Comments by telofy

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  • Diminutive for Molybdenum (according to Gene Wolfe's The Book of the Long Sun). It's probably also a tribute to Douglas Adams for Molybdenum has the atomic number 42.

    August 15, 2009

  • locomotive?

    August 15, 2009

  • See Google cache.

    (At least for the article.)

    August 15, 2009

  • (link)

    Whether or not uwig is commonly regarded as a German word I'll leave unanswered, but for uffig we first need to find a definition. Perhaps due to words like affig or puffig it sounds somewhat derogative to me, furthermore uff is the canonical interjection for indicating physical exhaustion, so it could be a slang term applied to very straining and exhausting tasks.

    Pronunciation: /'ʊfɪç/

    August 15, 2009

  • Last time I checked there existed no definite—and not even a more than barely feasible—definition of knowledge; I hope in view of this impediment it is permissible for me to be somewhat more hazy on this subject...

    August 14, 2009

  • Blinking hack.

    August 14, 2009

  • Perhaps a poem read in the course of a Poetry Slam?

    August 14, 2009

  • Without the accent and thus stress on the first syllable, Cosi is a short form for the name Cosima.

    August 14, 2009

  • If you want to see one flying, er, gliding: link

    August 14, 2009

  • Operator of the Nebuchadnezzar in Matrix.

    August 14, 2009

  • Cool, I've just transcribed an interview with Emilie Autumn who, among other things, talked about her her song Shalott!

    Hmm, I wonder what's the quantity of something as lovely as alleviate.

    August 14, 2009

  • I don't know about the Russian word this page honors, and of course you may generally feel free to enjoy whatever letter combinations you like, but to people who actually speak the respective languages such words are likely to sound not merely strange and awkward but in some cases even downright repugnant and might cause this feeling of embarrassment one feels in the stead of someone else—is there a word for that? ^^

    As I said, this is probably not about razbliuto at all; I've no idea what word really feels like.

    August 14, 2009

  • I once had an interesting forum discussion with my Aikido sensei about about the the choices we face and about this only too common notion of a good-evil-dichotomy that seems to make them easier for some of us. Unfortunately in German. But I also let two quotes speak for me, one regarding choices (playing with oxymoronicity):

    “If nothing we do matters, then all that matters is what we do.�? – Angel, Angel (TV series)

    And one about “good�? and “evil�?:

    “But whether all that came to good or evil, I don't know. Until we reach the end of time, we don't know whether something's been good or bad; we can only judge the intentions of those who acted.�? – Severian, The Urth of the New Sun by Gene Wolfe

    August 14, 2009

  • We're under attag!

    August 13, 2009

  • Let's ifyify salsify.

    August 13, 2009

  • Here in Germany Magpies are said to suffer from that.

    August 13, 2009

  • ?

    This is awesome.

    August 13, 2009

  • Verse was what I had intended thus the black cat, my hints are for something divided in two which is still unsolved.

    This however is now probably the most sursolved word so far.

    Sorry, for the ambiguity.

    August 13, 2009

  • It seems that fits as well.

    August 13, 2009

  • “Would the congregation know by then of Lemur's demise? Quetzal debated the advisability of announcing the fact if they did not. It was a question of some consequence; and at length, for the temporary relief the act afforded him, he pivoted his hinged fangs from their snug grooves in the roof of his mouth, snapping each gratefully into its socket and grinning gleefully at his distorted image.�? – Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun

    August 13, 2009

  • Social networks must be pretty deserted during vacation time when people have nothing to procrastinate.

    August 13, 2009

  • That means it's still underwordied.

    August 12, 2009

  • In The Book of the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe a manteion is something like a temple and church combined with a school, but I have no clue how to pronounce it which can be quite annoying when I always stumble in my mental subvocalization...

    August 12, 2009

  • The Chaos and The Chaos

    August 12, 2009

  • Yeah... I have people calling me to ask that...

    August 12, 2009

  • Perhaps "facial expression" is not as detached and descriptive as I thought...

    Except for "aspect" for which (in this sense) I don't really have a feeling, I went through those three words in the thesaurus and found them, as you said, rolig, too formal. "Look" is the one I rejected for being too ambiguous. I think I now favor "expression" without the "facial" as you said, and perhaps with something like "rich" in front. Thanks!

    August 12, 2009

  • I'm looking for a synonym for facial expression (particularly regarding the eyes) that feels warmer, does not restrict the meaning and is not ambiguous.

    If you happen to know one, please drop me a comment. Thx. :-)

    August 12, 2009

  • Not long ago I happened upon this marvelous online version of the OED which defines prosilient as "Outstanding, prominent."

    August 11, 2009

  • The Caldé is the highest office of the City of Viron in The Book of the Long Sun by Gene Wolfe.

    According to this list the word Caldé originates with the Spanish "alcalde" and is thus probably pronounced /ˈkalde/.

    Look out for "Silk for Caldé" graffiti in your neighborhood.

    (And please add the accent if they forgot it.)

    August 11, 2009

  • Peel this.

    August 11, 2009

  • This madeupical word is a hyblend of contempt and temptation which can be used for example to describe the disposition someone who wants to quit smoking might have toward his cigarettes.

    August 11, 2009

  • :-)

    August 11, 2009

  • Yeah, pretty pretty, especially since 17 is a prime number.

    Congratulations!!

    (two exclamation points to make the line 17 characters long)

    August 10, 2009

  • I don't think it really accords with the severally part, but multiply comes to mind...

    August 10, 2009

  • noun

    (And it sounds kinda cute to me.)

    (And it's also a perfectly commonplace word.)

    (And short.)

    August 10, 2009

  • @madmouth: The next and probably last horror is going to be a nicely surreal interpretation of a (human) thumb.

    But first you need to find out what it is that is divided in two.

    August 10, 2009

  • Watch this video for further information.

    August 10, 2009

  • ... Words. I have to remember to speak words now. I say something. But you do not hear me unless I move my lips. To move my lips and my tongue ... while I make this noise in my throat.�?

    Mamelta in Gene Wolfe's The Book of the Long Sun

    August 10, 2009

  • Looks a bit like Bush with its “i�?s so close together...

    August 10, 2009

  • Thumbs up! (Or one anyway.)

    August 10, 2009

  • Better this way? ;-)

    August 9, 2009

  • To see if your answer is correct please scroll down.– I dare you!

    August 9, 2009

  • A little excerpt from The Book of the Long Sun showing the kind of slang (usually called thieves' cant) some people in the City of Viron speak:

        "That could get him tried for murder, Jugs," Auk told her. "No, what you want to do is roll this Crane over to Hoppy. Only if you're going to queer it, you'd be better off doing him. They'll beat it out of you, grab the deck and send you with him. It'd be a lily grab on you, Jugs, 'cause you helped

    him. As for the Patera here, Crane saw to his hoof and rode him to Orchid's in his own dilly, so it'd be candy to smoke up something."

        He waited for them to contradict him, but neither did.

        "Only if you go flash, if you roll him over to some bob culls with somebody like me to say Pas for you, we'll all be stanch cits and heroes too. Hoppy'll grab the glory while we buy him rope. That way he'll hand us a smoke smile and a warm and friendly shake, hoping we'll have something else to roll another time. I've got to have pals like that to lodge and dodge. So do you two, you just don't know it. You scavy I never turned up the bloody rags, riffling some cardcase's ken? You scavy I covered 'em up and left him be? Buy it, I washed him if he'd stand still. And if he wouldn't, why, I rolled him over."

        Silk nodded. "I see. I felt that your guidance would be of value, and I don't believe that Chenille could call me wrong. Could you, Chenille?"

        She shook her head, her eyes sparkling.

        "That's rum, 'cause I'm not finished yet. What's this hotpot's name, Jugs?"

        "Simuliid."

        "I'm flash. Big cully, ox weight, with a mustache?"

        She nodded.

    August 8, 2009

  • A pity it doesn't come up in the actual lyrics of the song.

    But I found also a band with that name.

    August 8, 2009

  • :-D

    August 8, 2009

  • My thesaurus defines it as random. What a funny word. I have this voice in my head: imagine someone with a good valley girl accent saying something in the lines of “I'm, like, Tiffany, you know, from, like, Lawndale? (vocal fry) Ooohh, your (sic), like, from Lawndale, too? That's like sooo desultory? (vocal fry) Totally awesome?�?

    August 8, 2009

  • Wait, I thought there was already a discussion about squirrels here... Only a few days ago I read about this shadowy tail of squirrels here on Wordie when I had just uploaded my latest squirrel video on YouTube. And then I read about squirreled on squirrelled. *discombobulated*

    August 8, 2009

  • rosemary

    August 8, 2009

  • August 7, 2009

  • There is unda in undulating, just a guess...

    August 6, 2009

  • to conspire?

    August 6, 2009

  • I hope it's planet; planet is kewl. :-)

    August 5, 2009

  • Of course. :-)

    August 5, 2009

  • “His arm and ankle seemed more painful than ever; he told himself firmly that it was only because the palliating effects of the drug Crane had given him the night before—and of the potent drinks he had imprudently sampled—had worn off.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun

    August 5, 2009

  • Some thesaurus-dictionary cross-referencing yields vagrant and vagabond. Is that licit or does it already verge on cheating?

    August 5, 2009

  • Viator?

    August 5, 2009

  • Zeitgeist?

    Well, in this case I do have a certain advantage. :-)

    Or are we supposed to comment on the list's page?

    August 4, 2009

  • A slight twitch on the reins, and a prod from the Monk’s heels and they were off, picking their way

    carefully down the rocky incline.

    – Douglas Adams, Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency

    August 4, 2009

  • I see some kind of intricate device used in the field of creative plumbing aka subversive plumbing (see Brazil). Surely your contraption has such a contraption built into it somewhere.

    August 3, 2009

  • Yes, the OED lists it as a known (mis)spelling of quiddity.

    August 2, 2009

  • With a showman’s flourish, the seller reached beneath the stained red cloth that draped his table and produced a small wire cage containing an orange-and-white catachrest. Silk was no judge of these animals, but to him it appeared hardly more than a kitten.

    ...

    “Word,” the little catachrest said distinctly. “Shoe word, who add pan.”

    ...

    “Berry add word,” the catachrest told him spitefully, gripping die wire mesh of his cage. “Pack!”

    He shook it, minute black claws sharper than pins visible at the tips of his fuzzy white toes.

    “Add word!” he repeated. “Add speak!”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun

    Hint: catachresis

    August 2, 2009

  • After the market introduction of Serial ATA in 2003, the original ATA was retroactively renamed Parallel ATA. (Wikipedia: PATA)

    July 31, 2009

  • “The prosperous-looking man mopped his streaming brow with a large peach-colored handkerchief that sent a cloying fragrance to war with the stenches of the street.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun

    July 30, 2009

  • “If the Fliers are human,” Silk admonished his charges, “it would surely be evil to stone them. If they are not, you must consider that they may be higher than we are in the spiritual whorl, just as they are in the temporal.” —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the Long Sun

    July 29, 2009

  • "They spoke in fragments and ellipses, in periphrastics and aposiopesis, in a style abundant in chiasmus, metonymy, meiosis, oxymoron, and zeugma; their dazzling rhetorical techniques left him baffled and uncomfortable, which beyond much doubt was their intention." – Robert Silverberg, Born With the Dead (on World Wide Words)

    July 27, 2009

  • Thanks and welcome to Wordie!

    Dactylian yields 253 Google hits so it definitely is in widespread use. If you have any more double-dactyls, feel free to add them. :-)

    July 27, 2009

  • In the How I Met Your Mother (Season 4) episode Three Days of Snow Marshall says /məˈtʃʊɚ/ or I think even /məˈtʃjʊɚ/ while Lily pronounces it /məˈtʊɚ/, which was new to me, though listed first on dictionary.com. Robin also says /məˈtʊɚ/ and moreover especially stressed the word (twice), which however might have semantic reasons.

    July 23, 2009

  • This semester has finally reached its end so that since yesterday afternoon I have more time to read stuff, watch stuff and hopefully reorganize a few of my lists. And hardly had I commenced my reading of The Dead by James Joyce when I came across this utterly discombobulating sentence:

    Hardly had she brought one gentleman into the little pantry behind the office on the ground floor and helped him off with his overcoat than the wheezy hall-door bell clanged again and she had to scamper along the bare hallway to let in another guest.�?

    A quick search across the Internets only resulted in this hardly thrilling reinforcement of my intuitive grasp on that construction.

    But it's Joyce, James Joyce! ;-)

    What am I missing?

    July 18, 2009

  • Word!

    And thanks in advance.

    July 17, 2009

  • Wonderful, another Gene Wolfe reader. Welcome to my list.

    I haven't read those two books yet. Next I'll turn to The Book of the Long Sun and There Are Doors.

    Have great fun.

    July 17, 2009

  • Hugh Laurie's favorite word.

    July 15, 2009

  • "It's gonna be legend—wait for it, and I hope you're not lactose intolerant because the second half of that word is—dairy!" – Barney, How I Met Your Mother

    July 14, 2009

  • “Hi Wordizens, I'm Rhoty. You can always readily recognize me by my low third formant. Tonight I'm invited to Schwa’s party and my longer brother ɝ is coming, too—it's going to be legen-er-dary!”

    July 14, 2009

  • So far I've used my favorites as a collection of bookmarks of lists I didn't want to forget, but as that is not really the intended purpose of favorites, I'm now using the private note feature of this page to save them. That makes private notes one of my favorite words I guess. ^^

    July 13, 2009

  • Thanks, only, you must have put there a virgule instead of a dot between the sobriquet and the domain.

    For now I tricked the bug. :-D

    July 13, 2009

  • soup.io is missing under "also on". The URL structure is perfectly straight forward (e.g. telofy.soup.io), shouldn't be the slightest problem. Thanks. :-)

    July 13, 2009

  • see

    July 8, 2009

  • See also.

    July 7, 2009

  • Rice's theorem. Very handy.

    July 6, 2009

  • See also unfuck, I guess... ^^

    July 5, 2009

  • Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity.

    Hanlon's razor

    July 5, 2009

  • According to this page: Irish slang for drunk.

    July 2, 2009

  • I could never decide whether to use quotation marks in "American style" or in "British style", meaning whether to put those punctuation marks that don't belong there into the quotation. (I, by the way, used those pseudo quotation marks in the last sentence to indicate that I actually know a few books by American authors that employ "British style" and vice versa.)

    To me the first option looks flowier, while the second one has the distinct advantage of not being so illogical and ambiguous.

    This morning I had the idea that I might use both versions: "American style" when writing fiction and "British style" when writing non-fiction. Do you think that is an acceptable compromise?

    June 23, 2009

  • I feel somewhat tipsy right now but I can still quickly and accurately touch the tip of my nose. Stoopid tests. ^^

    June 22, 2009

  • "a complete surrender to natural impulses without restraint or moderation; freedom from inhibition or conventionality: to dance with reckless abandon." – Random House

    Wow. This word, this definition—I totally got goosebumps reading it.

    June 21, 2009

  • We got a new one today.

    June 16, 2009

  • Hi, I could use a feature that would allow me to categorize my lists so that the lists list shows—​for example—​first a number of lists that might be interesting for everyone (under an appropriate title) and then a few lists that are just my private—​and most probably less interesting—​vocabulary learning lists (under the appropriate title again). Also some Wordees with >100 lists on their lists list could profit from that.

    Thanks a lot (also and specifically generally). ;-)

    June 14, 2009

  • Is this word pronounced /ˌdaɪəˈt�?nl/ (GenAm)?

    Here is more /-yʊ-/, but then again that guy speaks quite unnaturally slow and stresses three out of four syllables...

    June 8, 2009

  • Trifles no one is actually going to care about.

    A word a friend of mine coined in an IRC chat:

    "... lüllefütten (also kleinigkeiten, die niemanden am ende wirklich interessieren)"

    The etymology is highly obscure.

    May 29, 2009

  • OK, thanks for your opinions. :-)

    May 16, 2009

  • I'm having a problem deciding which pronunciation I like better, /ˈbɔɪənt/ or /ˈbujənt/.

    Does anyone have a strong opinion about that they'd like to share?

    Thanks.

    A link.

    May 15, 2009

  • Rynt thee!

    May 11, 2009

  • That one is my own creation. :-)

    The idea came to me when I read the sentences "What exactly are you a professor of, Mr. Logan?" – "Art."

    I just wasn't so sure about the "of". Someone clumsily trying to ancientize his sentence would probably also try and avoid preposition stranding but a reordering of the words would distract from the nub of the joke, so I changed that from the beginning.

    May 9, 2009

  • "Of what exactly are you a professor?"

    "Art."

    "OK, of what exactly art thou a professor?"

    May 8, 2009

  • Hi, and welcome to Wordie.

    Thanks for your word. In the case of self-referentially I actually like the hyphenate version more, who knows why... Douglas Hofstadter perhaps. ^^

    And thanks to everyone who donated double dactyls here. :-)

    May 6, 2009

  • Typical onomatopoeic expression among 20 to 30 year old computer science students at the Freie Universität Berlin, primarily amongst members of Spline, the student's project for Linux networks.

    It means exactly what you think it means, at least when you think that it means exactly what it does mean. Sort of. Hard to explain...

    May 4, 2009

  • In Ellen Muth's speech I can hear basically all varieties: with the usual alveolar flap, with the seemingly elided t and with pretty pronounced glottal stops. Something I should be listening out for once I have time is when the ts are pre-vocalic and when not and what bearing that has on their pronunciation.

    The paper focuses on word-final pre-vocalic glottal stops, so the button phenomenon (phonemenon) probably won't be explained.

    Darn, now I have to go to the next lecture...

    There is a Wikipedia article that seems quite interesting, but I don't know how viable it is to try and apply that to American English.

    Another edit:

    I quickly listened to short sequences of Ellen Muth in of "The Young Girl and the Monsoon" (1999) and though there wasn't much time, I think I heard a few glottal stops at word-final pre-vocalic position.

    April 30, 2009

  • This paper is highly intriguing. I just started reading but I have the suspicion that I might go on the answer all my questions about the American glottal stop. :-)

    April 30, 2009

  • I'm not a native speaker of course but my natural way of pronouncing "button" is to obstruct (or rather completely stop) the airflow at and around the alveolar ridge like when pronouncing /n/ from right after the /ʌ/ onwards which renders the rest of the word nasal, and I think there is also something glottal going on. When I pronounce it the way Ellen does—the Cockneyesque way—the airflow isn't obstructed on the height of the alveolar ridge until the /n/. (It is of course for the /b/ with the lips and then in the glottis.)

    There is a transcription of someone from Mississippi here, who used a lot of glottalization, too. It isn't as special as it seemed to me at first, I guess. I'll probably try and add a few glottal ts to my speech if I should happen to have mental resources to spare. ^^

    April 30, 2009

  • In General American many ts are pronounced as alveolar taps (/ɾ/) but that is not what I mean.

    I'll collect a few words as soon as I have a couple of minutes to spare. ^^

    "Button" wasn't among the words I noticed but for "button" there is a mention in the glottal stop article.

    I don't have much time right now but a few word are "thought", "doubt", "gotton" (same pattern as "button" I guess).

    Very often the ts at the end of words are missing but many of them seem elided rather than glottalized. Those three up there sounded very glottal to me though.

    And she already did that in the pilot, so she probably had the propensity before. Perhaps there are comprehensive books on American accents in one of my university's libraries.

    April 30, 2009

  • I'm just listening to the commentary voice-over of the first season of Dead Like Me and noticed that Ellen Muth who is from Connecticut from time to time uses t-glottalization! That's so amazing! At that time on the set of Dead Like Me she has been working with Callum Blue who (at least there) uses consistent t-glottalization. Also the Wikipedia article says that even "Prince Harry frequently glottals his Ts". I can absolutely understand why that's so contagious. ;-)

    By the way, yarb, Dead Like Me was shot in Vancouver, BC.

    April 30, 2009

  • Yep, I found that list yesterday. So many pretty dds – but I don't want to appear kleptomaniacal. ^^

    April 29, 2009

  • Thanks. Sounds intriguing, I can't wait to force an opportunity to use it.

    I separated the nicknames by \n instead of ,, so the authorizations for this list were mucked up for a few hours, sorry.

    April 29, 2009

  • Oh yes, I didn't consider the element of quaintitude. That's definitely a plus for hyphens, but usually (or by default) I'm rather progressively oriented. I guess that once I gained a somewhat reliable feeling that the mainstream accepted spelling of a word is, I'll probably more or less stick with the most non-mainstream one that looks acceptable (and pretty) to me. (Unless I seek to evoke certain connotations.) This might very well be influenced by how often Gene Wolfe uses it.

    Just recently I decided for myself to write email. Donald E. Knuth convinced me.

    Imagine the time when people considered writing "newfangled" "new-fangled". ^^

    April 28, 2009

  • Thanks you two.

    I added antiestablishment. I tend to prefer the version without hyphen if I can find it in one of my favorite dictionaries (or if I think it looks much prettier).

    April 28, 2009

  • I thought this /-tɹi/ was just a British thing, I'll consult Wikipedia on that tomorrow.

    Then welcome to my list, /ˌsu:.pɚ.əˈɹɒg.ə.tɹi/. :-)

    Thanks.

    Edit: I opened the list for you in case you meet any more of our little (double dactylic and inevitably sesquipedalian) friends.

    April 28, 2009

  • Hmm, it's one syllable too long and then there is also this second secondary (no pleonasm) stress.

    But it's more important for the words to be hexasyllabic I think.

    April 28, 2009

  • Her aphorisms might be pithy (hopefully the a- is not a negation), furthermore there is π in there, and thy (somewhat out of context though). Unfortunately there's no pithy without a pit one has to avoid...

    April 28, 2009

  • According to this page it's /ɑɹˈiθə/ but I want it to be /'æɹəθə/ (like /ˈægəθə/) for obvious reasons.

    Also this last name is reminiscent of many intriguing word somehow...

    April 27, 2009

  • Ok, that's a major problem.

    What about a little button then, which waits patiently somewhere around the comment box and when clicked opens a little box into which one can write the names of the people who are to be notified of ones comment (by means of a feed for example)?

    April 27, 2009

  • No more than once per post. Prolagus, plethora

    And I just did.

    April 26, 2009

  • My teacher once taught me that isization (as opposed to izization) was a Cambridge thing.

    April 22, 2009

  • Hi John.

    When someone uses my sobriquet in our IRC channel and I happen do be present at that moment, my IRC client flashes and displays the line in red. I find that pretty handy.

    Would it perhaps be possible for you to introduce a feed of the comments that contain one's own nickname, so to make it easier to address one another anywhere on the site?

    Have fun and blessed be. ;-)

    April 22, 2009

  • I'm not sure about its double-dactylity: the last syllable carries a secondary stress. Help?

    April 20, 2009

  • Ok, thanks. I made my comment more specific.

    April 16, 2009

  • Spotted in (an online version of) Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary 1913 Edition. Probably long fixed. Just thought Wordie should know about it.

    Definition: pleading equivocally?

    April 16, 2009

  • "Other people may believe what it pleases them to believe, but I will do nothing without I know the reason why and know it clearly." – Dirk Gently, "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency" by Douglas Adams

    April 13, 2009

  • Yeah, that's my Wordie PRO. :-)

    (Also see below.)

    April 12, 2009

  • Hey, congrats to 2k words!

    Happy thousand! ;-)

    April 7, 2009

  • "Mein Deutsch muss gegossen werden." or

    "Mein Deutsch muss bewässert werden."

    hf.

    April 6, 2009

  • How did "shrink" come to mean a psychiatrist?

    March 28, 2009

  • "Why do I spend time thinking about this stuff?" -- cb

    First off, I agree with what you figured out about the meanings of "hm", "hmm" and "hmmm" and hence I'm happy my fondness for that word no longer coaxes me to contribute my views.

    The importance of this topic I think lies in the interjectional character of that sound: As it has very little of this tangible semantic kind of meaning, the word has great value for pointing out how important this other layer of meaning can be. Perhaps it could be called something like "connotative", but that word I think is not as apt as I would like it to be.

    January 27, 2009

  • schnitz - imperative of schnitzen, to carve

    Enge - tightness/narrowness

    Zungen - tounges

    Huyden - probably some foreign family name I never saw before

    Spotted in The Daily Show from January 19, 2009.

    January 21, 2009

  • Oh dear, he perpetuated my choices. What if one day I should find part of what I seek today? Will you update the screenshot?

    Thanks for the clarification.

    January 20, 2009

  • Should actually be visible to anyone...

    January 20, 2009

  • Great, someone noticed my Wordie PRO profile. I'm using the Web Developer extension to alter the HTML in such away that the menu provides the desired options. Then all I have to do is submit it. Ajax channels the data to the server where it isn't rechecked upon arrival.

    Have fun.

    January 20, 2009

  • Thanks a lot. I must definitely peruse that wikipedia article about the subjunctive mood again. :-)

    Not only this section.

    January 19, 2009

  • "I come out here every night and start talking as if I know things." -- Stephen Colbert

    Can someone tell me when/why it is/isn't know respectively knew in this kind of construction? I'm just watching a few procrastinated Colbert Report episodes and this sentence puzzles me... Thanks.

    January 18, 2009

  • Who pronounces me /mei/?

    If anyone has a clue, please post. I'm really curious.

    (I just heard it in a song but that was just so it rhymes with away...)

    January 8, 2009

  • If you create something that is entirely new to you, could that not be called inventing even if—unbeknownst to you—someone else invented it already?

    Well, I didn't invent ridonkulous and nor do I claim to have done any such thing, which debunks that theory anyway.

    January 6, 2009

  • "I don't want any trouble. I just wanna be alone and quiet in a room with a chair and a fireplace and a tea cozy. I don't even know what a tea cozy is, but I want one." – Buffy, BtVS

    January 5, 2009

  • Not EVER to be confused with "Auster", the German word for oyster! ;-)

    January 4, 2009

  • Thx. :-)

    January 4, 2009

  • Sure.

    But it wouldn't be bases solely on your opinion; before I knew how huge the list would (still) be, I planned it just as a temporary container destined to be tuned into a little list in the comma separated sense inside the Grandiloquent Dictionary list's description. I thought there might be ten or twenty errors to be found or something like that. In order to retain these comments it would also be possible to recycle this list for something entirely different.

    January 4, 2009

  • As reply to your comment on my Gene Wolfe list:

    Thanks, I like that concept. Only I think it comes pretty close to how I've decided the words to enter my list. Words I didn't know were in immediately because they were interesting just for their novelty. Then there are those words, which I would have known if they had been employed somewhat differently. In some cases I neglected to copy out the context so that their interesting senses are then lost on me after a few weeks. But there are also words like veil which I knew and which are perfectly commonplace but which in that context sounded so gentle and light that I needed to note it down as well. I don't know if that is an intrinsic property of that word and I'm moreover entirely unsure whether or not anyone else would find that remarkable, but in that situation it forced me to ameliorate my Wordie sheet with it. Later, when I enter the words into Wordie, it's a rather mechanic process where I'm so overwhelmed by the masses of words I wrote down that I seldom rethink my selections.

    Yet with Gene Wolfe who creates his own recondite neologisms by building upon ancient, foreign, and ancient and foreign words it would also be of interest to have list exclusively of words of his own creation. It's one of my plans for that list to draw some kind of distinction there, so I could move all other words to my Utilitarian lists for example. Perhaps I'll write a script for that for I don't have much time parallel to studying...

    January 4, 2009

  • I'd be the last one to disqualify any combination of letters as not "being a word" just on the basis that it's not in this or that dictionary. One or two years ago I've been introduced to the world of logophilia by blogs, articles and videos by/of Erin McKean and obviously through the works of Gene Wolfe, so I abandoned the notion of a dictionary being some sort of word police even before it had any chance of manifesting itself. The whole purpose of this list was that at some point mollusque informed me that this Grandiloquent Dictionary contained quite a lot of errors (referring to stuff like -phillia). Being inclined towards perfectionism this bugged be, so I had to figure of a way to detect those errors. Only 2700 words are a bit much for me to look though by hand so I decided to write a program that could screen out all words which are guaranteed to be correct. My hope was to be left with a list of at most one hundred words, which would then be rather easy to look through manually. Unfortunately it didn't work out like that, so I more or less abandoned the project.

    After a few months I let a script search through all the word pages looking for the tag "misspelling". Those are the words listed in the description of the other list.

    Since this automated dictionary search failed to provide my with an agreeably shrunken number of words, I always planned on deleting this list for its utter uselessness. I didn't realize that it could be interpreted as sacrilege upon our sacred art of neologation (or the like). Even more reason to perform this sort of ablution on my lists list...

    Edit: Until I decide what to do with this list, I've slightly changed the description up there. Could someone please have a quick look at the grammar? Some parts feel rather ambiguous...

    January 4, 2009

  • Thank you. And I've taken the liberty of replying on my Gene Wolfe list. :-)

    January 4, 2009

  • Thanks, and also for my profile comment.

    Yes, I'm to some degree dependent on input from you guys as it is rather hard for me to differentiate between those words which are new only to me and such which might also be a novelty to native speakers. In some cases—for example proper—I've added the corresponding citation to the word page. In some cases I probably neglected to do that though it would have been necessary, but in many cases—apron being one of them I think—I simply didn't know the word at that time and copied it onto one of my special Wordie sheets.

    So thanks a lot for your words, I'll process them immediately. :-)

    January 4, 2009

  • Thanks, great you noticed! Now, I can finally add some more words. ;-)

    January 3, 2009

  • The antepenultimate of the Time Lords.

    (Let this be the last one, please. ^^)

    January 3, 2009

  • "someone who earn wages in return for their labor":

    Is someone plural, or earn subjunctive and their synonym for his/her? The latter version I wouldn't understand really... Help.

    January 3, 2009

  • The penultimate of the Time Lords.

    January 3, 2009

  • Wow, thanks for those words. Especially homoseme seem to be a rare term.

    I was merely in need of some word for referring to the non-silent "e"s in our participial adjectives or the words themselves. Like Hofstadter when he coined Capitalized Essences for such things as the Purpose of Life or often God.

    January 2, 2009

  • "... for Jesus said: Blessed are the poor inspirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. ..." -- Matthew 5:3-10

    It doesn't look like a verb here but even OED only lists "inspirit, v."

    January 2, 2009

  • Great article!

    The definition of heteronyms is a bit wide though. Perhaps it's best to describe them as rolig et al. did, or can someone coin a witty madeuponym ("neologism" is aged; 237 years according to the OED) for such participial adjectives? ^^

    January 1, 2009

  • Thank you!

    I'm probably most interested in a term for those adjectives such as learned or blessed you mentioned. Thanks again.

    January 1, 2009

  • Synonym for now coined by Alexander Haig.

    (Found in On Writing Well by William Zinsser.)

    January 1, 2009

  • Hi, I got the following question:

    In some texts there are words in the past tense whose "e"s in their "-ed"s are supposed to be pronounced. Often the "e"s which aren't are apostrophed out:

    "...

    Armed at point exactly, cap-à-pie,

    Appears before them, and with solemn march

    Goes slow and stately by them. Thrice he walk'd

    By their oppress'd and fear-surprised eyes,

    Within his truncheon's length; whilst they, distill'd

    Almost to jelly with the act of fear,

    Stand dumb and speak not to him. This to me

    ..." -- Horatio, Hamlet, Shakespeare

    But—save for the meter perhaps—is there any other rule when to pronounce them and when not?

    And what is that called, so I can also google it?

    Thanks in advance!

    January 1, 2009

  • Here it's damn cold and kind of loud outside at the moment (or "at this juncture of maturization"). To start the new year with a positive signal concerning the employment situation I like to call them hirecrackers, though I've only employed two of them this time. Oh, and 2009 has the digit sum 11 and so has my nickname. (Well, if you add the values of the letters according to the alphabet and then calculate the digit sum.)

    Happy New Year then!

    January 1, 2009

  • Hmm, torsion is torsion, I can't take credit for that one, but your right of course, what I meant was torque.

    January 1, 2009

  • Exactly, me too. What're we gonna do?

    January 1, 2009

  • There, there.

    He bestowed you with a comment just about a month ago; perhaps he'll return...

    January 1, 2009

  • You also listed inertial damper. But do they actually say inertial dampeners in Star Trek? That's more like when Janeway spills her tepid coffee on her elaborately drawn Minkowski diagrams... ^^

    (Yet I found this Stargate article.)

    December 31, 2008

  • Yep. /ˈbeɪθɒs, -θɔs, -θoʊs/

    December 31, 2008

  • "I never should have used the word bathos"

    December 31, 2008

  • But only three of the 12-14 English vowel sounds.

    December 30, 2008

  • Hi John.

    When displaying "Versicherungsgekkokotzenbedürfnis" on the front page, wordie truncates the word in the middle of the two byte German umlaut "ü", so only the 0xC3 was shown which of course can't be shown.

    Something like this might help.

    December 30, 2008

  • Just added the appropriate tag to were.

    December 30, 2008

  • I'd call it "Versicherungsgeckokotzbedürfnis", but in both cases it might also be understood as the urge to throw up this lizardy creature instead of throwing up due to it.

    "versicherungsgeckoinduzierter Brechreiz" would be less ambiguous, sadly it's two-wordy. ;-)

    December 30, 2008

  • Often I simultaneously preworry that I'm not worrying enough about the worrisome, and that I'm worrying too much and thus jamming the unworrying process, without the two preworries annihilating each other (or themselves?).

    But I don't recommend that approach.

    December 30, 2008

  • ¡lol!

    December 30, 2008

  • The Spanner (the German term, hence the capitalization) we use to put torsion on the rotator/plug of a lock when picking it is called tension wrench. (I'm a lockpicker.)

    December 30, 2008

  • "= vicinal" -- OED

    December 29, 2008

  • "Resembling a manatee; related to the manatees." -- OED

    December 29, 2008

  • Basically with that symbol in the lower right corner of the window.

    December 29, 2008

  • NoScript will probably do the trick; an invaluable add-on in many regards.

    (Depends on the site though I guess.)

    December 28, 2008

  • Lunke, a madeupical German term for the separator thingy you put on the conveyor belt at the counter in a supermarket. My favorite is Kundenknüppel, tough (roughly translated “customer baton”).

    December 28, 2008

  • Perhaps someone can help me, I can't induce what this game is about...

    December 28, 2008

  • chicken

    December 28, 2008

  • Contributing my first random association.

    December 28, 2008

  • "Outstanding, prominent." -- OED

    Thanks.

    December 27, 2008

  • American military slang term for a series of under-financed and largely inconclusive recon missions in Japan during World War II.

    December 27, 2008

  • Ack, will I always have to keep learning? Won't I ever experience a sense of lasting satisfaction? Ok, just kidding, I guess. Kaufman was interviewed on The Colbert Report, only it seems the full episode has become rather unavailable at my destination for Colbert Nation procrastination...

    December 27, 2008

  • Complementary to that:

    "And this too shall pass away."

    I read this in Harold & Maude but it seems it has been used by several famous persons.

    December 27, 2008

  • Dear lyrical self,

    I'm sorry I can't provide solutions to your predicaments...

    You might want to try Explosions in the Sky, tough. Those guys have the audacity to aver that Earth Is Not a Cold Dead Place and they prove it by means of their music. Unfortunately First Breath After Coma is not streamable. I can't speak from experience but rumor has it that within a decade or two hormonal processes will change to such a degree that you won't be able to feel the exact way you do now, so you might want to savor those emotions; they'll indubitably constitute an invaluable experience.

    Oh, and have fun.

    Merry Christmas.

    December 26, 2008

  • ...

    As conspiracies unwind

    Will you slam shut

    Or free your mind

    Or stay hypnotised

    When the Zetas fill the skies

    Will our leaders tell us why

    ...

    -- Muse, Exo-Politics

    Just a random association.

    December 26, 2008

  • See amn't.

    December 26, 2008

  • Yep, I once memorized that letter-number relation; very useful.

    December 26, 2008

  • @ 27: Or 9?

    December 26, 2008

  • Live long and prosper!

    December 26, 2008

  • My random word. How apt. :-)

    (I mean with Christmas and all.)

    December 25, 2008

  • Oh, and in German of course: Frohe Weihnachten /ˌfro�?ə ˈvaɪ̯naxtn̩/

    December 25, 2008

  • In Lojban it's probably something close to:

    ko zanlifri le xisyjbe nunsalci

    At least according to this discussion.

    December 25, 2008

  • Moving em masse: seconded.

    In Firefox there are several ways to open a link in a new tab for example Ctrl+Click, both mouse buttons, middle button and probably some more.

    About private messaging: I'm not sure I understand why it would be such a wordoom, just thought it would be a nice feature... Thank Goddess I'm not the one who has to decide such things in the end. ^^

    Would private lists be a similar sacrilege?

    December 25, 2008

  • That's UTC-7 I guess.

    I hope the double post was unintended so I don't bring harm to an artistic impression when I remove one... ^^

    Merry Christmas.

    December 24, 2008

  • xkcd: That site offers but a small minority of comics that are less than hilarious to me. :-)

    cheat sheet: It's not really exhaustive.

    December 24, 2008

  • Hey, I just noticed you are Wordee no. 10,000!

    Congratulations!

    December 24, 2008

  • Actually the Wordee with the number 10,000 is wenya. This discrepancy can most likely be attributed to Wordees who deleted their accounts, I guess.

    December 24, 2008

  • viceral, gut and this video are tightly intertwined in my mind.

    December 24, 2008

  • Hmm... ;-)

    December 24, 2008

  • Does someone wont to nominate her (this word) for woty08?

    I want to stick with ataraxia (for now)...

    December 24, 2008

  • Stylish:

    When I had my XGA screen I found the font to be much too big, for it's set in pixel an absolute value. Now I have a WXGA+ display, and the font would still be much to big if I didn't use Stylish. Simple zooming doesn't suffice as some parts would actually become too small. Furthermore I can reduce the space between the words on lists; looks much better that way.

    This is my css code.

    December 24, 2008

  • How cute!

    December 24, 2008

  • I'm currently using these:

    Adblock Plus

    NoScript

    oldbar

    Redirector (for appending "&fmt=18" to Youtube URLs)

    Stylish (to make Wordie and dictionary.com look better)

    Web Developer

    WikiLook

    Your turn.

    December 23, 2008

  • Not to be confused with �?棋.

    December 23, 2008

  • Nothing like youtube comments. :-)

    December 23, 2008

  • <a href="http://www.librarything.com/work/83734/book/20334358">Link-blah-foobar</a> should look like this: Link-blah-foobar

    And on a(n) (un)realated note: I love fiction for I eschew real-life. Ok, that was cynical, I don't mean it like that, just kidding; please imagine many sortas, kindas and ;-)s inserted into that sentence.

    December 23, 2008

  • Being rushed I'm afraid this choice might be subject to alterations, yet for now my nominee is ataraxia.

    December 23, 2008

  • My computer answers when I call it by its name:

    telofy@reverie:~$ ping reverie

    PING reverie (127.0.1.1) 56(84) bytes of data.

    64 bytes from reverie (127.0.1.1): icmp_seq=1 ttl=64 time=0.047 ms

    December 23, 2008

  • Hi John.

    About a year ago you asked whether or not to equip Wordie with a private messaging system. Personally I'm in favor of such an enhancement and I'm unable to infer a nay from the replies you got back then, so is something of that sort coming up?

    December 23, 2008

  • @ VanishedOne: egregious

    December 23, 2008

  • The name I gave my computer.

    December 23, 2008

  • Wow, other people need drugs to think of such things as you construct here; and I guess I would need some to fathom them (antecedent at your discretion). It's always thrilling when I can nevertheless make sense of things here often remind me of thoughts I once had yet still can't quite remember. Perhaps it's all due to change.

    As I don't know your timezone, sleep well, whenever.

    December 22, 2008

  • Depends on the seating furniture.

    I've a wicker chair here that is really comfy. Currently I'm sitting on a rather ordinary desk chair though.

    December 22, 2008

  • A useful little tuning program which is likely to be already included in most distribution's repositories.

    Something entirely different, more from my area of study: The Turing Machine.

    Edit: Well, not entirely. And sorry for playing the Oedipus (Thou art the informal notion of effective method in logic and mathematics).

    December 21, 2008

  • In Pushing Daisies I came upon the cute pronunciation /ikw'ɪli/. :-)

    December 21, 2008

  • And for me most of you guys and she-guys have unfavorable timezones...

    December 19, 2008

  • A friend has pointed out a problem with this list. There is a song called 99 Bottles of Beer which could easily be exploited to add any number of prime numbers to this list as there is a version of this song which is based upon an ever increasing sequence of numbers. That could definitely spoil th fun...

    Perhaps you should restrict this list to prime numbers in songs with static lyrics or something such as that.

    Good luck.

    December 19, 2008

  • @Prolagus-Paradox: Kudos, wonderful. :-)

    December 18, 2008

  • An exceedingly flauschig and functional programming language.

    December 17, 2008

  • An adjective (and now also adverb) of paramount importance to the German language.

    December 17, 2008

  • to amooth: to become increasingly exhausted and weary due to hot and humid weather.

    to amooth s.o.: torture and interrogation method consisting of locking the subject up in a sauna for an extended period of time.

    December 17, 2008

  • Ok, here comes my version, only with reversed causality:

    Watchan is a program designed to watch 4chan (and other imageboards but I think they aren't yet included in the configuration) and the next sentence is false. The previous sentence is true so I haven't said anything and thus didn't break rules 1 and 2, right? Hmm, I think I have to note this paradox down in formalized notation to understand what I've just asserted... ^^

    Edit: Ok, I still don't fathom it.

    December 17, 2008

  • Hey, thanks, it's the name I gave a program of mine, but I won't spoil the game by elaborating on the origin of the term. ^^

    (Unless someone wants me to.)

    It has the tendency to crash after some time for the threads are not properly synchronized, but currently I don't have the time and motivation to continue that project...

    December 17, 2008

  • As a child I had a(n) (of course unused) toilet brush among my favorite cuddly toys.

    December 16, 2008

  • · — — — — — · — · — · · · · ·

    or

    �? ▬ ▬ ▬ ▬ ▬ �? ▬ �? ▬ �? �? �? �? �?

    I like the small dots & dashes more for they are more congruous to my shy disposition...

    December 16, 2008

  • "Ignorance is bliss." -- Cypher, Matrix

    December 16, 2008

  • syn: verbolatry

    December 16, 2008

  • You can't negate implications like that. ^^

    That "ciao" is "a statement acknowledging something or someone" does not necessarily mean that any statement acknowledging something or someone is a ciao. Only for bijective relations both such statements would be true, respectively, it would be a bijective relation if both statements were true.

    Ciao.

    December 16, 2008

  • Congrats!

    (From another 08er ^^)

    December 15, 2008

  • I think that perhaps bneenan84 is distinguishing between an objective and a subjective reality, so that when (s)he says "this website" (s)he's acknowledging its existence within this subjective reality while its existence in the objective reality remains doubtful. "I believe this website does not exist" would then either mean that the objective existence of a subjectively perceived website is doubted or simply that (s)he would believe "such a website" to be inexistent within whichever reality, referring to some kind of perhaps unlikely notion.

    Please excuse possible inaccuracies, I'm currently in a lecture.

    December 15, 2008

  • That's just "A live-editing content system backed by a Git repository", so nothing bad at all.

    December 15, 2008

  • So mermaids are denizens, right? ;-)

    December 14, 2008

  • The expression found me while I was watching The Big Bang Theory, but the writers intended it to be obscure:

    "Stay low. Bear left. Now keep true."

    "What?"

    "It means 'go straight'."

    "Can't you just say 'go straight'..."

    "You don't say 'go straight' when you give bearings, you say 'keep true'."

    Concerning "thesaurus": At first I couldn't decide between "to thesaurus" and "to thesaurus up", but in the end I concluded that the latter sounds to deliberately run-of-the-mill.

    And thanks for the quotes.

    November 23, 2008

  • Empirical: Great, and even one of the words I didn't thesaurus.

    I can't imagine how I survived the years before I knew "empirical" resp. "empirisch". ^^

    Under "true", there are a few promising entries in a couple of dictionaries I just checked (I have to connect to a VPN to access the OED):

    "Determined with reference to the earth's axis, not the magnetic poles: true north." -- Heritage

    "i. Of bearings: measured relative to true North." -- OED

    And Heritage also avers that "true" and "tree" are related, and with the exception of the crooked and the gnarled ones, those are quite straight as well. ;-)

    November 23, 2008

  • I'm not sure I know what you mean by idyllic hope but it sounds like something that would soon succumb to subfusc and probably ungrounded worries and anxieties accompanied by selectively over-interpreted empirical data. At least it's not always that way, so I always have to consoling knowledge that it is mainly just my subconscious filtering my perception in a somewhat unpropitious (inauspicious, unfavorable) way...

    How is self-trust uncomplicated to discuss? ^^

    November 23, 2008

  • I hope you mean Schiller. Of course I'm not to doubt that it is the zenith of aptness.

    I was only wondering about my "bid ... welcome" sentence. I never used that before for I just discovered that bid bit on dict.cc.

    On a different note, I still regard my self as quite young, yet I worry that with time my hopes and dreams will crumble down to a desperate heap of resignation. The last time a few days ago, while being absent-minded during a lecture...

    November 23, 2008

  • I'm honoured by your considerateness, quoting such a significant poet from my native country and I'm thus trying to convey my gratitude by employing your British orthography. ;-)

    It seems you are on Wordie for about a week now, so let me bid you slightly delayed welcome.

    (Strange construction... Does that work?)

    November 23, 2008

  • This is a picture from the opening sequence of The Big Bang Theory.

    Is there a name for this particular housing scheme? I keep spotting such configurations on google maps.

    November 23, 2008

  • I heard that "keep true" means as much as "go straight" when giving directions. Can anyone confirm that or back it up with a dictionary entry or something? Thanks.

    November 23, 2008

  • Hence erinaceous.

    November 20, 2008

  • "t" is the twentieth letter.

    November 20, 2008

  • /mɔθθə/ or /mɔθðə/?

    Or still differently?

    In German it's "Motte", simply without the "h"s.

    November 17, 2008

  • I've started evaluating the chat log data. The current release can be found here: http://yu-shin.de/foo/evaluation.pdf

    As stated in the document, newer versions will probably just overwrite the document (for reasons of laziness). Be warned.

    And enjoy your reduplicated circumflexes.

    November 7, 2008

  • I seldom see ^_^, though I think it isn't uncommon either. But o_O and ^_^, it seems to me, represent two distinctly different emotions...

    I'm currently downloading gigabytes of chat logs, so I can perhaps post some hard facts here by tomorrow. :-)

    November 7, 2008

  • I usually interpreted them as raised eyebrows. There is a short mention on wikipedia. Perhaps I should statistically analyze chat logs. Later...

    Sleep well, whenever that will be in your timezone.

    November 6, 2008

  • Hello World.

    I've had several discussions with friends about "^^". The point at issue is whether or not it ought to be separated from the text by a whitespace. Here some examples:

    "It's over nine thousand!^^"

    "It's over nine thousand! ^^"

    Perhaps a special whitespace like a thin space would be appropriate.

    Intuitively I used the space at first, but then I observed many other people omitting it and asked them which usage they deem correct. Until recently the outcome of my informal survey remained largely to the disfavor of the whitespace, but now I notice an increasing number of instances of deliberate use of the separating space.

    Smilies are usually separated from the text, while punctuation marks are not. Personally I'm inclined to assign "^^" to the category of smilies, hence my initial use of whitespaces, but lacking solid arguments for my position I yielded to the seeming majority who omitted them.

    Now I don't know anymore what to do or believe, please help!

    Thanks in advance.

    November 6, 2008

  • A problem is also that you might be successful: that can be pretty scary.

    November 5, 2008

  • They usually have a decent virus and spyware collection I guess. Unless they run Linux. But to configure this socks proxy you only need the browser and the OpenSSH client.

    I found a little description here.

    November 4, 2008

  • Right, but often they are neither encrypted nor trusted—they can read your entire traffic if they wont.

    Edit: Look what I found: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/each other :-)

    November 4, 2008

  • German for "to decant".

    November 4, 2008

  • Googling for "brennah kelsey taylor bonnie trevor lauren charlie" you get links to the Atholton High School. Or did they already mention the name of their school?

    November 4, 2008

  • About the censoring at school: Simply run a ssh-server at home and then, when you are at school, just configure your browser to use it as a socks proxy. Not only will the censoring be ineffective, your connection will even be encrypted. In case you have a dynamic IP, simply use dyndns.com. That's how we did it back then in the good old days. Good luck.

    November 4, 2008

  • Now that the election is nearly over, could you also optimize the css in a way that it looks decent on different resolutions? On xga the font is huge hence I've changed quite a lot with stylish. Thanks!

    November 4, 2008

  • Great to hear someone is enjoying my lists. :-)

    Good luck listing.

    October 29, 2008

  • Well, I know Colbert Report, yet I've no clue for what kind of German exam this would be useful. Anyway, when you know the other one really good, like a good friend or something, or when he/she is a child, you would say "Wieso hasst du Freiheit?" or "Warum hasst du Freiheit?", when you are taking to someone in any more formal context, the "du" is to be replaced by "Sie".

    Perhaps someone can add the IPA pronunciation, I'm not yet fit in writing IPA.

    Have fun.

    October 28, 2008

  • Hi, to screen my Grandiloquent Dictionary list for misspellings I wrote a script that searches each word's page for "misspell". When running the word through OED I had to decide whether or not I wanted to count these alternative spellings as misspelling. I decided in favor of that approach for in the OED page of these words, they are indicated thus: "query_type=misspelling". So I don't necessarily see misspelling and variant spelling as contradictory. What do you think?

    October 27, 2008

  • slitch:

    = sleech

    sleech:

    1. Mud deposited by the sea or a river; soil composed of this.

    2. A stretch of mud on a shore. Hence sleechy a., slimy, muddy.

    -- OED

    October 27, 2008

  • See also lych gate.

    October 27, 2008

  • Misspelling/Variant of ballycater.

    October 21, 2008

  • Variant of flamfew.

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of huckster.

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of huddroun.

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of nerk, according to OED.

    (Nerk: "A foolish, objectionable, or insignificant person." -- OED)

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of ollendorffian.

    ("Heinrich Gottfried Ollendorff (1803-65), German educator and grammarian" -- OED)

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of onymancy.

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of orchotomy.

    October 21, 2008

  • Misspelling of psychopannychist.

    October 21, 2008

  • "Breakfast" - OED

    (pronunciation?)

    October 21, 2008

  • "To kiss affectionately. Hence deosculation, kissing." - OED

    October 21, 2008

  • OED lists these two alternative/non-standard spellings: clapperdogen, clapperdogeon.

    "clapperdrudgeon" is not in the index.

    October 21, 2008

  • Anyone read Illuminatus!?

    October 20, 2008

  • My bootloader. :-)

    October 19, 2008

  • Searching for *age in the online OED yields 2855 results.^^

    October 16, 2008

  • Bodhi, serendipity is our Lucksmith.

    October 13, 2008

  • "It the present perfect always implies a strong connexion with the present and is chiefly used in conversations, letters, newspapers, and wireless reports." -- Thomson & Martinet, A Practical English Grammar (fifth impression, 1972)

    See also Oxford comma.

    October 8, 2008

  • "Gunnie had been loyal to me and to Urth, not to her comrades; and perhaps we are unable to advance some paragon of loyalty to an apothegm only because loyalty (in the final analysis) is choice." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 7, 2008

  • I put html comment signs around the list name. It's just a temporary collection no one should be irritated by scrolling my lists. Oh, right, we need private lists. :-)

    (And perhaps there should be a bit tighter restrictions for using html.)

    October 6, 2008

  • Could someone enlighten me as to whether or not sine in the Latin sense of "without" is also pronounced /saɪn/? Thanks.

    Edit: I hope the program is right: http://www.dict.cc/?s=sine qua non

    I now have access to the online OED, I'm so ecstatic!

    OED says: /'saɪnɪ/ or /'sɪneɪ/

    October 6, 2008

  • "I said, 'Your friend's neck has been broken.'

    He answered, 'You should know, vates.'

    'I broke it, then. I thought so.'"

    -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 6, 2008

  • “He burned the gnarled old apples and mulberries in his own fireplaces, for wood was dear;”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 6, 2008

  • Sorry, mystes seems to be already singular.

    October 3, 2008

  • OED says: "One initiated into mysteries."

    It seems to be singular; I guess myste is wrong then, I'll delete it from my list.

    October 3, 2008

  • Somewhere in that season I stopped watching X-Files. Yet Cerulean Blue stays burned into my brain.^^

    October 3, 2008

  • A∴A∴

    Somehow reminiscent of Illuminatus!... :-)

    October 3, 2008

  • I guess (ought I put some word here?) meeting them personally they'd turn out completely nice dudes (or she-dudes). Oh well, this world is quite confusing.^^

    October 3, 2008

  • I use to enjoy reading through all those wonderful wikipedia articles about mental disorders. It's always soothing to know there are names for my problems. ;-)

    October 3, 2008

  • Seconded. Whedon for president (or Bundeskanzler)!

    But are dialogs usually that witty and snappy in Californian High School libraries and Magick Shops? Scares me... Our colder weather must render us totally dull around here then.

    October 3, 2008

  • @yarb: dictionary.com concurs.

    October 2, 2008

  • Yes, thanks, I like it, too, but as long as I'm not suddenly turned into a woman, I don't actually need the term homosexual that frequently. Besides, also in informal German speech it would sound spicy I think.^^

    October 2, 2008

  • A Firefox extension I've found to be exceedingly useful:

    WikiLook

    Have fun!

    October 2, 2008

  • I wonder, when a native speaker hears the word queer in whatever context, is the first association homosexual or is the order really more like the one on dictionary.com (with homosexual in fifth place)?

    October 2, 2008

  • I know the term from Gödel, Escher, Bach. But what's heterological doing here? (rofl)

    October 2, 2008

  • @plethora & chained_bear: Yes, I totally agree. I really like German, yet there are various aspects that cause me to love English. Most of them are certainly utterly unconscious, a few others I think I have identified: In English there are so many words. The OED contains about 600,000 words, while the Duden holds about 130,000 to 145,000 words including common examples of those German compound nouns, by the help of which you can theoretically build infinitely many "correct" words. Of course there are also quite a lot foreign words, but while the wikipedia article on the English language says "the excessive use of Latinate words is considered at times to be either pretentious or an attempt to obfuscate an issue." in German it suffices to use just one of those foreign words and 80% of the population will be utterly discombobulated, will think you an arrogant pretentious spado (nothing against spados, it's a word Gene Wolfe used so I had to recycle it) and henceforth eschew you. With the remaining 20% it's real fun. Sometimes I could talk German with a friend of mine and in the course of this we used so many foreign and old words that save for us no one around us understood what we were talking about. In English even the most synonymous synonyms, of which there is such a variety, have each distinctly different connotations. I imagine, with what precision I could limn my thoughts once I acquired the necessary expertise. Also I yearn to read (and understand to some degree^^) works by Shakespeare and Joyce. Much similarly there is this fluency: I've read German texts by Novalis, which are gorgeous and convey a sense of flow that is marvelous, but almost anything else I've read and I'm reading sounds rather harsh and angular... In English it's but onerous for me to come about some text whose fluency, accuracy and elegance is such that—in a very positive sense—it gave me the creeps (looking for a better depiction).

    Also there seems to be a much greater potential for puns in English than in German (very important point for me). And last but not, well, last of course it is much easier to learn more. In German I have to really strain all my serendipity to come across a new word that is not too specific as to be used in some situation and anyway, almost no one will understand me (ok, that's not the point). In English on the contrary I usually just have to visit a random website to find a few useful words I didn't know. That's much more convenient. Oh, and the dubbers always have so discongruous voices and the lips move all differently. And English slang tends to sound prettier I think.^^

    Hmpf, now I feel bad for all the things I haven't listed...

    Edit: Oh, and wikipedia says: "(...) there is no Academy to define officially accepted words and spellings." which in my view preserves a sense of purity. While within axiomatic systems or quasi-axiomatic ones there is this mathematical and logical purity which is maximized by beautiful precise unambiguous univocal definite definitions, language being a so diametrically opposite and complementary concept seems only to be harmed by such endeavors...

    October 2, 2008

  • See also complementarity.com. Yet it's still mostly in German.

    October 2, 2008

  • I've got a whole book exclusively about the relative pronoun (in Latin)! *boast* ^^

    October 2, 2008

  • About the sorting: Whenever the list owner selects one sort of sort, it could be saved as the default sort of the list—for him and for everyone else.

    Furthermore: Isn't there a way to achieve this "Move" and "Delete" with Ajax, so the page needn't be reloaded? When I go through my lists to move or delete specific words, I'm always quite lost when the page reloads and I have no clue where I was.

    October 2, 2008

  • "Some people juggle geese!" -- Wash, Firefly

    October 1, 2008

  • "As though an amschaspand had touched them with his radiant wand, the fog swirled and parted to let a beam of green moonlight fall." -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "His jaws were as big as an arctother's and his canines as long

    as my index finger (...)" -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    "The claws of an arctother had been shaped from his fingers (...)" -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "(...) and the great families—then as now—preferred to inter their long-limbed dead in vaults on their own estates. But the armigers and optimates of the city favored the highest slopes, near the Citadel wall;" -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • In Gene Wolfe's New Sun novels: An animal with prominent eyes that eats humans inheriting (parts of) their personalities and can then speak with their voices.

    October 1, 2008

  • "They were guarded by dimarchi, hard-bitten troopers in armor that looked

    as if it had been made for use and used." -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "Many abuattes roamed the gardens of the House Absolute, and because the lower servants (ditchers, porters, and the like) occasionally trapped them for the pot, they were wary of men. I often watched and envied them as they ran up some trunk without falling—and, indeed, seemingly without knowledge of the aching hunger of Urth at all." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "I would have laughed at those windows, if I had not been laughing at myself already so that I would not weep. These Hierogrammates who ruled the universe and what lay beyond had not merely mistaken another for me, but now sought to remind me, who could forget nothing, of the scenes of my life; and did so (so it seemed to me) less skillfully than my own memories could have. For though every detail was present, there was something subtly mistaken about each view." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "Not the monkeys, since the monkeys are there still. Perhaps something like the zoanthropes, though smaller. The zoanthropes always make for the mountains, I've noticed, and they climb trees in the high jungle there." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "Or maybe a sailor will fight with an officer and get written up for punishment. Then he'll go off and join the jibers. We call them that because it's what you say a boat does when she makes a turn you don't want—she jibes." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    The space ship is so vast and ancient that various completely independent cultures have formed, plus sub-cultures, in this case the utterly undergroundy jibers.

    October 1, 2008

  • "The hetrochthnous worlds must by this time have reshaped humanity to conform to their own spheres." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    Probably derived from heterochthonous. Link.

    October 1, 2008

  • “He seated himself on the floor at my feet, not cross-legged (as I would have sat in his place) but squatting in a way that reminded me at first of a dog, then of an atrox or some other great cat.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “… there stood the Autarch Severian, … the bacculus of power in his hand.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "(...) and I had reached the moment when Father Inire and I had embraced, and I had mounted the pont to the ship of the Hierodules, which was to take me to this ship, the ship of the Hierogrammate, the ship of Tzadkiel, though I did not know it." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "The mace head was a gear wheel; it struck him where the shoulder joins the neck, with every ounce of strength I possessed behind it.

    I might as effectively have clubbed an arsinoither. Still conscious and still strong, he struck me as that animal strikes a dire-wolf. The mace flew from my hands, and his weight crushed the breath from my body." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    (Don't worry; despite everything that passage is going to be all happy endingy.)

    October 1, 2008

  • "Looking past my guide, I saw something leap into view, hurl a spinning, many-pointed knife, and spring at us with the heavy-shouldered bounds of a thylacosmil." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “A bolt of flame from some contus or war spear roared like a furnace, splashing blue fire across the bulkhead in back of me, …” —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “… or the lucivee with which Agia had torn my cheek, …”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    A (usually lethal) weapon, which can be held and hidden in one hand.

    October 1, 2008

  • “When Jonas and I rode to the House Absolute, we were attacked by Hethor’s notules, mirror-fetched creatures that fly like so many scraps of scorched parchment up a chimney, but for all their insubstantiality can kill.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "A flier like a great locust thrummed overhead; I watched it until it was out of sight, feeling the ghost of the strange wind blown from the pentadactyls that had attacked our cavalry at Orithyia." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "(...) and I was able for the first time to see the full face of their prisoner too. (...) I knew my own reflected my fear, and felt much as I had when the Ascian pentadactyls had whirled over Guasacht's schiavoni." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "Most had now folded their hearts in the bowers of their petals, and only a pale moonvine blossomed, though there was no moon." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "But yes, imagine that we desire to play shah mat upon a board whose squares are rafts on that sea. We move, yet even as we move the rafts stir and slip into some new combination; and to move, we must paddle from one raft to the next, which takes so long." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "He had been an aquastor, like those who had fought for me in Yesod, created from my mind; thus he had believed, as I had, that the undine had saved me because I would be a torturer and an Autarch." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “I had been brutal enough with the khaibit Thecla of the House Azure, then as mild and clumsy as any untouched boy with the real Thecla in her cell; …”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “Who’ll take you, Herena? Is your village raided by cultellarii?”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • In Gene Wolfe's New Sun novels: The name of the planet earth in the far future (at the time our sun's life reaches its end).

    October 1, 2008

  • “The crowd parted as waves separate for the terrible jaws of a kronosaur, and Ceryx advanced through it.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "Os was already far behind us, and would have been out of sight had not the atmosphere been as clear as hyalite." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “The autochthons say that their cattle can speak but do not, knowing that to speak is to call up demons, all our words being only curses in the tongue of the empyrean.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • See sarcin.

    October 1, 2008

  • See sarcin.

    October 1, 2008

  • "The supplies he was giving us were in long sarcins of about the bigness of a demicannon's barrel lashed to the base of the bonaventure." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • "For a time the apostis glowed like a forge; gradually it dimmed and went out, and our ship resumed a more conventional position, (...)" -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • “There was only the azure of her seas, glimpsed through the rents in her surging clouds, and occasionally a flash of land, brown or green.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    October 1, 2008

  • I'm afraid there must be a bug in "always be right"...

    September 30, 2008

  • So it's actually a week now. Shiver me timbers!

    I would have liked to answer on your individual profile pages, but that would have been bound to ensue redundancy.

    Most of these 3333+ words stem from the Grandiloquent Dictionary and weren't copied by hand. There is also a pretty little collection of quick-and-dirty python scripts I wrote, which are assisting me. ^^

    Sleeping indeed becomes an issue btw. Since you pay for Wordie PRO per year and not per page traffic, it would be utter squander.

    Thanks for the motivation!

    September 30, 2008

  • “You are the New Sun. You will be returned to your Urth, and the White Fountain will go with you. The death agonies of the world you know will be offered to the Increate. And they will be indescribable—continents will founder, as has been said. Much that is beautiful will perish, and with it most of your race; but your home will be reborn.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    September 30, 2008

  • /ˈgreɪdɪn; Fr. graˈdɛ̃/

    1. one of a series of steps or seats raised one above another.

    2. Ecclesiastical. a shelf or one of a series of shelves behind and above an altar.

    -- dictionary.com

    September 30, 2008

  • "Divinely inspired; wrought up to enthusiasm." -- The Free Dictionary

    September 30, 2008

  • I got a question, too. Does anyone know a movie or a series, where lots of seldom words and constructions are used?

    September 30, 2008

  • "Am I doing it right?"

    September 30, 2008

  • amidoinitrite?

    September 30, 2008

  • Reminds me of M. C. Escher.

    September 30, 2008

  • There was a wikipedia link missing here.

    September 29, 2008

  • The more Ajax the more 2.0. Perhaps it's not that simple.

    September 29, 2008

  • In The Urth of the New Sun (Gene Wolfe), apports are all kinds of beings who are somehow unintentionally caught in the giant sails of spaceships floating through time and space.

    And thx for purport. :-)

    September 29, 2008

  • Same as misandrist. Misspelling?

    September 28, 2008

  • From the German "Lebensabschnittsgefährte".

    September 28, 2008

  • Misspelling of the German word "Schrecklichkeit" meaning as much as horribleness.

    http://www.dict.cc/?s=schrecklichkeit

    September 28, 2008

  • "But Sidero said one time that mutist means a rebel." -- Gene Wolfe, The Urth of the New Sun

    September 28, 2008

  • Wow, thanks a lot, to everyone hunting down those errors.

    About the description: I'm on it.

    Edit:

    I'm currently running all 2700 Words through aspell, dict.cc, dictionary.com, wordnet, ninjawords and thefreedictionary.com; this will take about an hour. About one third to one fourth of them fail this test so far.

    Another Edit:

    Done. The resulting list is here.

    September 28, 2008

  • Right, "f" and "d" are so ducking close on qwerty/z keyboards; that really ducks!

    September 28, 2008

  • Oh, thanks for notifying me; perhaps I can find a way to locate some of those misspellings. I wonder if I should change the list name once the words are different from those in the dictionary...

    Thanks again and a grand weekend.

    September 28, 2008

  • A nerd is never inert.

    September 28, 2008

  • And I use to read wikipedia to acquaint myself the plot of anything before watching it as I sort of dislike that much suspense and tension. Not that I haven't had my timid emotional outbursts and demure paroxysms.^^

    Trying to aptly limn emotional conditions is like trying to hit a puppy by throwing a live bee at it, you know?

    September 28, 2008

  • Like ardent:

    http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/ardurous

    "Lo! further on, Where flames the arduous Spirit of Isidore. --Cary."

    Where did the "r" go?

    September 28, 2008

  • On the mobile pages there is a "=" missing:

    input type"text" name="word" class="w220"

    For example:

    http://wordie.org/m

    http://wordie.org/m/list/16708

    Have fun!

    September 27, 2008

  • /ˌræproʊʃˈmɑ̃; Fr. raprɔʃˈmɑ̃/

    Source

    September 27, 2008

  • Fuck, how do you get your tongue to pronounce this w after the θ in /θwɔrt/? ^^

    Like this I guess...

    September 27, 2008

  • also here

    September 27, 2008

  • Is it pronounced /ɪ'mʌnd/?

    September 27, 2008

  • Possible... ^^

    Perhaps that would be a source for more words. Thanks.

    September 26, 2008

  • "a proposal made in order to achieve peace or harmony (formal)" -- MSN Encarta (sorry)

    September 26, 2008

  • Being German I write much less English than most of you I guess, so only a few months ago, spell-checking a readme and a changelog file for an OpenSource tool I wrote, I also had the same "separate" epiphany. Had to correct it in almost every file... ^^

    "interesting" came out a bit earlier.

    September 26, 2008

  • I could use comprehensive statistics: For example the total time I'm online on wordie, how often each list was accessed, how many completely new terms I've contributed (and which), etc.

    But most of all I need those customizable links in each list entry.

    Have a nice weekend. ~

    September 26, 2008

  • Just added them all to dict.cc. They'll stage a superb comeback.

    September 26, 2008

  • Hi, great blog, I especially like your diction and those long sentences. :-)

    September 25, 2008

  • I've now activated "autohinter" and stuff, the font face looks ok now. My terminal looks quite different now, perhaps I'll switch back, don't know yet.

    Concerning the size I've decided to use only 3 to 4 different sizes, instead of 9 viz. "small", "medium" and "xx-large" plus "300%" for h1.

    http://pastie.org/279025

    September 25, 2008

  • My current approach is to delete everything from the all.css except for the part concerning fonts. That way I can perhaps introduce relative sizes and can also change the font face as that looks funny here.

    Got a singular sense of readability the author of this all.css file.^^

    September 25, 2008

  • Thanks! I've tried Stylish a few days ago, but later the solution with No Squint seemed more apt then. I guess I'm going to revise this verdict. Perhaps I'll finally register an OpenID to publish it, if the sheet should meet my expectations.

    September 25, 2008

  • The actual answer is of course 42, as usual, but wikipedia tends to be more specific I'm afraid.^^

    September 25, 2008

  • "Just underground lies the examination room; beneath it, and thus outside the tower proper (for the examination room was the propulsion chamber of the original structure) stretches the labyrinth of the oubliette." -- Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    September 25, 2008

  • Oh, not the slightest idea, but they have a quite elaborate comments feature there. ;-)

    A way of comparing and synchronizing lists would be totally awesome btw:

    Deleting all words from list a which are already in lists b or c.

    September 25, 2008

  • 41

    September 25, 2008

  • Right, hence the restriction to one extra level as on youtube. The majority of reply urges would become satisfiable.

    Besides, if the text would be smaller—the way I like it—the lines would be too long anyway, so indention would be rather beneficial.

    September 25, 2008

  • "… that by the time we reached the gate of the necropolis, the statue of Night atop the khan on the opposite bank was a minute scratch of black against the sun’s field of flame, …"

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    September 25, 2008

  • I'm also particularly fond of dual-level commenting structures as seen for example on youtube, for first-level comments usually address a broader audience, while with replies to comments there is often only a specific recipient, who could thus be easily informed once such interest in his stated opinion has been taken. Yet the necessity of restricting the structural depth of such conversation might be viewed as partially depriving the concept of its intrinsic theoretical elegance and purity... Whatever. Have fun.

    September 25, 2008

  • "Common sense isn't." -- Carol Schaffer

    September 25, 2008

  • "Hypocrisy is the homage vice pays to virtue." -- Francois de La Rochefoucauld

    September 25, 2008

  • "Self-restraint is indulgence of the propensity to forgo." -- Ambrose Bierce

    Edit:

    According to wikiquote it's:

    "Self-denial is indulgence of a propensity to forgo."

    September 25, 2008

  • “… such is the kindness of the torturers, whom I was subsequently to betray.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    September 24, 2008

  • Wonderful, that list seems to exudes a certain ineffable flavor of Gene Wolfeiness. Care to contribute to my open Gene Wolfe list?

    Ciao!

    September 24, 2008

  • I know, No Squint just saves the scale for the entire site, so you don't have to resize each time you open a new page.

    September 24, 2008

  • 7457 is leetspeak for "tast". But what is "tast"?

    Crossfoot is of course 23.

    September 24, 2008

  • Thanks a bunch, John!

    I can't imagine how I managed to survive the last 19 years without wordie.

    September 24, 2008

  • Hi, a handy feature would be to have customizable links to arbitrary sites after each word in lists and on the individual word pages that include a placeholder for the specific word. Much like the buttons up there, but customizable. For example when scrolling through lists I often don't know what a word means, and for me, being German, the simplest solution is to look it up in dict.cc. It would be very convenient if there was a link to "http://www.dict.cc/?s=$w" ($w being a placeholder) which opens dict.cc in a new tab.

    Another feature I miss is some way of decreasing the font size. Many pages provide a way to customize the main font size, for with different screen resolutions and different diopter different sizes seem appropriate. Atm I'm using the firefox addon "No Squint" to scale the page to 80%, yet as everything (optionally except pictures) is scaled, the text which is small anyway becomes a bit too small.

    Also I'm missing links/buttons for wiktionary.org lookups, and in case you have some way of obtaining it, the IPA pronunciation of words could prove valuable as well. So far I'm always looking it up on dictionary.com.

    And thanks a lot for this marvelous site!

    September 24, 2008

  • "Trying to send him to a specific place is sort of like... like... trying to hit a puppy, by throwing a live bee at it." - Willow, BtVS (Triangle)

    September 24, 2008

  • Perhaps. Thanks. :-)

    September 24, 2008

  • “They would be on us like a pack of dholes, Madame”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    September 23, 2008

  • “I swerved to dodge an oblesque that appeared to shoot up before me, and collided full tilt with a man in a black coat.”

    —Gene Wolfe, The Book of the New Sun

    September 23, 2008

  • "I heard the ring of steel on stone, as if someone had struck one of the grave markers with a badelaire." -- Gene Wolfe - "The Book of the New Sun"

    September 23, 2008

  • "Certain mystes aver that the real world has been constructed by the human mind, since (...)" -- Gene Wolfe - "The Book of the New Sun"

    Help! What does that word mean?

    September 23, 2008

  • Actually I've written it myself. First posted in an xkcd forum and now copied here, but you're right, I could have said so.

    Have fun.

    September 22, 2008

  • Correct me if I'm at fault, but to me "pulchritudinous" sounds quite superficial in comparison to "beautiful"...

    September 22, 2008

  • "Allotheism - defined as the worship of strange gods - is based upon the sole principle continuously chaperoning mankind's amelioration: To ambitiously forgo the habitual liberate humanity's potentiality! Still for this artifice of evolution to prosper it is but essential to disunite with any biased animosity against heterodoxy and even iconoclasm lest one be entangled in as forlorn as fatuous devotion. Hence convert."

    September 22, 2008

  • "...

    It's cruel I know

    At least they tell me so

    Well someone lock me up and throw away the key

    Because I'm not ashamed, oh no

    Oh, willow

    That I only write love songs

    To those whom I don't love

    I only reach for him

    Who's tied to someone else's glove

    That which I hold inside

    Which I admire and deride

    Which I protect and hide is yours

    Slander and dissention

    They're parlor games to me

    Papers overrun with lies too mad to mention

    You say they never hurt you

    No consequence, I'm happy

    We're much too far above it all

    But oh no, that's not true

    These wicked pastimes take their toll

    These tyrant vices break your soul

    Deliver me from all I am

    And all I never want to be

    ..."

    -- Emilie Autumn - "Willow"

    September 22, 2008

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