contributed to this site, but it's passing unfortunate that you have chosen to make a personal issue out of 42. If you want to leave, all for the best, I'm sure, but I think a lot of people, including yourself, would be happier if you would agree to just be calm about everything and, if criticizing a word, doing so in an impersonal way.

    God bless,

    T.

    August 21, 2008

  • Dodged a bullet on that o--- no! ouch!

    Must be the shine of all those gold medals. I am going to go compose an ode in elegiac couplets.

    August 21, 2008

  • Probably from Greek ergos work, and thus related to ergatic.

    August 21, 2008

  • a spoken word

    August 21, 2008

  • (six syllables, not five)

    one who wars about words

    August 21, 2008

  • one who writes words

    August 21, 2008

  • "Monitor to note those who miss Lectures, and give their name to the Humanity Lecturer who shall punish them not by pecuniary mulcts but by tasks of making Verses, Themes, Epistles, or getting anything without book. All pecuniary mulcts of Undergraduates to be abolished, and Exercises, Admonitions, Recantations, and Expulsions (according to the nature of the crime) to succeed in their room."

    -- Isaac Newton, "Of Educating Youth in Universities"

    August 21, 2008

  • Have you seen her? She's something appalling!

    -- The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • I objurgate the centipede,

    A bug we do not really need.

    At sleepy-time he beats a path

    Straight to the bedroom or the bath.

    You always wallop where he's not,

    And if you do, he leaves a spot.

    -- Ogden Nash

    August 21, 2008

  • Well, maybe we'll pass it again on the way back down.

    August 21, 2008

  • As I said, it looks like something that started light-hearted and which he proceeded to get touchy over. I've been known to get shirty, especially over the internet, over things that I shouldn't have, and once I cooled down and apologised everything was fine. But contumely tends towards aggravation rather than amelioration. All I'm sayin'.

    August 21, 2008

  • I don't know; the vorpal blade went snicker-snack!

    August 21, 2008

  • Geny would be from genÄ“sis, or beginning (identical to our genesis). So the beginning of being would bring to head again the beginning of species. Silly little idea.

    August 21, 2008

  • A useful term for 'a bit of', as in, "I'll have a spot of orange juice, please?"

    August 21, 2008

  • Zmays! Here's something that's gotten all out of hand! Let's all cool a bit, somewhere to the level of a Bose-Einstein condensate. I'm sure logos realises he was out of line, so let's not get anthropoctonous about this. If we all consider the matter with sagacity and not fractiousness, there will be no need for Schadenfreude to be added to my list

    Let us neither traduce one another nor palliate the offense. Logos, I would urge you to apologise...you've used heavy words for just a spot of silliness (and silliness is quite common to this place). But some of you others also came down really hard on him, when you could have gone about this whole business with civility instead of ignivomous histrionics and fescennine hadeharia. At any rate, I shall be quite lugubrious if anyone has to leave over this.

    August 21, 2008

  • DUKE. When, to evade Destruction's hand,

    To hide they all proceeded,

    No soldier in that gallant band

    Hid half as well as he did.

    He lay concealed throughout the war,

    And so preserved his gore, O!

    That unaffected,

    Undetected,

    Well-connected

    Warrior,

    The Duke of Plaza-Toro!

    ALL. In every doughty deed, ha, ha!

    He always took the lead, ha, ha!

    That unaffected,

    Undetected,

    Well-connected

    Warrior,

    The Duke of Plaza-Toro!

    -W.S. Gilbert, The Gondoliers

    August 21, 2008

  • KO-KO. Your Majesty, it's like this: It is true that I stated that I had killed Nanki-Poo----

    MIKADO. Yes, with most affecting particulars.

    POOH-BAH. Merely corroborative detail intended to give artistic verisimilitude to a bald and----

    KO-KO. Will you refrain from putting in your oar? (To Mikado.) It's like this: When your Majesty says, "Let a thing be done," it's as good as done--practically, it is done--because your Majesty's will is law. Your Majesty says, "Kill a

    gentleman," and a gentleman is told off to be killed.

    Consequently, that gentleman is as good as dead--practically, he is dead--and if he is dead, why not say so?

    MIKADO. I see. Nothing could possibly be more satisfactory!

    -- Gilbert & Sullivan

    August 21, 2008

  • The male participle in Greek for "being", the process of existence. Very important in philosophy, especially in (you guessed it) ontology.

    August 21, 2008

  • The feminine of ontia; the 'being' of somebody with specific reference to his stuff.

    August 21, 2008

  • The flowers that bloom in the spring,

    Have nothing to do with the case.

    I've got to take under my wing,

    A most unattractive old thing,

    With a caricature of a face

    And that's what I mean when I say, or I sing,

    "Oh, bother the flowers that bloom in the spring."

    W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • MIKADO. Now, let's see about your execution--will

    after luncheon suit you? Can you wait till then?

    KO-KO, PITTI-SING, and POOH-BAH. Oh, yes--we can wait till then!

    MIKADO. Then we'll make it after luncheon.

    POOH-BAH. I don't want any lunch.

    MIKADO. I'm really very sorry for you all, but it's an unjust world, and virtue is triumphant only in theatrical performances.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    (that last line is one of the best in the entire language, seconded only closely by Westley in the Princess Bride: "Life is pain, Highness. Anyone who says otherwise is only trying to sell something.")

    August 21, 2008

  • Oh, never shall I

    Forget the cry,

    Or the shriek that shrieked he,

    As I gnashed my teeth,

    When from its sheath

    I drew my snickersnee!

    -- The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • The billiard sharp who any one catches,

    His doom's extremely hard--

    He's made to dwell--

    In a dungeon cell

    On a spot that's always barred.

    And there he plays extravagant matches

    In fitless finger-stalls

    On a cloth untrue

    With a twisted cue

    And elliptical billiard balls!

    -- The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • KO-KO. What are you going to do with that rope?

    NANKI-POO. I am about to terminate an unendurable existence.

    KO-KO. Terminate your existence? Oh, nonsense! What for?

    NANKI-POO. Because you are going to marry the girl I adore.

    KO-KO. Nonsense, sir. I won't permit it. I am a humane man, and if you attempt anything of the kind I shall order your instant arrest. Come, sir, desist at once or I summon my guard.

    NANKI-POO. That's absurd. If you attempt to raise an alarm, I instantly perform the Happy Despatch with this dagger.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • And so

    Although

    I wish to go,

    And greatly pine

    To brightly shine,

    And take the line

    Of hero fine,

    With grief condign

    I must decline!

    W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • To sit in solemn silence in a dull, dark dock,

    In a pestilential prison, with a life-long lock,

    Awaiting the sensation of a short sharp shock,

    From a cheap and chippy chopper on a big black block!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • But family pride

    Must be denied

    And set aside

    And mortified...

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • The youth who winked a roving eye,

    Or breathed a non-connubial sigh,

    Was thereupon condemned to die--

    He usually objected.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • Useful for describing anciented cows.

    August 21, 2008

  • The Solicitor is a rare unspeaking major part in a Savoy opera, representing Mr. Bunthorne the Aesthetic Poet in Patience. Mr. Bunthorne announces that his Solicitor has given him the advice to raffle himself off for marriage, after which the horrified suitors of the young ladies purchasing tickets curse him off the stage. Many directors take advantage of his silence yet presence on stage for a good deal of time for some situational comedy.

    August 21, 2008

  • Dragoons were generally light cavalry, used as a sort of police or guerrilla force on occasion, which is where the verb form comes in. So it was kind of silly for Gilbert to talk about "Heavy Dragoons", it being an oxymoron. (See residuum for citation.)

    The name came from the carbine they originally used, called a dragon.

    August 21, 2008

  • Originally akel-dama, field of blood, in Aramaic. In the Bible, Judas bought a field with the money he received from betraying Jesus, then, overcome with guilt, hanged himself above it, after which his body fell and burst open, and this name was given to it. Now chiefly poetical.

    August 21, 2008

  • Gentle sir, my heart is frolicsome and free...

    Gilbert, Patience.

    August 21, 2008

  • Gentle Jane was as good as gold,

    She always did as she was told;

    She never spoke when her mouth was full,

    Or caught bluebottles their legs to pull,

    Or spilt plum jam on her nice new frock,

    Or put white mice in the eight-day clock,

    Or vivisected her last new doll,

    Or fostered a passion for alcohol.

    And when she grew up she was given in marriage

    To a first-class earl who keeps his carriage!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, Patience

    August 21, 2008

  • If I had been so lucky as to have a steady brother

    Who could talk to me as we are talking now to one another –

    Who could give me good advice when he discovered I was erring

    (Which is just the very favour which on you I am conferring),

    My existence would have made a rather interesting idyll,

    And I might have lived and died a very decent indiwiddle.

    This particularly rapid, unintelligible patter

    Isn't generally heard, and if it is it doesn't matter!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, Ruddigore

    August 21, 2008

  • What time the poet hath hymned

    The writhing maid, lithe-limbed,

    Quivering on amaranthine asphodel,

    How can he paint her woes,

    Knowing, as well he knows,

    That all can be set right with calomel?

    -- Bunthorne, the Aesthetic Poet, in W.S. Gilbert's Patience

    August 21, 2008

  • DUKE. I began, at last, to think that man was born bent at an angle of forty-five degrees! Great heavens, what is there to adulate in me? Am I particularly intelligent, or remarkably studious, or excruciatingly witty, or unusually accomplished, or exceptionally virtuous?

    soldiers begin to titter as DUKE speaks, gradually giggling, laughing, and roaring outright at his final words

    -- W.S. Gilbert, Patience

    August 21, 2008

  • Ah! Take of these elements all that is fusible,

    Melt them all down in a pipkin or crucible,

    Set them to simmer, and take off the scum,

    And a Heavy Dragoon is the residuum!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, Patience

    August 21, 2008

  • My object all sublime

    I will achieve in time,

    To let the punishment fit the crime,

    The punishment fit the crime,

    And make each pris'ner pent

    Unwillingly represent

    A source of innocent merriment,

    Of innocent merriment.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Mikado

    August 21, 2008

  • Creating a new list, select the bottom option of allowing anybody to contribute

    August 21, 2008

  • GUISEPPE: It's quite simple. Observe. Two husbands have managed to acquire three wives. Three wives--two husbands. (Reckoning up.) That's two-thirds of a husband to each wife.

    TESSA: O Mount Vesuvius, here we are in arithmetic! My good sir, one can't marry a vulgar fraction!

    GIUSEPPE: You've no right to call me a vulgar fraction!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Gondoliers

    August 21, 2008

  • Take a tender little hand,

    Fringed with dainty fingerettes...

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Gondoliers

    August 21, 2008

  • As in 'skeletonic keys'.

    August 20, 2008

  • Also, someone who attacks his parents.

    August 20, 2008

  • When constabulary duty's to be done, to be done, a policeman's life is not an happy one.

    -- The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • When a felon's not engaged in his employment,

    Or maturing his felonious little plans,

    His capacity for innocent enjoyment

    Is just as great as any honest man's.

    -- The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • For when threatened with emeutes,

    Tarantara! tarantara!

    And your heart is in your boots,

    Tarantara!

    There is nothing brings it round

    Like the trumpet's martial sound,

    Like the trumpet's martial sound!

    I think it means riots, of some sort. From the Pirates of Penzance.

    August 20, 2008

  • "If I hadn't in elegant diction

    Indulged in an innocent fiction

    Which is not in the same category

    As telling a regular terrible story."

    August 20, 2008

  • Not to be mistaken for 'often'.

    August 20, 2008

  • 'When I know precisely what is meant by commissariat'

    -- The Major-General's Song in the Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • Hold, monsters! Ere your pirate caravanserai

    Proceed, against our will, to wed us all,

    Just bear in mind that we are Wards in Chancery,

    And father is a Major-General!

    -- The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • Here's a first-rate opportunity

    To get married with impunity,

    And indulge in the felicity

    Of unbounded domesticity.

    You shall quickly be parsonified,

    Conjugally matrimonified,

    By a doctor of divinity,

    Who resides in this vicinity.

    -- The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • Oh, is there not one maiden here

    Whose homely face and bad complexion

    Have caused all hope to disappear

    Of ever winning man's affection?

    To such an one, if such there be,

    I swear by Heaven's arch above you,

    If you will cast your eyes on me,

    However plain you be, I'll love you!

    -- The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • In that case unprecendented

    Single I shall live and die,

    I shall have to be contented

    With your heartfelt sympathy.

    -- several characters at different moments in Gilbert & Sullivan's "Patience"; it is pronounced there to rhyme with 'die', which apparently used to be a valid pronunciation.

    August 20, 2008

  • Your love would be uncomfortably

    fervid, it is clear

    If, as you are stating

    It's been accumulating

    Forty-seven year.

    -- Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • Oh, better far to live and die

    Under the brave black flag I fly,

    Than play a sanctimonious part,

    With a pirate head and a pirate heart.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Pirates of Penzance

    August 20, 2008

  • Also a useful synonym for excellent.

    August 20, 2008

  • Sit down, sir - or I'll instantly vociferate "Police!"

    -- Cox and Box

    August 20, 2008

  • Archaic Britishism for face.

    August 20, 2008

  • As in a 'rasher of bacon'.

    August 20, 2008

  • Ah! then you mean to say that this gentleman's smoke, instead of emulating the example of all other sorts of smoke, and going up the chimney, thinks proper to affect a singularity by taking the contrary direction?

    -- Cox and Box

    August 20, 2008

  • Mistaking my instructions, which within my brain did gyrate,

    I took and bound this promising boy apprentice to a pirate.

    Ruth, The Pirates of Penzance, Gilbert & Sullivan

    August 20, 2008

  • The centerpiece of an aria sung by Sergeant Bouncer of his days in the army in Cox & Box.

    August 20, 2008

  • Bouncer. Good morning, Colonel Cox. I hope you slept comfortably, Colonel.

    Cox. I can't say I did, B. I should feel obliged to you, if you could accommodate me

    with a more protuberant bolster, B. The one I’ve got now seems to me to have

    about a handful and a half of feathers at each end, and nothing whatever in the

    middle.

    -- Cox and Box

    August 20, 2008

  • Confused by the Attorney for the Defense with bigamy in Gilbert & Sullivan's 'Trial by Jury'.

    August 20, 2008

  • Oh, the monster overbearing!

    Don't go near him, he is swearing!

    -- Cousin Hebe in H.M.S. Pinafore, by W.S. Gilbert

    August 20, 2008

  • Hail, poetry, thou heav'n-born maid!

    Thou gildest e'en the pirate's trade!

    Hail, flowing fount of sentiment!

    All hail, all hail, Divine Emollient!

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Pirates of Penzance

    I really ought to do a G&S list.

    August 20, 2008

  • I participated in the vivisection of a frog last year. We bathed it in cocaine first, so it died happy. I subsequently removed its heart, which continued beating for an hour afterwards.

    Awesome!!

    August 20, 2008

  • Elision was used in Greek to avoid pausis, a glottal stop between two vowels, which they considered ugly. Hence we got silly constructs like ta auta becoming tauta, rendering the word for 'the same things' virtually identical to the one for 'that' with the minor exception of having an unused breathing mark left in the middle of the word.

    August 20, 2008

  • There's a character in Comenius's Labyrinth of the World and Paradise of the Heart whose name is translated in English 'Searchall Ubiquitous'. He turns out to be rather a rogue...

    August 20, 2008

  • There is a great deal of debate as to the pronunciation of classical Greek (and what I said earlier I meant to apply only to general American pronunciation). I'd heard that alpha had two distinct sounds, but other theories do exist. It's probably just my archaicism coming across, but I'd rather not pronounce according to the way the Vowel Shift has gone when there's a perfectly good Greek cognate to base my pedantry off of. And I may be wrong about the accent of ouranos, I don't have any of my references with me, but I thought I remembered the accent being nearer the front. If I remember my rules correctly, it's unusual to have an accent on the ultimate in a three-syllable word; I guess because the penult and ultimate are both short it might be on the penult, but I really would have thought it was on the antepenult.

    August 20, 2008

  • That may be, but Undecimber is the term used; contrary to what is normal, I didn't coin this one!

    August 20, 2008

  • Remember, however, that long a in Greek is the difference between 'father' and 'cat'. If it were truly what we consider as long a, it would be transcribed Ä“ (and often those are mispronounced as an English long e!) Based on the pronunciation of the Greek, I would recommend 'oo-rahn-us' with stress on either first or second syllable (the Greek would actually take the first, or sometimes third depending on declension, but the second sounds better imo...)

    August 20, 2008

  • Shrivel and die, you pusillanimous wimp!

    -- SMAC insult given to head of U.N.

    August 20, 2008

  • The thirteenth month of the calendar. Bet you didn't know there were thirteen months, did you? In fact, you can technically have as many months as you want. Our Gregorian calendar only uses twelve of them. But certain calendars, such as the Hebrew or Arabian, have the potentiality for thirteen months: and to support these in computer programs, specifically the Java language, the term Undecimber was introduced.

    The name derives from the Latin undecim, or eleven.

    August 20, 2008

  • I picked up this usage from my father, an investor; he would call something 'a real bear' if it was particularly difficult, troublesome, or annoying, as in "the Beltway was a real bear to drive this morning" or "setting up that program can be a real bear unless you know how to do it".

    August 20, 2008

  • A totally awesome state of matter.

    August 19, 2008

  • Venice about that time is a classic example of a thalassocracy. Spain or England is less good, as they had extensive land-based colonies. A thalassocracy is where the power is almost 100% in ships and islands and trade, i.e. early Renaissance Venice, classical Athens, or (the ultimate example) the mediaeval-era Hanseatic League of the North and Baltic Seas.

    August 19, 2008

  • Not to be confused with e.g.! The two are not interchangeable.

    August 19, 2008

  • Learnt this phrase in Uncle Remus.

    August 19, 2008

  • I think a chain mace might have unspiked balls. Probably the terms have some serious blending.

    August 19, 2008

  • Useful to describe children. "Ma'am, I'm afraid your child has been quite recalcitrant."

    August 19, 2008

  • "Our new cars, redolent of pine, spruce, and other all-natural scents..."

    August 19, 2008

  • To be humourously contrasted with combustibles.

    August 19, 2008

  • Brought into English by Rostand in his play Cyrano de Bergerac; his dying words declare that it is the only thing that cannot be taken away from him.

    August 19, 2008

  • "A Long Littoral" was one of the assets of a successful country described by President T. Roosevelt.

    August 19, 2008

  • In Cheaper By The Dozen (or its sequel; can't remember) the mother tells the girls that it is improper to make a 'depreciating moue'...or something to that effect.

    August 19, 2008

  • A form I much prefer to griffin.

    This also has the much-sought rare distinction of containing the three consecutive letters 'gry', though not ending with them.

    August 19, 2008

  • "...if NATIONAL REVIEW is superfluous, it is so for very different reasons: It stands athwart history, yelling Stop, at a time when no one is inclined to do so, or to have much patience with those who so urge it."

    -- Wm. F. Buckley

    I always thought that was a neat turn of phrase.

    August 19, 2008

  • Conversation I had working IT:

    Guy: I got this problem, I keep getting these emails.

    Me: Emails?

    Guy: Yeah, and I can't understand a word of them, they're all letters and numbers all jumbled up, can't make head nor tail of them.

    Me: So where are you getting these emails from?

    Guy: I don't know, they're all from a guy named Damon. I don't know who he is, I thought maybe he worked with you guys.

    Me: Damon?

    Guy: Yeah, Mailer Daemon. You know him?

    Me: Ohhhhh! That's not Damon, that's DEMON! That's way above my level, that means your computer's possessed. I'm just IT, you need an exorcist.

    I actually like to pronounce it as the Greek, 'daimon' with ai as in Thailand. This is actually the intermediate vowel between ay and ee, so it sounds all right for people who have been used to pronouncing it either way. This should be the general rule for all uses of the ae ligature (and oe is oi as in voice). If you have to choose something else, however, I'd take demon.

    August 19, 2008

  • Isn't this also a sort of an accent?

    August 19, 2008

  • From Greek hedonÄ“, pleasure, and a-privative.

    August 18, 2008

  • Minor coinage; virtually identical with 'hypocritical'.

    August 18, 2008

  • In my Ptolemy classes I misheard "apparent anomalistic motion of the sun" as "apparent and umbolistic..." So it actually doesn't mean anything. But I want it to.

    August 18, 2008

  • Unfortunately, yes; one must re-add the deleted word.

    August 18, 2008

  • A prophet; from Greek: 'hiera' holy things 'phanein' to bring to light.

    August 18, 2008

  • Just a so-much-funnier way to say bus. Quick! Get on that omnibus!

    August 18, 2008

  • Just a so-much-more-pedantic way to say taxicab.

    August 18, 2008

  • Just a so-much-cooler way to say 'ambush'.

    August 18, 2008

  • From Greek 'gune', woman, and 'aner' ('andros' related form), man.

    August 18, 2008

  • See also dephlogisticated.

    August 18, 2008

  • how does this differ from artifact?

    August 18, 2008

  • Once I built a railroad, made it run, made it race against time,

    Once I built a railroad, now it's done, brother can you spare a dime?

    August 18, 2008

  • Creation.

    August 18, 2008

  • That's silly. Why don't you just use pneuma? For some reason English speakers are frightened of more than two consonants beginning a word. So they drop the beginnings of gnomon, Ptolemy, pterodactyl, chthonic, pneumatic, psychology, mnemonic, Cnidarian, bdellium, and the wonderful middle of phenolphthalein, in addition to who knows what else. But it's fun to begin a word with two consonants! Similar wishy-washiness is seen beginning words with x; Xerxes and xanthrophyll are not Zerkzes and zanthrophil! It's particularly annoying with words that begin with ps -- that's one letter and pronounced as one letter! We don't say Cyclos, we say Cyclops -- so why not psalter?

    August 16, 2008

  • Malacious -- like malicious and salacious at the same time!

    August 16, 2008

  • I.E. in a stentorian or Cape Horn voice?

    August 16, 2008

  • One of Ogden Nash's finest:

    From whence arrived the praying mantis?

    From outer space, or lost Atlantis?

    I glimpse the grin, green metal mug

    That masks the pseudo-saintly bug,

    Orthopterous, also carnivorous,

    And faintly whisper, Lord deliver us.

    August 16, 2008

  • A word I use as a regular synonym to home, often in conjunction with resident as in resident domicile. It's pretentious as gehunteschpundt, but it makes me feel good. :)

    August 16, 2008

  • A form I prefer to cosmos, but that's just me.

    August 16, 2008

  • A word I am fond of.

    August 16, 2008

  • Rather like unctuous. I'm not sure which I like better!

    August 16, 2008

  • Sounds like you could use it as an adjective for reefs or rocks.

    August 16, 2008

  • Pertaining to, or having the property of being, the most beautiful word. A coinage.

    August 16, 2008

  • Laconic tends to me more about spare speech, and spartan more about spare living....

    August 16, 2008

  • Is it formicatious?

    August 16, 2008

  • A word which describes itself.

    August 16, 2008

  • That's bizarre!!

    August 16, 2008

  • Because I generally use it more in the sense of "I don't think so" instead of "that's WRONG!"

    August 16, 2008

  • It is often referred to by lower forms of life as a 'D12'.

    August 16, 2008

  • Also, the L-shaped thing left over when you remove a square from the corner of a square. Used extensively in Euclidean geometry. The g is pronounced.

    August 16, 2008

  • A friend gave it to me. I am utterly innocent of the knowledge of how he came about it.

    August 16, 2008

  • * GENERAL: Why do I sit here? To escape from the pirates' clutches, I described myself as an orphan; and, heaven help me, I am no orphan! I come here to humble myself before the tombs of my ancestors, and to implore their pardon for having brought dishonour on the family escutcheon.

    FREDERIC: But you forget, sir, you only bought the property a year ago, and the stucco on your baronial castle is scarcely dry.

    GENERAL: Frederic, in this chapel are ancestors: you cannot deny that. With the estate, I bought the chapel and its contents. I don't know whose ancestors they were, but I know whose ancestors they are, and I shudder to think that their descendant by purchase (if I may so describe myself) should have brought disgrace upon what, I have no doubt, was an unstained escutcheon.

    -- W.S. Gilbert, The Pirates of Penzance

    August 16, 2008

  • Constructing these is just totally awesome. I demonstrated it out of Euclid last year; basically you just mark off golden sections on a cube, raise equal lines perpendicularly, and connect the dots. I even made a model.

    August 16, 2008

  • Making Capt. Aubrey distentorian, then? Perhaps supradistentorian?

    August 16, 2008

  • Totally awesome in the form "I deprecate the validity of that assertion." (Technically that's more the territory of depreciate, but I've sort of merged the two words into the one that sounds good.)

    August 16, 2008

  • See my interesting client,

    Victim of a heartless wile!

    See the traitor all defiant

    Wear a supercilious smile!

    Sweetly smiled my client on him,

    Coyly woo'd and gently won him.

    -W.S. Gilbert, 'Trial by Jury'

    August 16, 2008

  • Foo-Foo the First, King of the Mooncalves!

    -Twain.

    August 16, 2008

  • Never particularly run across anagnorisis before. Looks like Aristotle might have dealt with it in his Poetics. Pretty sure it doesn't mean self-knowledge. I'd have to check my lexicon or Perseus.

    August 16, 2008

  • Pardon me, but I'm off to play the grand piano.

    August 16, 2008

  • Quite; it merely means, roughly, something going on...Wiki explains it better, link below.

    August 16, 2008

  • Is lambaste or lambast more correct?

    August 16, 2008

  • The morning star has other interesting names as well; the holy water sprinkler and goedendag, Dutch for 'good morning'. I agree, it is a pity that it has all three good names to itself among the three weapons.

    My college also has a ceremonial mace, carried by the most senior professor at the matriculation ceremony for freshmen.

    August 16, 2008

  • Camille Saint-Saens, in writing his 'Carnival of the Animals', called one movement 'Personages with Long Ears' (subtitled) 'Critics'.

    August 16, 2008

  • Cited by Ogden Nash:

    Have ever you harked to the jackass wild,

    Which scientists call the onager?

    It sounds like the laugh of an idiot child,

    Or a hepcat on a harmoniger.

    But do not sneer at the jackass wild,

    There is a method in his heehaw.

    For with maidenly blush and accent mild

    The jenny-ass answers shee-haw.

    August 16, 2008

  • A spectacular word. Unfortunately, I can't use it in USA because nobody knows what it means, and I can't use it in Eire because I don't have the trick of using it right. So I content myself with using it to myself, now and again.

    August 16, 2008

  • Morning star is a spiked ball on a shaft, no chain. I am a proud possessor of a flail, but most people refer to it as a mace. A mace, as was described by Wiki, is just really a club with a metal head. It was famously carried by the blind Czech general Jan Zizka.

    August 16, 2008

  • viz. is awesome also, but useful only in writing. This is commonplace and ordinary. Thus is not used by everybody, and serves a cool purpose. IMO.

    August 16, 2008

  • Also, a microscopic protozoan which bears a marked resemblance to a trumpet.

    In fact, Stentor is not mentioned in the Iliad but is only referenced when Hera speaks in Book V, 'with a voice like Stentor, as loud as fifty other men'.

    August 16, 2008

  • The stereotypical mace, with spiked balls and chain, is in fact not a mace but a flail.

    August 16, 2008

  • Extremely important in Aristotle's philosophy; this is the state in which lives all men who can live lives of complete moderation (sophrosune) and fulfill their reason of existence (entelechia, translated by Joe Sachs as being-at-work-staying-itself).

    August 16, 2008

  • Also, a military formation of circled wagons (like a laager).

    August 15, 2008

  • Romanian musicians who play at weddings.

    August 15, 2008

  • A wild or feral donkey, originally; it was adopted as a Roman name for a catapult. Apparently it kicks about as hard.

    August 15, 2008

  • A musical theme and variations on a bass line. Bach wrote a very famous one.

    August 15, 2008

  • I think it ought to be hemidemisemiquaver.

    August 15, 2008

  • As I mention at logos, rhema is an alternate word, as are alternate forms of logos itself.

    August 15, 2008

  • One of the most useful words in the language.

    August 15, 2008

  • I wonder how accurate those statistics are.

    August 15, 2008

  • I like using this word as an alternative for antiquated.

    August 15, 2008

  • I keep confusing this word with sagacity, and think it means some sort of wisdom.

    August 15, 2008

  • Came across this word in an English translation of Comenius's Labyrinth of the World and Paradise of the Heart, an allegory. The protagonist is constantly being told not to be a wiseacre by the people who lead him around, showing him the attractions of the world, when he questions their lasting value.

    August 15, 2008

  • As in Arthur Pendragon; a sort of Early English nobleman.

    August 15, 2008

  • As in Edgar the Atheling; a sort of Early English nobleman.

    August 15, 2008

  • I immediately thought of disgorged...

    August 15, 2008

  • Actually, it looks like Aristotle didn't use anything; I just looked at a manuscript translated "man qua man" and it was just "anthropos anthropou"...

    August 15, 2008

  • As I said, the primary meaning is 'word', not 'God'; I would say rather both you and God are associated with the same concept, rather than you being associated with God. If it bothers you that much, though, there's a secondary Greek word also meaning 'word', which is rhema. Or you could pluralise and use logoi, or peri log�?n 'concerning words', or something similar.

    August 15, 2008

  • See the Wikipedia aricle on this: a Classical Chinese poem composed entirely of the sound 'shi', in different intonations.

    August 15, 2008

  • Already we have turned all of our critical industries, all of our material resources, over to these...things...these lumps of silver and paste we call nanorobots. And now we propose to teach them intelligence? What, pray tell, will we do when these little homunculi awaken one day and announce that they have no further need of us?

    -- Sister Miriam Godwinson,

    "We Must Dissent"

    August 15, 2008

  • "His mother, whom drink had made loquacious..."

    -- Cordwainer Smith

    August 15, 2008

  • I've had a lot of fun comparing ugly modern church buildings to yurts. The resemblance is really quite striking.

    August 15, 2008

  • Mr. Bultitude is the name of a bear in "That Hideous Strength" by C.S. Lewis. I always thought it ought to mean something, like "of great size or strength."

    August 15, 2008

  • Or marked.

    August 15, 2008

  • Also spelt rhodomontade, a form I actually prefer because it means you're allowed to say it with pronounced trilled-r.

    August 15, 2008

  • A spectacular word of Greek, meaning alternately words, spoken speech, written letters, numerical accounts, record-keeping, debate, discussion, speaking, logic, histories, arguments, several dozen different things, and, of course, the Christian sense as well, which superseded most of the classical sense. It covers five columns in the Comprehensive Liddell & Scott Lexicon of the Greek Language, not even beginning to mention all the subsidiary forms in which it combines with other words to make new concepts.

    August 15, 2008

  • One of my favourites, which I use alternately to refer to talks and written papers.

    August 15, 2008

  • A friend told me once that he had been referred to, by an aunt, as a 'discommodious jackanapes'. That, in my opinion, is just awesome.

    August 15, 2008

  • Famously used in Ten Thousand Leagues Under the Sea.

    August 15, 2008

  • Not quite a Greek Remark, as is my list title, but its use in Arisotle warrants its inclusion.

    August 15, 2008

  • Remarkably similar to a proclivity.

    August 15, 2008

  • A sort of a sub-Indian crocodiliac.

    August 15, 2008

  • Used best with 'prodigious', as in 'the prodigious connexion between x and y demonstrates...'

    August 15, 2008

  • And then did my excellent friend Mr. Smooth-it-away laugh outright, in the midst of which cachinnation a smoke-wreath issued from his mouth and nostrils, while a twinkle of lurid flame darted out of either eye, proving indubitably that his heart was all of a red blaze. The impudent fiend! To deny the existence of Tophet, when he felt its fiery tortures raging within his breast.

    -Hawthorne, The Celestial Railroad (a parody of Pilgrim's Progress)

    August 15, 2008

  • Used neatly in the construct 'hopeless and incorrigible'.

    August 15, 2008

  • You might be interested in the Classical Chinese poem The Lion-Eating Poet in the Stone Den. It is a whole ten-line verse composed entirely of the sound 'shi'. It's also funny as all-get-out.

    August 15, 2008

  • My Greek teacher used this example sentence, to illustrate participles, infinitives, and gerunds (of which the latter there are none in Greek): "The dying king was dying to die for a living."

    August 15, 2008

  • A word which, unlike bombastic, does not describe itself.

    August 15, 2008

  • Used in Plato's Meno accompanying zetetic; working hard.

    August 15, 2008

  • The process of being zetetic; inquiring. From Greek. Verbal comrade to ergatic.

    August 15, 2008

  • In my opinion, one of the funniest words in the English language.

    August 15, 2008

  • "It was not an accident! You're not careful!"

    -Neal, to Jeff.

    August 15, 2008

  • Dutch for blockhead, I believe. There was a wonderful children's book about Anton von Leeuwenhoek, the final lines of which were:

    "This man is mad!" the people said.

    "This Anton's crazy in the head!

    He says he's seen a horsefly's brain.

    We ought to ship him off to Spain."

    (overleaf of Mr. Leeuwenhoek, looking sad, in a boat by a sign pointing forward, labelled 'To Spain.')

    They called him domkop, which means 'dope'.

    And that's how we got the microscope.

    August 15, 2008

  • Can be used as a synonym for 'belong'.

    August 15, 2008

  • French 'citizen', made famous in the French Revolution and literature thereof.

    August 15, 2008

  • One of the four Martian races in C.S. Lewis's "Out of the Silent Planet"; mostly unseen.

    August 15, 2008

  • From Greek pros, before, and legomena, speaking.

    August 15, 2008

  • Not averted in entire; merely averted from the 1860s. Slavery had to go one way or another; but under better leadership from the 15th president it might have gone quite a bit less bloodily.

    As for Coolidge, I can only repeat what was said of him by a friend when told that he had been nominated vice-president. "But that's horrible!" he said. "I've known Cal Coolidge all my life, and he is the luckiest dog you've ever met. Harding's going to die or get assassinated or something!" I don't particularly think you can blame Coolidge really for all that happened later. Nobody saw it coming. Nobody wanted him to do anything. He, serving the will of the people, didn't do anything. I'm also somewhat of the opinion that the attempts to fix the Depression rather lengthened it. But I gave up debating politics a long time ago, when I became an apathetic anarchomonarchotheocratic anticonstitutionalist.

    August 15, 2008

  • I like to use it as an exclamation. "Zmays!" or "Raging zmays!" for a more emphatic. The plural is all wrong, it ought to be zmayu or something like that. But it's fun to say.

    (I am also known to use "domkops" as the plural. A Dutchie corrected me once, so now I know I'm wrong. But I still do it.)

    August 15, 2008

  • I would prefer calling it 'intramalar glossophony' (or 'glottophony', depending on preference for Attic dialect or not)

    August 15, 2008

  • No offense taken; and I certainly don't intend to lay the entire Civil War on Buchanan's doorstep. I still feel that a sufficiently strong leader could have either prevented the war in entire, or made the North's situation a good bit better than it ended up being. Just as not the entire blame for the Iraq War can be laid on Bush's doorstep.

    Doing nothing as president can be really good -- I cite Coolidge as an example of somebody who did nothing for near six years while nothing went wrong. If you have crisis unfolding under you, like Buchanan, it can be awful.

    August 15, 2008

  • Pous being a type-3 Greek noun, the plural is podes, in two syllables. This is a rare form; more commonly, as in hippopotamus, the plural will take the form hippopotamoi. Rhinoceros becomes rhinocera (although that also is irregular, as it ought to be rhinocerata).

    August 15, 2008

  • Which can progress from "leaving the cripples and stout old ladies simply nowhere", a line from Jerome K. Jerome, to "what if they were from Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania? They would be teetotalers and object to stout!" to "well, are we applying stout to these old ladies or not?" to "yes, apply the stout to them, straight from the bottle!"

    Good times...

    August 15, 2008

  • "At this B.'s intellect gives way, and he becomes simply drivelling."

    Jerome K. Jerome, Diary of a Pilgrimage

    August 15, 2008

  • Drives me berserk when people pronounce it to rhyme with 'anal'. Makes me simply wild! It is pronounced how yarb explained; anything else is simply indicative of where your mind's been.

    August 15, 2008

  • something that a zmay might do

    August 15, 2008

  • Used along with effulgence to try to translate a Greek pun in some editions of Plato's Meno. (That's where I remember it from, at least.)

    August 14, 2008

  • In various Slavic dialects (spelled alternately zmaj, zmiy, etc.) a worm, snake, or dragon.

    August 14, 2008

  • Come on! Those are a study in genius and honesty compared with Buchanan, Harding, Grant, Pierce, and the redoubtable William Henry Harrison (although truth be told, he accomplished about as much as Coolidge, the chief crime which can be urged against him being that he was not bright enough to come in out of the rain).

    Buchanan particularly. If Bush by dishonesty got us into the Iraq War, Buchanan by cowardice and incompetence got us into the Civil War.

    August 14, 2008

  • http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A640207

    Granted, now that I look more closely, not strictly the work of the BBC...

    August 14, 2008

  • Reminds me of the Glasgow Ice Cream Wars.

    August 14, 2008

  • So I was ultracrepidarious for listing it under this form? Perhaps I was only being ultracrepidarian. On the other hand, I stole it from the BBC.

    August 14, 2008

  • More properly ratskeller.

    August 14, 2008

  • One who uses a gonfalon is called a gonfalonier.

    August 14, 2008

  • One wielding a gonfalon. In mediaeval Florence, one of the highest offices in the city was the Gonfalonier of Justice, which I think is just the coolest title ever.

    August 14, 2008

  • Probably from the greek petros, rock; and ichor, the essence of the gods.

    August 14, 2008

  • "Silence, knave!"

    August 14, 2008

  • For a Presbyterian, actually, clergyman is much more likely than clergyperson.

    August 14, 2008

  • The truest Greek autantonym, meaning both awesome, awful, terrible, terrific, horrible, horrific, amazing, astounding, shocking, disgusting, in all the meanings of all those words. English cognate in deinos + sauros (lizard)

    August 14, 2008

  • First couple are culled from Wikipedia. Anybody is welcome to suggest new ones and explain the reason why here.

    August 14, 2008

  • Acting or speaking beyond the sphere of actual knowledge or experience; ignorantly criticising.

    August 14, 2008

  • Silly; simple.

    August 13, 2008

  • I had thought the etymology was because the Republicans crossing party lines to vote for Grover Cleveland had their "mugs" on one side of the fence, and their "wumps" on the other.

    August 13, 2008

  • From the Greek kakos (bad) and phonÄ“ (sound)

    August 13, 2008

  • This word is the first that comes to mind to describe Mr. Collins from Pride and Prejudice.

    August 5, 2008

  • Often used, poetically, in the phrase "toil and moil".

    July 31, 2008

  • If it's derived from Greek it ought to be HAL-kee-on, or actually probably HAL-kae-on

    July 29, 2008

  • "My aged employer, with his physiognomy

    Shining from soap like a star in astronomy

    Said, "Mr. Cox, you'll oblige me and honour-me

    If you will take this as your holiday,

    If you will take this as your holiday!"

    --Cox and Box

    July 14, 2008

  • Unoxygenized.

    July 13, 2008

  • A brilliant word.

    July 6, 2008

  • In the villages men knew better. There they remembered the threnes that had been composed when news came that the city had fallen, punished by God for its luxury, its pride and its apostasy, but fighting a heroic battle to the end. They remembered that dreadful Tuesday, a day that all true Greeks still know to be of ill omen; but their spirits tingled and their courage rose as they told of the last Christian Emperor standing in the breach, abandoned by his Western allies, holding the infidel at bay till their numbers overpowered him and he died, with the Empire as his winding-sheet.

    --Runciman, The Fall of Constantinople

    July 5, 2008

  • Generally: something sad. Technically: a poetic rhythm used by the Greeks to write sad poems with.

    July 5, 2008

  • Sorry, fellows, meant to write "good deed" and had my mind on the wrong thing and wrote "good word" instead.

    July 5, 2008

  • Derived from Greek: Good word.

    July 4, 2008

  • Also, when used as a noun archaically, has the sense of 'a place of meeting'. Derived, I think, from Icelandic.

    July 4, 2008

  • Of course, the most famous usage of it in literature:

    "Corroborative detail intended to provide artistic verisimilitude to an otherwise bald and unconvincing narrative."

    -- W.S. Gilbert, "The Mikado"

    July 4, 2008

  • A very small shred. Originally used with potatoes, is used of paper in Little Women.

    July 4, 2008

  • A very small shred. Originally used with potatoes, is used of paper in Little Women.

    July 4, 2008

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