Comments by oroboros

Show previous 200 comments...

  • A social gathering that turns ugly according to NPR's Says You.

    May 3, 2014

  • The urban dictionary has a rather racy definition which I doubt is in the OED.

    April 25, 2014

  • To talk too much; use too many words, according to NPR's Says You.

    April 19, 2014

  • Heard used on NPR morning edition segment today (4/15/14) about effects of low blood sugar on marital discord.

    April 15, 2014

  • A cartoon comment on slough.

    April 9, 2014

  • A pertinent cartoon opinion

    March 28, 2014

  • One who prefers one's romance in the dark, according to NPR's Says You.

    March 22, 2014

  • A unit of measure of the amount of wear on the upholstery one's pants are creating. This, according to NPR's Says You.

    March 22, 2014

  • Some dove humor.

    March 4, 2014

  • The Mourning Dove's call (oooo,oooo,oo) is the Morse Code equivalent of 'R': dah dah dit.

    March 4, 2014

  • A bushel basket, according to NPR's Says You.

    March 1, 2014

  • Maillard Reaction.  Also, see <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maillard_reaction">Wiki article</a>.

    February 21, 2014

  • See also yclept.

    February 15, 2014

  • "...in 2001 editors placed a fake word in the New Oxford American Dictionary as a trap for other lexicographers who might steal their material. Fittingly, the word was esquivalience, “the willful avoidance of one’s official responsibilities; the shirking of duties.”

    Sure enough, the word turned up at Dictionary.com (it’s since been taken down), citing Webster’s New Millennium Dictionary.

    And as with Agloe, the invention has taken on a life of its own. NOAD editor Christine Lindberg, who coined esquivalience, told the Chicago Tribune that she finds herself using it regularly. “I especially like the critical, judgmental tone I can get out of it: ‘Those esquivalient little wretches.’ Sounds literate and nasty all in one breath. I like that."

    From futilitycloset.com

    Also see the interesting comments under esquivalience.

    February 9, 2014

  • ill+iter+ate

    February 5, 2014

  • Dish+was+her. An aside: washer contains 'she' and 'her' with a shared 'he'.

    February 4, 2014

  • The act of pulling someone's leg, according to NPR's Says You.

    February 1, 2014

  • English schoolboy slang for a mixed-breed dog, according to NPR's Says You.

    February 1, 2014

  • Futilitycloset.com lists it as "the distance between two stopping places". The webpage also has a neat puzzle related to the word. Check it out.

    January 31, 2014

  • Pastries or cakes baked on board a ship according to NPR's i>Says You

    January 25, 2014

  • To repress into silence according to NPR's Says You.

    January 18, 2014

  • Someone who deserves to be hanged according to NPR's Says You

    January 11, 2014

  • Modern art? Crossword puzzle clue.

    January 11, 2014

  • A very young frog; a "peeper", according to NPR's Says You.

    January 4, 2014

  • Buying one ticket for a movie in a multiplex theater and then sneaking into additional shows. Heard on NPR's <i>Says You</i>.

    January 4, 2014

  • Words within words: Chapman contains synonyms chap and man.

    December 21, 2013

  • To lay a bottle on its side to empty it completely according to NPR's Says You.

    December 21, 2013

  • Words within words: Spanish word for 'gold' contains synonyms: the English 'or' and the Spanish word for 'or' -- 'o'.

    December 21, 2013

  • Words within words: Par+tic+i+pate, and interestingly: part+ici+pate, which contains 'ici' the French word meaning 'here'..

    December 21, 2013

  • To get the last word. (according to NPR's Says You)

    December 14, 2013

  • A favorite, a favored person; teacher's pet. --NPR's Says You


    See also, faddle.

    December 14, 2013

  • The ingredient in coffee that makes you smarter! God help decaf drinkers...

    December 6, 2013

  • What fuels Black Friday. Neologism heard on NPR's Morning Edition.

    November 29, 2013

  • That makes sense....however, you also go *against* the flow and there's great profit in that. So many Wordies fit that blessed category and it's what melded us all together in the early days One of the most important benefits, REALLY, for me, was the realization that I hardly matched the aggrandized self-image I had about my own language 'genius' I'd attributed to myself; I've been humbled and I'm grateful for it..

    November 25, 2013

  • fb - you're pretty damn prolific! :o) I'll police these up in due time. Thanks. Some of your suggestions are, for me, more esoteric/obscure to rate inclusion (e.g., 'po') but, just so you know, I'm admiring your erudition.

    November 25, 2013

  • What the hell was that all about?

    November 25, 2013

  • AH!! Broke the code and found the comment box. Thanks,, fjharjo for all your suggestions for my words-within-words list.. I had no doubt that I'd strike a Wordie between the eyes and I added most of your suggestions. Part of my not opening the list up to everybody was my private quest to search out appropriate words during those sleepless hours in the night to give the mind-maw something to do until falling back into slumberland.. Again, thanks, Wordie-amigo! :o)

    November 23, 2013

  • Thanks, fbharjo, alexz and bilby for your suggestions.

    November 23, 2013

  • Thanks, danama. Those work!

    November 23, 2013

  • par all ax

    November 21, 2013

  • to get her

    November 21, 2013

  • see the

    November 21, 2013

  • pan ache

    November 21, 2013

  • pert in a city

    November 21, 2013

  • Me too.

    November 20, 2013

  • Kangaroo word with Joey PIN -- imPrIsoN

    November 18, 2013

  • If you don't have a screen you'll get flies innuendo. The Barn

    November 10, 2013

  • An Irish dance resembling a Virginia Reel.

    November 2, 2013

  • A nomadic Tatar tribe of western Siberia

    November 2, 2013

  • A perpetual student; one who stays in school to avoid the work-a-day world.

    November 2, 2013

  • Growth ring?

    November 2, 2013

  • References Howard Nemerov w/r/t a poem about being 6 months behind a natural phenomenon (like fall leaves) -- Nemerov came up with the word "azaleate," which means to commiserate with someone who missed the phenomenon --Billy Collins - interview

    October 31, 2013

  • @reesetee - also the mountain chickadee.

    October 4, 2013

  • Heard on NPR's Says You

    September 21, 2013

  • Heard on NPR's Says You

    September 21, 2013

  • Heard on NPR's Says You

    September 21, 2013

  • Heard on NPR's Says You

    September 21, 2013

  • Heard on NPR's Says You

    September 21, 2013

  • A sneaky dishonest kid according to NPR's Says You.

    September 7, 2013

  • As defined on NPR's Says You: a pile of nuts collected by a squirrel.

    August 10, 2013

  • ..."Liam asked, 'How rare is that -- being able to sing backwards?'

    It's pretty freakish, it has a name. It's called *melodicanagramaticism*. It's a brain wiring quirk, like Tourette's ..."

    --"Eleanor Rigby" by Douglas Coupland, p. 146

    August 1, 2013

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

    July 20, 2013

  • See winglet.

    July 20, 2013

  • Called a sharklet by the Europeans (Airbus).

    July 20, 2013

  • Aviation slang for one who has made a transoceanic flight. (according to NPR's *Says You* - I hadn't heard the term before but decided to include it in my list)

    July 20, 2013

  • Absurdly, ridiculously happy. Heard on NPR's *Says You*.

    July 20, 2013

  • A gossip. Heard on NPR's Says You.

    July 20, 2013

  • Using your laptop in an airplane? http://assets.amuniversal.com/756cbcf0abbd0130d87a001dd8b71c47 (Wiley's Dictionary)

    June 11, 2013

  • Thanks for your suggestion on my autoantonym list. Added.

    June 3, 2013

  • Thanks for your suggestion on my autoantonym list. I added it.

    June 3, 2013

  • See discussion under imperience.

    May 25, 2013

  • Circular reasoning: http://www.arcamax.com/newspics/72/7285/728560.gif

    May 25, 2013

  • Texting shortcut for "don't believe everything you read".

    May 24, 2013

  • Texting shortcut for "don't believe everything you read".

    May 24, 2013

  • Hanky panky at the old ancestral home?

    May 18, 2013

  • The smallest and least healthy bird in the nest (according to NPR's *Says You*).

    May 4, 2013

  • A sheep that's never been sheared.(according to NPR's *Says You*).

    May 4, 2013

  • Birth and death dates of a life, say on a gravestone (according to NPR's *Says You*)

    May 4, 2013

  • Clever crossword clue "back to front?" for "ier" entry.

    May 1, 2013

  • Nice analysis, ry. Above and beyond the call of duty; good work.

    April 30, 2013

  • Formal junglewear (from Wiley's Dictionary - B.C. Comics)

    April 30, 2013

  • See sensuousnesses.

    April 30, 2013

  • @shari. I simply have wordnik.com/community bookmarked and have no problem accessing the site. I note that your profile is private so I was unable to comment there directly. I don't know if that adds any complication to your access or not. Anyway, good luck and enjoy our Wordie community.

    April 20, 2013

  • Eavesdropper? (crossword puzzle clue/answer)

    April 20, 2013

  • @fbharjo: Also a river.

    April 17, 2013

  • Pleased to introduce you to Futility Closet. A ton of interesting stuff there that I imagine you're discovering on your own. Cheerio!

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to P.J. Casteel here.

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to Allen Ginsberg here.

    April 16, 2013

  • Nickname for a USAF Academy graduate. Also, if I remember correctly, the term for a U.S. Coast Guard pilot.

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to Shiela Heldenbrand here.

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to Morty Sklar here.

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to Carol DeLugach here.

    April 16, 2013

  • Attributed to Fletcher Copp here.

    April 16, 2013

  • "Broken" broken? (attributed to: Keith Abbott here. Also see bork)

    April 16, 2013

  • Hey! Congrats on your Gravity's Rainbow list mention. Pinchon: an amazing wordsmith. Now go to work on David Foster Wallace. :o)

    April 10, 2013

  • Connecticut kids were called pumpkin heads because cut pumpkins were used as a guide for cutting hair; the original "bowl cut" (heard on NPR's Says You)

    March 30, 2013

  • A cushioned bleacher seat (according to NPR's Says You)

    March 9, 2013

  • A foul aroma (according to NPR's Says You)

    March 9, 2013

  • See comment under host.

    March 4, 2013

  • Host is the Czech word for guest according to futilitycloset.com.

    March 4, 2013

  • Guatemalan head covering. (according to Says You)

    March 2, 2013

  • What you use to start the car in Boston? (thanks to NPR's Says You)

    February 23, 2013

  • Some of the pines in my area: Sugar pine (a 5-needle pine holding largest cone title - by length. Also my favorite pine), Coulter pine ("big cone pine" holding title of largest cone by mass), Digger pine (named for the "Digger" indians who harvested its large seeds)

    February 9, 2013

  • An all female theatre production. (from Wiley's Dictionary, B.C. Comic)

    February 9, 2013

  • Neat list, trivet! How 'bout puzzlement? If I remember correctly, Yul Brenner used it in a new way in The King and I.

    February 8, 2013

  • How about umbrellaphilic?

    February 5, 2013

  • I wonder if this word has anything in common with agio?

    February 5, 2013

  • Good work, Tank. T(h)anks! :o)

    February 4, 2013

  • Al - O - Ne (aluminum, oxygen, neon)

    February 2, 2013

  • Ba - Rb - I - E (barium, rubidium, iodine, einsteinium)

    February 2, 2013

  • W - As - Te (tungsten, arsenic, tellurium)

    February 2, 2013

  • H - Ar - P (hydrogen, argon, phosphorus).

    February 2, 2013

  • K - Ni - Fe (potassium, nickel, iron)

    February 2, 2013

  • A medical quack. (according to NPR's Says You)

    February 2, 2013

  • An autantonym: Military battle vs. marital accord.

    January 26, 2013

  • To examine the papers of a ship to discover a smuggling operation. (according to NPR's Says You)

    January 26, 2013

  • Ambiverts make the best sales-types; they can listen as well as be proactive in their sales interactions. Heard on NPR's Weekend Edition.

    January 1, 2013

  • I've heard the British pronunciation ("swaythe") many times and in different venues; often enough that I'm going to put it in my 'Bi-sonic' list.

    December 20, 2012

  • The early chaos that formed the world, according to NPR's Says You.

    November 17, 2012

  • The wing-tip device makes the wing more efficient by inhibiting the natural flow of air from the high pressure area below the wing to the low pressure area above the wing. This high-to-low flow is what generates the dangerous wing-tip vortex which can upset aircraft in the wake of the generating aircraft.

    October 18, 2012

  • A toy store. (via NPR's Says You)

    September 1, 2012

  • Thanks for your input, p_a. Added.

    August 11, 2012

  • Tibetan beer. (according to NPR's Says You)

    July 28, 2012

  • "...There are many drawbacks to the use of the word 'consciousness.' In the first place it is used in half a dozen different senses by philosophers and psychologists, and in the second place it suffers from the great drawback that it has no active verbal form. One can say 'to be conscious of' but not 'to conscious' such-and-such an object. There is the word 'awareness' and the dubious coined derivative 'awaring,' which I have also occasionally pressed into service, but it is ugly and not very current. The best term is one that was coined by E. D. Fawcett in his The World as Imagination, Zermatt Dialogues, etc. The term in question is consciring – i.e. “knowing together” - and has as its correlative, for the content-form, the word conscitum (plural, conscita. I should certainly have availed myself of these coinages but, unfortunately, they are not as yet sufficiently widely current to be generally understood and, moreover, a great deal of the book had been written before I came across Fawcett's writings..."

    --From Sri Krishna Prem’s “The Yoga of the Bhavagad Gita”: APPENDIX A – NOTE ON THE TERMS CONSCIOUSNESS AND FORM

    July 27, 2012

  • Contranymic in the sense of resolve = firmness and resolve = to ease, soften, as a problem. Also one of the bi-sonics: solve again v. determination, firmness..

    July 8, 2012

  • HARD: Employed, as “I hard him to do the job.” Also a man’s name, as “Mah wife’s a cousin of Hard Hughes.”

    July 2, 2012

  • PRAYED: A large public procession, usually including a marching band. “That was some prayed they had downtown.”

    July 2, 2012

  • TOAD: The past tense of tell. “Ah toad you never to do that.”

    July 2, 2012

  • RULE: Nonurban, as “He comes from the rule area.”

    July 2, 2012

  • FORCED: A large group of trees, as “Lemme showya mah pine forced.”

    July 2, 2012

  • An English poet (1788 - 1824).

    July 2, 2012

  • As the plural of cola brand Pepsi, this word qualifies for my bi-sonics list.

    June 28, 2012

  • I added orp to my potpourri II list and the page still shows "orp has not been added to any list yet" although I verified that it is in fact on my list. Ditto for destinated

    June 17, 2012

  • The inability to accept bad news (via NPR's Says You)

    June 9, 2012

  • @ ruzuzu: Très whimsical. Love it!

    June 2, 2012

  • See pernoctation.

    June 1, 2012

  • According to NPR's Says You: a rowdy party or celebration.

    May 19, 2012

  • An ambush; attack. Heard on NPR's Says You.

    May 19, 2012

  • Pomposity (according to NPR's Says You)

    May 12, 2012

  • Illinois State University mathematician Phil Grizzard points out that a person born on Nov. 30, 1999, is a “stopwatch baby” — the date always displays her age in months, days, and years. For example, today, 5/4/12, such a person has been alive for 5 months, 4 days, and 12 years. (Europeans can swap the month and day — the principle still works.)

    A caveat: In December we must “make change” by setting the month to 0 and adding 1 to the year. So this Christmas, 12/25/12, a stopwatch baby will be 0/25/13 — 0 months, 25 days, and 13 years old.

    --via futilitycloset.com

    May 5, 2012

  • A force of nature to be reckoned with indeed! (via Baby Blues comic strip 4/26/12)

    April 26, 2012

  • Huh! Can't even make the pronunciations play at "hot dog"....go figure. ACK!

    April 25, 2012

  • So, the feedback page is otiose? 'Zu, are you able to create pronunciations? I'm having no luck at all. Is it broke? Can we access pronunciations of old?

    April 25, 2012

  • Instrument invented by Lewis Carroll for writing in the dark while still half asleep.

    March 31, 2012

  • A wonderful spoonerism.

    March 31, 2012

  • Oh lordy, 'zu. Now I'm infected too! *arrgh* :o)

    March 24, 2012

  • Dinkum Good, genuine, honest.

    General Australian. From 1908 (AND). Attested in numerous sources.

    In Australian English, this is often used in the combination ‘fair dinkum’ as well, which was current from 1890 (AND), meaning ‘fair play’; and ‘dinkum oil’ meaning ‘genuine information’.

    --Source here

    March 24, 2012

  • Thanks, 'zu. I probably would have found it eventually if I'd spent more time. Cheers!

    March 16, 2012

  • Huh! Thanx fbharjo and ruzuzu; tried to go to your profile pages and say it but...huh! I'm a dope or, uh, something....

    March 16, 2012

  • Thanks, 'zu. But this can come about w/o repetition in my experience. I guess it belongs in the category of brain fart? :o)

    February 27, 2012

  • How about a word for the feeling or sensation when seeing a common word where it suddenly seems strange and unaccountable? Had that happen once with the word maid! Gotta be one of them déjà-type words, me thinks.

    February 27, 2012

  • It's 120 miles high.

    February 25, 2012

  • Some one who's sick of reading? (From Wiley's Dictionary - B.C. cartoon 2/25/12)

    February 25, 2012

  • An implement for decorating Ukrainian Easter eggs.

    February 18, 2012

  • Time spent trying to get tech support on the line.

    February 18, 2012

  • Cut inches off yards? --NYT crossword clue

    February 16, 2012

  • MOW (inverted) = MOW

    February 16, 2012

  • A joke ending with a pun. --Heard on NPR's Says You

    February 11, 2012

  • In an unsuccessful fox hunt, to assuage the down spirits of the hunters the leader of the hunt would pick out a steeple seen in the distance and issue the challenge of a race to it among the riders. A sort of "last one there is a rotten egg!" dare. --Heard on NPR's Says You.

    February 4, 2012

  • According to NPR's Says You the security blanket was an actual product for securing babies in their cribs and not dreamed up by Charles Schultz.

    February 4, 2012

  • A David Foster Wallace-ism. To wit: "Meredith Rand is one of only a handful of females at the REC that every male with an opinion on such matters agrees is totally, wrist-bitingly attractive." --The Pale King p.447

    Very evocative, don't you think? :o)

    February 4, 2012

  • Not sure what you mean, Erin. I've not come across it. Does it refer to an aircraft exploding in flight?

    February 3, 2012

  • From cyberspace:

    C = carbon

    Ho = holmium

    Co = cobalt

    La = lanthanum

    Te = tellurium

    CHoCoLaTe - Better living through chemistry!

    February 3, 2012

  • A long dog with short legs that runs on a Rube Goldberg-type mechanism to turn a spit of roasting meat. --Heard on NPR's Says You

    January 28, 2012

  • To shroud, especially with plants and greenery. Heard on NPR's Says You

    January 21, 2012

  • Mnemonic for the planets of the solar system.

    January 20, 2012

  • Mnemonic for the colors of the spectrum (e.g., rainbow).

    January 20, 2012

  • The following is related by an eminent naturalist: ‘A young lady was sitting in a room adjoining a poultry yard, where chickens, ducks and geese were disporting themselves. A drake came in, approached the lady, seized the bottom of her dress with his beak, and pulled it vigorously. Feeling startled, she repulsed him with her hand. The bird still persisted. Somewhat astonished, she paid some attention to this unaccountable pantomime, and discovered that the drake wished to drag her out of doors. She got up, and he waddled out quietly before her. More and more surprised, she followed him, and he conducted her to the side of a pond where she perceived a duck with its head caught in the opening of a sluice. She hastened to release the poor creature and restored it to the drake, who by loud quackings and beating of his wings testified his joy at the deliverance of his companion.’

    – Ballou’s Monthly Magazine, May 1870 (via futilitycloset.com)

    January 20, 2012

  • Be careful lest ye precipitate precipitate actions!

    January 19, 2012

  • Usage example here

    January 16, 2012

  • Sounds Like A Plan

    January 14, 2012

  • A traveller who complains about everything. --heard on NPR's Says You

    January 14, 2012

  • Gum-like substance similar to myrrh. --heard on NPR's Says You

    January 14, 2012

  • Just sliding by? (clue on NPR's Says You)

    January 14, 2012

  • Hi Shirley! Looks like you survived the Friday 13th menace, eh? :oD

    January 14, 2012

  • To buff a shoe bottom prior to finishing. --heard on NPR's Says You

    January 7, 2012

  • First women in the USA to receive a driver's license. --heard on NPR's Says You

    December 31, 2011

  • Inventor of the potato chip. Originally known as Saratoga chips. --heard on NPR's Says You

    December 31, 2011

  • Discrete v. discreet.

    Most of us can testify to it. After two or three heaping portions of turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes and gravy, cranberry sauce, sweet potatoes and Waldorf salad you’re bursting at the seams. You’re so sated that you had to discretely place a crumpled napkin over that uneaten turkey wing on your plate. --Ingrid Spilde

    Despite the usage gaff, the article Why You Always Have Room for Dessert is an interesting read.

    December 30, 2011

  • A counterfeit seal (as on a document). Heard on NPR's Says You.

    December 17, 2011

  • One of the two children of the Pillsbury Doughboy (Popper's the other). Heard on NPR's Says You.

    December 17, 2011

  • See Bun bun.

    December 17, 2011

  • One of the two children of the Pillsbury Doughboy (Popper's the other). Heard on NPR's Says You.

    December 17, 2011

  • Bermuda grass. Heard on NPR's Says You

    December 17, 2011

  • Can't look up cash money -- "500 server error"

    December 14, 2011

  • This book has a prominent place in my library it was one of those that initially set my feet upon the path...

    December 14, 2011

  • To adjust to a new environment. Heard on NPR's Says You.

    December 10, 2011

  • To hold, as a lion, at bay. Heard on NPR's Says You

    December 3, 2011

  • Oooh, exotic!

    December 3, 2011

  • First palindromic phrase I've seen using google. :o)

    December 1, 2011

  • Thanks for mirror rim - nice!

    December 1, 2011

  • Heavens to Murgatroyd!! 1000 STFs, fbharjo!!?? Lawdy, what creativitinessness...ness. Gud wurk!

    November 23, 2011

  • *ponders where to add his first comment on the beta-test wordnik* * basks in undeserved glory* *wonders about shamelessness and other character flaws*

    November 23, 2011

  • Aviation slang term for the aircraft autopilot.

    November 19, 2011

  • Tea served at a high (dinner-type) table; contrast with Low Tea served on a coffee table. (according to NPR's Says You)

    November 5, 2011

  • The marble targeted by a shooter in a game of marbles. (according to NPR's *Says You*)

    November 5, 2011

  • A weevil; a variety of English wheat worm, according to NPR's Says You.

    October 29, 2011

  • A foolish thing, according to NPR's Says You.

    October 29, 2011

  • Guiness Book of World Records shortest time to carve one? 54.72 seconds (2001) --via NPR's Says You

    October 29, 2011

  • The opposite of wreak havoc? (B.C.'s Wiley's Dictionary)

    October 29, 2011

  • Nice, sionnach. *like* Gutlevel chives? Mmmm, that's some tall chives.

    October 22, 2011

  • n. “A bright appearance in the horizon, under the sun or moon, arising from the reflected light of these bodies from the small rippling waves on the surface of the water”

    (Nathaniel Bowditch, The New American Practical Navigator, 1837) --via futilitycloset.com

    October 22, 2011

  • An especially small Englishwoman? (from BC cartoon - Wiley's Dictionary)

    October 20, 2011

  • Cheaper than a day rate?

    October 20, 2011

  • Strange Brew.

    October 17, 2011

  • "There seems to be a problem with your credit card, Mr. Kent." (Strange Brew 'toon)

    October 17, 2011

  • Hey! Word it up, dude.

    October 17, 2011

  • I didn't think there was any way to quietly jam fufluns into tail pipes! What's your secret 'zu? Ninja training? :o)

    October 16, 2011

  • Well, it appears that I can't add words to my "potpourri" list; not at the list page or the word page (with checkmark). Jesus Cristo y Madre de Dios!

    Edit: Doh! I was trying to add a word that was already on that list (toothsome). Still, what produced the confusion in the first place is that the word page for toothsome shows no checkmark in my potpourri list box. And that's still the case: no checkmark, but I've verified it's on the list at the list page. Go figure! :o/

    October 11, 2011

  • To try to propel a boat forward by abrupt movements of one's body; "ooching forward". (according to NPR's Says You)

    October 8, 2011

  • To inadvertently collide with a wall or door. (According to NPR's Says You)

    October 8, 2011

  • An irrational fear of convergent sequences.

    October 2, 2011

  • To attend a party to which one hasn't an invitation. (according to NPRs Says You)

    September 3, 2011

  • Ordaine to be a minister?

    August 27, 2011

  • “People are never so ready to believe you as when you say things in dispraise of yourself; and you are never so much annoyed as when they take you at your word.” --Somerset Maugham (Notebooks)

    August 27, 2011

  • A number between 6 and 7. (George Carlin)

    August 20, 2011

  • Erin: Yes, still tiny font (with Chrome browser). @bilby,'zu,sionnach, erin et al., hanks for the rib tickling irreverence!

    Oh, and I have the same experience with pronunciation that dontcry has...

    August 13, 2011

  • How do I access my recent comments? Try as I might, all I can access is comments from the first two weeks of my presence on Wordie. There is no "continue to next page" option.

    August 7, 2011

  • August 7, 2011

  • "The person who fetches the midwife". (via NPR's Says You)

    August 6, 2011

  • Corruption of "Old Nick" - the Devil. (via NPR's Says You)

    August 6, 2011

  • Erin, is the translate feature going to make a comeback eventually? And is the font size in the comment box while entering and/or editing comments going to remain so tiny?

    August 6, 2011

  • @Erin. Much improvement in comment/edit comment option. Thanks!

    August 5, 2011

  • I've got one of the originals with the chrome runners and reusable cloth bag. Remarkably, it came with this house I bought 10 years ago...

    August 5, 2011

  • via Dan Piraro.

    August 5, 2011

  • Desktop computer. Everybody else's using fondleslabs!

    August 3, 2011

  • Kipple and Things : How To Hoard and How Not To Mean.

    August 2, 2011

  • An Uh, Er, Um Essay

    August 2, 2011

  • What sionnach said. Yes.

    August 1, 2011

  • iPad, iPhone, etc. See grandpa box.

    July 31, 2011

  • A variety of green bean. Rattlesnake Pole Bean.

    July 31, 2011

  • Comment function is intermittent. The whole site is abominably slow. Edit: comment option works, but EXTREMELY slowly. Ditto for edit option; or it seems to work only intermittently.

    July 31, 2011

  • Fear of the color purple.

    July 31, 2011

  • A variety of carrot (according to Says You)

    July 30, 2011

  • A variety of bean (according to Says You)

    July 30, 2011

  • A variety of tomato (according to Says You)

    July 30, 2011

  • Related to musical instruments (pipes), not steam pipes. (via Says You)

    July 30, 2011

  • thanks milos and dharma

    July 16, 2011

  • Thanks, dharma, for your input. Added!

    July 16, 2011

  • I agree with Pro and frogapplause: the site really has the feel of reference emphasis. I miss the "first listed by" and other such personalizing features. Another thing that strikes me, although it may be transitory, is surprisingly long wait times.

    July 9, 2011

  • To cut meat into small pieces. (heard on NPR's Says You)

    July 9, 2011

  • A euphemistic insincere phrase; a verbal air kiss. E.g., "Oh we must have lunch ..." (according to NPR's Says You)

    July 9, 2011

  • A messed up kiss?

    July 8, 2011

  • See comment under spatula.

    July 8, 2011

  • Fun to say?

    July 8, 2011

  • A Norwegian dance, according to NPR's Says You.

    July 2, 2011

  • First seen in D. F. Wallace's Infinite Jest.

    July 2, 2011

  • What happened to the translation feature on the word page? Has it just been deleted or forgotten...or, again, am I just missing something?

    June 25, 2011

  • bRAdburY. Ray Bradbury, Sci-Fi author extraordinaire.

    June 25, 2011

  • bRAdburY: Ray Bradbury, SciFi author extraordinaire.

    June 25, 2011

  • Thanks, mollusque for your kangaroo word suggestion. Definitely "outside the box". :o)

    June 25, 2011

  • Hey! Good one, mollusque, thanks.

    June 25, 2011

  • I'm just waaaaaaay outta the loop! (but wanted to link the cartoon at least).

    June 24, 2011

  • A young female pig...who knew?

    June 24, 2011

  • Is this like pwn?

    June 24, 2011

  • For more discussion of "grey v. gray" see here. In a nutshell: Gray = color; grey = colour.

    June 24, 2011

  • It would be nice to have the option, on the word page (in addition to adding the word) to delete a word from one's list as opposed to having to go to the list page and deleting it there. Or am I overlooking something?

    June 24, 2011

  • Also May gray. Especially applies to the Southern California Spring, early Summer weather patterns.

    June 24, 2011

  • See June gloom.

    June 24, 2011

  • 'zu --> :oD

    June 24, 2011

  • Thanx for your input, marky. I see your account isn't public? Sorry I can't return the favor of perusing any of your lists.

    June 24, 2011

  • See also, Dyslexic's Dread.

    June 18, 2011

  • Truly an amazing tour de force. What a mind!

    June 15, 2011

  • Yeah, he was sporting lint!

    June 15, 2011

  • Bar hopping; pub crawling (via NPR's Says You)

    May 28, 2011

  • An encouraging cry to hunting dogs in pursuit of prey.

    May 28, 2011

  • I've used 'perfuct' for years. Very satisfying!

    May 28, 2011

  • Huh! Sionnach beat me to the punch. Joke was meant to come after 'colour'.

    May 25, 2011

  • Heard on NPR this AM. Finally tumbling to what is obvious to everyone else.

    May 25, 2011

  • If a pig loses its voice is it disgruntled?

    May 23, 2011

  • Slang for "details".

    May 14, 2011

  • Highschool slang for "for real".

    May 14, 2011

  • Highschool slang for "totally".

    May 14, 2011

  • According to NPR's Says You: To break apart by dropping, e.g., a bag of ice.

    May 14, 2011

  • A draggin' wagon?

    May 14, 2011

  • Be the Captain of her fat.

    May 6, 2011

  • Thanks gangerh...and to all the players; I feel all warm 'n toasty to be among such an erudite and rapscalious crew. w00t!

    May 5, 2011

  • Heard on the radio: the bump in the polls for Obama as a result of the take-down of Osama Bin Laden. Might have been osamobama bump; couldn't be sure.

    May 4, 2011

  • Thanks, Wp.

    May 3, 2011

  • Thanks, Wordplayer. I like insignia; chandeliers is good too. Appreciate your input...

    May 3, 2011

  • Fear of cockroaches. Got a kinda nice ring to it, no? Heard on NPR's Weekend Edition in an interview with Amy Stewart on her new book Wicked Bugs: The Louse That Conquered Napoleon's Army & Other Diabolical Insects.

    April 30, 2011

  • I actually played Grumpy-dwarf once in a Junior High theatre production. I was well cast. *grumps*

    April 28, 2011

  • Here ya go; I used my favorite method: no-brains.(Edit: whoops! see addition of frogclapping below)

    bilby - hidelugged

    blafferty - calepinerienne

    chained_bear - aaaaaarrgh!

    dontcry - queasy

    erinmckean - playful

    fbharjo - od

    frindley - boggy

    frogapplause - dreamy....uh, oh, no, wait, okay: balsamaceous

    gangerh - sinistral

    hernesheir - ascian

    mollusque - chrestomathic

    oroboros - wiggy

    PossibleUnderscore - heartstringsplucker

    Prolagus - harlequin

    pterodactyl - wodge

    reesetee - distingue

    ruzuzu - prodigal

    seanahan - systematic

    sionnach - protean

    Wordnicolina - greenhorn

    Wordplayer - emordnilap

    yarb - panda

    April 26, 2011

  • NPR's Says You used this word in its bluffing round: skipping a rock across water.

    April 23, 2011

  • Curled in ringlets. (per NPR's Says You)

    April 23, 2011

  • *You* folks? 'Zuzu, 'member the enemy is us (what we met)! :o)

    April 22, 2011

  • Egad! Well, I know I can get at least *one* right!

    *scurries off to pour some Scot's smart-juice over ice*

    April 22, 2011

  • Take it or leave it. (NYT X-word puzzle clue/answer)

    April 21, 2011

  • Good one, mollusque. Thanks!

    April 19, 2011

  • Cow's favorite rock band? Moo-dy Blues.

    Favorite entertainment? Moo-vies.

    April 12, 2011

  • To fluff up a pillow. (via NPR's Says You)

    April 9, 2011

  • See also wolf ticket.

    April 6, 2011

  • Criminy! Nobody's even bothered to list fishplate! I'm not gonna either...*tests ruzuzu's squeak, just to make sure*

    April 4, 2011

  • British slang for 'excellent' or 'cool'. (NPR's Says You)

    April 2, 2011

  • Means "skyward" (to the sky?) in Yiddish (?) according to a NYT crossword clue.

    April 2, 2011

  • You know how your gas tank fuel indicator stays at or above "full" for a seemingly inordinate amount of time? That's what engineers call "full reserve." Same thing at the "empty" end of the range; would that be an "empty reserve?"

    April 2, 2011

  • See foley.

    March 30, 2011

  • W.C. Fields character.

    March 30, 2011

  • W.C. Fields character. Gotta love it.

    March 30, 2011

  • Anagram: carthorse.

    March 28, 2011

  • trombone in French.

    March 28, 2011

  • Just learned that trombone is the French word for paperclip. Egad! I wonder if I'll ever forget this? :o)

    March 28, 2011

  • I figured it just has to do with going into the pocket for coin and coming out with lint. But thanks for the reference.

    March 26, 2011

  • The "Q" stands for "quality".

    March 26, 2011

  • The "F" refers to focal length.

    March 26, 2011

  • Origin: The most "bankable" actors in the film industry are on the A-list.

    March 26, 2011

  • Encountered in Wallace's Infinite Jest. To have no money.

    March 25, 2011

  • @ptero: Interesting study, but no, I got this from an NPR Says You episode. Gratified it sparked a comment flurry! :o)

    March 24, 2011

  • HeAVEN

    March 23, 2011

  • Shopping cart h(e)aven.

    March 23, 2011

  • Crazy.

    March 21, 2011

  • Movie trailers (previews) used to come at the end of the film (hence the name) but that practice was abandoned because nobody stuck around to watch 'em! This, according to NPR's Says You.

    March 19, 2011

  • The gesture made with the index and little fingers raised while the thumb holds down the middle and ring fingers. The sign of the horns - symbolic of the "evil eye".

    March 19, 2011

  • Wearing socks on the outside of your shoes to minimize slipping on an icy walkway.

    March 19, 2011

  • I decided to comment day before yesterday.

    March 19, 2011

  • From the police blotter of the SLO (San Luis Obispo, CA) City News, March 10-16 2011:

    Alcohol: Police responded at 12:41 a.m. to the Native Lounge on the 1100 block of Chorro St. after one of the natives got restless and rough. He was arrested for suspicion of being bent in public. Another ruckus broke out at 1:37 a.m. at Mo Tav, just around the corner on the 700 block of Higuera St. There, a belle of the ball was arrested for being crapulous."

    March 18, 2011

  • From the police blotter of the SLO (San Luis Obispo, CA) City News, March 10-16 2011:

    "Theft: Police were called at 5:17 P.M. to the 700 block of Higuera St. at Fanny Wrappers Lingerie shop for a reported shoplifting. No word on the booty that was pinched."

    March 18, 2011

  • Unabridged umbrage. Yoiks!

    March 18, 2011

  • "A friend’s young son (4 or 5) was asking her about “you know, the guys who like women, but they like to look good, too.” She very bravely took him up on it and explained that such men were called “metrosexuals.” He thought for a moment and then said, “So the guys who like guys… what are they? Hobosexuals?” She was driving at the time and is still amazed she didn’t run off the road from laughing so hard. Of course, the funny thing is, apparently there really are gay hobos who refer to themselves as “Hobosexuals.” Who knew?"

    (Comment by "Prospero" on Dan Piraro's--"Bizarro" cartoonist-- blog)

    March 18, 2011

  • Even Dilbert gets into the action. A shame Scott couldn't work meatus in as well.

    March 18, 2011

  • Heard on NPR's Says You - a bon mot by one of the panelists (in re: to the word tussie-mussie - i.e., presented to mollify a fussy hussy), and I just like it.

    March 12, 2011

  • Domestic helper hides physician?

    March 12, 2011

  • Origin: when signatures were often simple crosses, a cross over a cross was a reneging on the deal.(According to NPR's Says You)

    March 12, 2011

  • Origin: wooden board to catch the mud or water thrown up by the horses pulling a carriage or coach. (According to NPR's Says You)

    March 12, 2011

  • Thank'zu, 'zu! :o)

    March 10, 2011

  • How 'bout a ride in my Isuzu, ruzuzu? It's got a full tank o' umbrage, 'n rarin' to go!

    March 4, 2011

  • Could be used as a shibboleth for detecting chemists (according to Isaac Asimov, says Wikipedia).

    March 3, 2011

  • The consummate craft of Foley. All those little and big sounds in the movie you're watching have to be recreated from a vast storehouse of typical junkdrawer, wardrobe and miscellaneous paraphernalia. Fascinating! It'll enhance your appreciation of the film industry.

    March 2, 2011

  • Well, nothing comes to mind other than the standards: "cheated death"; "almost bought the farm"; "used one of his nine lives" "bit a hole in the pilot seat" (with his you know what) etc. Not all that inspired, but I hope it helps...

    February 26, 2011

  • Net cost of jumping in your Cessna 172 and flying off to Catalina Island for lunch.

    February 26, 2011

  • Slang for a "Near Mid-air Collision"

    February 26, 2011

  • A kind of visual approach into an airport. Nicely expeditious in certain weather conditions, for places like John Wayne - Orange County airport and Burbank airport. Also see concrete compass.

    February 26, 2011

  • Navigating an aircraft by reference to roads on the ground. If you use a rail-road track you're using the iron compass. Useful in contact approaches.

    February 26, 2011

  • An aircraft that spends an inordinate amount of time in the hanger undergoing repairs. Especially applicable to aircraft harboring a "wire-worm".

    February 26, 2011

  • Just lookit all 'em g-s, h-s 'n t-s! Splendid!

    February 25, 2011

  • "Pickles"

    February 23, 2011

  • A different sort of palindrome.

    February 19, 2011

  • Beauty contains buy and eat. A sort-of Kangaroo word: BeaUtY - bEAuTy. See an animated version here.

    February 17, 2011

  • RENDER UNTO CAESAR...

    Modernity comes to China: Religious teachers must now fill out a government application before they can be reincarnated.The decree, passed in 2007, requires that applications be submitted to four different government bodies.“The selection of reincarnates must preserve national unity and solidarity of all ethnic groups, and the selection process cannot be influenced by any group or individual from outside the country.” (via futilitycloset.com)

    February 17, 2011

  • See comments at kilroy, as to "Kilroy Was Here".

    February 17, 2011

  • According to "Wiley's Dictionary": metronome = a city dwarf.

    (Johnny Hart's B.C. comic 2/15/11)

    February 15, 2011

  • From BC cartoon today: "Show me an Eskimo ophthalmologist...and I'll show you an optical Aleutian."

    http://comics.com/bc/2011-02-11/

    February 11, 2011

  • see donut icer

    February 10, 2011

  • see donut icer

    February 10, 2011

  • Anagrams: introduce and reduction.

    February 10, 2011

  • Smoked salmon scramble (with sour cream and drizzled-on Pepper Plant TM); potatoes on the side. Mmmmmm...

    February 7, 2011

  • A short, private, dead-end road. (via NPR's Says You)

    February 5, 2011

  • To throw money into a crowd. (via NPR's Says You)

    February 5, 2011

  • I first heard this visiting relatives in Hawaii.

    February 5, 2011

  • A Brazil nut.

    February 5, 2011

  • That's no Lady! That's my....uh, hmmmm, well, no on Lady of Spain, but I did do an interview or two with playing on the local radio, too: KTMS.

    January 30, 2011

  • Yes, the NPR puzzle. Will Shortz said it's a variant of Afghani, and if he accepts it that's good enuff for me...

    January 30, 2011

  • A square piece of cloth used as head covering in Guatemala. (via NPR's Says You)

    January 29, 2011

  • In the old days, saloon and bar owners offered a free lunch to patrons who spent a requisite time drinking in their establishment, hoping they would get so drunk they'd forget they never got their free lunch. It was adjudged as unfair advertising by the authorities of the era. (via NPR's Says You)

    January 29, 2011

  • Sad and Happy at the same time?

    January 29, 2011

  • A nationality containing two nations:

    afGHANistAni

    afgHAnIsTanI

    January 27, 2011

  • Nosey Parker; Lookie Loo.

    January 26, 2011

  • I'm astounded I didn't discover this page 4 years ago and expose a limited chapter of my past. I played accordion as a kid *and* I played in an accordion band. We played on a float in the Santa Barbara Fiesta Parade as well as other public venues for a number of years and appeared on the local TV station,KEYT, on several occasions. A few of the members could play 12th Street Rag with the bellow shake and were awe inspiring to the rest of us hacks.

    January 22, 2011

  • When your parrot flies the coop?

    January 14, 2011

  • Yeah, good one. Added.

    January 12, 2011

  • Point taken, 'zu. Also fbharjo's. Thanks.

    January 12, 2011

  • Ah, Walt Kelly we miss you!

    January 12, 2011

  • Thanks again, ruzuzu. Tuck-out's new to me. tuck in always meant to sit down and "dig in" to a meal with enthusiastic appetite; didn't realize tuck-out was the same. Course, little Jack Horner tuck-in his thumb and tuck-out a plum, don'tcha know! :o)

    January 8, 2011

  • Thanks, 'zu. Cop as "Goin' to get all medieval on yo ass."? (Pulp Fiction, I think). :o)

    January 6, 2011

  • What Eskimos get from sitting on the ice too long?

    January 5, 2011

  • Related to "alas and alack"?

    January 3, 2011

  • Derivation: "count of the stable" - the man who counted the King's horses every morning to verify none missing. (via NPR's Says You)

    January 2, 2011

  • It's in Bell county. :o)

    December 31, 2010

  • Anagram of Woman Hitler

    December 30, 2010

  • Against everybody?

    December 25, 2010

  • The science of poker playing?

    December 25, 2010

  • A small table?

    December 25, 2010

  • Not cute enough?

    December 25, 2010

  • See cryptomnesia.

    December 20, 2010

  • "Gets the red out."

    December 19, 2010

  • To act timidly, according to NPR's Says You

    December 19, 2010

  • To lay a bottle on its side for a long time to get out every last drop after the contents have been poured out. (via NPR's Says You)

    December 19, 2010

  • See fragrance.

    December 19, 2010

  • Fragrance v. scent. Alcohol-based v. oil-based. (via NPR's Says You

    December 19, 2010

  • Algonquin word for moose, meaning "twig eater".

    ~via NPR's Says You

    December 12, 2010

  • A lightening in the sky portending bad weather.

    ~via NPR's Says You

    December 12, 2010

  • In typing, a word is a unit of length signified by five characters/spaces.

    ~via NPR's Says You

    December 12, 2010

  • Re: "more good songs in Spanish" - check out the classic "Trio Los Panchos" oeuvre. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Los_Panchos

    December 10, 2010

  • Yah, didn't know him but enjoyed his version; you've been a fan for a while? Thing I like about the Perla arrangement is the repeated, harmonic descending arpeggio background to the piece. It's unique in my experience...and works on me like an anvil of mercy.

    December 10, 2010

  • 'Zu, I changed the link. THIS is my very favorite arrangement, just didn't know it was up on YouTube. The version I have on iTunes by Perla Batalla is done with a quartet of acoustic guitars. Beautiful!!

    December 9, 2010

  • The cuccuruddu ruzuzu made me think of that extremely beautiful Mexican song Cucurrucucu Paloma. Check it out, 'zu! Always makes me misty eyed when I hear it...

    December 9, 2010

  • Thanks, 'zu. I added shell to the list. Also found some more at that off site list ptero linked. Neat!

    December 9, 2010

  • Janus word in the sense of add shells (or bombard "we were being shelled by the VC") vs. remove shells (i.e., shuck).

    December 9, 2010

  • Huh! I mighta knowed! :o)

    December 8, 2010

  • A female moth?

    December 7, 2010

  • Time-share yacht?

    December 7, 2010

  • Surfing convention?

    December 7, 2010

  • "Nathaniel had his reasons for his journey to Rhyolite, the greatest boom town in the west. He hoped to find what the snallygaster had taken from him. Some believed it could snatch away whatever you most valued. It had taken Annabelle, the love of his life. Now he was here in Rhyolite, to make his fortune, reunite with Annabelle--and to find the man he murdered back in Baltimore."

    ~Opening paragraph of Journey to Rhyolite by Steve Bartholomew

    December 5, 2010

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