Comments by mollusque

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  • Every now and then some despairing hotel owner or storekeeper in Europe looks into the future for comfort and winds up his autotelling of fortunes by saying, "When this war is over there will be such a rush to Europe as we've never seen before.

    --William G. Shepherd, 1917, Confessions of a War Correspondent, p. 138

    July 11, 2010

  • Darman changed the autopenning system so that more official papers were signed by the autograph machines—and so were letters to friends.

    --Richard Reeves, 2005, President Reagan: The Triumph of Imagination, p. 59

    July 11, 2010

  • You'll learn how to configure your machine to participate in a network, see how to configure the client side of some important network services, and look at what IP autonetting is and how it can affect your computers.

    --Eric Johnson and Eric Beehler, 2007, MCITP: Microsoft Windows Vista Desktop Support Enterprise Study Guide, p. 263

    July 11, 2010

  • Scan data is reduced to geometric primitives for use by Grumman's IBM CADAM "autonesting" program that feeds numerical control output generation of aircraft parts.

    --Hardcopy7: 90 (1987)

    July 11, 2010

  • This extra iteration loop, combined with the automeshing algorithm, can be quite time consuming when buried inside a shape optimation loop.

    --Anees Ahmad, 1997, Handbook of Optomechanical Engineering, p. 322

    July 11, 2010

  • The more expensive word processors offer such features as automerging, which permits you to insert names and addresses in separate form letters and then print them without having to edit and print each one manually.

    --Olen R. Pearson, 1996, Consumer Reports Guide to Personal Computers, p. 38

    July 11, 2010

  • If a dealer was unable to deliver a bond, it either failed on the trade (incurring a fail cost that might be 400-600 basis points) or it attempted to borrow the bond in question via the autolending programs operated by the global clearers — at a cost of up to 350 basis points.

    --Frank J. Fabozzi, 1997, Securities Lending and Repurchase Agreements, p. 30

    July 11, 2010

  • The conditions of the instrument: plasma power 1050 kW, radio frequency 40 MHz, argon gas for plasma, auxiliary and nebulizer of 15.0, 0.5 and 1.0 l min-1, respectively, autolensing of ion lens and sample aspiration rate of 1.0 ml min-1 were employed.

    --Jaroon Jakmunee et al., 2001, Analytical Sciences 17, Supplement, p. i1416

    July 11, 2010

  • Some patients with horseshoe kidney may suffer episodes of abdominal pain and vasomotor disturbances that can be relieved by autoflexing the trunk.

    --Ayten Someren, 1989, Urologic Pathology with Clinical and Radiologic Correlations, p. 31

    July 11, 2010

  • Fractions were collected either from the top of the gradient by a Buchler autodensity flow analyzer or by puncturing the tube at the bottom and sampled for radioactivity and infectivity.

    --R. Mittelstaedt1, H. Oppermann and G. Koch, 1975, Archives of Virology 47: 383

    July 11, 2010

  • Why is the autotwisting (or autobending) phenomenon absent, or at least negligibly small, in Zr-2.5Nb-H alloys?

    --Iain G. Ritchie and Zheng-Liang Pan, 1992 in, Vikram K. Kinra, Alan Wolfenden (eds.), M3D: Mechanics and Mechanisms of Material Damping, p. 393

    July 11, 2010

  • One can go further and consider the case of true autoantibodies; that is to say, antibodies that react with substances originating in the same organism that elaborated them. We were able to induce such antibodies by injecting guinea pigs with autotestis, isotestis, or heterotestis.

    --G. A. Voisin, F. Toullet and P. Maurer, 1958, Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 73: 729

    July 11, 2010

  • In 1910 Schwarz hypothesized that peptic ulcer is a product of self digestion, which results from a 'disproportion in the normal balance between the autopeptic power of gastric juice and the protective forces of the gastric mucous membrane'.

    --T. C. Northfield, Michael Mendall, Patrick M. Goggin, 1993, Helicobacter pylori Infection: Pathophysiology, Epidemiology, and Management, p. 62

    July 11, 2010

  • Polysaccharides can be roughly separated into two groups, homopolysaccharides and heteropolysaccharides. Homopolysaccharides are autopectin, glycogen (reserve tissue

    in animal bodies), insulin, and cellulose.

    --Lada Manolova, 2003, Natural Pharmacy, p. 3

    July 11, 2010

  • Sept. 1, 1913 . . . 480 tubes autopencil leads . . . $22.40

    --Statement of Contingent Expenses, Treasury Department, 63rd Congress, 3rd Session, House of Representatives, Document no. 1241, p. 8

    July 11, 2010

  • Antibodies could mimic endogenous ligands, such as the endogenous autolectin described by Kuchler et al. or block interaction of oligodendroglia with other cells . . . .

    --I. D. Duncan, Robert P. Skoff and David Colman - 1990, Myelination and Dysmyelination, p. 91

    July 11, 2010

  • The fever resulting from the absorption of foul stuff from the parturient canal, either from unbroken mucous surface, or by the open mouths of vessels, or from traumatic surfaces, this is autoseptic. This form also is likely to complicate other fevers.

    --Robert Barnes and Fancourt Barnes, 1885, A System of Obstetric Medicine and Surgery, p. 727

    July 11, 2010

  • In the Byzantine terminology again, a uniquely-profiled idiomelon becomes a prototype or generator automelon, the basis for imitated melodies or prosomoia. Automelic chants are generally cut of the same stylized cloth as the idiomelic chants that make up the bulk of their particular category. But the automela were so well-fixed in choristers' and congregational memories that in early hymn-books they rarely appeared with neumes.

    --Kenneth Levy, 1990, "On Gregorian Orality", Journal of the American Musicological Society 43: 218

    July 11, 2010

  • He knew she had summoned an automedic and that the diligent robot doctor worked on him for more than ten minutes.

    --Robert E. Vardeman, 1987, Plague in Paradise, p. 129

    July 11, 2010

  • I happened to have an old list of reduplicatives in a file drawer, so I was happy to extract the hyphenated ones.

    How are you searching for palindromic convowel patterns? Are there particular ones you're still looking for. One of the things I like about convowel tagging is the serendipity of the words that group together.

    July 10, 2010

  • With only very few exceptions, the large majority of so-called nanocomposites developed to date are micro-nanocomposites, rather than nano-nano composites (where both the matrix and inclusion grain size are in the nanometer range).

    --Michael J. Zehetbauer and Yuntian Theodore Zhu, 2009, Bulk Nanostructured Materials, p. 553

    July 10, 2010

  • Thanks, frogapplause! (Have you been talking to my wife?)

    July 9, 2010

  • Hi, oroboros, yes, I meant "demo" (demolish) as "tear down" versus "demo" (demonstrate, promote) as "build up". The fanfeel is mutual. I've mined quite a few of your lists.

    July 9, 2010

  • How about demo?

    July 9, 2010

  • mayim

    July 8, 2010

  • Psst, isobaric.

    July 8, 2010

  • Do any of these qualify?

    July 8, 2010

  • Finnish for Canada goose.

    July 8, 2010

  • The robot made a moue. Back then it had seemed to Justinian as if it wore its skin inside out Later he would realize that it was an underderm; the robot had yet to pull on its proper skin.

    --Tony Ballantyne, 2006, Capacity, p. 159

    July 8, 2010

  • Odd as it looks, ccvvvv for "clayey" seems right. I hadn't heard of "gleyey" but it looks like standard usage in books on soil.

    July 8, 2010

  • Nope, unable to tag beforehand with "cvcvcvcvcc", although I could tag it with "hand. That's a strange bug.

    July 4, 2010

  • Yes, use the convowel tag if you're so inclined. We're at 1398 distinct patterns at the moment.

    July 4, 2010

  • I tagged the louse with the pattern I was expecting; hope that makes it clearer.

    I haven't been doing much convowel tagging lately. At the moment, I'm tagging your newly found convowel patterns with "convowel". (It's easy to recognize them, as they're blue in my view of your tag list.)

    July 4, 2010

  • Yo (Philadelphese for hello), hernesheir, thanks for retagging, but I was hoping you'd remove the half tags, to clean up the tag lists for aeoiu and yioeau.

    I see you've been bitten by the convowel bug and that I have to catch up on my tagging.

    July 4, 2010

  • Unfortunately, the name is preoccupied; Leviathan was used as a genus name by Koch in 1841, for what what proved to be a fossil mastodon.

    July 4, 2010

  • Ussolzewiechinogammarus and Haemodipsus lyriocephalus are great examples of reduplicatory multivocalness, hernesheir! I knew about Dybowski's predilection for long Gammarus names, but hadn't thought to search them for doubly panvocalic words. By the way, could you tag the full complement of vowels in the louse, rather than the half set?

    July 4, 2010

  • If I were listing collateral adjectives I'd either use Wordnik's related word function, or put them into a list serially, e.g., Odd Anagrams. Or you could substitute a hyphen for the slash.

    June 26, 2010

  • It's not really any harder than finding Panvocalic Pants. Just think of a likely genus, see what species ITIS lists in it, then select the ones with complementary vowels.

    June 26, 2010

  • Wordnik doesn't like the slashes.

    June 25, 2010

  • So what were you using if not IPNI? Are you scanning visually, or querying a database?

    June 24, 2010

  • A euvocalic synonymous with a monovocalic.

    June 24, 2010

  • Hey, reesetee, we're still waiting for that panvocalic bird list (see The Sound of One Hand Typing). I have some more for you: Otus alfredi, Vireo nanus, Corvus capensis.

    June 23, 2010

  • But then you are consoled: you get to reload it, laying bare the stapler arm and dropping a long zithering row of staples into place; and later, on the phone, you get to toy with the piece of the staples you couldn't fit into the stapler, breaking it into smaller segments, making them dangle on a hinge of glue.

    --Nicholson Baker, 1988, The Mezzanine, p. 14

    June 23, 2010

  • . . . attempting to staple a thick memo, and looking forward, as you begin to lean on the brontosaural head of the stapler arm, to the three phases of the act . . . .

    --Nicholson Baker, 1988, The Mezzanine, p. 14

    June 23, 2010

  • Then I slipped my shoe back on by flipping it on its side, hooking it with my foot, and shaking it into place. I accomplished all this by foot-feel; and when I crouched forward, over the papers on my desk, to reach the untied shoelace, I experienced a faint surge of pride in being able to tie a shoe without looking at it.

    --Nicholson Baker, 1988, The Mezzanine, p. 13

    June 23, 2010

  • Then it had not been tagged as knowledge to be held for later retrieval, and I would have forgotten it completely had it not been for the sight of the CVS bag, similar enough to the milk-carton bag to trigger vibratiuncles of comparison.

    --Nicholson Baker, 1988, The Mezzanine, p. 8

    June 23, 2010

  • Some of these aren't phrasal verbs, folks. But you're welcome to add them to Get, Got, Gotten.

    June 23, 2010

  • See comments at wasteliquor.

    June 23, 2010

  • The spelling "wasteliquor" does occur on p. 727, but "waste liquor" appears on p. 745, so it seems not to be an intentional spelling.

    June 23, 2010

  • Thanks for the additions to the euryvocalic pattern list, hernesheir! Dicerocaryum was a new pattern as well. You've inspired me to resume the search for panvocalic animals. I've mined a lot them from ITIS. Are you working from IPNI? (BTW, check your tags on Hedraiostylus.)

    June 23, 2010

  • Apparently coined by J. E. Schmidt in Reversicon:

    a Medical Word Finder

    (1958: 93).

    June 22, 2010

  • There is only one species known in Hawaii, and it is the only eyeless hypogastrurine there.

    --K. A. Christiansen and P. Bellinger, 1992, Insects of Hawaii p. 28

    June 21, 2010

  • Apterourids share a broad collum and paranota with rhiscosomidids and buotids, but their male ninth legs are reduced to single segments fused to the sternites and are entirely hidden under the gonopods.

    --William A. Shear, 2009, Zootaxa 2290: 43

    June 21, 2010

  • Hoff (1946) upon re-examination of Banks' type specimens of P. bicornis (the generotype of Pseudogarypus) confirmed the presence of "pseudospines" on the first coxae just as Jacot had implied and gave support to the idea that there were two North American genera of pseudogarypid pseudoscorpions: Pseudogarypus and

    Cerogarypus.

    --Ellen M. Benedict and David R. Malcolm, 1978, Journal of Arachnology 6: 82

    June 21, 2010

  • Megaluropids are sediment-dwelling amphipods that recline in an inverted position, with their legs and antennae projecting from the sediment surface . . . .

    --L. E. Hughes, 2009, Zootaxa 2260: 708

    June 21, 2010

  • Hi, hernesheir. Good call on capitalizing the generic names. I went through my panvocalic lists maybe six months ago and reentered everything that should be capitalized. Unfortunately that ghosted some comments, but it allowed me to add vowel pattern tags for them. I didn’t tag them originally because Wordie didn’t allow capitalization and I didn’t want proper and common mixed together on the tag lists. Since Wordnik allows capitalization, they’re easy to distinguish on the lists.

    Might I suggest that in addition to or instead of commenting on the vowel pattern for genera, you tag them?

    I like the hierarchy. Maybe monovocalic and polyvocalic can be added. Here’s a cocktail napkin version: words (avocalic, vocalic (monovocalic, polyvocalic (panvocalic (supervocalic (euvocalic, euryvocalic ))))) .

    I’m not inclined to take the hierarchy past panvocalic (supervocalic (euvocalic, euryvocalic)). Alphavocalic and retrovocalic don’t have to apply only to panvocalics: for example “unhooked” or “captious” are alphavocalic. We could also distinguish euryvocalics where “y” is a vowel (phosphuranylite) from those where it’s a consonant (youngmanishness), but I don’t think we need mononyms to describe those situations.

    I’ve opened Supervocalic in waiting.

    June 21, 2010

  • Since no other leucopsacid (or rossellid) had a frame of fused hexactins such as that in Euryplegma, Ijima (1903) finally retraced steps and assigned the genus to the dictyonine Dactylocalycidae.

    --John N. A. Hooper and Rob W. M. van Soest, 2002, Systema Porifera: a guide to the classification of sponges, vol. 2, p. 1365

    June 20, 2010

  • At least in some hungarobelbid species, prodorsum with a sclerotized tuberculum . . .

    --Joachim Adis, 2002, Amazonian Arachnida and Myriapoda, p. 100

    June 20, 2010

  • Hernesheir, what do you think of generalizing supervocalic to include both euvocalic and euryvocalic: supervocalics would have each vowel once, with wye optional, euvocalics would exclude wye, and euryvocalics would have to have wye.

    June 20, 2010

  • Here's a euvocalic mineralogical coincidence: chromium garnet = uvarovite.

    June 20, 2010

  • One of my favorite sounds.

    June 20, 2010

  • The fates were quite impartial in their distribution of favors, and the next toucanine thrill came to Howes as he was passing along a trail with mind and eyes concentrated on no higher forms of life than wasps and bees. From almost the first walk I had taken in this part of the jungle I had observed and tried to mark down some of the half dozen big red-billed toucans which fed, and called and climbed hereabouts.

    --William Beebe, G. Inness Hartley and Paul G. Howes, 1917, Tropical Wild Life in British Guiana, vol. 1, p. 192

    June 19, 2010

  • The tetragonurid squaretails are round fishes encircled by ridged scales and with a long caudal peduncle that has a single keel on either side formed from scale ridges.

    --Gene S. Helfman, Bruce B. Collette and Douglas E. Facey, 1997 The Diversity of Fishes, p. 267

    June 19, 2010

  • These differences have been deemed sufficient to recognise the existence of another segnosaurid from the late Cretaceous of Mongolia.

    --David Norman, 1985, The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, p. 52

    June 19, 2010

  • Rostratuline birds with long decurved bills, long wings, long legs and feet.

    --Gregory M. Mathews and Tom Iredale, 1921, A Manual of the Birds of Australia, p. 119

    June 19, 2010

  • Titanis, a phorusrhacid? a phorusrhacine?

    --Bulletin of the Florida Museum of Natural History, 2005, p. 207

    June 19, 2010

  • I vote for the expungement of "pungment".

    June 19, 2010

  • Cordulegastrid larvae live in the soft bottoms of streams, buried in mud or sand with only part of their heads and anal appendages raised clear of the substrate.

    --R. R. Askew, 1988, The Dragonflies of Europe, p. 206

    June 19, 2010

  • I also compared the succession of this type in time with the growth of its present representatives in their embryonic condition, and carried out this illustration especially for the Crinoids; showing that in its successive transformations the Comatula passes through stages which, from their resemblance to the full grown Crinoids of earlier ages, I designated as the Cistidian, the Pentremitian, the Platycrinian, the Pentacrinian, and the Comatuline stages of growth.

    --Louis Agassiz, 1869, Annual Report of the Trustees of the Museum of Comparative Zoology for 1868, p. 9

    June 19, 2010

  • The uraeotyphlid family represents a transition between basal and more developed forms of caecilians.

    --Rebecca Stefoff, 2007, The Amphibian Class, p. 72

    June 19, 2010

  • Two new protamines: katsuwonine and plecoglossine.

    --Kyushu Journal of Medical Science, 1: 33 (1950)

    June 19, 2010

  • The Caulophrynines present a combination of remarkable characters. The antepectoral region or "head" is remarkably large—even larger than the rest of the body, the mouth very deeply cleft and little oblique, and the pectoral fins are large; the dorsal and anal are not only multiradiate, but most of the rays greatly prolonged.

    --Theodore Gill, 1909, "Angler fishes: their kinds and ways", Annual report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution for 1908, p. 585

    June 19, 2010

  • The caluromyine woolly opossums are specialised fruit and nectar eaters, hanging by their prehensile tails in the branches of the high forest canopy.

    --T. S. Kemp, 2005, The Origin and Evolution of Mammals, p. 192

    June 19, 2010

  • Ambulocetids are only known from Indo-Pakistan and are always found in littoral sediments . . . .

    --J. G. M. Thewissen, 1998, The Emergence of Whales: Evolutionary Patterns in the Origin of Cetacea, p. 458

    June 19, 2010

  • Of course the battleground motif with its notes of air raids and unruly squadrons is a neomusical conceit anticipating the last quartet, Little Gidding, in which the wartime theme is more fully developed in allusions to the London bombings . . . .

    --Martin Schiralli, 1999, Constructive Postmodernism: Toward Renewal in Cultural and Literary Studies, p. 120

    June 17, 2010

  • His first volume, The Laurel: An Ode (1889), betrayed the overmusical influence of Lanier and gave promise of that extraordinary facility which often brought Hovey perilously close to the pit of mere technique.

    --Louis Untermeyer, 1921, Modern American Poetry, p. 91

    June 17, 2010

  • See the tag long.

    June 17, 2010

  • In the GUIDE trial, acute lumen gain by PTCA was measured by computing the ratio of the post-procedure neoluminal area to the nominal balloon cross-sectional area (neolumen:balloon ratio, NLBR).

    --Christopher J. White, 1995, Interventional Cardiology, p. 10

    June 17, 2010

  • Psst, factitiousness.

    June 17, 2010

  • I think that's a job for John (page 5).

    Pro, have you coalesced?

    June 16, 2010

  • Synonym of metacinnabar.

    June 16, 2010

  • Referring to your comment on my profile, brumadoite (valid) and saukovite added. What to do about burovaite, which seems to have appeared only as "burovaite-Ca"? I guess that means they expect another variety to be discovered with a different element in the Ca slot.

    June 16, 2010

  • How are you handling synonyms, hernesheir? I checked on a list of approved mineral names and found sulphohalite, but not sulfohalite, so the latter is an unofficial synonym. The list also has saukovite as a synonym of metacinnabar, so I guess that's an official synonym. Does either synonym qualify for your list?

    Edit: just saw that you addressed sulfohalite already on my profile.

    June 16, 2010

  • Glad to help. Let me know if you find anything that needs editing in my lists.

    Have you thought about tackling names of pharmaceuticals? I'll bet there are more panvocalics lurking there.

    June 16, 2010

  • Fabulous list, hernesheir! I'm happy to have inspired such an excellent obsession. I've added a bunch to my panvocalic and euryvocalic lists, putting the former over 2500 words. And tellurantimony makes the 240th euryvocalic vowel pattern, so one third of all possible ones have now been found!

    Hard as may be to believe, none of my panvocalic listings are coinages: they all appear in print somewhere. Note that dusmantovite and suaconite are misspellings, and check your tags for plumbonacrite. Is sulphohalite an official name? If so, I'll change my listing from sulfohalite.

    June 16, 2010

  • Thanks, hernesheir! Any list containing wentletrap deserves support.

    June 15, 2010

  • Not to be confused with pulicarious, of the nature of or resembling a flea.

    June 15, 2010

  • Go for the plural!

    June 14, 2010

  • "Through difficulties to the stars" is usually "per aspera ad astra". The Wizard of Oz said "per ardua ad alta", which is "through difficulties to the heights".

    June 12, 2010

  • Thanks bajacalla, but I'm not including purely reduplicative words (see the list description).

    June 12, 2010

  • Is this word right here?

    June 12, 2010

  • When volition precedes perception of potential, woulda, coulda, shoulda expresses regret for inaction (and volition was mere velleity), whereas coulda, woulda, shoulda suggests that obligation was not perceived until opportunity had passed.

    June 12, 2010

  • Erin, do gimme and lemme qualify?

    June 11, 2010

  • But doesn't the possibility of doing something usually exist before one becomes aware of it?

    June 11, 2010

  • More shelter here.

    June 10, 2010

  • So which is it, woulda, coulda, shoulda or coulda, woulda, shoulda?

    June 10, 2010

  • I submitted my first grant proposal yesterday that mentions those methods.

    (Five days till Prolagus coalesces . . .)

    June 9, 2010

  • Yes, ultrarevolutionaries and automobile insurance. They live on Panvocalic Miscellany.

    June 9, 2010

  • Pro? Now that you've nailed concatenation . . .

    June 5, 2010

  • Different listing styles I guess. I generally go for the shortest entry I can. Love your edgy sedge list by the way.

    June 5, 2010

  • Pounce!

    June 5, 2010

  • Hi ruzuzu, I meant man-o'-war to encompass all three (ship, bird and jellyfish).

    June 5, 2010

  • and cannelloni.

    May 30, 2010

  • The very lovely aboriginal abalone.

    May 30, 2010

  • Speak clearly or you'll be deported.

    May 26, 2010

  • Thanks hernesheir! I just wish there were more of them. I don't often find new ones these days.

    May 24, 2010

  • Yes, I got a copy for Chanukkah last year. It's intense.

    May 20, 2010

  • Doesn't cacholong refer primarily to the mineral rather than the color?

    May 18, 2010

  • You're not the first to coin it. It apparently means "containing mercury":

    "...the outer container, also of steel, is sprayed with a special pigmented mercatious iron ore, which, with the galvanizing renders the container unlikely to rust."

    --Journal of the Royal Institute of Public Health and Hygiene 3: 140 (1940)

    May 17, 2010

  • Sorry Pro, guess I'm not photo-literate. It never crossed my mind to photograph the tag, and alas, it is no more. Maybe I can find one on the way out tomorrow.

    May 10, 2010

  • I flew into Tagbilaran airport (Bohol, Philippines) a few days ago, and was delighted to find a TAG tag on my suitcase.

    May 7, 2010

  • *graohns*

    April 21, 2010

  • How about maedi, a viral disease of sheep.

    April 17, 2010

  • A preempt? By analogy to the term used by bridge players.

    April 16, 2010

  • People haven't the data for being wisely in love till they've reached the age when they haven't the least wish to be so.

    --William Dean Howells, 1887, April Hopes

    April 16, 2010

  • . . . it was not that she thought what Dan had just said was so very funny, but people are immoderately applausive of amateur dramatics, and she was feeling very fond of the young fellow.

    --William Dean Howells, 1887, April Hopes

    April 15, 2010

  • Thanks again. The reverse dictionary function of OneLook helped quite a bit in compiling it.

    OED has a cloth definition of flax, so it's in.

    April 12, 2010

  • Thanks, agatehinge. I've added tergal and casement. Antique satin doesn't fit my list because it's two words.

    Good to have a fabric expert around. Anything to add about etamine/etamins/estamins from the previous comments?

    April 12, 2010

  • Junk food deity?

    April 12, 2010

  • Would that That buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo Buffalo buffalo buffalo?

    Would that that That buffalo would.

    April 10, 2010

  • Seeing that no one has picked up the thread, I'll continue.

    Another student in her essay said that that That that that student was from is in the North West Frontier Province, not in Sindh.

    Is it true that that "that that That that that" that that student used in her essay was also correct?

    April 9, 2010

  • Or forked?

    April 8, 2010

  • Amœbæ yes, amoebae no.

    April 8, 2010

  • I heard that that student was from That, Pakistan.

    April 8, 2010

  • Es prohibido.

    April 7, 2010

  • The champion is honorificabilitudinitatibus; unimaginatively, verisimilitudes, parasitological, cytomegalovirus, and aluminosilicates are also longer.

    April 6, 2010

  • Your pro- words should still be there. Try refreshing your screen (F5) when it seems like things have disappeared.

    April 5, 2010

  • lol as a pictograph.

    March 31, 2010

  • Alos slanticular.

    March 31, 2010

  • The woven pads are called potholders.

    March 31, 2010

  • ...and not heard.

    March 29, 2010

  • Leaving only artichoke remains.

    March 29, 2010

  • There's some imagined eternal perfection represented there, something lasting. Your books are . . . unmottled. Is that a word?

    --Roland Merullo, 2007, Breakfast with Buddha, p. 16

    March 24, 2010

  • I remember that two of the shocks I'd experienced in coming to New York were discovering that Ringling was considered an unusual last name and that most people had never heard of knoephla soup.

    --Roland Merullo, 2007, Breakfast with Buddha, p.290

    March 24, 2010

  • And them, to finish, an apricot- and walnut-stuffed palascinta, which turned out to be a thin pancake stuffed with apricot-walnut cream.

    --Roland Merullo, 2007, Breakfast with Buddha, p. 144

    March 24, 2010

  • Trust was accumulated quickly, due primarily to the brute strength of the man's gentleness, his thereness. The girl knew from the outset that Hans Hubermann would always appear midscream, and he would not leave.

    --Markus Zusak, 2005, The Book Thief, p. 37

    March 24, 2010

  • He was always just there. Not noticeable. Not important or particularly valuable. The frustration of that appearance, as you can imagine, was it's complete misleadance, let's say. There most definitely was value in him, and it did not go unnoticed by Liesel Meminger.

    --Markus Zusak, 2005, The Book Thief, p. 34

    March 24, 2010

  • Thanks, gangerh! Quaintly led me to Queensland.

    March 24, 2010

  • It has a wonderful power to check the process of disintegration and correct its inevitable saniousness.

    --J. C. Sanders, 1880, Transactions of the American Institute of Homoeopathy 32‎: 297.

    March 23, 2010

  • ... whereupon said Devil is soundly defeated by the virtuoso fiddle-playing skills of a vernacular violinist infused with the ambient radiousness of Biscuitism.

    --Pope Gus Rasputin Nishnabotna Sni-A-Bar, 2009, The Nuclear Platypus Biscuit Bible, p. 137

    March 23, 2010

  • . . . volmerine cacumination and mitotic ramuliferousness leading to operculate onagerosity and testaceous favillousness . . .

    --Nicolas Slonimsky, Richard Kostelanetz, and Joseph Darby, 1994, Nicolas Slonimsky: the first hundred years, p. 372

    March 23, 2010

  • Aaargh.

    March 23, 2010

  • Contains three vowels followed by three consonants. Are there any other such words?

    March 23, 2010

  • I've just noticed the alphabet links in the footer, apparently a new feature. The lists by letter aren't sorting as advertised, "Ordered by the number of occurrences in our database of example sentences". For example, under x, "xiphophyllous" near the top of the list has no examples, but "xylophone" near the bottom has several.

    March 23, 2010

  • Charlie the Tuna.

    March 22, 2010

  • "Seraglio" in English.

    March 22, 2010

  • OSPD4 lists it as meaning "quiet", of which OED2 lists it as being 18th century variant.

    "And maybe aifter the sairman, Hugh and yourself—though it wunna be easy for him wi' the lame leg—may hev a reel with the dancing scholars." "Be quate, be quate," exclaimed Angus Matheson, an old, sombre, sour-looking native, of some sixty years of age; " don't be putting sairmans and dancing together that way."

    --Colin Macdonald, 1881, Chronicles of Stratheden, p. 166

    March 21, 2010

  • Digging a bit more, I found that "pi" is an American spelling of "pie", and that OSPD4 doesn't list "pyeing", so the SOWPODS entry must be British. OED2 says, "To make (type) into 'pie'; to mix or jumble up indiscriminately". It also says, "To put (potatoes, etc.) in a pit or heap and cover them with straw and earth, for storing and protection from frost", which also has a sense of jumbling. Here's an example for the latter:

    "The Swedes are pulled, topped, tailed and put into heaps (about eight heaps per acre), which are covered with a small quantity of straw and mould to preserve them from the frost, and to have them ready for use in any weather. This system of pyeing turnips is a very common one in Norfolk, and it is difficult to decide whether the majority of good opinions is in favour of it, or rather of the other method, which is, "placing" the turnips from several rows side by side, so as to leave at least nine-tenths of the land vacant."

    --John Hudson, 1847, The Farmer's Magazine 16: 5

    March 21, 2010

  • It could be a variant of piing, as in "piing the type", more common as "pied the type", from the verb pi. I don't know if this is what SOWPODS means. Here's an example:

    "This word pyeing, as made use of in an old Rule of Court, signifies the selecting the Declarations from that confused Manner in which they were brought in, and reducing them into an alphabetical Order, for the more ready finding them, &c. It is a Term yet in Use among the Printers, but here it signifies the Reverse of this, for they call pyeing the casting away the Letters out of the Frame, or Box, confusedly together; and this they call making Pye.

    --R. Boote, 1781, An Historical Treatise of an Action or Suit at Law, 2nd edition, p. 69

    March 21, 2010

  • Sandalous!

    March 21, 2010

  • At the place of sectioning the depression is two feet wide by a foot deep and covered with almost a foot of alluvium washed from the slightly higher slopes to the north; within it were collected charcoal, burned pebbles, the very abundant scallop (Pecten irradians), quahog (Venus mercenaria) clam (Mya arenaria), oyster (Ostrca virginiima), also a few specimens of the decker (Crepidula fornicata), jingle shell (Anomia), blood clam (Scapharca pexata) and a fulgur, besides the bones of some fish and birds and broken pottery.

    --Hervey W. Shimer, 1912, "Kitchen Middens as Ethnological Records", Science Conspectus 3: 28

    March 19, 2010

  • A word worth $14 million.

    March 19, 2010

  • Here's another early use as a noun:

    "One from 647 feet is a mash-up of soft, grey, shaly rock enclosing fragments of hard slate or argillite."

    --W. Whitaker and A. J. Jukes-Browne, 1894, Quarterly Journal of the Geological Society of London 50: 492

    March 19, 2010

  • Nope. But some of us have sproingy rhinophores.

    March 17, 2010

  • Which of your bird wird lists does entermewer fit?

    March 16, 2010

  • If you're a gull, it might be "ruzuziae".

    March 16, 2010

  • Kinesthetic: Baryshnikov

    March 16, 2010

  • How I wish I could enumerate pi easily, since all these horrible mnemonics prevent recalling any of pi's sequence more simply.

    (Seen here.)

    March 15, 2010

  • If this scenario is extrapolated to a hypothetical megarorqual that is much larger than a blue whale, we find that the whale would not be able to support its metabolism by lunge feeding.

    --Jeremy A. Goldbogen, 2010, "The ultimate mouthful: lunge feeding in rorqual whales", American Scientist 98: 131

    March 15, 2010

  • A chain of face-sharing tetrahedra forms a gently curving triple helix. This pleasing structure was given the name "tetrahelix" by R. Buckminster Fuller.

    --Roald Hoffmann, 2010, American Scientist 98: 116.

    March 15, 2010

  • Jeepers!

    March 6, 2010

  • snail-laden

    March 5, 2010

  • We're up to a thousand different consonant-vowel patterns now, tagged convowel.

    March 5, 2010

  • A step up from incontinent.

    March 5, 2010

  • We'll have to keep this one in reserve in case she runs again.

    March 4, 2010

  • Look under hydroptic; it's defined there.

    March 4, 2010

  • A gargoyle on a keystone?

    March 3, 2010

  • Who am I to judge?

    March 2, 2010

  • mushroom?

    February 28, 2010

  • There are lots of misspelled words in Wordnik. Some are typos by users, others come from errors in the billions of words in the corpus from which Wordnik draws examples.

    You can: a) ignore them, b) tag them as typos or misspellings or c) make clever or snide remarks about them.

    February 28, 2010

  • SPAM-o-rama

    February 28, 2010

  • Psst, VO, check your spelling.

    February 28, 2010

  • Good catch, tusseymountain. I found this explanation:

    "The word 'besague' was rescued by the late Lord Dillon from the compilers of antiquarian glossaries who had confused it with the double-headed axe (bis-aigue or bisacuta)."

    --The Antiquaries Journal 19‎: 427 (1939)

    February 28, 2010

  • And how come when I add it to my Biology list, I'm shown as having listed it, but the list name is not there? Apparently the same bug prolagus reports on sensitivo.

    February 24, 2010

  • Thanks, hernesheir. The family name Psychroteuthidae is tempting too, but it just misses euryvocalic status with that extra "e".

    February 23, 2010

  • *looks for snails under the porch*

    February 23, 2010

  • Standardization of the spelling of flaitchment, recorded in the OED, but not observed in the wild.

    February 20, 2010

  • According to OED2, an error for Dutch cruyshaye, a kind of shark.

    February 20, 2010

  • You should talk to Grant more often Erin!

    February 20, 2010

  • Did John Noyes have a nook in Oneida?

    February 19, 2010

  • Another variant of catawampus, cattywampus . . .

    February 18, 2010

  • Thanks hernesheir. I'm not taking hyphenated words, but kinnikkinnik also occurs, so I'll use that.

    February 18, 2010

  • The algorithm for calculating "Scrabble score" under stats gives incorrect results when a word has more instances of a letter than there are in a Scrabble set. For example, fuzzy has a Scrabble score of 19, not 29, because a blank must be used to play it. And pizzazz can't be played at all, let alone for 45 points.

    February 18, 2010

  • I have lists like that.

    February 18, 2010

  • Littling is an obsolete verb form: little meant "to make small" or "diminish". In the context you cited, "littling" looks more like a misspelling of "vittling", i.e., "victualing" or "supplying".

    February 18, 2010

  • Thanks bilby and hernesheir. This list seemed suspiciously short, so I'm glad to know there's more lurking out there. "Sheesh" is the first 123312 pattern.

    February 17, 2010

  • Here it was perpetual carnival for those who could pay, with something for every taste, including carefully staged mock shanghaiings of selected tourists.

    --Hayford Peirce, 2005, The 13th Death of Yuri Gellaski‎, p. 30

    February 17, 2010

  • ¡Ay! How did I miss that! Thanks, ruzuzu.

    February 17, 2010

  • Have you figured out how many different consonant-vowel patterns are possible? I've found representatives for a couple of dozen more patterns. Your tag for descriptive missed the last vowel (assuming it's yours).

    I've tagged vowel patterns in lots of words over the last couple of years. See the list descriptions for Panvocalics, Panvocalic euryvocalic, Monovocalics, and Double diphthongs etc. Let me know if you find any errors with my tags.

    OneLook might help your search for other patterns, such as words with bh.

    February 16, 2010

  • I changed all the words from Panvocalic Proper (and its derivatives) to upper case so I could see which were capitalized on the tag lists (e.g., aouei).

    February 15, 2010

  • Is it not Italian, or just obsolete? It's listed in this Italian lexicon from 1859.

    February 15, 2010

  • Say, Pro, how did you get a part of speech named for you?

    February 15, 2010

  • Hermaphroditus would be even better.

    February 15, 2010

  • Milea Cyrous would be even better.

    February 14, 2010

  • Hi Bri,

    Love the consonant-vowel tagging! You've covered a lot of ground. I've been adding a few of the odder patterns. There's an extra c in your tag for down.

    February 14, 2010

  • Nattering Nabob Security Service?

    February 14, 2010

  • Navy Navigation Satellite System?

    Natural Necessity Surf Shop?

    February 14, 2010

  • Severer!

    February 14, 2010

  • Apparently it was. Thanks Pro!

    February 14, 2010

  • Regarding the ongoing work on links intended to stop spammers: just when I'd trained my donkey not to eat he died on me.

    Edit: That was posted on the feedback profile.

    February 13, 2010

  • We muster passed on it.

    February 12, 2010

  • Articles that Talese wrote for the Times provided most of the material for his first book, New York: A Serendipiter's Journey (Harper, 1961) . . .

    --Current biography yearbook‎, 1973, p. 424

    February 12, 2010

  • Could I request an Apostrophe Flying Squid Squad instead?

    February 12, 2010

  • It's in his Cardiophonia from 1824 (as "undertempters").

    February 12, 2010

  • PossibleUnderscore, is q.v. what you're looking for?

    Edit: "your" changed to "you're".

    February 12, 2010

  • Assuming none of the pigeons depart before the pigeonholing is finished. Maybe their condo association allows timesharing?

    February 11, 2010

  • An excellent seaslug!

    February 11, 2010

  • Clucklaster either.

    February 10, 2010

  • We wouldn't want you to be lackcluster, marky!

    February 10, 2010

  • Which is it: able to be uncoiled or not able to be coiled?

    February 10, 2010

  • Despite the acute embarrassment of a full-blown riot raging in a so-called "unriotable" penitentiary—and the fact that correctional officers were rarely murdered during an uprising—Warden Barton James and his people relied on the usual reactive models.

    --Peter Collinson, 2002, The Northeast Kingdom‎, p. 76

    February 10, 2010

  • Instead of putting out "All people are of equal worth regardless of merit" as some kind of mysterious truth-claim which appears in fact to be at best groundless and at worst false, would it not have been clearer and less evasive for the human-rights advocate simply to remark that he starts with a commitment on which he will not bend, namely a commitment to the treatment of all people as beings who are to have quite unforfeitably an equality of concern and respect?

    --Kai Nielsen, 1984, Equality and Liberty: A Defense of Radical Egalitarianism, p. 23

    February 10, 2010

  • She had one stack and, in spite of Stevenson's objections, one bow port, or trapdoor, where an unpointable, untrainable, and practically unloadable thirty-two pound gun was located—a "plaything," as her captain later called it.

    --William N. Still, 1988, Iron Afloat: The Story of the Confederate Armorclads‎, p. 47

    February 9, 2010

  • Scharff (1936) eliminated A. maculatus, which had been causing severe malaria, from 185 unoilable irrigation pools scattered over about 2 1\2 square miles . . .

    --Mark Frederick Boyd, 1949, Malariology, p. 1373

    February 9, 2010

  • But he said instead with a gruff uncordialness, "More's the pity," and, crossing his legs, slouched, sullen and black of mood, farther into the comer of his seat.

    --Susan Johnson, 1991, Forbidden‎, p. 94

    February 9, 2010

  • It is very difficult for the literary man to distinguish between a genuine crook term (like "back-door parole," prison slang for dying in prison) and an invented one (like "Chicago overcoat" for coffin).

    --Selected Letters of Raymond Chandler‎, p. 218 (18 May 1950

    February 9, 2010

  • . . . Dante's celestial rose, or Plato's unbodiable good . . .

    --Monica Ferrell, 2008, The Answer is Always Yes‎, p. 74

    February 8, 2010

  • One does not require much imaginative effort to visualize the predicament of an elderly man, originating from the lack of fulfilment in love, though to the sufferer himself, it might seem to be uniquely agonizing and shamefully unconfidable, but still a grand passion.

    --Thought 14‎: 194 (1962)

    February 8, 2010

  • A bounty may go directly to certain interests, but this does not mean that those who engage in bountiable enterprises are made, to this extent, more prosperous than they otherwise would be.

    --Joseph S. Davis, 1939. On Agricultural Policy, 1926-1938‎, p. 106

    February 8, 2010

  • That could be a terrifying suffix, Pro. I'll have to explore it more.

    February 8, 2010

  • Have you discovered any other ideal lists, ruzuzu?

    February 7, 2010

  • Fun list!

    February 7, 2010

  • Looks like it's too late to let you know. ; )

    February 7, 2010

  • Then how did you get to this page? Is seeing it okay?

    February 7, 2010

  • Thanks for the alphaliterals Zeke. I added all but a couple to the list. Hope you'll start a few lists of your own.

    February 6, 2010

  • Letty fretted secretly a good deal about the difference between them and this new-found mother; her own bad grammar, Ben's tobacco, his everlasting noisy hillos and laughs, his bare red legs, gave her many an anxious hour.

    --Rebecca Harding Davis, 1870, "Ben", Putnam's Magazine, new series, 5: 174

    February 6, 2010

  • Bird wird, reesetee!

    February 6, 2010

  • Thanks, Pro! Links fixed.

    February 5, 2010

  • The hotel in D.C. had a lousy bar, the place was gestanko in general.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 450

    February 5, 2010

  • Cats stalk lizards among the clay pots around the fountain, doves settle into the flowering vines and coo their prayers, thankful for the existence of lizards.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 393

    February 5, 2010

  • The author's "Studs Lonigan" is an Indian youth named Poatlicue, watched by the jealous king as he hones his skill in battle.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 345

    February 5, 2010

  • You read more newspapers than Mr. Hearst himself, though it aggravates you to no end. Shiffling through all that claptrap hunting a day's one glory. The rise of the little man somewhere, or the fall of a tryant.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 338

    February 5, 2010

  • Think of how you would paint this cat: with her insides exposed, the delicate rib cage curved like a ring's setting around a bloody gem of carnivorous love.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 275

    February 5, 2010

  • Just before the border were pecan orchards, dark blocks of trees with their boughs half bright and half shadowed, lit by the electric lights of the shelleries.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 84-85

    February 5, 2010

  • Bilby, you beat me to Namarrgon! : )

    February 5, 2010

  • Thanks, john. Another one I just noticed: Apparently when more than one Wordnik contributes a variant, the variants get separate instead of combined headings. See cattywampus for an example. Also, can the drop-down box for related words be set to be blank as a default?

    February 3, 2010

  • Why is that almost every random word I tried tonight (about 40) had 5 examples?

    February 3, 2010

  • Would an aspirator help c_b?

    February 3, 2010

  • The linguists might not agree, but Namarrgon is where the action is online.

    February 2, 2010

  • That makes you about the same vintage as me.

    February 2, 2010

  • Bilby, I think it's misspelled there. Try Namarrgon.

    February 2, 2010

  • Make it five: tonitrophobia.

    February 2, 2010

  • In Hebrew, get means a divorce.

    February 2, 2010

  • John, sorting was changed, but not fixed. Currently it seems to alphabetize words up to the list page that one is on, but not those on following pages. If you click through the pages on a big list, you can see the words accruing into alphabetical order.

    February 2, 2010

  • Oops, I just outed myself as having an alias. I was testing how tags work and started composing the message as mollusque, but it got sent as grasshopper. (BTW, I'm not the only one who used grasshopper, it was traded at least once.)

    February 1, 2010

  • The two-color catalog contains product pictures and specifications for equipment ranging from a greensweeper to turf aerator with core processor.

    --The Golf Superintendent‎, 1975, p. 60

    February 1, 2010

  • got 'em bad

    January 30, 2010

  • Talking crow in The Chronicles of Prydain

    January 30, 2010

  • A giant cat in The Castle of Llyr, the third book of The Chronicles of Prydain.

    January 30, 2010

  • Ack!

    January 30, 2010

  • See meiofauny (Polish).

    January 30, 2010

  • Glad you liked meatloaf.

    January 30, 2010

  • A word game that wasn't listed! (Well, sionnach has dumb crambo). Has anyone played it?

    January 29, 2010

  • How do you feel about discombobulate?

    January 29, 2010

  • It's not usually pejorative, but it can be used pejoratively, just as blonde can (example.)

    January 29, 2010

  • Hmm, if we could just snip out the extra "e": magnotelluric. Which does appear online, but seems to be a misspelling.

    January 29, 2010

  • I agree frindley. I've heard the odor of rotting seashells referred to as a pong, and it's definitely pongsome.

    January 29, 2010

  • It doesn't need a new category, that's what False teeth fairies is for. Maybe gangerh should put a link to it in the list description.

    January 29, 2010

  • The covers were then put through the regular cover-slip preparation, carbofuchsine being used for the bacilli with methylene blue as a contrast stain.

    --C. C. Beach, 1899, "Insects as Etiological Factors in Disease", Proceedings of the Connecticut Medical Society, p. 104

    January 29, 2010

  • Oooh!--with a squid association too!

    January 29, 2010

  • I do' know the times when I 've set out to wash Monday mornin's, an' tied out the line betwixt the old pucker-pear tree and the corner o' the barn, an' thought, 'Here I be with the same kind o' week's work right over again.' I 'd wonder kind o' f'erce if I could n't git out of it noways; an' now here I be out of it, and an uprooteder creatur' never stood on the airth.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1890, Going to Shrewsbury

    January 28, 2010

  • Urge the beast, can't ye, Jeff'son? I ain't used to bein' out in such bleak weather. Seems if I couldn't git my breath. I'm all pinched up and wigglin' with shivers now. 'T ain't no use lettin' the hoss go step-a-tystep, this fashion.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1890, A Winter Courtship

    January 28, 2010

  • And when poor Jerry, for lack of other interest, fancied that his health was giving way mysteriously, and brought home a bottle of strong liquor to be used in case of sickness, and placed it conveniently in the shed, Mrs. Lane locked it up in the small chimney cupboard where she kept her camphor bottle and the opodeldoc and the other family medicines.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1886, Marsh Rosemary

    January 28, 2010

  • To be sure, it was the fashion to appear older in her day,—they could remember the sober effect of really youthful married persons in cap and frisette; but, whether they owed it to the changed times or to their own qualities, they felt no older themselves than ever they had.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1886, The Dulham Ladies

    January 28, 2010

  • I suppose you 're too young to remember John Ashby's grandmother? A good woman she was, and she had a dreadful time with her family. They never could keep the peace, and there was always as many as two of them who did n't speak with each other. It seems to come down from generation to generation like a—curse!" And Miss Debby spoke the last word as if she had meant it partly for her thread, which had again knotted and caught, and she snatched the offered scissors without a word, but said peaceably, after a minute or two, that the thread was n't what it used to be. The next needleful proved more successful, and the listener asked if the Ashbys were getting on comfortably at present.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, Miss Debby's Neighbors

    January 28, 2010

  • The wind blew over pleasantly and it was a curiously protected and hidden place, sheltered and quiet, with its one small crop of cider apples dropping ungathered to the ground, and unharvested there, except by hurrying black ants and sticky, witless little snails.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1881, An October Ride

    January 28, 2010

  • They saw the woman that had the guitar, an' there was a company a−listenin', regular highbinders all of 'em; an' there was a long table all spread out with big candlesticks like little trees o' light, and a sight o' glass an' silver ware; an' part o' the men was young officers in uniform . . .

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1900, The Foreigner

    January 28, 2010

  • "Lord, hear the great breakers!" exclaimed Mrs. Todd. "How they pound!—there, there! I always run of an idea that the sea knows anger these nights and gets full o' fight. I can hear the rote o' them old black ledges way down the thoroughfare.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1900, The Foreigner

    January 28, 2010

  • Esther was untouched by the fret and fury of life; she had lived in sunshine and rain among her silly sheep, and been refined instead of coarsened, while her touching patience with a ramping old mother, stung by the sense of defeat and mourning her lost activities, had given back a lovely self-possession, and habit of sweet temper.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1899, A Dunnet Shepherdess

    January 28, 2010

  • I saw two unpromising, quick barbel chase each other upstream from bank to bank, as we solemnly arranged our hooks and sinkers.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1899, A Dunnet Shepherdess

    January 28, 2010

  • The dark pools and the sunny shallows beckon one on; the wedge of sky between the trees on either bank, the speaking, companioning noise of the water, the amazing importance of what one is doing, and the constant sense of life and beauty make a strange transformation of the quick hours.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1899, A Dunnet Shepherdess

    January 28, 2010

  • The truth was that my heart had gone trouting with William, but it would have been too selfish to say a word even to one's self about spoiling his day. If there is one way above another of getting so close to nature that one simply is a piece of nature, following a primeval instinct with perfect self-forgetfulness and forgetting everything except the dreamy consciousness of pleasant freedom, it is to take the course of a shady trout brook.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1899, A Dunnet Shepherdess

    January 28, 2010

  • I watched her for a minute or two; she was the old Miranda, owned by some of the Caplins, and I knew her by an odd shaped patch of newish duck that was set into the peak of her dingy mainsail.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • I expected she'd come pleasantin' round just to show off an' say afterwards she was acquainted.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • Yes 'm, old friends is always best, 'less you can catch a new one that 's fit to make an old one out of . . .

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • Last winter she got the jay-birds to bangeing here, and I believe she'd 'a' scanted herself of her own meals to have plenty to throw out amongst 'em, if I had n't kep' watch.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1886, A White Heron

    January 28, 2010

  • Mrs. Todd had taken the onion out of her basket and laid it down upon the kitchen table. "There's Johnny Bowden come with us, you know," she reminded her mother." He 'll be hungry enough to eat his size."

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • He might have belonged with a simple which grew in a certain slug-haunted corner of the garden, whose use she could never be betrayed into telling me, though I saw her cutting the tops by moonlight once, as if it were a charm, and not a medicine, like the great fading bloodroot leaves.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • The conversation became at once professional after the briefest preliminaries, and he would stand twirling a sweet-scented sprig in his fingers, and make suggestive jokes, perhaps about her faith in a too persistent course of thoroughwort elixir, in which my landlady professed such firm belief as sometimes to endanger the life and usefulness of worthy neighbors.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    January 28, 2010

  • You can hardly have the heart to scold any more about the malpractice of patients when we believe in you so humbly and so ignorantly.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • And adverbs tend not to be listed as often as the corresponding adjectives.

    January 28, 2010

  • Citation at seventhly.

    January 28, 2010

  • It was thinly dressed in fluttering paper covers, and was so thick and so lightly bound that it had a tendency to divide its material substance into parts, like the seventhlies and eighthlies of an old-fashioned sermon.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • She was a well made, pretty lookin' girl, but I tell ye 'twas like setting a laylock bush to grow beside an ellum tree, and expecting of 'em to keep together.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • As he looked, he could see through a white low-hung mist, the ridge pole of the cabin roof and the crowstick chimney's ragged edge, the vines growing over the well-house, and bryony taking all the fence corners.

    --Maristan Chapman, 1928, The Happy Mountain‎, p. 150

    January 28, 2010

  • Citation at backlog.

    January 28, 2010

  • Citation at backlog.

    January 28, 2010

  • They brought in the materials for an old-fashioned fire, backlog, forestick, and crowsticks, and presently seated themselves before a crackling blaze.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • I ain't goin' to live in the chimbly-corner of another man's house. I ain't but a little past sixty-seven. I 've got to stand in my lot an' place.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • She might dressmake or do millinery work; she always had a pretty taste, and 't would be better than roving. I 'spose 'twould hurt her pride," --but Mrs. Thacher flushed at this, and Mrs. Martin came to the rescue.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    January 28, 2010

  • She was 'shamed to look so shif'less that day, but she had some good clothes in a chist in the bedroom, and a boughten bonnet with a good cypress veil . . .

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • Unintentional, Pro, as was the digital sense of blackberrying, the previous word that I added!

    January 28, 2010

  • And I can tell you another thing that happened among my own folks. There was an own cousin of mine married to a man by the name of John Hathorn.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • We saw them join the straggling train of carriages which had begun to go through the village from all along shore, soon after daylight, and they started on their journey shouting and carousing, with their pockets crammed with early apples and other provisions.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • Tommy Dockum was more interested than any one else, and mentioned the subject so frequently one day when he went blackberrying with us, that we grew enthusiastic, and told each other what fun it would be to go, for everybody would be there, and it would be the greatest loss to us if we were absent. I thought I had lost my childish fondness for circuses, but it came back redoubled . . .

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • To dance by the light of the moon?

    January 28, 2010

  • Kate and I cracked our clams on the gunwale of the boat, and cut them into nice little bits for bait with a piece of the shell, and by the time the captain had thrown out the killick we were ready to begin, and found the fishing much more exciting than it had been at the wharf.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • And then he laughed apologetically, rubbing his hands together, and looking out to sea again as if he wished to appear unconcerned; yet we saw that he wondered if we thought it ridiculous for a man of his age to have treasured up so much trumpery in that cobwebby place

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • He looked more and more like a well-to-do old English sparrow, and chippered faster and faster.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • We found that it was etiquette to call them each captain, but I think some of the Deephaven men took the title by brevet upon arriving at a proper age.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • There was a most heathenish fear of doing certain things on Friday, and there were countless signs in which we still have confidence. When the moon is very bright and other people grow sentimental, we only remember that it is a fine night to catch hake.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • Kate and I took much pleasure in choosing our tea-poys; hers had a mandarin parading on the top, and mine a flight of birds and a pagoda; and we often used them afterward, for Miss Honora asked us to come to tea whenever we liked.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • There was a beautiful view from the doorstep and we stopped a minute there. "Real sightly, ain't it?" said Mrs. Bonny. "But you ought to be here and look across the woods some morning just at sun-up. Why, the sky is all yaller and red, and them low lands topped with fog!

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    January 28, 2010

  • We could go together to get her together. (First commented on cleavagram.)

    January 28, 2010

  • The banquet was nearly two hours late in coming forward, and the dryness engendered in the air by forty-three uncocktailed throats was so powerful that it deranged Mengtsz's electric system and all the lights went out.

    --Stella Benson, 1925, The Little World‎, p. 242

    January 25, 2010

  • Can't stand pat with that one.

    January 25, 2010

  • In Florida you need a permit to fish for permit.

    January 23, 2010

  • I like the Century Dictionary definition--"Same as Cactales: a name introduced without good reason, but now much used."

    January 23, 2010

  • The age is classed, on the presence of tubiflorate composite pollen, as middle Miocene at oldest.

    --James P. Mandaville, 1990, Flora of Eastern Saudi Arabia‎, p. 21

    January 23, 2010

  • This preacher has reduced dubiousness to a fine art. Doubtless he has escaped out of exaggeration, but he has not landed anywhere. Neither has he landed his people anywhere. In the next place he abates his diction to correspond to the neutralism of his thought. It is proper and pale, and inoffensive and unpotential, and void of positive verity.

    --Nathaniel J. Burton, 1888, "Veracity in Ministers", Yale Lectures on Preaching, p. 346

    January 23, 2010

  • 30th edition, edited by Douglas M. Anderson, Patricia D. Novak, Jefferson Keith and Michelle A. Elliott, 2003. A comprehensive work of more than 2000 pages, it has lots of lists in addition to definitions: blocks, bodies, bones, canals, nuclei, syndromes, fossa, fractures, muscles, etc.

    Last word: Zyvox.

    January 21, 2010

  • By J. E. Lighter, 1994-1997. Full title: Random House Historical Dictionary of American Slang. The first two volumes are excellent, but the work seemed dead in the water when Random House abandoned it. Fortunately, Oxford University Press has decided to continue the work. HDAS also contains dincher (see my comment under Dictionary of American Regional English).

    January 21, 2010

  • It took a long time to walk back, but Mother wasn't angry. She'd found a couple of dinchers in the pocket of her yellow dress.

    --Barbara Kingsolver, 2009, The Lacuna, p. 57

    January 21, 2010

  • Edited by Frederic G. Cassidy and Joan Houston Hall, 1985 (vol. 1) - 2011 (vol. 5). Intensely complete, with many items recorded in no other well-known reference. For example, last night I was reading Barbara Kingsolver's The Lacuna, and came across dincher. It's not in OED2, MW2, MW3, RHD2, CDC1, Urban Dictionary or Wordnik (till now). DARE has it (under dinch): a cigarette butt. See the DARE website for more info.

    Last word: check back in 2011, the work hasn't been completed yet.

    January 21, 2010

  • By Gareth Branwyn, 1997. Subtitle: a pocket dictionary for the jitterati. A short book based mostly items from Wired's "Jargon Watch" feature, many of which probably started as madeupical (geekosphere, goofcore). All entries are capitalized, even though it doesn't capitalize its own title on the cover).

    Last word: Zen Mail.

    January 21, 2010

  • By Don Ethan Miller, 1981. Subtitle: An Essential Guide to the Inside Languages of Today. Grouped by topics, with 24 sections, including medicine, law, ballet, sailing, fashion, drugs, and wine.

    Last word: zygoma.

    January 21, 2010

  • By Anita Pearl, 1980. Full title: The Jonathan David Dictionary of Popular Slang. Most of the terms recorded in this work would already be known to a native speaker, and the organization is strictly alphabetical (no groupings or lists), so it's not clear who the target audience is.

    Last word: zowie.

    January 21, 2010

  • "Valid variation"? Not in Latin or medical English. Words ending in -itis are feminine, so the adjective should be in feminine form. Compare *itis *osa and *itis *osum* on Onelook. Words ending in -derma are neuter, hence the -um ending with "xeroderma pigmentosum".

    January 21, 2010

  • By Harold Wentworth and Stuart Berg Flexner, 1975, Second Supplemented Edition. The appendices contain some massive lists: words sorted by suffix groups (-aroo, -eroo, -roo, -oo), shortenings, reduplications (first, second and third order). These guys would have loved Wordie/Wordnik.

    Last word: Zulu, last word of supplement: zot.

    January 19, 2010

  • By Eric Partridge, 1970. Subtitle: Colloquialisms and Catch-phrases, Solecisms and Catachreses, Nicknames, Vulgarisms and such Americanisms as have been naturalized. 7th edition, two volumes in one (dictionary and supplement).

    Last word: zymy (from zymotic).

    January 19, 2010

  • By J. S. Farmer and W. E. Henley. Subtitle: Three hundred years of colloquial, unorthodox and vulgar English". 1987 reprint of 1890 work titled Slang and its Analogues, 2 volumes. Provides citations illustrating the use of the words, and synonyms in various European languages.

    Last word: Zu-zu.

    January 19, 2010

  • Heads up, ruzuzu!

    January 19, 2010

  • Should be "retinitis pigmentosa". Maybe Gabaldon confused the spelling with "xeroderma pigmentosum"?

    January 19, 2010

  • And now the singular has been found, coined seven years before Borgmann constructed it:

    The name illustrates an important feature of this disease, "subendolymphatic hyperplastic proliferation." . . . It was Dr. Frank's feeling that this was a subendolymphatic proliferation of the endothelium lining these spaces . . . .

    --American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (1957) 73‎: 1070

    January 19, 2010

  • I've been curating my panvocalic lists, mostly to convert listings that need capitalization, and it's given me a new appreciation for the Examples, the images from Flickr and even the Twitter feed. Sometimes they provide the only results for a word: Calepodius, Mahmoudieh, Codiaeum, Bufonidae, Austin Powers.

    Since developing better ways of dealing with capitalization is on the upgrade list, here's a couple more observations.

    On Wordie I didn't tag the items in (for example) Panvocalic Proper with vowel sequences because it would have mixed upper and lower case words together on the tag list without distinguishing them. On Wordnik this isn't a problem since capitalization is preserved, so I can have a mixed list e.g., aeiou. So I hope whatever is being developed to handle capitalization keeps the visual distinction but maps the associated items together. At the moment it seems that the Twitter and images mappings are not case-sensitive, but the definition and example mappings are.

    In most cases, converting to upper case increased the number of words that got a definition feed from the linked dictionaries, however, in some cases with the Century Dictionary, capitalization broke the link.

    I imagine the hardest part with be merging the comments, since comments from capitalized words will intercalate with those from uncapitalized ones, if chronological order is maintained. Maybe in cases where both forms of the word have comments, the ones coming from the capitalized form could have a note to that effect added.

    January 19, 2010

  • Fixed. Thanks, John!

    January 19, 2010

  • I encountered it in the same place; it seems to mean "hysterical". Online it appears in the delightful phrase, "pithiatic rhinolalia".

    January 19, 2010

  • In a cavern, in a canyon,

    Excavating for a mine,

    Dwelt a miner, forty-niner,

    And his daughter Clementine.

    January 18, 2010

  • Caverniloquy, or cavernous pectoriloquy, is the speech of the patient as heard over an ordinary cavity.

    --Richard C. M. Page, 1897, A Handbook of Physical Diagnosis of Diseases of the Organs of Respiration, p. 181

    January 18, 2010

  • Another panvocalic milestone: a word other than an adverb with all six vowels in alphabetical order.

    January 18, 2010

  • The first panvocalic couple: Areithous and Philomedusa (found here).

    January 18, 2010

  • Ahem, our trees ; )

    January 18, 2010

  • I have about 70 dictionaries, mostly English, but also Latin, French, German, Yiddish, Hebrew, Tagalog, and Hawaiian. My entomological shelf is maintained by Google Books.

    January 18, 2010

  • One of the most amazing fish is the dipneumonan Lepidosiren, a lunged fish that can survive on dry land.

    --Géraldine Véron, 1998, On the Trail of Big Cats‎, p. 101

    January 18, 2010

  • I'm unable to update the description of my list Panvocalic Euryvocalic. I get the message saying it has been successfully updated, but nothing changes and the edits are not saved.

    January 18, 2010

  • In reviewing the earlier travel books one comes across Eli Bowen, a postal official and writer who emphasized the railroads in a real Hungerfordian manner.

    --Frank P. Donovan, 1940, The Railroad in Literature, p. 105

    January 18, 2010

  • Variant of "Gebroulaz", Italy, in 19th century discussions of the mineral sellaite

    January 16, 2010

  • I think something else is being smoked (H, maybe tagging rather than commenting would suffice?)

    January 15, 2010

  • How about making "random word" show a random listed word? That should get around the problem of it leading mostly to junk.

    January 14, 2010

  • I have a few on Odd Anagrams (vile, evil; parental, paternal; enraged, angered), but it's not restricted to such.

    January 14, 2010

  • Hi PossibleUnderscore, as stated in the list description, all of the listed panvocalics have been used at least once in print, by an author who was not seeking to create a vowel or letter pattern.

    Under Panvocalic euryvocalic, you'll see that I rejected subendolymphatic because it was coined for the pattern rather than the meaning.

    So, yes, I consider all of the items listed to be legitimate words. For obscure words (rare and non-obvious meanings) I generally tag them with a dictionary in which they appear, or provide a quotation.

    "Counterpain" gets more than 600 hits in Google Books. Some of them are misspellings of counterpane, but many are used in the sense of analgesic. Cotigulate I tagged with OED2, since it's listed there (meaning "to tile a house"). Schizoneuran is used in the entomological literature.

    January 13, 2010

  • Thanks all, for the various suggestions. I put one trick pony on Triads 3 and KitKatClub on Triads 2. Nanny, nanny, boo-boo sounds more like a quartet than a triad.

    Ruzuzu, do you mean Music! Music! Music! by Weiss & Baum or Music Music Music by Brewerman?

    January 13, 2010

  • Try procrustean (lower case).

    January 12, 2010

  • My Tagalog dictionary lists pekpek rather than peck.

    January 12, 2010

  • See syllogistic.

    January 9, 2010

  • The related words feature has some interesting behavior, which I discovered when I accidentally listed "foot" as an antonym of autopodium. There was no apparent way to delete the entry, but when I then added "foot" as synonym, it replaced the entry for antonym. More testing shows that a word can be listed as only one of the options (antonym, synonym, cross-reference, related word, rhyme, variant). "Related word" is the most general; if the same word is then listed as a synonym, "synonym" replaces "related word", but more general categories don't supplant more specific ones.

    That's a clever bit of programming, but it prevents some possibilities, such as listing "ramble" as a rhyme and a synonym of "amble", or "sanction" as both synonym and antonym of "encouragement".

    Some other possibilities could be added to the drop-down list: "more general", "more specific", "bigger", "smaller", "more positive", "more negative". This would allow automatic generation and display of word chains such as:

    polygon, quadrilateral, parallelogram, rectangle, square;

    universe, supercluster, galaxy, solar system, star, planet, moon;

    ecstatic, delighted, happy, content, disgruntled, miserable, despondent.

    Might I also suggest that the drop-down list should have a blank rather than "antonym" as a default.

    January 7, 2010

  • Defined as "having the ability to switch between two lexicons in competitive Scrabble" (e.g., OSPD and SOWPODS) in Letterati by Paul McCarthy (2008, p. 287).

    January 6, 2010

  • Aim for "satine" plus the blank in Scrabble for the maximum chance of playing a seven-letter word. See Sera's satine list.

    January 6, 2010

  • I hadn't come across autopod Jubjub, but judging from results in Google books, it's used almost as frequently as autopodium. Pro: does autopod qualify as colloquial? Gangerh: snort!

    January 6, 2010

  • Paws up for autopodium (illustrated here).

    January 5, 2010

  • But there was enough for the shattered man, once a blood, and twice a dandy, but now a querulous, chalkstony valetudinarian — enough for his beautiful, blackbrowed, black-eyed, Frenchified daughter, who came with no good grace from her Boulogne circle of scampish pleasantness to rusticate in au English country-house.

    --Shirley Brooks, 1853, "Aspen Court", Graham's Magazine 43(1): 370

    January 2, 2010

  • "malacozoon . . . a soft animal; a mollusc."

    --George M. Gould & R. J. E. Scott, 1916, The Practioner's Medical Dictionary, 3rd edition, p. 531

    January 2, 2010

  • Then the hill that hid the furnaces was rounded; the flammivorous smelters blooded the silver night for the last time; the moonlight ebbed and flowed upon the lime-cliffs.

    --Randolph Bedford, 1905, The Snare of Strength‎

    January 2, 2010

  • The problem's constructional; the answer's deductional;

    The text is instructional; the States are effluxional.

    --Michael Coper & George Williams, 1997, How Many Cheers for Engineers?‎, p. 153

    January 1, 2010

  • Where do you findum?

    January 1, 2010

  • No such luck, Pro. They're using fat ones.

    January 1, 2010

  • It's listed in MW3, defined as "a German cheese resembling limburger that is produced in a brick shape".

    December 31, 2009

  • Interesting comment among the definitions from American Heritage.

    December 24, 2009

  • Seen here.

    December 24, 2009

  • Is that a non-vocalic, PossibleUnderscore?

    December 24, 2009

  • Thanks ruzuzu! I picked up Brachypolemius and Macroxyletinus for Panvocalic organisms.

    Edit: changed "Proper" to "organisms".

    December 22, 2009

  • We'll have to retool it.

    December 20, 2009

  • Sionnach, your source is inaccurate. The space between the eyebrows is the glabella. The glabella is just below the ophryon (not "ophyron") (and just above the nasion). Diagram here.

    December 20, 2009

  • Spectrum?

    December 20, 2009

  • One day she appeared at the schoolhouse itself, partly out of amused curiosity about my industries; but she explained that there was no tansy in the neighborhood with such snap to it as some that grew about the schoolhouse lot. Being scuffed down all the spring made it grow so much the better, like some folks that had it hard in their youth, and were bound to make the most of themselves before they died.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1896, The Country of the Pointed Firs

    December 18, 2009

  • I tell you, Leslie, that for intense, self-centred, smouldering volcanoes of humanity, New England cannot be matched the world over.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1884, A Country Doctor

    December 18, 2009

  • The opposite of a Vexample; the only example (from Sarah Orne Jewett) is the very one I came here to add.

    December 18, 2009

  • There is another story I'd like to have ye hear, if it's so that you ain't beat out hearing me talk. When I get going I slip along as easy as a schooner wing-and-wing afore the wind.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    December 18, 2009

  • Worse still, spirits of the noblest strain, like Edith and Bonduca, suddenly break out into the same fishwifery, and rail with an excess of epithet that is as repulsive as it is picturesque.

    --Gamaliel Bradford, Jr., 1908, "Beaumont and Fletcher", The Atlantic Monthly‎ 101: 131

    December 18, 2009

  • Alone, the suitors, complaining, impress us with Kate's shrewery. She must be so sung up, so made a champion of, for the oncoming battle royal.

    --Theodore R. Weiss, 1974, The breath of clowns and kings: Shakespeare's early comedies and histories‎, p. 56

    December 18, 2009

  • Isn't this just a variant of hoick?

    December 16, 2009

  • It's under blog.

    December 15, 2009

  • SPAM Alert!

    December 15, 2009

  • Crusade, grenade, pavesade.

    December 15, 2009

  • Which came first, dumbassery or asshattery?

    December 14, 2009

  • Terebellum happens to be a genus of mollusk; I hadn't known it was also an asterism.

    December 14, 2009

  • Do you mean terebellum, ruzuzu?

    December 14, 2009

  • A bird and a lizard.

    December 14, 2009

  • Naked mole rats don't get cancer. However, they can die of embarrassment.

    December 13, 2009

  • Big Apple sauce.

    December 13, 2009

  • SPAM alert!

    December 13, 2009

  • Mr. English errs: the word is gantelope.

    December 13, 2009

  • Means mix-mix; also listed as halo-halo. It's a dessert, not drink (unless you let it melt for a while).

    December 13, 2009

  • So the chuckwalla handles unruly lounge lizards!

    December 11, 2009

  • And it's reversible.

    December 11, 2009

  • Hi rover, a couple of us have wandered down this road: see Hogwash! and Humbug and bafflegab. I'll be interested to see where it takes you.

    December 11, 2009

  • Thanks, PU and marky! Marky, do you mean Century Dictionary sense 1 or something rad on Urban Dictionary?

    December 11, 2009

  • Variant of scheltopusik.

    December 10, 2009

  • The American Heritage Dictionary is aiming to displace Weirdnet. Did you know that the chuckwalla is a "large herbaceous lizard"?

    December 10, 2009

  • Hi captaincloud, are you creating a new word, or do you mean neologism?

    December 9, 2009

  • I found a way to salvage chicks, marky.

    December 8, 2009

  • I just noticed in leaving a comment on the blog that absolute rather than relative links must be used there. At least, that's the case in linking to a tag, since the blog has tags of its own. Is it possible to edit comments on the blog?

    December 8, 2009

  • I hadn't anticipated words like "pup", "calf" and "chick" when I started the list. My original thought was words (or phrases in the case of monkey puzzle) that arose independently. "Bug", "primate", etc. don't qualify because they apply to all members of their group and so don't have different origins or meanings.

    "Pup" and "calf" aren't independent words when applied to dog and seal or cow and whale, but the organisms aren't closely related. The young of carnivores might be called "kits" or "cubs" and of ungulates "fawns", "foals", or "shoats". So I'd say they do bring two different kinds of animals to mind.

    "Chick" doesn't fit; there are lots of animals terms that can be applied to people (hog, hawk, rabbit). Doesn't someone have a list like that?

    December 7, 2009

  • Time to turn turtle.

    December 7, 2009

  • Thanks Pro! You can add it to Two for the price of one.

    December 7, 2009

  • How about cockroach?

    December 7, 2009

  • I added roach and realized it refers independently to two different animals (fish and insect). I wonder how many others there are?

    December 7, 2009

  • We reached 100 just in time then!

    December 6, 2009

  • Squirrel could go on both lists!

    December 6, 2009

  • I think PossibleUnderscore is becoming increasingly probable.

    December 6, 2009

  • So do I. I'm just thinking it would be fun to read with one list for one syllable words and another for two. If marky doesn't take up the idea, maybe I'll pursue it.

    Edit: marky's post came in while I was writing mine. Marky, I think we can push one syllable over 100 words.

    December 6, 2009

  • Marky, this list would have more punch if restricted to one syllable words. BTW, jellyfish has three.

    December 6, 2009

  • The "next" link on lists with more than 100 words is no longer working. The page says "words 101 through 200", but still displays 1-100.

    December 6, 2009

  • What about ramen? Break the block before cooking or leave intact for subsequent slurping?

    December 6, 2009

  • Modern day abacination! *Throws reesetee wet cloth*

    December 5, 2009

  • Pleased to bracket subjunctive please and subjunctive please, please pleas.

    December 5, 2009

  • SPAM alert!

    December 5, 2009

  • Thanks, Pro. I also cleaned up some of the borked diacritics in the list description.

    December 5, 2009

  • It's bopping, not bonking, in the earworm now playing here.

    December 4, 2009

  • Subjunctive please!

    December 4, 2009

  • I want to know if uselessness got sauce on his keyboard.

    December 4, 2009

  • Here's a profile of Bivalve.

    Are you the same person as Kat?

    December 3, 2009

  • Excellent! Do you know of other such that I could add to Dictionary words & escapees?

    On Wordie, a ghost word was one no longer on any lists. See Former ghosts and Ghosted.

    December 2, 2009

  • Yup, it's in use.

    December 2, 2009

  • I thought the idea was to let the flavor out. Sort of like bone marrow.

    December 2, 2009

  • Cutting spaghetti is acceptable only if all the cutting occurs at once at the beginning of the meal. I use a crosshatch cut.

    December 2, 2009

  • What about Bivalve?

    December 2, 2009

  • For me, only a few more things need to be tweaked and Wordnik will have equaled Wordie for (fun)ctionality.

    1) Move tags to the comments page, and show them larger, directly under the word. As the leading tagger on Wordie/Wordnik, I find I have little incentive to tag when the tags are relegated to a sidebar on a page that otherwise can't be modified by users. Tags aren't fun anymore.

    2) Restore more of the listings of top ten for the week (e.g., top ten commenters). And restore the links to the all-time lists. Some of us like looking at the wordometer. Newbies can crack the top 100 in a week; it takes (took) fewer than 1000 words listed.

    3) Restore the iconic links to various dictionaries on the comments page. I often used them, particularly the OneLook link.

    4) Under profiles, restore the list of comments by user. I often used that to find the threads I wanted to catch up on, and I'd use it now to find any remaining borked bits from the transition and fix them.

    After that, imagine when the "Take this word" options include "define it", "etymologize it", "exemplify it".

    December 1, 2009

  • It just needs to be rejiggered so that only the letters typed are entered unless one chooses one of the other items on the list of suggestions.

    November 29, 2009

  • Glad you like it, pollyanna. Your

    November 29, 2009

  • Tags with apostrophes seem not to be working. Both zz and zzz are tagged z's, but clicking on the tag gives the message "No words have been tagged z's yet. Why not go tag some?"

    November 28, 2009

  • Borgmann's coinage is no longer purely madeupical (but the singular form still hasn't been spotted outside the laboratory):

    "The increased prevalence of salpingitis due to N. gonorrhoeae at the time of menses has fostered the contention that the loss of mucosal integrity and the rich supply of subendolymphatics are important variables in transforming occult glandular infection into clinically recognized disease."

    --Gilles R. G. Monif and David A. Baker, 2008, Infectious Diseases in Obstetrics and Gynecology‎, p. 451

    November 27, 2009

  • Well, it is possible to reach the 16-letter plateau with SUBENDOLYMPHATIC, a contrived word best interpreted as meaning "partly within a lymphatic vessel.

    --Dmitri A. Borgmann, 1965, Language on Vacation: an Olio of Orthographical Oddities‎, p. 126

    November 27, 2009

  • How about detartrated?

    November 26, 2009

  • Did you know that bilby prefers strapless? (Evidence).

    November 26, 2009

  • Let the gallopavonian pursuits begin!

    November 26, 2009

  • Could we disbra you instead?

    November 26, 2009

  • It seems that the person listed as having first listed a word is often not the person who first listed a word. For example, curbstone on bilby's I Can't Believe It's Not Listed.

    Also when someone listed a Word more than once on Wordie, all the List occurrences were grouped together, but Wordnik sorts them in order of listing, which seems preferable, unless moving the word to a different list means they are no longer credited with having first listed the word.

    November 26, 2009

  • This reminds me of arguments about what is a species. No definition of "species" works in all situations, and the same is true of "word". OED2 says about species, "The exact definition of a species, and the criteria by which species are to be distinguished (esp. in relation to genera or varieties), have been the subject of much discussion."

    Some of the hallmarks of words are that they are pronounceable, used for open communication, have inferable meanings, and are related to other words (have derivations).

    I don't think every combination of letters can be considered a word. "Madeupical" meets all four of the criteria above; "dhn" mets none of them. The meaning of madeupical, might be inferred by a native speaker of English even without a context, even though it is not a standard formation. The meaning of dhn cannot be determined without a context. It might be an acronym, or it might be an arbitrary string of characters that conveys meaning only as a code.

    November 26, 2009

  • Watch your langauge!

    November 21, 2009

  • I miss the Wordie visual distinction between internal (relative) and external (absolute) links.

    November 21, 2009

  • Also on the subject of examples, some lack an attribution. For example, the third one for retronym comes from William Safire.

    November 21, 2009

  • How are examples selected? The first five for bayesianism are essentially repeats of a large alphabetical list.

    November 21, 2009

  • A new riality show?

    November 21, 2009

  • Maybe chartles.

    November 21, 2009

  • Could be Manute Bol, the basketball player.

    November 21, 2009

  • When we came down from the lighthouse and it grew late, we would beg for an hour or two longer on the water, and row away in the twilight far out from land, where, with our faces turned from the Light, it seemed as if we were alone, and the sea shoreless; and as the darkness closed round us softly, we watched the stars come out, and were always glad to see Kate's star and my star, which we had chosen when we were children.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    November 21, 2009

  • Almost all the coasters came in sight of Deephaven, and the sea outside the light was their grand highway. Twice from the lighthouse we saw a yacht squadron like a flock of great white birds.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    November 21, 2009

  • As Mrs. Kew had said, there was "a power of china." Kate and I were convinced that the lives of her grandmothers must have been spent in giving tea-parties. We counted ten sets of cups, beside quantities of stray ones; and some member of the family had evidently devoted her time to making a collection of pitchers.

    --Sarah Orne Jewett, 1877, Deephaven

    November 21, 2009

  • Needles to say.

    November 21, 2009

  • Don't get me started.

    November 21, 2009

  • Thanks, Pro! Old MacDonald has met his match.

    November 21, 2009

  • Do three lefts make it right: unununium?

    November 20, 2009

  • Purpureous bliss!

    November 20, 2009

  • What about words that no longer sound musical: keynote, fiddlesticks?

    November 20, 2009

  • Oops, typed too fast. How do I delete a word from an open list?

    November 20, 2009

  • Yippidie!

    November 20, 2009

  • how about ununified?

    November 20, 2009

  • Very strange. Panvocalics wasn't listed, but as soon as I ahemed, it showed up. How'd you do that Grant?

    November 20, 2009

  • Ahem . . .

    November 20, 2009

  • I agree with dontcry. I always used to read Wordie by scanning for the threads in purple first, to pick up where I'd left off. Also in some operations I do on lists, knowing that I've clicked before saves a lot of time.

    November 20, 2009

  • Doesn't it qualify for your Road Signs list, bilby?

    November 19, 2009

  • Disemvowelment?

    November 19, 2009

  • It's the last word in alpha order on my miscellaneous list, but it suffers from "Disallowed key characters in global data".

    November 19, 2009

  • They flanked opposite ends of the house and were probably architectural absurdities, redeemed in a measure indeed by not being wholly disengaged nor of a height too pretentious, dating, in their gingerbread antiquity, from a romantic revival that was already a respectable past.

    --Henry James, 1898, The Turn of the Screw

    November 19, 2009

  • If I had a great deal to do I had still more to think about, and the moment came when my occupations were gravely menaced by my thoughts.

    --Henry James, 1896, The Way it Came

    November 19, 2009

  • She had reached the period of life that he had long since reached, when, after separations, the dreadful clockface of the friend we meet announces the hour we have tried to forget.

    --Henry James, 1895, The Altar of the Dead

    November 19, 2009

  • Gravener was profound enough to remark after a moment that in the first place he couldn't be anything but a Dissenter, and when I answered that the very note of his fascination was his extraordinary speculative breadth, my friend retorted that there was no cad like your cultivated cad and that I might depend upon discovering (since I had had the levity not already to have inquired) that my shining light proceeded, a generation back, from a Methodist cheesemonger.

    --Henry James, 1894, The Coxon Fund

    November 19, 2009

  • Already, at hungry twenty-six, Gravener looked as blank and parlimentary as if he were fifty and popular.

    --Henry James, 1894, The Coxon Fund

    November 19, 2009

  • I wondered whether he had lost his humour, or only, dreadful thought, had never had any--not even when I had fancied him most Aristophanesque.

    --Henry James, 1894, The Coxon Fund

    November 19, 2009

  • Does trying to say them all at once result in epiglottery?

    November 17, 2009

  • Ruzuzu's Capitonyms or capitonyms is timely.

    November 17, 2009

  • Hi, Prolagus! Could you edit your comment on my Letters list, to fix "ḍ as in puḍḍica"?

    November 17, 2009

  • Psst, your profile page is under your real name, so you might want to tweak your settings. You know, to keep up the uselessness mystique.

    November 17, 2009

  • Thanks, John! (By the way, weren't you capitalized on Wordie?)

    November 16, 2009

  • Was I being dense below, or prescient? The top of the comments box says that double brackets link to the comments pages.

    November 16, 2009

  • I think a royal blue might be easier to read than the cornflower blue.

    November 16, 2009

  • I've never heard it pronounced, but I'd follow the pattern of Venusian.

    November 15, 2009

  • John, how about delegating some of the clean-up to longtime users? If you gave them superuser powers, they could search out (given appropriate tools) the remaining problems with character conversions and fix them. This would mean allowing the superusers to edit other users comments.

    You could harness that fijiti ocsjts energy for something beyond meta!

    November 15, 2009

  • If those don't fill you up, try these.

    November 15, 2009

  • Where a word hasn't been listed, the "Be the first!" link goes to "Create a new word list" instead of to "Take this word and . . . List it".

    November 15, 2009

  • Yet another aspect of the split: try looking up some of the Wordie neologisms, like alphavocalic. The definitions page gives no hint that Wordnik has information about such words, i.e., that they've been listed and commented on. It should show when words have been listed (maybe showing the first ten lists). To make room for this, how about moving the tags to the comments page (since tagging is a form of commenting), and cutting out six of the picture from Flickr so the right column is continuous.

    November 15, 2009

  • "Janusian thinking"—the capacity to conceive and utilize two or more opposite or contradictory ideas, concepts, or images simultaneously—is discussed in relation to its role in the creative process in art, literature, architecture, music, science, and mathematics. I feel that understanding the psychological factors in creativity should be of importance in the theory and everyday practice of the art of psychotherapy.

    --Albert Rothenberg, 1971, "The Process of Janusian Thinking in Creativity", Archives of General Psychiatry 24(3): 195

    November 15, 2009

  • While writing the previous comment, I realized the shortcoming of have the comment box at the top: it's smaller than before, which makes it harder to compose longer comments. How about popping up a larger window for comments, like the tags box we used to have on Wordie? Or automatically enlarging the comment box once typing hits the fifth line?

    November 15, 2009

  • I'm starting to get used to the janusian feel of the Wordienik chimaera. The Wordnik definition pages show the ducks from above, and the Wordie zeitgeist pages show the spirited paddling underneath. I'm not sure I want more people to pay attention to the activity below. Might we be overwhelmed if too many people joined the fray?

    The split is odd at times though. Clicking on a bracketed word brings you to the definition page, not the comment page, yet the words are often being bracketed to refer to another comment. And tags can be added only from the definitions pages, not the comments pages. We need an option "Take this word and . . . tag it", and a short cut for linking a word to its comment page. (Maybe double square brackets?)

    November 15, 2009

  • I see a snowman surrounded by conch embryos.

    November 15, 2009

  • Google doesn't seem to index Wordnik very often. A search for "gubernatoric hubris" (see below) finds Wordie but not Wordnik.

    November 14, 2009

  • Lipton uses anamonics to keep track of large numbers of words. In simplest terms, an anamonic is a phrase that helps the player remember a group of words made up of similar letters, like the seven-letter word POLENTA plus a blank.

    --Paul McCarthy, 2008, Letterati, p. 135

    November 14, 2009

  • Give me my scallop-shell of quiet,

    My staff of faith to walk upon;

    My scrip of joy, immortal diet;

    My bottle of salvation;

    My gown of glory, hope's true gage,

    And thus I'll take my pilgrimage!

    --Sir Walter Raleigh, 1603, Pilgrimage

    November 14, 2009

  • Hi jclerch. Do you want contributions to this list (it's open), or do you intend to stick to ten words as in the list description?

    November 14, 2009

  • I gazed long at the weather-worn block; and, stooping down, perceived a hole near the bottom still full of snail-shells and pebbles, which we were fond of storing there with more perishable things. . .

    --Emily Brontë, 1847, Wuthering Heights

    November 14, 2009

  • I like the "list of the day" idea, introduced yesterday on the blog. How do we nominate lists?

    November 14, 2009

  • Make that "list", not "lost". We don't seem to have the ability to edit comments at the moment.

    November 12, 2009

  • Hi tiara, interesting list! May I recommend putting the parenthetical remarks as comments instead of with the words? Also, try entering the words in lower case unless they need to be capitalized. You'll see that some of them are on some other color lists, which might give more fodder for your lost.

    Also, take a look at the tag

    November 12, 2009

  • *Turns blue*

    November 10, 2009

  • Hi Pro! I didn't know there were two of you. When did you become paraphyletic?

    November 9, 2009

  • Wordies, as of November 8, 2009.

    November 9, 2009

  • Sionnach, I think you need to revisit Professor von Schmartzenpanz.

    November 9, 2009

  • But less likely than certaintity.

    November 9, 2009

  • Thanks for the update, John. I like "seemless", which seems less corporate than "seamless".

    November 9, 2009

  • Congratulations on becoming paraphyletic (again)!

    November 7, 2009

  • He entered the Gothic archway of the hall where Bouteillan, the old bald butler who unprofessionally now wore a mustache (dyed a rich gravy brown) met him with gested delight. . .

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 5, 2009

  • He could not say afterwards, when discussing with her that rather pathetic nastiness, whether he really feared that his avournine (as Blanche was to refer later, in her bastard French, to Ada) might react with an outburst of real or well-feigned resentment to stark display of desire. . .

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 5, 2009

  • Citation at anadem.

    November 5, 2009

  • Next day, or the day after the next, the entire family was having high tea in the garden. Ada, on the grass, kept trying to make an anadem of marguerites for the dog while Lucette looked on, munching a crumpet.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 5, 2009

  • . . .the Odettian Sphinx had turned, bless him, into an elephantoid mummy with a comically encased trunk of the guermantoid type. . .

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 5, 2009

  • She carefully closed a communicating door as they entered into what looked like a glorified rabbitry at the end of a marble-flagged hall (a converted bathroom, as it transpired).

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 5, 2009

  • I did the opposite, yarb. I wrote down lots of words to start with, when I was on my Nabokov jag a few months ago. But I petered out on Ada after about 100 pages; I just didn't care for the story.

    November 5, 2009

  • You could clip and kiss, and survey in between, the reservoir, the groves, the meadows, even the inkline of larches that marked the boundary of the nearest estate miles away, and the ugly little shapes of more or less legless cows on a distant hillside.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 4, 2009

  • Rolled up in its case was an old "jikker" or skimmer, a blue magic rug with Arabian designs, faded but still enchanting, which Uncle Daniel's father had used in his boyhood and later flown when drunk.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 4, 2009

  • Citation at towel horse.

    November 4, 2009

  • Van had never encountered a towel horse before, never seen a washstand made specially for the bathless.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, or Ardor

    November 4, 2009

  • Hi, lesurze. Glad to see another Nabokov list. If you're so inclined, post quotations for the words (e.g., mnemoptical).

    Welcome to Wordie!

    November 4, 2009

  • Also a part of some clam shells.

    November 3, 2009

  • Eat peanut butter first.

    November 2, 2009

  • John, your reply to madmouth on Craigslist - stuff for sale raises a question. Will we be able to capitalize existing listed words that are supposed to be capitalized, or will we have to drop one and add the other?

    November 1, 2009

  • The opening sentence must be an earcatcher of sufficient value to retain the listener's interest. Sometimes, a catchy melody or a fanfare is the perfect for this opening "teaser."

    --Barbara E. Benson, 1945, Music and Sound Systems in Industry‎, p. 52

    October 31, 2009

  • Then punctoglyph is broader than emoticon. Let's hope it catches on.

    October 31, 2009

  • Is the ascii squid a punctoglyph?

    October 30, 2009

  • Thanks, madmouth! I've opened the list.

    October 30, 2009

  • Your offspring?

    October 30, 2009

  • I used the F5 trick that bilby suggested (see bugs).

    October 30, 2009

  • Yarb, another monosyllable is tops at the moment--grace.

    October 29, 2009

  • Umbragella, an umbrage deflector?

    October 29, 2009

  • Umbraglio is excellent, madmouth. Does it refer to exchanges of phony or real umbrage or both?

    October 29, 2009

  • I think Wordnet has this wrong; it should be purloo in the stew meaning. I can't find poilu used with any meaning but soldier in Google Books.

    October 29, 2009

  • Thanks, bilby---I didn't know about F5.

    October 29, 2009

  • Brackets on punctoglyph please, rolig.

    October 29, 2009

  • I can't refresh the homepage. Even though I'm signed in, I get the sign-in screen and the comments from a couple of days ago.

    October 29, 2009

  • Thanks, ruzuzu! I've added you to Monovocalic Proper

    October 29, 2009

  • Shouldn't this be zoeae?

    October 28, 2009

  • At a recent meeting of the Berlin Geographical Society, reported in Ocean Highways, Herr Langenbach read a paper on the culture of the Orange in Sicily. The Agrume is first met with in latitude 44°, while the sweet Orange does not grow plentifully above 41°. The lecturer stated that there are seven different species of Sicilian Oranges, which are subdivided into no less than thirty-two different kinds.

    --The Garden 3: 76, January 25, 1873

    October 28, 2009

  • How'd I miss this for my citrus list?

    October 28, 2009

  • The place, as he approached it, seemed bright and breezy to him; his roamings had been neither far enough nor frequent enough to make the cockneyfied coast insipid.

    --Henry James, 1893, "Sir Dominick Ferrand", The Real Thing, and other tales, p. 88

    October 28, 2009

  • His book was a novel; it had the catchpenny cover, and while the romance of life stood neglected at his side he lost himself in that of the circulating library.

    --Henry James, 1893, "The Middle Years", Scribner's Magazine 13: 610

    October 28, 2009

  • He was happy and various—as little as possible the mere long-haired musicmonger.

    --Henry James, 1892, "Collaboration", The English Illustrated Magazine 9: 912

    October 28, 2009

  • He found him in the little wainscoted Chelsea house, which had to Peter's sense the smoky brownness of an old pipebowl, surrounded with all the emblems of his office—a litter of papers, a hedge of encyclopaedias, a photographic gallery of popular contributors—and he promised at first to consume very few of the moments for which so many claims competed.

    --Henry James, 1892, "Sir Dominick Ferrand", The Cosmopolitan 13: 325

    October 28, 2009

  • The year before, in a big newspapery house, he had found himself next her at dinner, and they had converted the intensely material hour into a feast of reason.

    --Henry James, 1892, "Nona Vincent", The English Illustrated Magazine 9: 365

    October 28, 2009

  • If it sucks only a little is it suckling?

    October 28, 2009

  • Hadn't heard it before now, so it's rare in the United States, if used at all.

    October 26, 2009

  • Coined by Gary Larson, but should have been anatiscopophobia.

    October 25, 2009

  • What's false about this one?

    October 25, 2009

  • The only flightless zygodactyl I can think of is the kakapo. I suppose with a combination of hopping and waddling, it might break into an occasional scurry.

    October 25, 2009

  • Climbing yes, but which zygodactyls scurry?

    October 25, 2009

  • Extinguisher, particularly of candles.

    October 25, 2009

  • Thanks, gangerh! It seems to happen about once a year. See mollusque baugh.

    October 23, 2009

  • I'm glad it's not for chopping up mollusks.

    October 21, 2009

  • Variant of corset.

    October 21, 2009

  • Digraph, maybe?

    October 20, 2009

  • Bird wird, reesetee!

    October 20, 2009

  • Thanks pterodactyl! I think bilby should win a trip to Marineland for finding a ten-letter word.

    October 20, 2009

  • Apparently not, c_b. Series, corps, and species aren't colisted anywhere on Wordie.

    October 20, 2009

  • Excellent and disturbing point, sobriquet. All 20 of the examples Wordnik pulls in for "gound" are incorrect, based on typos of "ground". What is Wordnik doing that adds any authoritativeness? Why pull in definitions from other online dictionaries? Doesn't OneLook serve that purpose? Or the dictionary links on Wordie?

    I'd much rather see Wordnik give a venue for "lexigraphic irregulars" to help devise definitions and provide compelling quotations, than be another portal that mashes up the same old stuff.

    October 19, 2009

  • Gangerh, good observation about the vertical lists. I can pick panvocalics out of a vertical list much more rapidly than out of a horizontal list. I'd say relegate horizontal lists to cloud view.

    October 19, 2009

  • Good work, John! Definitely an improvement over the old Wordnik. A few comments and questions.

    On the Wordnik profile, I would like my favorites to be public but my browsing history to be private, as on Wordie, but that's not an option on Wordnik.

    Should I update my Wordnik profile, or will my Wordie profile be migrated?

    Unlike Wordie, Wordnik has a pre-existing corpus. Will Wordnik still show who first listed a word? Will it be possible to add words to the corpus without listing them? To me, listing words and building the dictionary are two separate activities. The only downside of separating them is that it would no longer be possible to have "ghost words".

    I'm not sure I like the homepage. It makes a reasonable first impression, but I think it will get old quickly. I find myself thinking, it would be cleaner if "is" weren't in blue. And maybe the same for "in the known universe". How about just "Wordnik: the most comprehensive dictionary".

    On the zeitgeist page, "Favorited" should be "Favourited" for panvocalicness.

    How will comments be mapped from Wordie to Wordnik for words like polish where capitalization matters?

    October 17, 2009

  • So suu me.

    October 17, 2009

  • If you renew, the loan service could almost redue you.

    October 17, 2009

  • Möbius disagrees.

    October 17, 2009

  • Settlers avoid overcrowding by shrinking themselves with a "debigulator." (The physics of the device were sketchy.)

    --Mother Jones Magazine‎, 24(3): 88 (1999)

    October 16, 2009

  • Less evidence?

    October 16, 2009

  • Isn't this redundant?

    October 16, 2009

  • Now called Myidae.

    October 15, 2009

  • Now called Myidae.

    October 15, 2009

  • I'm sorry, that information has been withheld.

    October 14, 2009

  • And completing the set, in Google Books, anthelmintic is actually the most common of the four spellings.

    October 13, 2009

  • Will this serve?

    October 13, 2009

  • Variant of antihelminthic.

    October 13, 2009

  • Is this one of your strays, c_b?

    October 12, 2009

  • Presumably you use a "leash de resistance"?

    October 12, 2009

  • Chagrin?

    October 12, 2009

  • It's Irish; try searching Google Books.

    "A toper there lived at Rashedag

    Who was so very fond of the wee jug

    His coat, hat, and sheen

    He'd sell for poteen,

    An' he went to the Mass with a keedug

    --Dugald MacFadyen, 1887, "Donegal Doggerel", Songs from the City, p. 192

    October 11, 2009

  • Quite quiet.

    October 11, 2009

  • As a kid I liked eating the top parts of Pop-tarts.

    October 11, 2009

  • Rediscovered 10 October 2009.

    October 10, 2009

  • Nada.

    October 10, 2009

  • Times really are toug.

    October 9, 2009

  • Should be nyctophoniac.

    October 9, 2009

  • They chafe too.

    October 9, 2009

  • Usually spelled bumbershoot.

    October 9, 2009

  • Variant of metastasize.

    October 9, 2009

  • OED2 cites 1864, but Dana first used the term in 1852.

    "This centralization is literally a cephalization of the forces. In the higher groups, the larger part of the whole structure is centered in the head, and contributes to head functions, that is, the functions of the senses and those of the mouth."

    --James D. Dana, 1852, Crustacea. Part II. United States Exploring Expedition 13: 1397

    October 9, 2009

  • I added frogappeal to Terms of Enfrogment, a list to which you have not even contributed, reesetee. No wonder frogapplause has her doubts about you.

    October 9, 2009

  • I work in Philadelphia, but grew up in South Jersey in an area which on that map is Atlantic Midland, but is actually East Midland; the border is farther north than Vineland.

    I don't merge any of the vowels in question, so I guess I'm either East Midland or General American. What's the distinction between those two?

    October 8, 2009

  • Holocaust cloak.

    Prepare to die.

    Anybody want a peanut?

    Rodents of unusual size.

    October 8, 2009

  • Doesn't it though? Unfortunately, the "real" word is cryptorchid or cryptorchidic.

    October 8, 2009

  • Satinna, you'll find it listed under obstropolous in OED2. It's also defined in A Supplementary English Glossary by T. Lewis and O. Davies (1881).

    October 7, 2009

  • It's a thousand pities she can't keep on goin' to school," said Mrs. Jones; "if 'twarn't for the trouble of lookin' arter her, I wouldn't mind givin' her her wittles, but such gals is so obstropalous."

    --Mrs. E. Little, 1846, "Riches without Wings", The Ladies' Wreath 1: 309

    October 7, 2009

  • And since it's not really a word, I can't list it as a panvocalic. (At least I have the pattern with lymphoreticular).

    October 6, 2009

  • Variant of lullaby.

    October 6, 2009

  • Therefore I'm not.

    October 6, 2009

  • I only get one present?

    October 6, 2009

  • Perhaps if like me he'd been able to hide his otakuness maybe shit would have been easier for him, but he couldn't. Dude wore his nerdiness like a Jedi wore his light saber or a Lensman her lens.

    Junot Díaz, 2007, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, p. 21

    October 6, 2009

  • His adolescent nerdliness vaporizing any iota of a chance he had for young love.

    --Junot Díaz, 2007, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, p. 23

    October 6, 2009

  • To be called boycrazy in a country like Santo Domingo is a singular distinction; it means that you can sustain infatuations that would reduce your average northamericana to cinders.

    --Junot Díaz, 2007, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, p. 88

    October 6, 2009

  • I thought Knids were vermicious.

    October 5, 2009

  • *makes room for bilby*

    October 5, 2009

  • I guess I should.

    October 5, 2009

  • The Good Humor trucks blared bells

    Each afternoon, their engines

    Whirring to save the delight

    Of cold, sweet uselessnesses.

    Nuclear stereos rocked

    The boulevards, the old piers

    Splintering and rotting out.

    --David Rothman, 2007, Goodbye to Greenpoint, p. 19 in

    Sailing in the Mist of Time

    September 26, 2009

  • C_b, I meant that anyone could mark anyone's comment as a definition or citation. I suppose that could be misused, but I don't see people have been intentionally marking, for example, verbs as conjunctions. Another possibility might be to allow multiple people to mark a comment as a definition, which could bubble it to the top in a subtler way that Urban Dictionary.

    September 26, 2009

  • How about more access to the underlying database? So that one could query, say, for words appearing on lists with "bird" in the name and also on lists with "panvocalic" in the name. Or for adverbs tagged as palindromes (if any exist). Or English adjectives derived from Swedish. Or words with the repeat pattern for letters of 12345234.

    September 25, 2009

  • I prefer the term "comments": it's the current name on Wordie, it's relatively neutral, and it's a standard database name for a field that contains discursive information.

    I'd like to be able to mark comments as definitions or citations in the same way that we can mark parts of speech under tags. That means that anyone could mark a comment as a citation or definition (or both, or presumably unmark it), so that past comments could be categorized. That would allow one to view only comments that are definitions or citations if desired.

    I don't want to see many options for marking comments though, because as Prolagus suggests, it could be deadening. Imagine marking jokes as such *shudders*.

    September 25, 2009

  • Pickled papaya, a Filipino condiment.

    September 15, 2009

  • Shipworms eaten as a delicacy, raw or cooked, in Palawan.

    September 15, 2009

  • Too late.

    September 11, 2009

  • Maybe not.

    September 11, 2009

  • Could this be the start of the Human Lexome Project? Where do I send my resume to be biology editor for Wordnik?

    (Lexome or lexisphere . . . lexome or lexisphere?)

    September 11, 2009

  • An exclamation along the lines of "zounds".

    September 10, 2009

  • The verbal equivalent of a dust bunny.

    September 10, 2009

  • John, presumably Erin has a Wordie account. Why not ask her to say a few words to us?

    September 10, 2009

  • The frogs go marching one by one, hurrah, hurrah . . .

    September 9, 2009

  • Hi yarb, I'm off to the Philippines again on Friday for three weeks, so keep an extra beady or two on the Words to have topped list.

    September 9, 2009

  • Congratulations, John!

    Having played around on Wordnik for a few minutes now, I'd guess Wordie could be a portal into Wordnik once the databases are integrated. That could let the minimalist Wordieview be maintained.

    There are some great features on Wordnik, like the ability to suggest related words. (Something that was suggested on Wordie a while ago, by yours truly.) So John, I hope you'll dredge back through the features suggestions and dust off some of them for implementation.

    Does this mean we get capitalization? How is Wordnik going to handle all our games and non-English characters (like ΒΑ�?Α�?Α)?

    September 9, 2009

  • Having the tartar removed, used in reference to grapes and wine, but potentially also in reference to visits to the dentist.

    September 9, 2009

  • Wet the frog?

    September 9, 2009

  • See the tags auto-antonym and janusword. Also called contranyms. I wonder if pejorations or amelioration is more common when meanings evolve.

    September 8, 2009

  • Short-changed?

    September 7, 2009

  • Recipe here for persimmon fudge with walnuts.

    September 7, 2009

  • I saw it.

    September 7, 2009

  • Is that all you're craving, reesetee?

    September 6, 2009

  • Ubi?

    September 5, 2009

  • He was a guy who talked with commas, like a heavy novel. Over the phone anyway.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 11

    September 5, 2009

  • I've written twelve best sellers, and if I ever finish that stack of magoozlum on the desk there I may possibly have written thirteen.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 24

    September 5, 2009

  • They gave him a grand for a quitclaim just to save time and expense, and now somebody is going to make a million bucks clear, out of cutting the place up for residential property.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 25

    September 5, 2009

  • Towards the far shore, which wasn't very far, a black waterhen was doing lazy curves, like a skater. They didn't seem to cause as much as a shallow ripple.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 24

    September 5, 2009

  • I knew it was going to be one of those crazy days. Everybody has them. Days when nobody rolls in but the loose wheels, the dingoes who park their brains with their gum, the squirrels who can't find their nuts, the mechanics who always have a gear left over.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 21

    September 5, 2009

  • I turned and saw Mrs. Loring on a couch beside a prissy- looking man in rimless cheaters with a smear on his chin that might have been a goatee.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 23

    September 5, 2009

  • Citation at collapsed lung.

    September 5, 2009

  • A guy in a shantung jacket and an open neck shirt came up behind her and grinned at me over the top of her head. He had short red hair and a face like a collapsed lung.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 24

    September 5, 2009

  • On a bar stool a woman in a black tailormade, which couldn't at that time of year have been made of anything but some synthetic fabric like orlon, was sitting alone with a pale greenish-colored drink in front of her and smoking a cigarette in a long jade holder.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 22

    September 5, 2009

  • Citation at sharping.

    September 5, 2009

  • It seemed to me for an instant that there was no sound in the bar, that the sharpies stopped sharping and the drunk on the stool stopped burbling away, and it was like just after the conductor taps on his music stand and raises his arms and holds them poised.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 13

    September 5, 2009

  • And right now I didn't need the work badly enough to let some fathead from back east use me as a horse-holder, some executive character in a paneled office with a row of pushbuttons and an intercom and a secretary in a Hattie Carnegie Career Girl's Special and a pair of those big beautiful promising eyes.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 13

    September 5, 2009

  • He has as much charm as a steel puddler's underpants.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 15

    September 5, 2009

  • You go in and complain of a sinus headache and he washes out your antrums for you.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 15

    September 5, 2009

  • Outside in the tecoma a bird was gussing around, talking to himself in low chirps, with an occasional brief flutter of wings.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 12

    September 5, 2009

  • He was looking a little sideways when he said this, towards the window over the sink and the tecoma bush that fretted against the screen.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 5

    September 5, 2009

  • Citation at rubdown.

    September 5, 2009

  • Citation at rubdown.

    September 5, 2009

  • Then I went to a Turkish bath place. I stayed a couple of hours, had a steam bath, a plunge, a needle shower, a rubdown and made a couple of phone calls from there.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 5

    September 5, 2009

  • "It must be something like the tertian ague," he said. "When it hits you it's bad. When you don't have it, it's as though never did have it."

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 3

    September 5, 2009

  • But I had no mental picture at all of Terry Lennox loafing around one of the swimming pools in Bermuda shorts and phoning the butler by R/T to ice the champagne and get the grouse atoasting.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 3

    September 5, 2009

  • I had a mental picture of the kind of eighteen-room shack that would go with a few of the Potter millions, not to mention decorations by Duhaux in the latest subphallic symbolism.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 3

    September 5, 2009

  • Citation at hackie.

    September 5, 2009

  • . . . almost his last dollar had gone into paying the check at The Dancers for a bit of high class fluff that couldn't stick around long enough to make sure he didn't get tossed in the sneezer by some prowl car boys, or rolled by a tough hackie and dumped out in a vacant lot.

    Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 1

    September 5, 2009

  • On a coffee table in front of a hard green davenport there was a half empty Scotch bottle and melted ice in a bowl and three empty fizzwater bottles and two glasses and a glass ash tray loaded with stubs with and without lipstick.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 1

    September 5, 2009

  • Its color scheme was bile green, linseed-poultice brown, sidewalk gray and monkey-bottom blue. It was as restful as a split lip.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1949, The Little Sister, chapter 34

    September 5, 2009

  • I rang a bell and a large soft man oozed out from behind a wall and smiled at me with moist soft lips and bluish-white teeth and unnaturally bright eyes.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1949, The Little Sister, chapter 34

    September 5, 2009

  • It had the sort of lobby that asks for plush and india-rubber plants, but gets glass brick, cornice lighting, three-cornered glass tables, and a general air of having been redecorated by a parolee from a nut hatch.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1949, The Little Sister, chapter 34

    September 5, 2009

  • She was unclassifiable, as remote and clear as mountain water, as elusive as its color.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1953, The Long Goodbye, chapter 13

    September 5, 2009

  • mountains?

    September 5, 2009

  • He scratched a match on his thumbnail and watched it burn and tried to blow it out with a long steady breath that just bent the flame over.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 35

    September 4, 2009

  • "Two bucks to spend the night in this manhole," I said, "when for free I could have a nice airy ashcan."

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 13

    September 4, 2009

  • The eggheaded clerk separated me from two dollars without even looking at me.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 13

    September 4, 2009

  • I separated another dollar from my exhibit and it went into his pocket with a sound like caterpillars fighting.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 13

    September 4, 2009

  • I said goodnight and went on out, leaving him there moving his mind around with the ponderous energy of a homesteader digging up a stump.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 12

    September 4, 2009

  • There's a bunch of old handhewn log cabins that's been falling down ever since I recall . . .

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 11

    September 4, 2009

  • There was a bottle of Vat 69 and glasses on a tray and a copper icebucket on a low round burl walnut table with a glass top.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 3

    September 4, 2009

  • A fire was laid behind the screen and partly masked by a large spray of manzanita bloom.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 3

    September 4, 2009

  • He held the door wide and I went in past him, into a dim pleasant room with an apricot Chinese rug that looked expensive, deepsided chairs, a number of white drum lamps, a big Capehart in the corner, a long and very wide davenport in pale tan mohair shot with dark brown, and a fireplace with a copper screen and an overmantel in white wood.

    --Raymond Chandler, 1943, The Lady in the Lake, chapter 3

    September 4, 2009

  • Thanks, bilby! Hadn't heard of it, but it seems popular enough.

    September 4, 2009

  • Thanks, yarb!

    September 4, 2009

  • It's a fiblet — a little lie for a very good reason. The choice is to enter the patient's world and comfort, not to confront.

    --Joanne Koenig Coste, p. 35 in Betsy Peterson, 2004, Voices of Alzheimer's

    September 4, 2009

  • But it has: see black walnut.

    September 4, 2009

  • Peak bird, in terms of discovering species, was around 1850.

    September 3, 2009

  • Apparently first coined in French, with a different meaning:

    "Derrida called it a 'catapostrophe' — that is, an inversion of Aristotle's apostrophe."

    --David Lehman, 1991, Signs of the times: deconstruction and the fall of Paul de Man‎, p. 247

    September 2, 2009

  • Should be glabrous, not glubrous.

    September 2, 2009

  • Seems more like a run dry run kind of phrase. (Which is a great list by the way.)

    September 2, 2009

  • This assumes that the discovery curve is sigmoidal, with the x-axis being time and the y-axis being number of genera known. It also assumes that our concept of what constitutes a genus won't change, that the peak should be defined in terms of genera instead of species, and that birds aren't dinosaurs.

    September 2, 2009

  • Epil? Narcol?

    September 1, 2009

  • Thanks for the contributions, sarra and fbharjo! fb, what do you mean by "in between in". It doesn't seem like a normal phrase or idiom to me.

    September 1, 2009

  • Dollo's law.

    August 29, 2009

  • Do you mean zymurgy?

    August 28, 2009

  • Is this used for kerning? What about 0x0aa8 (hair space)?

    August 27, 2009

  • How about coddy-moddy?

    August 27, 2009

  • Of course it's a real word--it's just a madeupical one. (It's also one of Aidan Swellop Millofpckszy Stokes names.) Welcome to Wordie!

    August 26, 2009

  • Thanks, Milosrdenstvi. I could just take them from Wikipedia, but it's more fun to spot them as they're used on Wordie. Apparently there's more than one way to write the Georgian alphabet. What did you learn about that?

    August 26, 2009

  • Really not listed until today?

    August 26, 2009

  • Assorted, I hope.

    August 26, 2009

  • Thanks, Milosrdenstvi!

    August 26, 2009

  • Shouldn't it be on your list of that name, reesetee?

    August 26, 2009

  • Apparently a nonce word based on the genus name Alopex.

    August 26, 2009

  • Ecole?

    August 25, 2009

  • Whitefish.

    August 25, 2009

  • But sooth the other was a doughty sparhawk

    To clapperclaw him well; and both of them

    Fell in the middle of the boiling pond.

    --Dante Alighieri‎, The Divine Comedy, translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, 1909, p. 133

    August 25, 2009

  • Rather.

    August 25, 2009

  • My sister and I called in Narnia when we were kids.

    August 25, 2009

  • Where'd the extra three come from?

    August 24, 2009

  • Until now, Wordie has lacked authoritativeness.

    August 24, 2009

  • How about stage names (Charo), or non-human people (Bilbo), or people who had only one name (Socrates)?

    August 23, 2009

  • Said to be in OED2, but occurs only in a quotation under pyronin.

    August 23, 2009

  • Penguin?

    August 23, 2009

  • What we've got here is a failure to communicate.

    August 23, 2009

  • Shouldn't it be binarial, on the pattern of narial?

    August 22, 2009

  • What do you call a typo of a typo?

    August 21, 2009

  • Two world records this week: 100 meters in 9.58 seconds and 200 meters in 19.19 seconds, in both cases breaking his previous record by 0.11 seconds. Astounding!

    August 21, 2009

  • Getting mitochondria from both mother and father (instead of just the mother), a pattern found in some bivalves.

    August 21, 2009

  • Doubly uniparental inheritance.

    August 21, 2009

  • Time to restock.

    August 20, 2009

  • The 10K's have been tagged (so far), so I figured the 20K's should be too. C_b almost snuck hers by, but I happened to be watching.

    August 18, 2009

  • Thanks, reesetee and c_b. FYI, leagues joins swim and devincenzia on the 20K list.

    August 18, 2009

  • No, the dyadic nature of Calvin and Hobbes is too strong. They're on the Couples & Duos list.

    August 16, 2009

  • And then two in ten minutes! (Affixes, prefixes, suffixes inspired by SoSheShall).

    August 16, 2009

  • Thanks, xundra! It's been a long time since a new triad surfaced.

    August 16, 2009

  • Thanks bilby! The wordometer clicked over to 20K about a week ago.

    August 16, 2009

  • Floating on the Sargasm Sea?

    August 16, 2009

  • Maybe not.

    August 15, 2009

  • Yes. But maybe I should drop the "i". It looks sort of odd, and it's not too likely the numbers themselves would otherwise be used as tags.

    Edit: done.

    August 15, 2009

  • Seen here.

    August 15, 2009

  • South Florida is pretty flat. For unusual landscapes how about Utah? Bryce and Zion National Parks.

    August 13, 2009

  • It's cannibalism only if they eat each other.

    August 13, 2009

  • The antevasin was an in-betweener. He was a border-dweller. He lived in sight of both worlds, but he looked toward the unknown.

    --Elizabeth Gilbert, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love, p. 204

    August 13, 2009

  • The moon was lusciously ripe and full, and it hovered right above me, spilling a pewtery light all around.

    --Elizabeth Gilbert, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love, p. 202

    August 13, 2009

  • An escapee from Odamoddypia. And John's new alphabetic browse reveals several others.

    August 12, 2009

  • Maybe not.

    August 12, 2009

  • And schlimazel.

    August 11, 2009

  • They have only two varieties of pizza here — regular and extra cheese. None of this new age southern California olives-and-sun-dried-tomato wannabe pizza twaddle.

    --Elizabeth Gilbert, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything across Italy, India and Indonesia, p. 80

    August 10, 2009

  • Traveling-to-a-place energy and living-in-a-place energy are two fundamentally different energies, and something about meeting this Australian girl on her way to Slovenia just gave me such a jones to hit the road.

    --Elizabeth Gilbert, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything across Italy, India and Indonesia, p. 78

    August 10, 2009

  • It's no wonder you're confused, bilby: Patella and Patina are both genera of limpets.

    August 10, 2009

  • But never again use another person's body or emotions as a scratching post for your own unfulfilled yearnings.

    --Elizabeth Gilbert, 2006, Eat, Pray, Love: One Woman's Search for Everything across Italy, India and Indonesia, p. 65

    August 10, 2009

  • ..litter..

    August 9, 2009

  • What's up here? It's not misspelled (despite the tag), but isn't merged with the main listing because of the different URL.

    August 9, 2009

  • Boyd woyd, reesetee!

    August 9, 2009

  • Mr. Potato Head? That might explain some things around here.

    August 9, 2009

  • Thanks, telofy!

    August 9, 2009

  • Telofy, please make it a link not an image. Otherwise I'll have to avoid Wordie till it's off the homepage.

    August 9, 2009

  • And so there was a marriage after all, a wedding at the end with orchestra and fireworks and a reception at the Taj and the Gateway blocked off again for a dance sequence by the sweepers and sweeperesses of Bombay.

    --I. Allan Sealy, 1991, Hero: a fable‎, p. 105

    August 8, 2009

  • Hmmm.

    August 8, 2009

  • Stamina.

    August 8, 2009

  • Alcove.

    August 8, 2009

  • Clicking camel chicken somehow brought me to a page saying "Ruby on Rails application could not be started".

    August 8, 2009

  • Greg Lynn's conceptual "Embryological House" is the quintessential — if virtual — blobitectural structure.

    --John K. Waters, 2003, Blobitecture: waveform architecture and digital design

    August 8, 2009

  • Benjamin is a benjanym.

    August 7, 2009

  • See metallage.

    August 4, 2009

  • This species of interference . . . . may be called Metallagē, or more simply "Cross Compensation," a name I gave it towards a quarter of a century ago . . . . the earlier of two letters is displaced by a later one; but then, instead of repeating the latter in its proper place, the hand instantly and automatically executes the mental instruction first given it by dashing in the earlier and displaced letter where the later one should be written; the result, therefore, has the aspect of a simple interchange; e.g. . . . Padoga for pagoda . . . .

    --T. Le Marchant Douse, 1900, "On some minor psychological interferences: a study of misspellings and related mistakes." Mind: A Quarterly Review of Psychology and Philosophy 9: 88

    August 4, 2009

  • Also a misspelling or mispronunciation in which two letters in a word are switched in position. Misspelled metallege by no less an authority than Dmitri Borgmann.

    August 4, 2009

  • See squirrelled.

    August 4, 2009

  • Longest English word pronounceable as one syllable.

    August 4, 2009

  • Variant of squirrelly.

    August 4, 2009

  • How about Generation TMI?

    August 3, 2009

  • Variant of cinereous.

    August 3, 2009

  • Or when you can't get the spoon under the last bit of carrot sticking to the side of the soup bowl. Dern recalcitrant vegetables.

    August 2, 2009

  • Thanks! (Did you know that you have bleu in your username?)

    August 2, 2009

  • I was formed of night yolk aureolous and the albumen black empty wind hustles my skin . . .

    --Martin Booth, 1974, Brevities‎, p. 2

    August 2, 2009

  • For rain-sprigged yew trees, blockish as they guard

    admonitory sparse berries, atrorubent

    stone holt of darkness, no, of claustral light . . .

    --Geoffrey Hill, 2007, "Offertorium: December 2002", Without Title, p. 22

    August 2, 2009

  • Also see disemvoweling.

    August 2, 2009

  • Ears back for speed?

    August 2, 2009

  • Burlap.

    August 1, 2009

  • But contrary to the linked article, they are not the only vertebrates that can reproduce without a mate. Parthenogenesis has been demonstrated in some sharks.

    August 1, 2009

  • This might explain some incidents in customs. And here I thought the dogs were sniffing for drugs.

    July 29, 2009

  • "It was open, so we had to hunker up against the side of the house and keep real quiet.

    --Ralph Moody, 1991, Little Britches: Father and I Were Ranchers, p. 122

    July 27, 2009

  • Any relation, madmouth?

    July 25, 2009

  • It is.

    July 24, 2009

  • Maybe not.

    July 24, 2009

  • Oops.

    July 24, 2009

  • Parboiled gargoyle?

    July 24, 2009

  • Thanks, madmouth!

    July 7, 2009

  • Only 41 letters. You left out "ocon" toward the end.

    July 5, 2009

  • There's an open list, Let Them Eat Cake..., which includes more than cake.

    July 3, 2009

  • Good one babycakes!

    July 3, 2009

  • Brackets on spammy, please.

    July 3, 2009

  • Mine too, but I'd already listed chatouiller.

    July 1, 2009

  • See second comment at octopus.

    June 29, 2009

  • An onomatopoeic discovery: there is a percussion instrument starting with each (English) consonant, but none starting with "e", "i", "o", "u", or "y".

    June 29, 2009

  • tioV imprinted on forehead.

    June 28, 2009

  • Post turtles beware.

    June 26, 2009

  • But not shawarmageddon.

    June 24, 2009

  • It was an OCR error copied from Google books. Fixed.

    June 24, 2009

  • But not falafal.

    June 24, 2009

  • I can see them.

    June 23, 2009

  • Alfalfa and entente are apparently the only seven English letter words where the first four letters are the same as the last four letters.

    June 23, 2009

  • Hi mousescout, regarding your comment on 42: I think you've come up with another symptom of Wordie addiction!

    June 21, 2009

  • Accessibility expert and standardista Joe Clark, whose name will pop up more than once in this book, has created a Failed Redesigns campaign . . . designed to spread standards awareness while shaming those who produce new or redesigned sites that act as if "the 21st century is frozen in the amber of 1999."

    --Jeffrey Zeldman, 2007, Designing with Web Standards‎, p. 53

    June 21, 2009

  • Hi wordlover42. See 42 and 21. Welcome to Wordie!

    June 20, 2009

  • Shevek, I'm not sure what you find disrepectful--the original posting or one or more of the comments that followed. Since the original list has apparently now been deleted, it's hard to tell what the context was. I posted the next line in transliteration, partly because it came immediately to mind, but also so that someone who wanted to find out what it was could do so by searching for some of the words.

    A Google search for the tetragrammaton in Hebrew finds more than half a million instances. It's appearance on Wordie is not inherently disrepectful. A devout Jew would not write the tetragrammaton because of the risk that someone would throw out the paper it was written on rather than dispose of it through the appropriate ritual. The appearance on Wordie does not make someone likely to inadvertently pronounce it. Any who reads Hebrew automatically says "Adonai" or some other substitute.

    June 20, 2009

  • He glued a bit of leather on a large piece of cork, and placed his amalgama on the leather . . .

    --The Monthly Review, April 1784, p. 284

    June 20, 2009

  • V’ha-yu had’varim ha-eileh,

    asher anochi m’tzav’cha ha-yom al l’vavecha.

    (That's the next line, not a transliteration.)

    June 18, 2009

  • I've heard caveat pronounced as two syllables.

    June 17, 2009

  • Rasp.

    At least those that have radulas.

    June 17, 2009

  • Moo.

    June 17, 2009

  • My favorite is the zebra millipede.

    June 16, 2009

  • Also a genus of mollusks, the jewel box shells.

    June 16, 2009

  • Rebracketed, with alternate quote characters that should work.

    June 16, 2009

  • Unbracketed.

    June 16, 2009

  • inDIVIDuatE

    June 15, 2009

  • Self-tauigh.

    June 15, 2009

  • Short for hippopotamus, Weirdnet.

    June 15, 2009

  • Polishing them doesn't help.

    June 15, 2009

  • Okay, bracketed.

    June 15, 2009

  • I wondered about that when I added the quotation. Sharper as a noun of similar meaning goes back to 1797 (OED2). Cardsharper became common in the 1850s perhaps because of the British racehorse of that name. Another possibility (inferred from the notes in the Library of America edition) is that Nabokov was echoing the ending of shuler and Schüler:

    "I have often wondered why the Russian for it cardsharper . . . is the same as the German for 'schoolboy,' minus the umlaut . . ."

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1969, Ada, p. 175

    June 14, 2009

  • Ordinary and inordinate, reesetee.

    June 14, 2009

  • We put the “no�? in innovation.

    June 14, 2009

  • . . . I perceived my entire skin as that of a leopard painted by a meticulous lunatic from a broken home.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 243

    June 13, 2009

  • . . . I became aware of certain curious details: from the head down I was paralyzed in symmetrical patches separated by a geography of weak tactility.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 242

    June 13, 2009

  • The combination of those ingredients resulted in a dazzling pyrotechny of sense . . .

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 250

    June 13, 2009

  • . . . a diminutive golden pencil belonging to the eyelet of a congeric agenda in a vanity bag . . .

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 250

    June 13, 2009

  • Citation at interpellate.

    June 13, 2009

  • One dire detail: in rapid Russian speech longish name-and-patronymic combinations undergo familiar slurrings: thus "Pavel Pavlovich," Paul, son of Paul, when casually interpellated is made to sound like "Pahlpahlych" and the hardly utterable, tapeworm-long "Vladimir Vladimirovich" becomes colloquialy similar to "Vadim Vadimych."

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 249

    June 13, 2009

  • Citation at benumbed.

    June 13, 2009

  • . . . my mouth stayed mute and benumbed until I realized I could feel my tongue—feel it in the phantom form of the kind of air bladder that might help a fish with his respiration problems, but was useless to me.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 245

    June 13, 2009

  • Citation at cloudway.

    June 13, 2009

  • Yet, somehow, during my glide down those illusory canals and cloudways, and right over another continent, I did glimpse off and on, through subpalpebral mirages, the shadow of a hand or the glint of an instrument.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 245

    June 13, 2009

  • . . . finally hearing returned—with a vengeance. The first crisp nurse-rustle was a thunderclap; my first belly wamble, a crash of cymbals.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 244

    June 13, 2009

  • Citation at marge.

    June 13, 2009

  • Imagine me, an old gentleman, a distinguished author, gliding rapidly on my back, in the wake of my outstretched dead feet, first through that gap in the granite, then over a pinewood, then along misty water meadows, and then simply between marges of mist, on and on, imagine that sight!

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 240

    June 13, 2009

  • And yet I feel that during three weeks of general paresis (if that is what it was) I have gained some experience; that when my night really comes I shall not be totally unprepared.

    --Vladimir Nabokov, 1974, Look at the Harlequins! p. 239

    June 13, 2009

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