Comments by uselessness

Show previous 200 comments...

  • Hey, I also majored in Communication! Good thing, too: we haven't had many interesting coinkydinks around here in a while... :-P

    Anyway, they should have used E for ebony. Problem solved! ;-)

    November 27, 2007

  • Unless the sharpener is an Irish coffee, in which, depending on the strength of the brew, the net stimulatory effect is a zero sum...

    November 27, 2007

  • In the future, merely reading about viruses will infect you with them through the Power Of The Internet. The United States government will lead the charge against Google for its contribution to "digital biological warfare." Mankind will be forced into illiteracy to prevent the spread of the epidemic. It has been prophesied.

    November 27, 2007

  • Preys? Is it nearly so diabolical?

    November 26, 2007

  • Funny, I thought that was Miles Dyson. Though I guess he was kind of a wiener too, wasn't he?

    November 26, 2007

  • Hold it!

    November 26, 2007

  • Or vice versa. ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • Hey, I'm a designer and I resent that! ;-) I still think a better convention could have been used; after all, it is designers who say CMYK and RGB, and they know full well what cyan is. But using K for black isn't helpful at all.

    So who deemed that cyan and magenta would be the names of the blue-green and pink? Why not aquamarine and fuchsia? Or teal and amaranth? Or maybe turquoise and cerise?

    November 26, 2007

  • *cough*

    November 26, 2007

  • Bwahahaha!! Get that on c_b's list already! :-D

    November 26, 2007

  • Why am I not surprised that Reese's Peanut Butter Tee is the one providing clarification here? ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • Not to mention the fact that this isn't RGB, and there's no B here. ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • Yes. I am a HYUGE fan of these games, known in America as Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney. Who knew lawyering could be so much fun?

    November 26, 2007

  • Agreed, and this page has been tagged appropriately. :-P

    November 26, 2007

  • Smells like a Triad. ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • This one has annoyed me for years. Whose bright idea was it to have K represent "black"? Why not B?

    November 26, 2007

  • It's a hostile takeover of Wordie! Who are you working for??

    November 26, 2007

  • *groan* :-P

    November 26, 2007

  • Is it readily found in nature, or just in my office?

    November 26, 2007

  • Yeah right. Just... yeah right.

    Edit: Oh. It would seem you are right. Hmph. But now it's called Rg, because that's much saner.

    November 26, 2007

  • So is thirty-sixth, and forty-sixth, and... it would seem this word is not remotely rhymeless. It has infinite rhymes. It boggles the mind. :-P

    November 26, 2007

  • It's an American thing, bilby. ;-) FEMA is the Federal Emergency Management Agency, tasked with responding to disasters and the like. My personal commentary (and apparently c_b's as well) is that they are woefully bureaucratic and inept, as seen in their miserable handling of the Hurricane Katrina debacle. FEMA builds little relief towns of mobile homes (trailers) for victims to live in, and it's these towns that my old roommate inappropriately referred to as FEMAtown. And I'm just as guilty for singing along. Gotta love humor centered around horrible tragedies.

    Of course, it's not as funny when you have to explain the joke... ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • I was thinking of "easy as one, two, three," maybe...

    November 26, 2007

  • Weren't these really popular in the '80s? Or was it just my family that was mesmerized by them?

    November 26, 2007

  • As today is the official first birthday of Wordie, I just want to say congratulations and such. A monumental occasion.

    November 26, 2007

  • The infamous spammer jennarenn gets her comeuppance? ;-)

    November 26, 2007

  • Is that like wiggedy wack?

    November 26, 2007

  • Do do do do

    Do do do dooo...

    Won't you take me to...

    FEMAtown?

    November 26, 2007

  • Also, gecko poop.

    November 26, 2007

  • Okay, I'm going to be really lame, but shouldn't one, two, three be on this list?

    November 26, 2007

  • Do you have particular cities in mind? I don't think I could handle living in, say, NYC... but I do currently live in the downtown area of a considerably smaller (but still populated) city and it's pretty great. :-)

    November 25, 2007

  • Okay, I was just using the "search comments" feature and I discovered that on the results page, the search form at the top does not work -- it searches for a null string, rather than the value I type. So if I want to perform a second search, I have to go back to the main search page.

    November 25, 2007

  • Oh, here's another request I just thought of... I love the random word feature, but how about a random list feature?

    November 25, 2007

  • Yes, WeirdNet nailed this definition.

    November 25, 2007

  • I nominate Journey of a 300-Year-Old House. I love how it tells a story in such a simple format.

    November 25, 2007

  • Because if I did, it would surely scare the children (as ghosts are wont to do). ;-)

    November 25, 2007

  • Happyness? :-P

    November 25, 2007

  • I believe the word you're looking for is Geico. But I may be wrong.

    November 25, 2007

  • According to Orson Scott Card (by way of Guybrush Threepwood), this is the end of the road, and you are a gutter-crawling cur.

    November 25, 2007

  • Cool story.

    I do find it sad, though, that these days the word liberty is seldom heard apart from the word statue. Once upon a time it was a pretty earth-shaking concept, and in the 21st century it has become known mainly as a tourist attraction.

    November 25, 2007

  • According to Orson Scott Card (by way of Guybrush Threepwood), dairy farmers are notoriously bad at swordfighting.

    November 25, 2007

  • Gross!

    November 25, 2007

  • In the world of buggers, only the best of the best can become buggernauts.

    November 25, 2007

  • Caress the one, the Never-Fading

    Rain in your heart - the tears of snow-white sorrow

    Caress the one, the hiding amaranth

    In a land of the daybreak

    -Nightwish

    November 25, 2007

  • Or pirate shanties.

    November 25, 2007

  • They're lolcatting the Bible? I can has feer?

    November 25, 2007

  • What reesetee said. Er, smiled. :-P

    November 25, 2007

  • Seems I kicked off a discussion and then disappeared before it really got going! My original suggestion, of course, opts for a human-controlled mechanism over an automated one, so I don't think mollusque's concern applies. And the issue about accidentally deleting "legitimate" or intentional misspellings is, I think, moot... because if it's an uncommented ghost, frankly, no one will miss it.

    I'm a natural packrat, John, so I understand your aversion to deleting anything from the database. But isn't it safe to say that the benefits outweigh the costs of allowing us to manually clean up uncommented ghosts? It'll make the word count a more accurate figure, it'll stop auto-suggest from feeding typos to unsuspecting searchers, and I guarantee no one will be offended that "their" word got deleted. Think about it. ;-)

    November 25, 2007

  • I like legitimate ghosts. I think of them as little nuggets of surprise that will turn up far in the future, when somebody either discovers them via the random word feature, or else adds something s/he thought was new, yet already bears comments.

    Dead typos just floating around out there, on the other hand, are stupid. I figure if a ghost doesn't have any comments on it, that's a good gauge of keepability. No comments means no one cares. If you find it and you do care, leave a comment. ;-)

    November 22, 2007

  • So, how about a way for us to clean up the database a little? I'm thinking a "delete this word" button that only appears on ghosts that don't have any comments. There are a lot of these floating around on the site, and we ought to be able to do our part to weed them out. :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • I don't have to take your word for it!

    November 22, 2007

  • Hey, when have I intentionally added misspellings? When I spawn ghosts, I at least spell them right. :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • Haha! I actually got the opportunity to use madeupical in a business meeting yesterday... unfortunately my coworkers didn't exactly get the reference. :-P

    November 22, 2007

  • That sounds good! Bet the guy made for interesting conversation, too... :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • There's weirdie. I know there are others but I'm drawing a blank at the moment. :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • The oath taken by hypocritical police officers.

    November 22, 2007

  • Better than FEMAtown, I guess...

    November 22, 2007

  • FEMAtown. Much less funky than Funkytown. Coined by my old college roommate while driving past the impromptu villages of FEMA mobile homes erected in the wake of Hurricane Charley. He would always burst into inappropriate song at the sight of the refugees... and I would join him.

    November 22, 2007

  • On Snopes, this is an acronym for "Not Safe For British School Kids."

    November 22, 2007

  • Or if you've spent any time around Snopes, there's always NSFBSK.

    November 22, 2007

  • Sounds like a portmanteau of orifice and fornication. At least I think so, anyway.

    Woredaho? Ionois? Okancolor? Louissippisas?

    November 22, 2007

  • Haha, will do! :-) I really wish we all lived in the same small town...

    November 22, 2007

  • The name conjures up images of Chris Kattan and Bruce Springsteen. *shiver*

    November 22, 2007

  • It's one of my favorite books ever. I don't know why I've been referencing it lately; must be my subconscious telling me it's time to read it again (it's been a couple years)...

    November 22, 2007

  • *milksnort*

    November 22, 2007

  • My favorite line in the whole movie, c_b. I quote it at random times to random people, but nobody else seems to appreciate it. :-(

    November 22, 2007

  • You do know that's another Phantom Tollbooth reference, right? :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • Yes. Bingo. Correct. Affirmative. Right.

    Where are the Duke of Definition, Minister of Meaning, Count of Connotation, Earl of Essence, and the Undersecretary of Understanding when you need them? :-P

    November 22, 2007

  • That movie is classic. I've gotta watch it again. Like, tonight.

    November 22, 2007

  • Curiously, I'm beginning to see CV used more often than resume (or résumé, even) on the internet. The latter is distinctly America, but the former may be gaining traction.

    November 22, 2007

  • I want to pronounce this, but my tongue refuses to cooperate.

    November 22, 2007

  • You may also find some inspiration on this old, old list of mine. It's slightly related. :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • Lunch can't come soon enough. :-)

    November 22, 2007

  • I also read cheesepot. Today is a bad day for reading in the world of uselessness.

    November 22, 2007

  • For some reason I read that as "bread-loading rifle" and thought it would be tremendously handy at Roman circuses.

    November 22, 2007

  • I think you should add carrier of an internal thesaurus. :-P

    November 22, 2007

  • I have never grieved my ghosts. Actually I'm pretty sure I was the first person on the to create ghosts regularly, on purpose. It's something like a trademark. :-P

    November 21, 2007

  • Smells like a list to me... ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Also the name of a character in O Brother, Where Art Thou?

    November 21, 2007

  • I would want it why? ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Is the S silent, like in island?

    November 21, 2007

  • Phillips, Craig, and Dean? Georgie Porgie, pudding and pie?

    November 21, 2007

  • *groan* :-P

    November 21, 2007

  • I'll take 'em! Thanks!

    November 21, 2007

  • You impostor!

    November 21, 2007

  • NEVAR! :-P

    November 21, 2007

  • Thirded.

    November 21, 2007

  • A professional farter. Thanks (um, I guess) to John for introducing me to this fascinating trade on the queef page.

    November 21, 2007

  • Apparently the people who compete in the Rubik's cube world championship are mathletes of the highest caliber.

    November 21, 2007

  • My blog, The Insanity Farm, is closed until further notice. But I am relaunching it eventually, and it will be alsome.

    November 21, 2007

  • "Not I," said the pig.

    November 21, 2007

  • Well, we already have commandments. ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Sir yes sir!

    November 21, 2007

  • Phew, glad someone got the reference. ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Here's a vote for 'tain't. :-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Further proof that we need a tagging tutorial of some sort.

    November 21, 2007

  • Everything you just said is duly noted in my book, jennarenn. Even the thing about my list that I don't really like, because, well, you have a good point. :-P

    November 21, 2007

  • Yes, I saw that after I posted here. I've been slowly trying to catch up after the weekend. I swear, people here are commenting faster and I'm reading slower. And now the comments page is back to showing 100 at a time (but with pagination) so I've been making my way through it, page by page. I'm finally back on the first page at last, but now I'm exhausted. I'll never survive at this rate. Can we close for weekends? ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • Oh can't I please see your session ID? ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • I recently discovered Gold Bond Medicated Foot Powder. I was fully prepared for disgust, but actually it's quite mentholly. Makes your feet all cold and tingly, and nice-smelling. I can't wait to cover my feet in it again tonight.

    Have I shared too much?

    November 21, 2007

  • And it's so tasty too!

    November 21, 2007

  • Yeah right. I have a very hard time believing that. Who is this Jeff, so I may find him and threaten him?

    November 21, 2007

  • It had better look like a big W.

    And there had better be a large sum of money buried underneath it.

    November 21, 2007

  • Ring? Pall? Jason? Naked? ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • I really like this word. In fact, I think I'm going to favorite it.

    November 21, 2007

  • Aye, the Identify the Wordie game invited each user to submit one self-describing word, and then we all had to guess who had picked each one. Not as easy as it sounds. :-)

    November 21, 2007

  • What say we don't go there? ;-)

    November 21, 2007

  • In the war between the cities of Dictionopolis and Digitopolis, who will emerge victorious?

    November 21, 2007

  • Okay, I keep coming back with more... but does rub-a-dub-dub count?

    November 21, 2007

  • I was just learning about this a couple days ago, particularly in reference to the Mersenne Twister. I still don't understand it, but I think it's cool (in the dorkiest possible way, of course).

    November 21, 2007

  • For the record, my comment wasn't meant to be condescending; I'm sure there are plenty of people who in all sincerity just aren't acclimated with the concept of tags. It's a very Web 2.0 thing, and a tutorial would be nice for those who haven't used them before. I was assuming that peregrina thought they had a different purpose, like attributing other pages as reference or something.

    November 21, 2007

  • There's also Zip, Zap, Zop, a silly game to play when you're bored with a group of people.

    November 21, 2007

  • Does cha cha cha count?

    November 21, 2007

  • Say what? I'm starting to doubt y'all identities...

    November 21, 2007

  • Ooohhh, secrety.

    November 21, 2007

  • How about bippety, boppity, boo?

    November 21, 2007

  • Have you ever seen The Gong Show? Classic. I'm sure that's where this phrase originates from.

    November 17, 2007

  • This is such a colorful word. I always imagined it was coined by someone who realized that these people are not dullards; often they're intelligent, interesting people and with a little coaxing they really blossom. Of course, I just tell myself that because the wallflower is usually me. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • I'm not really a phone phreak kind of guy, personally, but usually because I hate the additional charges associated with doing anything beyond talk. Any idea what kind of fees I might incur if I tried managing lists via SMS?

    November 17, 2007

  • Isn't this referring to an altogether different kind of intoxication?

    November 17, 2007

  • IMMORTALIZED. :-P

    November 17, 2007

  • Yes. It annoys me to no end. Admittedly, there are times when we need a good neuter singular pronoun, but that's not it. I guess I'm rather politically incorrect these days, but I think using he is a good old standard that people understood. It's not really worth getting upset about, in my opinion, but then again I'm a man. ;-)

    I think part of the problem is also the increasing frequency of addressing collective units in the plural. When Microsoft does something, for example, it does it as one entity, not as "them" or "they."

    November 17, 2007

  • Aye that. I think zeitgeisty signifies the official tipping point for that one.

    November 17, 2007

  • I want an option to ignore comments by reesetee. Guy talks too much. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • Great point. With the internet I can find an immediate answer to nearly every question I have. When I can't, I become surprised and frustrated by the internet's "failure" to deliver. That's probably a lot different from the past, when people spent long hours in pursuit of information, and likely often resigned themselves to never knowing certain things. But ignorance is bliss, right? Information overload is a problem in its own right.

    November 17, 2007

  • It is curious. I think seek refers to searching outwardly for something, while search refers to a more introspective examination, or looking within something. If you're in need of a needle, you will seek one out. Unless you're positive there's one contained somewhere within this haystack, in which case you'll search the haystack for it. Your finding process is now heavily focused on one space, rather than open-ended.

    So, originally in computers the term "search" correctly referred to finding a given string of text within a single file. Actually the needle/haystack analogy has been used for years in reference to that kind of search. Later, the database allowed similar functionality, only instead of searching within one file, you searched within a larger array of associated data. And of course, the modern search engine is little more than a really massive database, so it's easy to see why we still say "search."

    Because technically speaking, we're searching for something within Google's database, rather than a less-focused seeking of the same. Hey, it's been too long since I wrote a madeupical etymology, that felt good!

    November 17, 2007

  • Well, it's not that bad... ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • "Come thou fount of every blessing..."

    Or, what sionnach said. :-P

    November 17, 2007

  • I can't stomach the thought of such a thing.

    November 17, 2007

  • Oh, I think you forgot uselessnessian.

    November 17, 2007

  • Wordie? Never heard of it. Isn't that the thing "jennarenn" was shilling? Nah, I just opened my thesaurus and picked the most impressive words I could find. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • Correct me if I'm wrong (I probably am) but isn't sought the past-tense form of seek? Therefore...

    After you seek, you have sought.

    After you search, you have searched.

    Right?

    November 17, 2007

  • Ouch. But yes, it's true.

    November 17, 2007

  • I don't hate it. I detest its foul loathsomeness with a burning abhorrence unmatched by any earthly revilement.

    November 17, 2007

  • Holy carp.

    November 17, 2007

  • Okay, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • It's hilarious! It has some scenes of over-the-top violence, ridiculous to the point of just adding to the humor, but if you're squeamish you might want to avoid it. Otherwise, it's highly recommended. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • Also, my favorite kind of salad, and my least favorite hairstyle.

    November 17, 2007

  • If I recall correctly, one of the characters in the movie Hot Fuzz only has one word in his vocabulary: yarb, pronounced the way I described. Maybe that's where I get the image. He wasn't a pirate, though.

    November 17, 2007

  • I favorited this list, it's great! No suggestions are really coming to mind right now except the line from The Truman Show -- "Good afternoon, good evening, and good night."

    November 17, 2007

  • Hmm, how about Florida cracker? Utahraptor? Kentucky Fried Chicken? Um, George Washington Carver?

    November 17, 2007

  • So you're saying these surreal numbers are really close to real numbers, as in "closer than infinitely close?" Uhm.

    November 17, 2007

  • I've had great success using Wordie's random word feature for prophetic purposes.

    November 17, 2007

  • I've never heard of this "jennarenn" before, she seems to be a spammer. I checked out that site and it's just a bunch of words -- don't waste your time on it. I think we should ban her IP.

    November 17, 2007

  • Of course, someone has to nominate Conversations because of its dashing thoroughness, so it might as well be me. :-) I'll also nominate the old classic, It Has a Name?? Thanks, jennarenn, of course, for nominating my list but I hate that one and will have to cancel out your yea with my nay. ;-)

    November 17, 2007

  • Ah yes, that is how I greet strangers too.

    November 17, 2007

  • I always thought (hoped?) that it was meant as a quizzical pirate exclamation, said with rising intonation and a question mark at the end. :-P

    November 17, 2007

  • Next thing you know, they'll be telling us that poindexter is meant to have a negative connotation too.

    November 16, 2007

  • A shiver of sharks. A shiver of sharks. I can't stop shivering, that shiver of sharks.

    November 16, 2007

  • That makes for great alliteration. A shiver of sharks. A shiver of sharks. Screw plinth, this is the eyeworm of tomorrow.

    November 16, 2007

  • Just chiming in to ditto that. Most evocative animal flock name I've heard yet.

    November 16, 2007

  • Or you can end every letter with "love" and see what happens. ;-)

    November 16, 2007

  • ...there...is...no...justification...for...that...word...

    November 16, 2007

  • Yes. You do.

    November 16, 2007

  • Where'd I put my Yikes pencils?

    November 16, 2007

  • Not just in Hobotopia, I like it too. ;-)

    November 15, 2007

  • Oh I hate when that happens, blasted comment overflow. Truth be told, that's why I've been so quiet this week, I've been slowly trying to catch up ever since Monday!!

    November 15, 2007

  • ...ceebee is watching you...

    November 15, 2007

  • Great ones!

    November 15, 2007

  • I can see I'm outnumbered, and I'll step down gracefully(?). *mutters something about democracy sucking* But mollusque's trick is duly noted, and I should mention that if right-clicking "normal" links and choosing "open link in new tab" is too much trouble, you can middle-click links to get a new tab instead. It takes exactly as much time as a regular left-click. If you don't have a middle button, your scroll wheel should work (it clicks, too).

    November 15, 2007

  • As a rule of thumb, I never click links that have "myspace" in the URL. :-P

    November 15, 2007

  • I know you didn't want me to chime in again, but I'm gonna. ;-) chained_bear mentions the ability to right-click a link to open in a new tab... but there is no ability to right-click a link and open it in *this* tab. In other words, if the link is hard-coded to do that, there's no way to force it not to, while the opposite is possible. Food for thought, anyway.

    November 15, 2007

  • That's what I meant too, kewpid, and I'm pretty sure that's what dahnielson had in mind as well. I remember building my own finicky CMSs with PHP and duct tape back in the day. It's so good to be living in the future, at last. ;-)

    November 15, 2007

  • I'm with dahnielson, but it's not so much of a curse word as it is a hallelujah chorus. ;-)

    November 15, 2007

  • I'm not a doctor, I speak in the vernacular. ;-)

    November 15, 2007

  • But a word can only be given a particular tag once. That's great for nomination, but not so good for voting.

    November 15, 2007

  • It pays to enrich your word power. ;-)

    November 14, 2007

  • Never heard of that site, but I'll have to check it out. Sounds handy. I also never use the links on Wordie, for two reasons. First, they open in a new tab/window, which annoys me; and second, I already have dictionary and thesaurus bookmarklets that I use all over the internet, and I use them here too out of habit.

    November 14, 2007

  • It's also possibly the most disgusting thing I've ever been covered in, but that's another story. ;-)

    November 14, 2007

  • I wish I knew Japanese. Every time someone mentions things like this I get the idea that it's a delightful language, seemingly designed with wordplay in mind. I love the nuances, the layers of meaning. Even in silly cartoons. ;-)

    November 14, 2007

  • Okay. :-P

    November 14, 2007

  • Hey, I had never heard of either of those, thanks for the suggestions!

    November 14, 2007

  • Hmm, I have yet to contribute to this discussion. So I will now.

    My first reaction was "heavens no, the s-word will just end up winning!" And then I realized that this is our noble chance to circumvent popular opinion and knock it off its pedestal. I'm in.

    I agree that two categories (real and madeupical) would be great. Actually I think I might vote for madeupical itself... Where do we vote and who's the officiator?

    November 14, 2007

  • You can't go back no never. ;-)

    November 14, 2007

  • When you're born, and, you know, you've been all up in that belly for like months and DANG SON, you're hongry. Like eat a horse hongry. You don't want no milk, you want a friggin' T-bone steak and some corndogs. And maybe a towel to wipe off all o'that womb juice after yeet.

    November 14, 2007

  • Reminds me of Normal, Illinois. *pronounces Illinois as "eely nwah"*

    November 14, 2007

  • Oh goodness gracious, somebody needs a tagging tutorial*!

    *Link thoughtfully provided so somebody else can write a tutorial on that page. ;-)

    November 14, 2007

  • I pray no corndog virgins actually exist in the world, and plan to feed my newborn child corndogs as the only sane (and ethical) response to postnatal hunger.

    November 14, 2007

  • Champ (can I call you champ?) that's probably the only thing I ever really found funny in that show. And I really wished they made a real Bamboozled game show. :-)

    November 14, 2007

  • Oh, I don't mind. 'Twas Ron Gilbert what made it up, anydanghow. :-P

    November 14, 2007

  • A particularly juvenile Mother Goose poem-thing:

    "I am a gold lock."

    "I am a gold key."

    "I am a silver lock."

    "I am a silver key."

    "I am a brass lock."

    "I am a brass key."

    "I am a lead lock."

    "I am a lead key."

    "I am a don lock."

    "I am a don key!"

    Reminds me of the old (equally lame) joke...

    "How do you spell spot?"

    "S-P-O-T."

    "How do you spell spot?"

    "S-P-O-T."

    "How do you spell spot?"

    "S-P-O-T."

    "What do you do at a green light?"

    "Stop!"

    "You stop? At a green light?" (cue Nelson: "Ha ha!")

    November 14, 2007

  • Aww darn, I just shaved my mustache (and beard) and cut my hair super-short last month. I alternate between hairy gross and squeaky clean, and November is my month for the latter. Oh well.

    November 14, 2007

  • jennarenn, I can take a hint. :-P

    I'll see what I can whip up, if John is interested... :-D

    November 14, 2007

  • That's pretty wild. Source?

    November 13, 2007

  • Good grief! When I have more time, I'll see what I can come up with. :-)

    November 12, 2007

  • Oh, I thought this was going to be a list about the S-word. ;-)

    November 12, 2007

  • Snugglecakes? Plunder bunny?

    November 12, 2007

  • I prefer mine of the flail variety. Yikes!

    November 10, 2007

  • Ewww. Ewww! EWWWWW!!!

    (also, owww!)

    November 10, 2007

  • Great movie.

    November 10, 2007

  • Hmm, probably in the late '90s. As I recall at that time it was used in reference to cheesy video game music of the butt-rock variety. :-)

    November 10, 2007

  • That sounds terrible. Who names this stuff?

    November 10, 2007

  • Particularly hilarious ones.

    November 9, 2007

  • I've certainly heard both. They're synonymous. But I've always preferred this one, for some reason. ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • How indecent!

    November 9, 2007

  • Seconded. How about Taxi, Cops, and Wings? Also, don't forget about B.S., which I'm too polite to spell out in mixed company. ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • It's a gerund from the verb "to whop," which means to produce a noise like a hundred thousand people saying "whop." And trivet, isn't that whup?

    November 9, 2007

  • Nothing like mass hallucinations to brighten up a web site.

    November 9, 2007

  • Mmmm, Alicia Silverstone. Oh sorry, was I thinking aloud again? ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • I think, therefore I am madeupical. So much for pleading my case.

    November 9, 2007

  • Oh dear, I don't like the direction this is headed...

    Look, a distraction!!

    November 9, 2007

  • Same here. I was meaning to ask the film crew yesterday, when I was surrounded by all manner of gaffers and best boys and grips, but they were frightfully busy (and a little on the rude side). Only one guy took the time to chat with me, and I don't think he would have known anyway.

    November 9, 2007

  • I like these a lot. This second one was easier than the first one, which is a good thing. :-) I much prefer this difficulty level.

    November 9, 2007

  • One. Minute. Too. Late. Argh. ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • Oh, duh! Simony!

    November 9, 2007

  • 1. Lemony

    2. Parsimony

    3. Testimony?

    4. Antimony

    5. Avgolemony?

    6. Persimmony - is that the answer in your hint?

    And they all share the -mony ending...

    November 9, 2007

  • Yo ho. Har.

    November 9, 2007

  • They make dandy antennae. How many radio stations can you pick up at once?

    November 9, 2007

  • Oh, sure. But I was talking about Robin Wright. Er, Robin Wright Penn, a.k.a. Buttercup. See my links below. ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • Bah! All my minions are pirates. :-P

    November 9, 2007

  • Quick, grasshopper. We've been discovered. Strike swiftly!

    November 9, 2007

  • *groan*

    November 9, 2007

  • What does Batman have to do with being wright?

    November 9, 2007

  • Ugh, I certainly hope not. What a terrible word.

    November 9, 2007

  • Heavens yes! We totally should. :-P

    November 9, 2007

  • Yes, my head. Normal, normal, normal.

    November 9, 2007

  • Yes! That is the logical explanation I was looking for! :-)

    November 9, 2007

  • Alas, the film crew was quite proficient at shooing me out of the way. :-P

    November 9, 2007

  • It is for Orville and Wilbur. And, er, Robin.

    November 9, 2007

  • The years from 2013 to 2019 can be called the teens, but 2010, 2011, and 2012 are left in the cold. Then again, only time will tell if maybe they deserve it. ;-)

    November 9, 2007

  • It must be from New Jersey.

    November 9, 2007

  • Heavens no! The trick is to make your etymologies more subtly plausible, so no one but you knows what a filthy rotten liar you are. ;-)

    (See also: archerent)

    November 9, 2007

  • Haha, yes, that's like a D-list celebrity... no wait, probably more like Y or Z. Actually, I don't think there are enough letters in the alphabet to identify the list I'm on. ;-)

    And yes, a large portion of the movie Sushine Cleaning is filmed on the block I live on, and they shot the final scene of the movie in my front door yesterday. So if you see the film, try not to get all stalkerish when you've identified the famed home of uselessness.

    November 9, 2007

  • Andre the Giant has a POSSLQ?

    November 8, 2007

  • (props)

    November 8, 2007

  • See eboy for lots of random, colorful, Japanese-ish isometric goodness.

    November 8, 2007

  • Oh... nice list, and they are some evocative (if patronizing) names. It's amazing to see the effort some people put forth into fashioning stereotypes.

    November 8, 2007

  • Well, I do have ten fingers and ten toes. Ain't that all it takes?

    November 8, 2007

  • Hmm, those are all very awkward numbers, clearly this unit isn't part of any western measurement standards. I just wonder if it's equivalent to five of a smaller denomination in the same Japanese system. Oh well, I assume it's obsolete now?

    November 8, 2007

  • I remember back in '99 there was a "Name the Decade" web site that took votes to decide what the "official" name would be. This word (Naughties) won. But now nobody's ever heard of the site, and apparently it didn't have much authority over such matters anyway. ;-)

    Actually, I find it interesting that before 2000, decade names were common in regular speech: I always heard people talking about "the '90s" or whatever decade it was at the time. Now, not so much. Because nobody can figure out what to call this decade, nobody does. Occasionally you'll hear "the new millennium" or "the 21st century" used in that place, or in some cases even "the post-9/11 world." But it's almost as if society collectively just stopped naming decades.

    I suspect we'll start again in the '20s, but that'll just seem wrong to me after experiencing much higher numbers. It's like a step backwards to me, it doesn't seem like progress or "the future." Maybe that's because it conjures up thoughts of the Roaring Twenties and I'll always associate it with talkies and flappers.

    November 8, 2007

  • Yesterday Alan Arkin and Amy Adams walked through mine. It's famous now. I, however, have yet to be discovered.

    November 8, 2007

  • Obsessive-compulsive counting of everything: ceiling tiles, vertical blinds, paper clips.

    November 8, 2007

  • I'm uselessness and I approve this message. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • There's nothing wrong with slugs in the bed. Now, a lot of slugs, that's another thing entirely. I dare say I might lose my temper too.

    November 8, 2007

  • Is that where the DDR songs like "Boom Boom Dollar" come from? I always thought that sounded strange.

    November 8, 2007

  • seanahan: See featherstonehaugh.

    November 8, 2007

  • Aren't those archer ents? Totally different beast. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • Hear hear.

    November 8, 2007

  • Are you tired, run-down, listless? Do you poop out at parties?

    November 8, 2007

  • You're making me F'ing cry.

    November 8, 2007

  • It's quite fashionable here in New Mexico. I thought everyone dressed with it?

    November 8, 2007

  • "Made. Up. Ickle." :-P

    November 8, 2007

  • An opening in a castle wall (usually a long, vertical slit) designed for archers to shoot through whilst remaining protected themselves.

    November 8, 2007

  • I believe the word you're looking for is archerent.

    November 8, 2007

  • Wait, I'm confused. What is this?

    November 8, 2007

  • There's one of these near the Mechanics Training Institute in northern Wyoming known as Socket Tuya. Across the valley, in a historically German part of the state, is its sister volcano, Göttehandett Tuya. Local legends tell of a third one in the vicinity, known by the Navajo name Watappenhd Tuya, but every expedition that set out in search of it disappeared under mysterious circumstances.

    I haven't even mentioned the one in rural Pennsylvania, Whatsit Tuya. But nobody cares about that one anyway.

    November 8, 2007

  • Clearly this word most commonly refers to the "thick end of the handle," and not, as I mistakenly believed, a person's posterior. Thank you, WordNet!

    November 8, 2007

  • Whether or not they're real, they're worth a laugh or two million. I approve. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • I believe I am the standard of normalcy around here.

    Not usefulness though, that would be reesetee's area of expertise. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • Nothing like typing seven characters just for the convenience of getting two-in-one. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • Surely this is another word for infinity?

    November 8, 2007

  • Curious, in Japanese the word go means five. I wonder if that has anything to do with the size of this measurement.

    November 8, 2007

  • What an awkward word. It would make a terrible username. ;-)

    November 8, 2007

  • I'm a legendary necromancer. I deliberately summon ghost words all the time. They shouldn't be ignored, it'll only make them feel bad. And when my ghosties feel bad, I feel bad.

    Because I'm really not a fan of historical revisionism, I'd prefer that users can't edit comments left by other users. Actually, I might even add a time limit for commenting so that people can't even edit their own comments after, say, an hour. Changing things after they've been said in conversation only confuses things and shoos away whatever historicity might be lingering on the pages here. But I'm not opposed to deleting one's own comments, which can be useful, and I still think a comment ranking system (of some sort) would be nice.

    Capitalization is a trickier issue than tags, I think, for words with multiple capitals in them. Particularly in the case of capitonyms: shall we have separate pages for Thanksgiving the holiday and thanksgiving the act of gratitude? And if so, what's the best way to ensure people are adding the one they think they want? Could lead to lots of head-scratching.

    I agree that flags for acronyms and abbreviations would be great.

    November 8, 2007

  • Interesting... how do you know that's what he did?

    November 8, 2007

  • Or better still: "why you getting all up in my grill?"

    November 6, 2007

  • Notice: This word has been tagged for the protection of future visitors.

    November 6, 2007

  • I like Sudoku. Not that it's the greatest thing ever, but it's a fun way to pass the time when you're bored..

    November 6, 2007

  • Sounds British. "Agnes was a gingerly gal with milky-white hands and a face like cherry velvet."

    November 6, 2007

  • According to dictionary.com, the definition you're thinking of is #2. That can't be right, either.

    November 6, 2007

  • I don't know the exact rate at which he added words, but stpeter had something like 3000 words not long after the web site was created. And of course, they were all in one huge, browser-crashing list -- a little separation never hurt anybody!! ;-)

    November 6, 2007

  • I laughed, I cried, I got hot flashes.

    November 6, 2007

  • Fans of the rock band Skillet are called panheads.

    November 6, 2007

  • You can't count therein! That's like saying that my hand is holding my hand. :-P

    November 6, 2007

  • Well lately I've been thinkin'

    About some good home cookin'

    Just like I haven't eaten in the longest time

    Now I like potato chips, now please don't get me wrong

    But I haven't tasted Mama's rhubarb pie in so very long

    (Chorus)

    Rhubarb pie in the summer

    Rhubarb pie made by my mother

    Nothing better in the winter

    Than rhubarb pie after dinner

    Twinkies may be better

    Than a hole in the sweater

    And the hole in the sweater

    Beats a poke in the eye

    If I had my choice I'd leave this

    Gas station store

    And then I'd travel back in time and

    I'd sit down and have some more

    (Chorus)

    Looking at the picture

    In the Sunday paper

    Of the politician he's talkin' to the press

    And he looks like he's been eating lemons all his life

    Well, I think Mama's rhubarb pie could solve

    More problems overnight

    (Chorus 2x)

    Ah take me home... whoa

    I like it with a crispy crust... whoa

    And the sugar on top... whoa

    Oh it makes my mouth water... whoa

    I'm comin' home, Mama... whoa

    -Five Iron Frenzy, Rhubarb Pie

    November 6, 2007

  • That is very depressing, seanahan. When the deficit is worded that way it sounds very big, indeed.

    November 3, 2007

  • I have more...

    fantasist, drafter, stenographer(?), penman, scribbler, scrawler, graffitist(?), cub, scrivener...

    November 3, 2007

  • Ghost comment? Boo!

    I mean, bu! :-P

    November 2, 2007

  • Looks good, John! But on multi-word phrases it only defines the first word (see hilarious misunderstanding for an example. Would be nice if it could either define every word in the phrase, or define the whole phrase (if it knows it), or not define anything at all.

    November 2, 2007

  • I'm pretty sure that's just a Masshole phrase. ;-)

    November 2, 2007

  • "I love Monty Python."

    "No you don't."

    November 2, 2007

  • *groan*

    November 1, 2007

  • And they're off!!

    For those who are interested, we've begun a collective novel over on Ficlets. I doubt we'll get anywhere near 50,000 words, but writing with others is more fun than going it alone (and some of us have lives that, you know, occupy our time). :-P If you have a Ficlets account, or want to sign up for a free one, feel free to join in the story.

    November 1, 2007

  • Before my time. Was that show as innuent as it sounds?

    November 1, 2007

  • Fascinating. Thanks for posting this, kenno, I learned a lot.

    November 1, 2007

  • Double pseudo-? That just ain't right.

    November 1, 2007

  • That's the rumor. I can't vouch for its truthiness though.

    November 1, 2007

  • Pragmatists?

    November 1, 2007

  • Wait, I don't know nothing about Scottish. Is this meant to be literal, like "potted head?" That's just gross.

    November 1, 2007

  • So is that like saying "I know what you're thinking, and don't even say it because you're wrong"?

    November 1, 2007

  • Somebody help rocks! She's gone blind!!

    November 1, 2007

  • Cool. That means I was right, the one time I tried to spell it. I guess I win. Or something.

    November 1, 2007

  • Peter. What's happening.

    November 1, 2007

  • Oh, well that changes the pronunciation considerably, doesn't it. "quad ruh LEET er ull" :-P

    November 1, 2007

  • "The castle is that way!"

    November 1, 2007

  • A syntactically correct four-word sentence. Happy? ;-)

    November 1, 2007

  • So what's the right spelling? We should note it on here, which, of course, Wordie is for. :-P

    November 1, 2007

  • Oh come on, we're the upper echelon of Wordies! That's gotta count for something! Revel a little! :-P

    November 1, 2007

  • I'm guessing a lot of the gangsters around here will know it... ;-)

    November 1, 2007

  • Check out above the fold, and don't forget that comments are searchable now. ;-)

    November 1, 2007

  • I used to use it in reference to classic video games and the sounds they made, before the word took on the current definition. Actually I used the phrase bling bling, which was just a weird coincidence I guess.

    Also, I first mistyped "reference" as "reverence," which is a sad but true Freudian slip. :-P

    November 1, 2007

  • I vote yes on all accounts. :-)

    November 1, 2007

  • Yeah, I guess you could say it that way too. There is a difference between the way the two sound, but to my ears it's negligible. Maybe you speak with a dialect that makes it more pronounced?

    November 1, 2007

  • Well said. That is a good rule of thumb.

    November 1, 2007

  • Wait, I thought cheese was made of milk? Come to think of it, I have no idea what cheese is, except for the decidedly non-specific "dairy." Maybe that should concern me. But I eat the stuff every day, and rather like it.

    November 1, 2007

  • There's a great scene in A Beautiful Mind where Charles, the "prodigal roommate," defenestrates the desk of a collegiate John Nash. The best part is (not to spoil the movie for those who haven't seen it) discovering what that scene really means later on.

    November 1, 2007

  • Haha, aren't nicknames supposed to be short? Few words are as awkward to type as "uselessness," but well, you found one. I can fully understand people shortening it to just u. ;-)

    November 1, 2007

  • Pronounced "cran," or maybe "cray-un," but certainly never "crown."

    October 31, 2007

  • What always bugged me is when people pronounced crayon as "crown."

    October 31, 2007

  • As popularized by Edward Scissorhands, maybe?

    October 31, 2007

  • That's the one. Enormous. He did a little bit of acting, look for him in Tim Burton's Big Fish.

    October 31, 2007

  • Books will dwindle, but I doubt people will ever forget about them entirely...

    October 31, 2007

  • Don't forget the P.O.D. song "Youth of the Nation," which is about school shootings.

    October 31, 2007

  • And Matthew McGrory is 1.3.

    October 31, 2007

  • Thank you, Mr. Pronunciation.

    October 31, 2007

  • See also: epicaricacy, karma, and the s-word.

    October 31, 2007

  • So true! (sadly)

    October 31, 2007

  • ...used in the intricately designed petticoats of one Stephen Colbert.

    October 31, 2007

  • So wait... is CamelCase only capitalizing the first letter of each word? I thought it was capitalizing every other letter. Hmm.

    Edit: Wikipedia says it's the former. Guess I was mistaken. Sorry for hurting your eyes, reesetee. So does tHiS have a name (besides obnoxious)?

    October 31, 2007

  • That's disgusting. But why do they call it "cheese?" There's nothing cheesy about it. I hate when names of things are obviously wrong like that, it seems like intentional misdirection.

    October 31, 2007

  • Do you really? ;-)

    October 31, 2007

  • Eww, did you just use touch base as a noun? That's even worse than the verb form.

    October 31, 2007

  • I'm pretty sure the word originally comes from naval jargon. A ping is a sound emitted by a ship to find submarines via echolocation, I think.

    October 31, 2007

  • While they're not as evocative as the other ones on this list, how about attractive and glamorous?

    October 31, 2007

  • Eww, I hate that particular phrase too, because I can never remember what it means, and it has thrown my schedule into confusion on multiple occasions.

    October 31, 2007

  • Corporate zombies! How appropriate for Halloween.

    If not zombies, then little Sylars mayhaps.

    October 31, 2007

  • Sionnach's phrase for the four horsemen of the apocalypse. Discussion on tagyoureit's Cringeworthy Corporate Buzzwords list.

    October 31, 2007

  • Ugh. Variation in writing is one thing; throwing around extraneous utilizes to accomplish that is another. The best way to avoid saying use over and over is to structure sentences differently, perhaps with different tenses. "Use" is so generic anyway, which makes for poor writing in the first place.

    It's similar to the "be" verb rule: Always avoid using being, is, was, are, am, and been. Active voice is always preferable. Finally, if you do have to find a synonym for "use," try implement, activate, apply, or some other more descriptive verb.

    Hmmm... perhaps I've found a second meaning for my username?

    October 31, 2007

  • This conversation is Van Goghing nowhere.

    October 31, 2007

  • Okay, I'm back. Lots of Google hits. Guess my college wasn't as clever as it purported to be. But y'all will be happy to know that the fifth search result is the Wordie page. :-P

    October 31, 2007

  • I have no idea who Eilonwy is in real life, but I wasn't personally in the college theatre group... I meant, rather, the theatre group of the college which I attended. And I watched them perform Tartuffe. I did have a friend who was in that show. Perhaps Eilonwy is my friend? Alas, s/he seems to have moved on from Wordie and I may never find out...

    Nevertheless, I am going to Google Tartuffified and see what I can see.

    October 31, 2007

  • Funny play. My college theatre group did a (modernized, I think) run of it and promoted it with fliers emblazoned with with "Get Tartuffified!" across the top.

    Edit: I am surprised to see that my linked word above is already listed, which leads me to believe my college didn't, in fact, make it up. I am crestfallen.

    October 31, 2007

  • uselessness has be known to do this on occasion.

    October 31, 2007

  • Hey, I feel just as bad for affirming your innaccuracy about Troi! But I'm not changing my comment. It's a matter of principle. Plus, I was quoting you verbatim and somebody's gotta preserve the historical record. ;-)

    October 31, 2007

  • Tellurian's word for when a system's order-chaos balance leans more toward order. See chaordic.

    October 31, 2007

  • Hooray for historical revisionism! Now I wonder what other old comments you have changed, and didn't tell anyone about... ;-)

    October 31, 2007

  • I think it's approaching mainstream vocabulary, especially after the recent Dumbledore thing.

    October 31, 2007

  • Steve Irwin's term for a freshwater crocodile. He probably didn't coin the word, but he made it popular.

    October 31, 2007

  • As opposed to the Crocodile Hunter's freshie. :-)

    October 31, 2007

  • Whoops, did you mean to add that as a new word?

    October 31, 2007

  • You'd have to ask the Raccoonnookkeeper Association of America (RAA) about that one. Truth be told, my school isn't accredited, so individual mileage may vary. :-P

    October 31, 2007

  • Yes. But not just fashion. I was struck with a serious case of buyer's remorse when I bought my rust-bucket of a Thunderbird recently. What was I thinking?

    October 31, 2007

  • Haha, with the likes of Paris Hilton and Lindsay Lohan running around, famous and infamous have become interchangeable. ;-)

    October 31, 2007

  • What, do you find the puns unpalettable?

    October 30, 2007

  • Argh, these are killing me!!

    **can't...breathe...puns...too...thick**

    October 30, 2007

  • Yep. Do you want to make more money? Of course, we all do. All exams are take-home tests with open-ended deadlines, submitted via Wordie comments. Grades are based on a threefold rubric: creativity, plausibility, and madeupicality.

    Graduation ceremony TBA, most likely it will be held in cyberspace. Thanks to a grant from a certain useless individual (who wishes to remain anonymous) tuition is free for all new students. You will be earning your M.E. degree, which certifies you as a professional Madeupical Etymologist.

    October 30, 2007

  • I'm sorry, SoG, I'm going to need to take down your Visa number. It's a matter of national security, you see. And I need a new wardrobe.

    October 30, 2007

  • Guess that's me. :-P

    October 30, 2007

  • "Video" could easily be split into VGA and DVI, among others... also, there's the notorious old keyboard and mouse standard, PS/2.

    October 30, 2007

  • Well, I rather enjoy it, personally.

    October 30, 2007

  • Second semester classes now enrolling! ;-)

    October 30, 2007

  • Hey, that's a good one! I had never heard of it before. Fun to say, too. :-)

    October 30, 2007

  • Mmm, but I think it's actually spelled sopaipilla. :-P

    October 30, 2007

  • I was going to say something, but reesetee took the words right out of my mouth. I'll just brush this one off.

    October 30, 2007

  • Gross! I rather wish I hadn't clicked that link...

    October 30, 2007

  • October 30, 2007

  • How about "universal health care?" I can think of a dozen more accurate labels. Of course they involve scary concepts like socialism, but then again that's the truth. Universal means nothing but bread and circuses for everyone, which, come to think of it, sounds rather nice. ;-)

    October 30, 2007

  • You reminded me of a Snopes page (warning: offensive racial language) about unfortunate-baby-name urban legends. This one is included there, along with the famous Latrine and Pajama. Also mentioned is Ima Hogg, recently discussed here.

    October 30, 2007

  • That's a good point. "Illegal immigration" is a perfectly valid term; labeling the people who do it as "illegal immigrants," not so much. Of course, it loses its subtlety when you start hearing them referred to as just illegals. To some, it seems, that's their defining characteristic. To the point of nouning them that way.

    October 30, 2007

  • Oh, we had a lovely discussion about this...

    October 30, 2007

  • Mark Twain, 1800's: "Buy land. They've stopped making it"

    Seasteaders, 2003: "Memo: Production Resuming"

    October 30, 2007

  • Here's a curiosity I just found about the name of the LPA: "Originally to be called 'Midgets of America,' the folks who could afford to attend the early meetings were as likely to be non-midgets as midgets. So a compromise was made to call the group 'Midgets and Dwarfs of America' (notice who came first). It didn't take long, however, for the fledgling members to notice that the non-midgets (by P.T. Barnum's standards) were greatly out-numbering the midgets. So a second compromise was struck to call the group 'Little People of America.'" Quoted from this page.

    Note the distinction between dwarfs and midgets, which is meant to differentiate between little people who have childlike proportions, and those who have "normal" adult proportions. Medically speaking, the two have today come to be recognized as simply different variations of dwarfism.

    It seems the notorious showman P.T. Barnum is credited with popularizing the word midget, which applies a suffix to midge (a small fly). Its offensiveness is debatable, and there are plenty of people with dwarfism who even prefer to be identified by that word. It's also used to describe any small object or trinket. There are also those who find dwarf to be an empowering label rather than pejorative, and advocate for its use.

    I look it up because I'm bored, and mildly curious. ;-)

    October 30, 2007

  • That's a whole other issue altogether -- today's definitions of "conservative" and "liberal" are a good deal different from those of a hundred years ago. In the past few decades alone there's been a dramatic shift. To a certain degree, the two ends of the spectrum appear to have completely swapped positions several times in history, yet from another angle they are actually pretty similar to each other in approach today (they disagree over various issues, but not in how to enact the changes they desire).

    October 29, 2007

  • Hmm, according to the internets there's an organization called LPA, or Little People of America. The medical condition they represent is formally known as dwarfism, but it seems they reject the word dwarf as a noun. They prefer "people with dwarfism," or the aforementioned "little people" as a more light-hearted reference. Their web site also mentions the "short-statured community," which is going on a list of mine posthaste.

    Additionally, there is a Restricted Growth Association in the U.K., which suggests different terminology is used across the pond.

    October 29, 2007

  • Only the sickening ones. ;-)

    October 29, 2007

  • That's a good one too, is there a counterpart on the conservative side? Maybe traditional, but that doesn't have quite the same strong implications as "if you're not a liberal, you're AGAINST progress!" :-) It would be nice if advocacy groups on all sides of the political spectrum could embrace a little truth-in-advertising.

    October 29, 2007

  • Ideologies aside, I think they're both baddies for participating in such a practice.

    October 29, 2007

  • What's the point? When not even death can stop true love, why bother? ;-)

    October 29, 2007

  • It may be. I've heard it plenty. But if I were one, I don't think I'd appreciate being called that very much.

    October 29, 2007

  • What, every word of that was true! ;-)

    October 29, 2007

  • I'm not clear on what the accepted alternative is. Isn't dwarf rather demeaning as well? I've also heard little people but I would consider that even worse. I'm not big into political correctness, but I've always felt awkward about using the words I've heard, because if I were short of stature any of them would offend me. And short of stature or just short are better, but inaccurate.

    October 29, 2007

  • I just love how rhetoric-steeped both of them are: if you're not pro-life, you must be anti-life, or pro-death, and if you're not pro-choice you must be anti-choice or perhaps pro-slavery. I do wish people could be objective and not have to propagandize all the labels. Only confuses the masses, really. If only to a certain degree, making it harder to put oneself in the shoes of the opposing side because of the vilification.

    October 29, 2007

  • Or when broadcast every Friday morning over the elementary school P.A. system. Just tragic.

    October 29, 2007

  • (She doesn't get eaten at this time.)

    October 29, 2007

  • Also, a notorious attorney named Johnny, right up there with the likes of one Phoenix Wright.

    October 29, 2007

  • Was the John B. one of them?

    October 29, 2007

  • Actually, the word chasing refers to the pursuit of pleasure. Similar to the modern-day pleasure cruise, which is much slower than one might expect from "cruising." Of course the root of such phrases stems from Solomon's book of wisdom, Ecclesiastes, in which he declares that "everything is vanity, a chasing after the wind," inexorably tying the pleasures of the world to the breeze, and by extension, sailboats.

    October 29, 2007

  • I don't think Ima has ever been a nice name. I've only ever heard it in jokes about terrible ones. Is it short for a traditional name, or was it just invented for the sake of bad puns?

    October 29, 2007

  • Wow, a different nose for every occasion... lucky guy.

    October 29, 2007

  • Aww, I wish this word didn't make me think of diarrhea... :-(

    October 29, 2007

  • Rita: What's wrong with the Groundhog Festival? In San Diego, I covered the swallows returning to Capistrano six years.

    Phil: Someday somebody will see me interviewing a groundhog, and think I don't have a future.

    Rita: I think it's a nice story. He comes out, and he looks around. He wrinkles up his little nose. He sees his shadow or he doesn't see it, it's nice. People like it.

    Phil: You are new, aren't you? People like blood sausage too. People are morons.

    - Groundhog Day

    October 29, 2007

  • Jeesh, could you be any more cryptic? ;-) How about Humperdinck, am I on the right track?

    October 28, 2007

  • That's okay, teaching others the basic tags is pretty much the cross I've borne for years as punishment for learning HTML in 1995. I don't even think about it anymore. I build web sites in my sleep. :-P

    October 28, 2007

  • At the ISP I work for, we have a server room with computers named after various characters. One is called Mojo, and its sibling server is called Jojo.

    We also have Blossom, Buttercup, Gilligan, Skipper, and, um, a bunch of others that I can't remember because I don't really work with any o' them.

    October 28, 2007

  • Regular HTML should do the trick. In the case of creating links, try the following code:

    <a href="URL-GOES-HERE">TEXT-GOES-HERE</a>

    I'm assuming that's what you were looking for, if not... *screams for John's attention*

    October 28, 2007

  • Sounds like you got pwned by pronunciation.

    October 28, 2007

  • I'm never speaking to you again.

    Oh wait, I just did. Nevermind then.

    October 28, 2007

  • That, of course, depends on your definition of "bad." ;-)

    October 28, 2007

  • What? Since when can anything pertaining to it be called proper? :-P

    October 27, 2007

  • Yes, it's definitely pronounced like "poned," and in an ironic, knowing manner.

    October 27, 2007

  • Not in the least. ;-)

    October 27, 2007

  • What can I say? I think it's horrible perfect.

    October 27, 2007

  • That's all very interesting and stuff, but remind me never to ask you out. ;-)

    October 27, 2007

  • That explains it! I remember a while back when somebody (reesetee, I think) noticed that the text on the home page said Wirdee, and assumed it was some April Fools joke or something. Shortly thereafter it seemed to correct itself, and we never did get closure... ;-)

    Edit: I just looked up the word page for Wirdee and it seems I was wise to things even back then!

    October 27, 2007

  • Don't worry, it's not like it'll run out of room or anything. Space is big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist's, but that's just peanuts to space.

    October 27, 2007

  • Sri Lanka? So... um... Colombo?

    October 27, 2007

  • It was certainly a step up from the TOS uniforms and their sparkly chest stickers... though I don't know that using the bathroom needed to be a factor. Everybody knows that in the future there are no bathrooms; you just beam the waste out from your body and into space. No muss, no fuss.

    October 27, 2007

  • I'm so confuzzled.

    October 27, 2007

  • Did I say bumbershoot? And the question is about raincoats? Whoops, stupid me. It's Friday and my thoughts are already on the weekend. ;-)

    October 27, 2007

  • The title of the thread was "Rudy Giuliani is Unbelievable Terrible." Politics aside, I love the phrase. :-P

    October 27, 2007

  • "I'd be happy to checkorate that for you!"

    October 27, 2007

  • "They should put this on babies."

    October 27, 2007

  • Hey now, I didn't add or comment on this word until after the game was over. But I fully intended to. :-P

    October 27, 2007

  • Aww jeez, did I draw the short straw this week? ;-)

    October 27, 2007

  • I fear what Google's giant computer brain will have to say about this page.

    October 27, 2007

  • No, the Picard-jerk would definitely have to be Wesley "Gosh, Captain, I wanna be just like you when I grow up" Crusher. ;-)

    And you'd think Starfleet would issue more practical uniforms at some point...

    October 27, 2007

  • Isn't that an oxymoron? The whole point of flash mobs is that they're spontaneous and random, and they dissolve just as suddenly as they form. But don't people usually plan far ahead for conferences, and then stick around once they've begun?

    October 27, 2007

  • Haha, like any good game show, I did what I could to generate the ratings. It's all about the ratings!

    October 27, 2007

  • Crazy logic those rom coms have! I admit having been tempted to do mean things ("accidents," of course) to various cute girls I've known, in hopes that real life would turn out to be just like a movie. But alas, real life ain't.

    October 27, 2007

  • I'm still stumped, but here are a couple wild guesses...

    3. bumbershoot?

    4. stumble?

    7. Dido?

    8. absolutely no idea

    10. ditto that

    October 27, 2007

  • Yes. Yes, and yes. Thank you for posting this. I chilled.

    October 26, 2007

  • Yes, the Picard-jerk! So that's what it's called... I love how even the little things from that show have become famous.

    October 26, 2007

  • All I know is if you filed my teeth down, I would be indignant. And you would be in the hospital for a very long time. ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Hey, that's a very good connection, skipvia! That phrase never did make sense to me. But I've gotta say, what a despicable deed is this bishoping. I'm not exactly what you might call an "animal person," but this sounds incredibly cruel even to me. Then again, I think I have an abnormal fear of scraping/filing body parts: teeth, toenails, elbow bones, jawbones... yeesh...

    October 26, 2007

  • I'm pretty clueless, but...

    1. mamba

    9. bomb bus?

    10. amblers?

    October 26, 2007

  • Oh no, you're corrupting my list ads!!

    October 26, 2007

  • Whyagottahate?

    October 26, 2007

  • And it's totally me. Haha!

    October 26, 2007

  • Well said. :-) I think libertarianism's pretty great, but I wouldn't want to use Wordie as my soapbox. Lots of better places for that.

    October 26, 2007

  • If ever there was a reason for censorship on Wordie... ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • You have emerged victorious from Identify the Wordie. You are an astute observer of people on the internet! I mean that in a good way! Make sure to come back for the next game so you can retain your title, champion.

    This comment is your trophy. Display it with love for all the world to see.

    October 26, 2007

  • You have emerged victorious from Identify the Wordie. You are an astute observer of people on the internet! I mean that in a good way! Make sure to come back for the next game so you can retain your title, champion.

    This comment is your trophy. Display it with love for all the world to see.

    October 26, 2007

  • You have emerged victorious from Identify the Wordie. You are an astute observer of people on the internet! I mean that in a good way! Make sure to come back for the next game so you can retain your title, champion.

    This comment is your trophy. Display it with love for all the world to see.

    October 26, 2007

  • Thanks for playing! Results have been posted!

    October 26, 2007

  • If you're looking for a good introduction, a lot of people have found this video (Flash) to be a terrific overview. It's pretty short too. The nice thing about libertarianism is it's grounded in basic principles and is consistent in every situation, and the video explains what they are in a no-nonsense way. :-)

    October 26, 2007

  • I suddenly just got the mental picture of John sitting in a large control room, surrounded by knobs and switches, occasionally pulling random levers, and passing the time by watching our respective odometers with breathless anticipation. ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Mr. Cooper, apparently. That is, according to Wikipedia. Oh, and Jim Cramer is also partially to blame. It's a corruption of booyeah, which I guess is a corruption of boo! Yeah! Or something.

    *WARNING: Etymologies in mirror are most likely more madeupical than they appear*

    October 26, 2007

  • Hmm, how about secretary, copywriter, spin doctor, transcriptionist, letterer, muse? Not sure if any of those are general enough for you, but take your pick. :-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Wikipedia has some interestingish articles on the Marines' oorah and the Army's hooah. I don't think the Air Force or Navy have equivalents.

    October 26, 2007

  • Superman? ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Sad but true. There are a lot of good political-type words that I wish I could cling to, but their definitions have shifted and they now have negative connotations. Oh well. That's language, right? ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • You're no Marine! ;-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Awkwardly, yes. Conservative and liberal are weird words that have changed meanings so many times over the years that they're hard to pin down meanings for today. Libertarianism can be defined both as "traditional conservatism" and as "classical liberalism." Some people say that we're economically conservative and socially liberal, but even that's hard to quantify. When I refer to myself as a conservative, I'm referring to my positions on limited government, which used to be a mainstay of conservatism but is seldom seen in the Republican party today. Nowadays the GOP is all about neoconservativism, which is another beast altogether.

    As for the "compassionate" part, it's a common misconception that libertarianism is uncompassionate. I hear it all the time and it's really annoying because it stems from not understanding the principles of liberty. Once a person discovers what liberty is really all about, it becomes clear that libertarianism is the most altruistic political position, and arguable the most compassionate as well.

    October 26, 2007

  • Great list! You might find some inspiration in my list of names for the afterlife because a lot of them are similarly evocative and mystical. :-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Hey, we do exist! We're just filed under "L" for libertarian. :-P

    October 26, 2007

  • Oorah!

    October 26, 2007

  • Any more guesses? I'll end the game tomorrow. Anyone is welcome to play. :-)

    October 26, 2007

  • Don't forget Adam West, star of...

    na na na na na na na na

    na na na na na na na na

    BATMAN!!

    *adds tag to page* :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • I love to think about philosophy but don't like reading it. One of the few "greats" that I've spent any time on at all was Thoreau, who espoused a similar view of the evils of civilization. He was very poetic, which is nice, but he was still wrong. :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • You flatter me. :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • That might be a good way to handle it. And maybe a similar feature for marking tags as irrelevant? ;-)

    October 25, 2007

  • British spelling never ceases to amaeze me.

    October 25, 2007

  • That is pretty great. Added!

    October 25, 2007

  • Haha, that's alright, I think there are about six or seven versions of this word on the site, but only one (the one I linked to) is "correct." Not that correctness really matters here, since it's admittedly a joke word, but whatever. ;-)

    October 25, 2007

  • The phrase based on refers to the basis of something. If someone writes a book on the basis of factual events, the book is "based on a true story."

    I think the new, mangled idiom assumes that the root word is base, i.e., the bottom surface of something, or a floor. The floor serves as a "launching point" for new content, which leaps "off of" it. So in the example above, the book is not entirely true, but it uses reality as its anchor as it explores new dramatic possibilities. Not to justify the new phrase, which is really awkward to say. And besides that, this etymological study, as usual, is totally madeupical.

    October 25, 2007

  • I'm also late. But I agree, too. It's John's site, and he should always have the last word in iffy situations like this one. I think he ought to reserve the right to censor even text in extreme situations, at his own discretion. We're a very good-natured community here, and I think the closest we've come to such a point was one offensive list that caught some attention back in the day.

    Considering that's the worst/most controversial incident that I'm aware of, we're in pretty good shape. But the nature of this kind of site makes it ripe for abuse, and John should be prepared to take action should it become necessary. I'm not a fan of frivolous habitual censorship, of course, but it must be an option in some rare situations.

    October 25, 2007

  • A portmanteau of snark and sarcasm. Perfect for the modern web user.

    October 25, 2007

  • Or maybe leaving everyone else out because your head is stuck in the sand. :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • Pharaoh Moohlah! Pharaoh Moohlah! :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • A more appropriate seat has never existed.

    October 25, 2007

  • Haha, nice example! :-P Yes, that's the third usage I mentioned, which I don't have (as much of) a problem with.

    October 25, 2007

  • I prefer the name curds and whey. Perfectly sums up the congealed chunky-runniness of the food. Wait, food? No, it's not food at all. It's barely edible fungus.

    October 25, 2007

  • Keith is a vegetarian

    Not vegan 'cause he drinks his dairy and

    He's not like me who also eats meat

    He protests the war with the sandals on his feet

    Omnivores for mediocrity!

    Omnivores for mediocrity!

    Omnivores for mediocrity!

    Helpless vegetables are trapped

    For killing only them you should be slapped

    At least a cow can run and be free

    Omnivores for mediocrity!

    (A note from Reese: Keith used to only eat four things - meat, bread, cheese, and candy. Then I made him go to this Chinese restaurant with me and he started eating vegetables. Now, he's gone way overboard and WON'T eat meat at all, and he goes to all these war protests. And he burns incense and wears a muumuu. Okay, maybe it's just a dress.)

    (A note from Keith: Hey, I look good in that dress.)

    October 25, 2007

  • Gross. Never, never feed me on the poop.

    October 25, 2007

  • On second thought, it is more pleasant than eating cottage cheese.

    October 25, 2007

  • It's like drinking maple syrup, with chewy lumps throughout.

    October 25, 2007

  • Wow, in that way it's almost onomatopoeic. *does that finger-in-cheek popping noise thing*

    October 25, 2007

  • Dad?

    October 25, 2007

  • I just had a revelation concerning the word poop... it's a lousy noun but a kick-awesome verb.

    October 25, 2007

  • For the win!

    October 25, 2007

  • Technology ftw!

    October 25, 2007

  • Before Orbitz the dotcom travel agency, there was Orbitz the drink. It was fruit-flavored, and thick nearly to the point of gelatin. The drink was clear, with many little colored globs perfectly suspended throughout it. The drink was strongly disliked and went out of production shortly after it launched. It could be considered a precursor to today's bubble tea.

    October 25, 2007

  • Oh, we play games occasionally, too. :-P

    October 25, 2007

  • Wait, this isn't listed yet? What the heck?

    October 25, 2007

  • Hey johayrae! The site doesn't have a "purpose" per se -- it's just a place to talk about words. We're very laid-back here and a lot more fun than you'd expect a bunch of grammarians and wordinistas to be.

    You can make lists of words (or phrases) and categorize them however you like... words you love, hate, words that remind you of New Zealand, whatever. :-) Check out lists made by other people, share ideas, tell jokes. Though words are our foundation we end up talking about pretty much everything eventually. It's a fun site to just dork out on.

    October 25, 2007

  • I think Boba is just the brand name of the local company that sells it here. But that's what my friends call it. The strangest drink I've had since Orbitz.

    October 25, 2007

  • What is that? Is it like boba tea? I'm so uncultured when it comes to food...

    Edit: Wikipedia tells me they are one and the same. A lot of my friends like that stuff. I think it tastes decent, but the floating blobs are gross.

    October 25, 2007

  • Haha, the context makes all the difference! I love it!

    October 24, 2007

  • nested...quotes...headache...

    October 24, 2007

  • Good call on rapprochemental, I corrected the spelling. And maybe for future guesses, just pick one word per person or it'll be hard to find a winner. :-P

    Oh, and I think you forgot John.

    October 24, 2007

  • Yeah, just post your guesses in a comment. :-)

    October 24, 2007

  • *smirks at trivet*

    October 24, 2007

  • Um... air inks? fair angst? ;-)

    October 24, 2007

  • Game on!

    October 24, 2007

  • That. Is. Perfect.

    October 24, 2007

  • It's also frequently misspelled. See: pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis. :-P

    October 24, 2007

  • This word always reminds me of Stranger Than Fiction. If you haven't seen it, you must. It was *made* for Wordies.

    October 24, 2007

  • Most every time I hear the phrase, it's used in one of two ways: it's either substituting for might, or it's substituting for could. In those situations, I get the impression the speaker doesn't know which one is correct, so he goes with both just to cover all the bases. That's BAD.

    But to be fair, there are other times it's used as an abbreviated form of "might be able to" and that's a little more acceptable. Grammatically atrocious, of course, but shorthand is reasonable in response to a mouthful of a phrase.

    October 24, 2007

  • Okay, I think I get it. Because ayuntar means "to join" or "to meet," I see how it could be taken either way. Similar to the word intercourse in English, which originally meant "discussion" but has come mean "coitus" in most every case. Also similar are conjugation and union.

    October 24, 2007

  • Sure beats Sega, which is an abbreviation for "Service Games," or Sony, which is Japanese slang for "child prodigy," or Microsoft, which means "small and mushy."

    October 24, 2007

  • I'm not super-attached to the embedded media thing. I like finding the occasional YouTube video on a word page because it often adds context (see: like) but it's true that it breaks the flow of the text we've come to expect. And a link would be nearly as effective, anyway. However, without embedded media, we wouldn't have earworm, which may or may not be a good thing.

    October 24, 2007

  • Woah, a Japanese-to-Spanish translation, posted on an English web site. I can't even begin to quantify the cool.

    October 24, 2007

  • Ah, that could be. I don't read much of anything. :-P Mostly non-fiction these days, anyway. But yeah, I expect the motif is present in more than two movies, I just couldn't find any specific examples.

    October 24, 2007

  • As the first person to ever embed media on Wordie, of course I'm a little biased... but I do like having the ability to post that kind of stuff. :-P

    However, I'm probably at odds with everyone else here when I say that I would appreciate some color and design elements around the site. I mean, it's perfectly functional as-is (and I love it!) but a little on the bland side for my tastes. Just because we're pro-words doesn't mean we have to be anti-everything else. Now, the only reason I've brought this up is that embedded media would not seem nearly so out-of-place on a more colorful site; I think it's only because of the simpler design we currently have that their presence seems a little jarring.

    October 24, 2007

  • Maybe the motif isn't as common as I thought. Some Googling tells me it was used in The Godfather and Children of Men, but maybe those are the only places? And perhaps not in books at all. Oh well, still interesting irregardless.

    October 24, 2007

  • He'll always be known as Left Ear to me.

    October 23, 2007

  • Actually that's pretty disgusting, if evocatively so.

    October 23, 2007

  • So... uh... what happened here?

    October 23, 2007

  • Hey! It's something I've on-and-off-again wanted, but never bugged you about it directly because you have so many other things on your plate. But yeah, if you made it, I wouldn't complain. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • No, oranges do. In literature, the appearance of an orange often signals that something really awful is about to happen. It's a kind of foreshadowing, or something.

    October 23, 2007

  • What? Tom Swift?

    October 23, 2007

  • The shade of green found on many sports cars, as named by my brother. The most dangerous car color in the world.

    October 23, 2007

  • The shade of red found on many sports cars, as named by my brother.

    October 23, 2007

  • The shade of yellow found on many sports cars, as named by my brother.

    October 23, 2007

  • Haha, I know what you mean! When you say the word, you can taste it funking in your mouth.

    October 23, 2007

  • Hey Jen! (Yikes, now there's two Jens around here *tries not to get confused*)

    So there's really no way to send private messages on Wordie yet, but yeah, a note on a profile is cool. Thanks for the kind words! I also enjoy rummaging through your letter-lists and finding nuggets of randomness. :-D

    October 23, 2007

  • But why Clark Kent? I mean, I'd at least be Donald Trump or somebody. Now Batman, there's a super with panache!

    October 23, 2007

  • But isn't that traditionally a symbol for impending danger? That would totally defeat the purpose! Give me some mithril any day.

    October 23, 2007

  • seanahan,

    Better a foothead than a butthead.

    Insincerely,

    uselessness

    October 23, 2007

  • Of course, had you never posted that comment, we never would have come here, and the need for an alert would never have existed. I think you're feigning care by "warning" us of earworms, but in reality hoping beyond hope that the dreaded beast will infect every last one of us with unending musicality. Thanks, bub.

    October 23, 2007

  • Oh hey guys, I'm back and I forgive you. So I lied.

    October 23, 2007

  • Wordie offends me. I'm leaving and NEVAR COMING BACK.

    October 23, 2007

  • I need to see Galaxy Quest again. That's an awesome movie! I love all the little Star Trek references and parodies.

    October 23, 2007

  • Holy cow, what an unlikely pair of definitions ayuntamiento has. Just how exactly are the two related?

    October 23, 2007

  • Tagged. And that's all I have to say about that.

    October 23, 2007

  • How random, somebody in the office was playing that very skit earlier today. Turd Ferguson is a funny name.

    October 23, 2007

  • It was my doppelganger! I was in a trance! Under duress! The terrorists made me do it! They were going to cut off my earlobes!

    October 23, 2007

  • Wow, between the auto-complete and the random word feature, I've discovered a number of strange things on this site...

    October 23, 2007

  • I guess that would be a matter of opinion. They may have thought that it's not immediately clear how to pronounce Danone ("dan OWN"? "dah NUN"?) and decided to go with something more phonetic in English. It's perfectly clear, this way, that it's meant to rhyme with cannon. To my ears, it connotes strength and vitality; that is some tough yogurt! Contrast that with their primary competitor, Yoplait, which sounds foofy and pretty and French. :-P

    October 23, 2007

  • The guy I bought my car from has a 250+ lb dog/wolf crossbreed named Sue. It's a boy.

    Mark Edge, a talk radio host I enjoy, has a cat named Señor Grouchy Pants.

    October 23, 2007

  • Ahh, brilliant, John, I'll keep that in mind next time I make an on-Wordie link!

    So yeah, lots of ideas here to consider... but in the meantime, perhaps a good priority is pagination on any page where comments can go? Because the active ones (like, say this page) fill up fast, and that's a lot of scrolling. AJAX and pagination go together like birds of a feather, so a little XMLHttpRequest magic could do wonders. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • That's true, Xing is also a common Chinese name, and it's pronounced "zing." So, I guess we can't win either way. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • Agreed, they should be consistent, I would think. But I don't really like the two forms you cited, personally, because x-ing is what you see on railroad crossing signs, and so I just head-pronounce it crossing. And x ing is totally weird: where else do you find a space between a verb and its -ing suffix? That can't be right!

    October 23, 2007

  • Good heavens, this site is becoming a veritable earworm minefield!

    October 23, 2007

  • Yes. Uh, yes indeed. You caught me. :-P

    October 23, 2007

  • Haha, that was Caspar Weinberger, but you have to wonder...

    October 23, 2007

  • Jeepers, what a letdown.

    October 23, 2007

  • Oh, Horatio Hornblower's ship was the Indefatigable. It's fiction, but noteworthy fiction. :-)

    October 23, 2007

  • Yes, as you've defined those pronunciations, although I usually pronounce a hard "G" in iguana. I'm entirely gringo and only say marijuana with a strong accent when I'm in the right (read: silly) mood. All other times I sound much more uncultured and American. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • In that case, you'll "love" the Gallery of "Misused" Quotation Marks. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • I'm also opposed to favoriting users, but I don't think favoriting comments is bad. At least on MetaFilter (my inspiration for the idea) there's no sense of competition. The "favorites" aren't really worth anything, except as a placemark to return to good conversation points. It has the side benefit of encouraging people to post substantial comments, though "substantial" remains plenty vague so it could mean educational or weird or funny or whatever. It's very free-form.

    I love all the "conversations" lists but I think it's only a short-term solution for keeping track of good stuff. I'm just looking for better ways to do that, and while favoriting comments may or may not help, maybe there are other things that will work better in the long-term. Wordie's getting bigger, and faster, and more complicated, and anything that improves the way it's organized is a big plus in my book.

    So here's an idea I just had. At the moment, we can create lists of words. But what if we could make lists of other things too? For example, lists of lists. Lists of tags. Lists of users. Lists of comments. I think that would add many layers of interconnectivity, and provide new ways to organize stuff as well.

    Finally, John, how the heck did you link to a list page without the icon showing up after it?

    October 23, 2007

  • The philosophy of liberty transcends politics. It is about maximizing the natural rights of all people equally. According to libertarianism, every human being is born with three inherent rights:

    1. Ability to own property. A person's belongings are the fruit of his labor (and the product of rights #2 and #3), therefore control over his property is the way to retain the meaning of his past. To take a person's property without his consent is theft.

    2. Personal freedom, or liberty. Every individual carries the responsibility of self-ownership and self-determination; only he may make the decisions of where he will go, what he will do, and how he will live his life. Liberty represents the worth of one's present. To take a person's liberty without his consent is slavery.

    3. Life. No human being is entitled to harm or take the life of another, because a person's life represents hope for the future. To deprive someone of life without his consent is murder.

    These three rights are the foundation of healthy society and may never be infringed by anyone, under any circumstance. Any additional "rights" that do infringe on the three rights listed above are not really rights at all. Additionally, laws which cause any of those rights to be infringed are immoral laws and should be opposed.

    The three cornerstone rights listed above form an invaluable gift that every person possesses in equal quantities. Libertarianism is about defending that gift from anyone who would take it from another by force. In many cases, the enemy of individual rights is the common thug; in many others it is a tyrannical government. Regardless of the circumstance, there is never any justification for violating other humans' rights. In modern democracies, libertarians stand against the tyranny of the majority to prevent the rights of the minority from being unwillingly wrested away.

    Libertarianism is an oft-ridiculed, oft-misunderstood philosophy, but a highly principled one as well. For a more detailed explanation, you may be interested in watching this short video.

    October 23, 2007

  • A good argument for libertarianism. :-)

    October 23, 2007

  • Did he leave a note?

    October 23, 2007

  • Person 1: "I love rain."

    Person 2: "I agree, rain is wonderful. Nice and wet."

    Person 1: "(Of course/By the way), while I enjoy the wetness, I hate the dark sky rain brings."

    Person 2: "I'll, uh, make a note of that."

    Okay, it's a stretch. They're similar, though not fully interchangeable. I concede this battle to you, but not without a whole lot of points scored for my team first. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • I wonder if that's related to the Dannon yogurt brand we have in the United States.

    October 23, 2007

  • See my similar experience at linguistical deafblindness. At least you got to duel it out; I fouled up the first word they gave me. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • LOL, nice way of diagramming it. :-) I just wish accent marks weren't so tricky to type. I'm not usually one to deliberately misspell things out of laziness, but I admit in the case of avoiding unusual characters, I'm pretty notorious.

    October 23, 2007

  • I'm only going to say it once. For the record. The S-word is schadenfreude. Never speak it in my presence. That is all.

    October 23, 2007

  • It's the new S-word! Something about obscure German words that attracts the trendies, I guess.

    October 23, 2007

  • I like to think of it as a spiritual battle royale, starring Jesus and Satan as luchadores in a ginormous wrestling ring of fire. And the devil done got his hide whupped something fierce.

    October 23, 2007

  • That's disgusting! I can't believe there's actually a word for this.

    *tries to forget*

    October 23, 2007

  • Correcting for unhealthy psychological frameworks in one's mind by deconstructing them and replacing them with normal ones. The term usually refers to the process needed to extract a loved from an abusive cult that indoctrinates followers. It is also a staple of post-traumatic counseling, and of helping harrowed soldiers recover from shell shock or brainwashing that they may have endured as prisoners of war.

    October 23, 2007

  • Unlearning is needed to excel in a lot of fields, because it leads to "thinking outside the box." See also: deprogramming for a related concept of mind-renewal.

    October 23, 2007

  • Fascinating. Who would have thought that such an old technology term would still be so relevant today? Well, it's old with regards to the internet/computer revolution, anyway.

    October 23, 2007

  • Sounds like it could be short for either word, seeing as how one is a noun and one is a verb. I mean heck, isn't divide really just the verb form of dividend anyway?

    October 23, 2007

  • It should be Frankenstein, which is totally a verb by the way.

    October 23, 2007

  • I use my pinky toe! You know, for counting. Four toes on a foot would be wrong wrong wrong. But when I hear this word, I also think of the appendix, and tonsils. :-)

    October 23, 2007

  • Okay, where the heck is the S.S. Minnow?

    October 23, 2007

  • See also: distraction. Binky comes in many forms. ;-)

    October 23, 2007

  • I have to wonder about people who go out of their way to insert unnecessary punctuation. It's easier to type your than you're! It's easier to type locals than local's! It's a two-for-one deal: save yourself the trouble of typing extra characters, AND get the added bonus of being correct. Who wouldn't want that?

    A frightened part of me suspects that these people assume using more letters and punctuation marks equals being more grammatically intelligent. Like refusing to acknowledge that its really is the possessive form of it, because it's not as "complete" as it could be.

    October 23, 2007

  • You know, it really is a pretty word. Guess it depends on how you pronounce it. Gotta use a strong fake accent and exaggerate the H sound: "mahdeeHHUUWWanna!"

    October 23, 2007

  • Here in New Mexico (that is, provided I'm really located there) we have a popular dish called huevos rancheros. If the slang connotation is so strong in Spanish, I wonder if that name is intended as innuendo. Seems innocent enough in the literal sense. There's got to be a way to order eggs without implying something else, right?

    October 22, 2007

  • I'm always late to these parties, but here's my two cents. I like my Wordie existential. You know, so it just is what it is.

    Maybe it's my pseudonym taking over, but I think attempts to make the site more useful are not so good. At least academically speaking. I'm all in favor of making it more usable, and more efficient to do what we already do. But let's not kid ourselves that we're making some kind of purposeful dictionary/Wikipedia clone. That may be right for Lingoz, but it's not who we are. Wordie is primarily about fun (vis-à-vis word appreciation, admittedly).

    Yes, the site is educational. But mostly in the "gosh, I wasn't planning to learn that today but I'm glad I did" way. There's no way to differentiate between fun comments and informative comments, and comments are frequently both. Often a regular definition comment will spawn a whole conversation that could be considered "fun" or "off-topic" but is also thought-provoking and enlightening. We should make no attempts to corral comments into one category or another. In my opinion.

    On the other hand, I'd be up for other ways to add value to comments. Perhaps comment-favoriting? MetaFilter has a nice way to both give kudos for good contributions to a discussion and save them for recall later. Favorited comments are noted with a little "14 users marked this comment as a favorite" blurb. Food for thought.

    October 22, 2007

  • Oh, there's an obscure usage you missed: "I like ice cream."

    It indicates favor. Mostly obsolete.

    October 22, 2007

  • I just want to say, though I've heard the tune for years I never knew the lyrics. This is one bizarre, hilarious song, and the fact that Verse 6 mentions Albuquerque makes it even better. Granted, my Spanish is muy terrible but I liked the parts I could figure out.

    October 22, 2007

  • Kind of like Xing, or however you spell that? Like when you X something out?

    October 22, 2007

  • Even in English, there's crossover there. I mean, should the phrase "of course" literally mean what we use it for? I'm pretty sure it's a shortened form of "it's a matter of course," meaning that the course of logic inevitably leads to some obvious conclusion. But the same phrase is also often used to mean "by the way" in colloquial speech; it's a conversational segue that refers to the same "course of logic," which in this case will lead the discussion into a natural transition. Similar to the way indeed is used, or in olden days, verily.

    For more examples of this kind of phrasal crossover in slang, see duh and eh. ;-)

    October 22, 2007

  • I hope he didn't hurt himself.

    October 22, 2007

  • A most helpful tag.

    October 22, 2007

  • Software that corrects intentional typos is teh evil. Also, I have the sudden desire to post my picture on studnet, whatever that is.

    October 22, 2007

  • I'm a fan of bastardaster, personally. Nothing like adding insult to... er, insult.

    October 22, 2007

  • Awww, I am most definitely a student of the latter.

    October 22, 2007

  • Every mother's ideal Christmas present?

    October 22, 2007

  • Also: an adherent to the Wordie Commandments, and by extension, John himself.

    October 22, 2007

  • What? Koani? No, say it isn't true! There is nothing... beautiful... about that, that, "word." Please, take it back!

    October 22, 2007

  • I'm sure to the trained reader this sort

    esuaceb ,tneiciffe ylbirret si gnitirw fo

    it reduces the work of the eye by 50%.

    redner ot lacitcarpmi rehtar si ti ,llitS

    since most computer software doesn't

    eb tsum txet dna noisrevni enil troppus

    flipped manually. And since the format is

    tnemngila ,epyt deifitsuj rof detius-tseb

    also becomes an issue. Not to mention the

    eurT .gniht sdrawkcab gnidaer elohw

    boustrophedon may not even be possible with

    sretcarahc derorrim sa ygolonhcet tnerruc

    are not supported for the entire alphabet

    .dradnats edocinU eht ni

    October 22, 2007

  • I really, really like hanging out at this one web site that doesn't have pictures and is all about words.

    October 22, 2007

  • I like it because it's just a bunch of vowels, preceded by the bizarrest letter in the alphabet. Plus, it should be impossible to pronounce but is instead deceptively easy.

    October 22, 2007

  • People who don't understand the difference between similes and metaphors probably shouldn't use analogies at all.

    October 22, 2007

  • Agreed, to my knowledge there's not an honest man in Washington except Ron Paul. Would be nice to see him become president, if only for the breath of fresh air to make the corruption more bearable everywhere else.

    October 22, 2007

  • Haha, I love the blue! Gotta agree with the comments in the thread though, that article sucked. :-)

    October 20, 2007

  • Love this one! How about cuckoo? (Kisholi made a nice list too...)

    October 20, 2007

  • I'm confused, do you mean compliant? Or perhaps just pliant? This word, "complaint," is a noun.

    October 20, 2007

  • See discussion at shirt. It means we want earworm merch. :-)

    October 19, 2007

  • Interesting that both of those Spanish words are English words too.

    October 19, 2007

  • I learned to say it fast back in third grade, and thought I had "arrived" in the world of intelligence. After a while I realized that doing so is an impressive -- but hollow -- way to dork out, and serves little purpose beside that. It's also an extremely effective way to make your friends think you're a pretentious snot. :-P

    October 19, 2007

  • Nice breakdown, but I think you mean pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis. ;-)

    October 19, 2007

  • Oh, now I see that one on the noun list. Guess I had thought of it as a verb. Ah well, still a nifty song.

    October 19, 2007

  • What is this "book" thing of which you speak? I like the idea of portable literature, but unless the battery life is good I can't be bothered.

    October 19, 2007

  • Hmm. Not sure about that. It's probably heavier than plain dirt, but I imagine there were plenty of unmined heavy metals underground. There's probably no way to calculate which would be heavier.

    October 19, 2007

  • Le freak, c'est chic.

    October 19, 2007

  • It's called "Popcorn," originally recorded by the band Hot Butter. Because of its notoriety as an obnoxious earworm, it's been covered probably more than any other song ever. There are so many versions floating around, it's not even funny. Here are 79 of them you can download. I have no idea what version is playing on this page, they're all the same to me. More information (and still more versions to download) available here.

    October 19, 2007

  • Better an icky insect than, um, nothing. Remember, Pinocchio was a blockhead.

    October 19, 2007

  • There are fifty levels. I couldn't stay consistently above 47.

    October 19, 2007

  • Precisely. I had a second meaning in mind too: "Made of sheets of paper bound together." :-P

    October 19, 2007

  • So I'm curious. When all the continents were together on one side of the earth, wouldn't that off-centeredness have caused the planet to rotate in a wobbly fashion? That's a lot of weight in one place. And if so, would it affect our orbit around the sun? I'm assuming not, in frictionless space. Still, makes you wonder.

    October 19, 2007

  • I'm going to assume that's a BTTF reference, reesetee, and no one's a bigger BTTF dork than me. Therefore, I must correct your years to 1955 and 2015. ;-)

    October 19, 2007

  • When did they start letting six-year-olds write the dictionary?

    October 19, 2007

  • There really isn't a problem with transporters. Safety mechanisms like the aforementioned pattern buffers and Heisenberg compensators have made the risk negligible. Beaming down to a planet surface is far safer than piloting a shuttlecraft down there, and has been for several hundred years (we're in the 24th century, right?).

    Occasionally you'll have some freak thing happen, like a duplicate you running around, or you turn into a ghost, or you discover that old crewmen have been hiding in suspended animation for years in the matter stream. Or any number of other weird anomalies. But for the most part, it's perfectly safe. The major limitations are the 40,000 km range, the fact that you can't transport through raised shields or during warp travel. Certain hacks have overcome some of those, but can't be relied upon in everyday use.

    October 19, 2007

  • After how many months, you're beginning to? ;-)

    It's the username, isn't it? Hard to take a guy seriously with a name like uselessness. I like it. Catches people off guard. :-P

    October 19, 2007

  • Free Rice! Not for you, silly, for starving people around the world. All you have to do is show your vocabluaric prowess (no shortage of that around here), and you can help end hunger.

    October 19, 2007

  • Sorry, I can't understand what you're saying. I'm going back to the l33t sp34k page.

    October 19, 2007

  • Meaningless, but fun to say. ;-)

    October 19, 2007

  • Exactly 1/16? I'm not sure that race can be calculated that specifically. Besides, I'd expect that most people have some small portion of every race in their blood. That is, providing race even exists at all.

    October 19, 2007

  • There are many reasons dorks watch Star Trek. But let's face it, if you tuned in for the babe factor there's probably not much hope left for you. ;-)

    October 19, 2007

  • Pattern degradation isn't as bad as it sounds, usually. The recursive pattern buffers and Heisenberg compensators will keep you safe.

    October 19, 2007

  • Why do you people torment me like this?!?

    October 19, 2007

  • Not the most subtle doublespeak in the world, at any rate.

    October 19, 2007

  • Hmm, I'm not sure about pattern loss on a trip through a planet. You're probably right. But the transporter doesn't only work line-of-sight either. I assume there's a threshold of several meters of matter that you could beam through safely, more or less depending on what the material is. My guess is that if you wanted to transport from one point on the earth's surface to another, you'd only be able to go a little further than the horizon; eventually the planet's curvature becomes an issue.

    Of course, that's assuming you're using the wireless protocol they install on starships. That's pretty impractical on land. I expect you could send the signal through the internet on earth, and get just about anywhere there's web access.

    October 19, 2007

  • You can't transport things long-range because the pattern will degrade. Transporters have a maximum range of 40,000 km, which is nothing in the hugeness of space.

    Dating Deanna Troi would be a field trip to hell. Besides the mind-reading, her emotional sensitivity makes her a regular drama queen. And then there's her mother. I don't envy Riker.

    October 18, 2007

  • Hedgepiglet?

    October 18, 2007

  • Tiddlywinks?

    October 18, 2007

  • I'd take the holodeck, which can at least make all the other things appear real. I mean heck, it fooled Professor Moriarty.

    October 18, 2007

  • A clever edit, reesetee, changing the name there, so future generations of Wordies will read this page and think I'm the crazy one...which I am, but that's beside the point.

    October 18, 2007

  • October 18, 2007

  • There's no business like strabismus...

    October 18, 2007

  • The what? Don't hint at such marvels, my boy, unless you're prepared to expound upon the reference.

    October 18, 2007

  • Mmm, Web Pie. I mean pi.

    October 18, 2007

  • *tries to come up with a good pun about the study being elementary*

    *fails*

    October 18, 2007

  • Where's the dartboard?

    October 18, 2007

  • Eh, only if you believe in evolution. ;-)

    October 18, 2007

  • Holy crap, you're lucky I wasn't around last night. Few men have said those kinds of things to my face and... um... avoided rumors being spread about their mothers behind their backs.

    Rule #1 of Wordie: Don't ban uselessness.

    Rule #2 of Wordie: Conventional books are overrated.

    Rule #3 of Wordie: You don't have to be as smart as uselessness, if you make up for it with commentiness.

    October 18, 2007

  • I miss AZ.

    October 18, 2007

  • I think it's more like "I'm sorry I got caught."

    October 18, 2007

  • Mine too, except I find it considerably less exciting when the man knows he's been stuck.

    October 18, 2007

  • Avoiding funnel cakes, that's for sure.

    October 18, 2007

  • Here, let me take it off from around my neck, and you can yank it all you want. Go crazy.

    October 18, 2007

  • I think it's a matter of the remote server coming and going. It's not the most reliable place to load music from. ;-)

    October 18, 2007

  • I need to watch that DVD again. A friend of mine held a "screening" of it a few years ago, and I forgot how funny it was! Of course, if I had the opportunity to see it live... well screw the DVD. ;-)

    October 18, 2007

  • seanahan: yes, and yes doubly so. I am just as guilty, and suspect all the regulars on this site are too. ;-)

    October 18, 2007

  • Haha, like a band shirt, with all the cities listed on the back? I like! We'll need a totally metal font for that... Limozeen!! ;-)

    October 18, 2007

  • Turkish for "cotton castle," the name refers to a series of mineral-rich hot springs staggered down a large cliffside. The effect is similar to a huge frozen waterfall. The ancient city of Hierapolis was built atop the mountain by the Phrygian Greeks, and later became part of the Roman Empire. The place has been a popular destination for millennia due to the water's supposed healing properties. See a picture.

    October 18, 2007

  • Don't let a kiss fool you, or a fool kiss you.

    October 18, 2007

  • America should totally adopt the word pants to mean underwear. Apart from that, I'm partial to skivvies.

    October 18, 2007

  • As an experiment, members of the Wordie group on Facebook can now play Compendium on the discussion forum. Not sure if y'all are interested, but there's a game in session now. It'll run for a few days, so get over there and grab as many points as you can!

    October 18, 2007

  • Let's not forget about mexicocity...

    October 18, 2007

  • I just created the official(?) Facebook group for Wordie. Y'all join up now!

    October 18, 2007

  • Right, hence the modifier sadistic. I enjoy being a devil's advocate myself quite often, as it plays a valuable role in the Socratic method (a way I frequently converse with people). I assure you, my motives are always pure. :-P Trolls, however, are just rabblerousers and have no motives beyond their own epicaricous entertainment.

    October 18, 2007

  • It ain't a bad thing!! If I didn't have, you know, work to do, I might could keep up! :-P

    October 17, 2007

  • I've assimilated plenty of information from the internet over the years, which isn't "reading" in the traditional sense, but I think it's had the effect of teaching me a little bit about a lot of different things. I just don't have much experience with literal page-turning. :-)

    October 17, 2007

  • So I haven't read his books? I am a terrible person. And I plan to remain one for the foreseeable future. A regular sinner. Sorry, Vonnegut.

    October 17, 2007

  • No arguments there. ;-)

    October 17, 2007

  • µ♉∨♔ translates to: "I want to wear the crown."

    µ�?�☠♚ translates to: "I will have to kill the king."

    Did I read that right?

    October 17, 2007

  • I am surprisingly, um, whatever the opposite of well-read is. Poorly read. But I'm working on it, slowly but surely.

    October 17, 2007

  • Oh go ahead. I'm in third place this week anyhow, and you've more than doubled my comment count. I can't compete. ;-)

    October 17, 2007

  • Haha, I'm listening to Pandora right now and was just thinking the same thing! Or more specifically, I'd like a way to un-thumbs-up a song if I change my mind and decide it's not so great after all, but don't want to thumbs-down it either.

    October 17, 2007

  • Someone who finds pleasure in starting flame wars on the internet. Sort of a sadistic devil's advocate.

    October 17, 2007

  • See also: l33t sp34k.

    October 17, 2007

  • l33t sp34k i$ t3h /\r7 0f $@y1ng t3h /\/\0$7 @$1n1n3 7h1ng$ 1n t3h /\/\0$7 <0/\/\pl1<@73d \/\/@y p0$$1bl3...

    October 17, 2007

  • A knock-down, drag-out, no-holds-barred internet battle of wits. Tempers flare, flames fly, and wits are seldom involved. Flame war vocabulary is typically composed of l33t sp34k and accusations of stupidity and/or homosexuality.

    October 17, 2007

  • On the internet, a post or comment written specifically to incite a flame war. See also: troll.

    October 17, 2007

  • It's okay, I've got enough hot air to last all winter.

    October 17, 2007

  • I have the same problem with humbleness. Can't people just say humility? It's a much nicer word.

    October 17, 2007

  • In The Curse of Monkey Island, watch out for the rowboat-paddling Lost Welshman. Scary.

    October 17, 2007

  • Oh yes, my lack of culture rears its head. So I looked him up. Slaughterhouse Five guy. Got it. It's one of those books everybody's supposed to have read, but I never have. Am I still welcome on your literary web site?

    October 17, 2007

  • Didn't they have storks in ancient Greece?

    October 17, 2007

  • A friend for Lamb Chop? Oh, wait...

    October 17, 2007

  • I've tried for months to be commentier than reesetee, but it seems I'm no match for his commentiness. I'd just give up, if it didn't mean "not commenting on Wordie anymore."

    October 17, 2007

  • So I was thinking a way to batch tag words en masse might be handy. I was tagging all the words in a list of mine, and since they all have the same tag, it would have been nice to select them all (with checkboxes or something) and just type the tag once for all of them.

    October 17, 2007

  • Well arby, people used to use the phrase seafoam moist, but that fell out of favor pretty quickly. So yeah, green is all that's left. ;-)

    October 17, 2007

  • Very cool, Wordie pages frequently show up on Google... we have a very googlipresent site. Hope you'll stick around, moxie, it's a cool place to dork out.

    October 17, 2007

  • Wasn't the Jiminy Cricket character just fabricated for the Disney cartoon, and named for the phrase? Pretty sure he didn't exist in the original story.

    October 17, 2007

  • It's okay. The haversack page is a happenstance stage, where the topic can slack and the jokes fall off track.

    October 17, 2007

  • I don't have a DVR, but I was cursing the CW last night for having commercials that were too short! I barely got my pants down in the bathroom before I heard the theme music come back on and CRAP I WAS MISSING FAMILY GUY!! Wait, what did I just confess to?

    October 17, 2007

  • "It's time to call my father

    'Cause it's his alma mater

    Good grades aren't what they seem

    I think he knows the dean

    It's time to call my father

    'Cause it's his alma mater

    He says he's proud of me

    But college always was his dream

    And I would always say it's not for me

    Oh no, not for me, not for me

    Call it torture, call it university

    No, Arts and Crafts is all I need

    I'll take Calligraphy and then I'll make a fake degree"

    -Relient K

    October 17, 2007

  • It's a good argument for staying indoors 24/7. I like that kind of affirmation.

    October 17, 2007

  • Never heard of Vonnegut... but I too love semicolons -- problem is, I have the bad habit of using too many of them, along with ellipses and dashes; I've wrestled with all three for years.

    October 17, 2007

  • So many people, so little time. One could keep himself quite busy and just meet Cleavers all day. *ducks tomatoes*

    October 17, 2007

  • We read through this play in my Intro to Theatre class in college. Surprisingly raunchy, considering all the other ancient Greek texts I had read up till then were so academic and whatnot.

    October 17, 2007

  • "Google's giant computer brain has decided that someone looking at 'pornography' might also enjoy..."

    October 17, 2007

  • "You know what that means? It's Latin. It means Know Thyself. I'm going to let you in on a little secret. It's like being in love. No one can tell you you're in love, you just know it. Through and through. Balls to bones."

    October 17, 2007

  • No, that's IceT. I mean IcedT.

    October 17, 2007

  • When has this happened? Would be rather Twilight Zone-ish to be flipping through the channels and keep seeing the same thing... even if it is just trying to get you to buy a Nissan Rogue.

    October 17, 2007

  • October 17, 2007

  • Well there goes that happy childhood memory...

    October 17, 2007

  • I don't know what's worse, the inappropriate irony of your joke, or the invocation of TV's second biggest nerd (following Wil Wheaton, of course).

    October 17, 2007

  • I agree, it's a great phrase. After watching Das Boot I have a new respect for depth charges. They can be terrifying!

    October 17, 2007

  • Maureen Dowd's phrase for the replacement of oneself.

    October 17, 2007

  • It's hardly a children's song, really, other than the part about candy.

    October 16, 2007

  • "Who's in the house? J.C.!"

    October 16, 2007

  • "The pool is closed due to AIDS."

    Don't ask.

    October 16, 2007

  • "Failure is just success rounded down."

    -T-Rex

    See also: made of fail.

    October 16, 2007

  • As for meat, check out this shirt, inspired by this story, courtesy of Dinosaur Comics.

    October 16, 2007

  • See discussion at sike, subtitled "Why Uselessness Is Right And You Are Wrong." ;-)

    October 16, 2007

  • Hmm, that does look familiar. I had forgotten the name, but I think I recognize the toy. Pretty sure I wanted one, too.

    October 16, 2007

  • But... but... you're X-ing out "Christ"!! You put a big X right through it! Why are you trying to censor his name?! </sarcasm>

    October 16, 2007

  • But WHY?

    October 16, 2007

  • Haha! How about element?

    October 16, 2007

  • I never bothered learning to type special characters. But whenever I need one, I just load this bookmarked page, find what I'm looking for, and copy-paste it as needed. :-)

    October 16, 2007

  • We seriously need the following t-shirts:

    epicaricacy: Don't make me laugh.

    waxed paper: Shirted nerd.

    haversack: For the haver who has everything.

    Have a nice firkin day!

    hagiothecium: Google got pwned.

    madeupical: Trust no one.

    Also, if there was a way to generate posters or shirts or something on-the-fly, a "purchase this list for use in meatspace" link would be nice to dynamically do what rocksinmypocket said, and create merch with lists in cloud format.

    October 16, 2007

  • (skipvia, note that I avoided that particular discussion... :-P)

    October 16, 2007

  • Lame attempt at Frenchoising NASCAR. ;-)

    October 16, 2007

  • Wait, what? Is it an extra-large roomba-sized slinky? Or the regular kind?

    October 16, 2007

  • *whinny*

    October 16, 2007

  • blimp

    October 16, 2007

  • Mmmm, caffeinated feces, my favorite.

    October 16, 2007

  • A typographical error usually caused by pressing the wrong keys when typing too fast. Can also result in transposed or omitted letters. Often blatant misspellings will be defended as typos to avoid embarrassment.

    October 16, 2007

  • Never heard of 'em, but I love the name!

    October 16, 2007

  • Haha, I love it! Coque-Colla? Miche-Donàlaides? Nasqueur? trivette? ;-)

    October 16, 2007

  • How elegant.

    October 16, 2007

  • Mmmm, now you've gone and made me hungry. (It's not hard to do...)

    October 16, 2007

  • The only thing worse than a nerf herder, is a scruffy nerf herder.

    October 16, 2007

  • Same here. I'm an artist wannabe with no natural talent. Sometimes when I was bored I'd just blacken the whole screen and erase it again, which (unbeknownst to me) breaks the thing over time.

    October 16, 2007

  • I wonder if it's from this phrase that we get pissed off. They are similar...

    October 16, 2007

  • Yes, but who would ever want to squish Wordie? ;-)

    October 16, 2007

  • The name of Gumby's dog that can only say... "No!"

    October 16, 2007

  • Then it would bounce!

    October 16, 2007

  • Part of AT&T's weird new "Your Seamless World" ad campaign. A combination of any place name beginning with New, Boston, and Sacramento.

    October 16, 2007

  • Part of AT&T's weird new "Your Seamless World" ad campaign. A combination of China (or Chile?), London, and Moscow.

    October 16, 2007

  • Part of AT&T's weird new "Your Seamless World" ad campaign. A combination of any place name beginning with New, San Fransisco, and North or South Dakota.

    October 16, 2007

  • Good ones! (Fun for a girl or a boy?)

    October 16, 2007

  • ...the bulldogs all have rubber teeth and the hens lay soft-boiled eggs...

    October 15, 2007

  • As mentioned on proctor, I know of a Ron Doctor, Ph.D., a.k.a. Dr. Doctor. May or may not count as a "name."

    October 15, 2007

  • By worst, npydyuan, I think you mean best. Of course.

    October 15, 2007

  • How fortuitous!

    October 15, 2007

  • Incidentally... I don't mean to embarrass you in any way, but I'm a rather brilliant surgeon. Perhaps I can help you with that hump?

    October 15, 2007

  • Oh, I guess not then. Never had that.

    October 15, 2007

  • Oh, you must be Igor.

    October 15, 2007

  • Malice in chains?

    October 15, 2007

  • Er... no... just needed a break. It'll be back, eventually, with a new design and a new focus.

    October 15, 2007

  • Apparently it was a rider in a bill about highway litter fines. Most of the congresspeople voting didn't even know it was in there. Those who did, didn't care.

    October 15, 2007

  • What's with the "formerly a planet?" You just have to rub it in... LEAVE PLUTO ALONE!!

    October 15, 2007

  • I like the name Celia.

    October 15, 2007

  • Glassanine refers to the glass itself, which is made for asinine purposes (and I imagine it's pronounced accordingly). The action of using said glass is called glassaning. Or perhaps glassery? In extreme cases, the word jack may precede it.

    October 15, 2007

  • Temporary, like my head was when I was in college. Where did it go in the time since, anyway?

    October 15, 2007

  • Ever been to a Ripley's Believe It or Not museum? They have a room full of pictures of people contorting their faces and folding their tongues and stuff, and a mirror on one wall with a sign: "you try it!" So everybody makes the ugliest faces of their lives in front of this mirror, then continues through the museum. Later, right before the exit, it's revealed that the mirror was two-way, and now embarrassed visitors get an opportunity to laugh at the poor saps coming up behind them. Admittedly this is the best thing about a RBIN museum, and the only thing I remember about my trip to one at all.

    October 15, 2007

  • By the way, I killed my site yesterday. Hope you enjoyed it while it lasted. ;-) And jennarenn, I've scattered so many bits of myself around the internet over the past twelve years, I've come to accept stalking as a very real possibility. Or even probability. Every day I spend online, it becomes more likely. And you know, at this point, I think I'm okay with that.

    Just the same, I might not live in Albuquerque. I might live in Toledo. Or Saskatoon. Or Cork.

    October 15, 2007

  • Or method, if you're really lazy.

    October 15, 2007

  • Nice. It's really an odd story how Mario got his start. Ever heard of Doki Doki Panic?

    October 15, 2007

  • There used to be a kid's show called Gullah Gullah Island, featuring a Gullah family and showcasing different aspects of that culture. Lots of songs.

    October 15, 2007

  • I'm dying here...

    October 15, 2007

  • I always hear jeez oh pete's.

    October 15, 2007

  • Well you know, you could always get on Facebook... ;-)

    October 15, 2007

  • I might just have to. You know, I was told I could listen to the radio at a reasonable volume from nine till eleven, and now my stapler's gone and disappeared.

    October 15, 2007

  • Huhwhat? *looks at waist*

    October 15, 2007

  • Quiet, jennarenn, you'll blow my cover! I've been so careful keeping my location a secret...

    October 15, 2007

  • The fun of music is sharing it with people. I like italo quite a bit, but none of my friends have any idea what it is, so it's not as enjoyable as it could be. I only play it when I'm home alone... it's good background music for reading a book.

    October 15, 2007

  • But... but... I don't want people to know I live in Albuquerque!!

    October 15, 2007

  • A modern form of disco still lives (and with reasonable popularity in some parts of Europe). The genre name is "italo" or "italo disco." It's usually very minimalistic chillout/dance music.

    October 15, 2007

  • I like it!

    October 15, 2007

  • See neener. ;-)

    October 15, 2007

  • Cool, thanks for everything, John. The 400 comments is a good temporary fix until pagination arrives. But it's a pretty monstrously huge page. ;-) Also, maybe there should be a special non-word/profile/list page for this kind of discussion so we don't clutter up the site with feature requests and bug reports and whatnot?

    October 15, 2007

  • How would geotagging apply to words? Well I can see noting regions for local dialects, but most words are pretty universal...

    October 15, 2007

  • One of my favorite movies of all time, just watched it again last night with some friends. It's really a masterpiece, one of those movies that will still have you thinking about it and asking questions days later. Reesetee, what are you waiting for? :-)

    October 15, 2007

  • The point exactly opposite from a given point on an object's surface. If you want to circumnavigate the globe, you could walk in a little circle around either pole. But few will take you seriously unless you traverse through two antipodal points, to ensure that you've traveled the earth's full circumference.

    October 15, 2007

  • Every great magic trick consists of three parts or acts. The first part is called the pledge. The magician shows you something ordinary: a deck of cards, a bird or a man. He shows you this object. Perhaps he asks you to inspect it to see if it is indeed real, unaltered, normal. But of course... it probably isn't. The second act is called the turn. The magician takes the ordinary something and makes it do something extraordinary. Now you're looking for the secret... but you won't find it, because of course you're not really looking. You don't really want to know. You want to be fooled. But you wouldn't clap yet. Because making something disappear isn't enough; you have to bring it back. That's why every magic trick has a third act, the hardest part, the part we call the prestige.

    October 15, 2007

  • It feels good to be one, or so I'm told.

    October 15, 2007

  • October 15, 2007

  • Evil. Absolutely evil.

    October 15, 2007

  • The best new jokes are old ones?

    October 15, 2007

  • In the classic adventure game Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge, you are a pirate in search of the fabled treasure of Big Whoop. When you eventually find it, it's rather disappointing. ;-)

    October 14, 2007

  • Not me, but jennarenn's got a list of crazy names.

    October 14, 2007

  • Hey John, as if you didn't already have your hands full, I gotta make a suggestion. 200 recent comments seems like a lot, but they're going by faster and faster all the time. I can keep up with them Monday-Friday, but the weekend throws me off and I end up missing stuff. (And I really don't want to miss anything around here!) Any chance you could add pagination to the comments page, so if I want to look at older ones, I can click a "previous 200 comments" link? That would be stellar.

    October 14, 2007

  • Gladiola is plural for gladiolus, and this word is an alternate plural form of the same thing. I actually prefer this one.

    October 13, 2007

  • So, isn't the dictionary definition supposed to reflect a word's most common usage? If nobody uses it to mean "opposition to the belief that there should no longer be an official church in a country" then shouldn't the dictionary reflect what people do use it for, and leave it at that? With perhaps a note about what the word used to mean?

    October 13, 2007

  • I must be getting rusty, didn't even catch that one! :-P

    October 13, 2007

  • Goes hand-in-hand with jingoism.

    October 13, 2007

  • I love how, though fully aware of the effects of such an action, you still encourage skipvia to do it. Thanks, chica.

    October 13, 2007

  • Starving children.

    October 13, 2007

  • Unsweetened.

    October 13, 2007

  • ....can't....stop....clicking....

    October 13, 2007

  • How unfortunate!

    October 13, 2007

  • All the better. Last time somebody outside The Loop was informed, arby went on the blink. Absolutely nutso.

    October 13, 2007

  • "Rest assured that we will soon come out... at a very real outcome."

    October 13, 2007

  • 'Round these parts, c_b, we don't ask. We just do. Now if you'll excuse me, I have a business meeting to puma.

    October 13, 2007

  • Only for tax purposes.

    October 13, 2007

  • I assume you're talking about the emphasis tag, which renders in italics, but I refuse to try your experiment just because it's so dang self-centered.

    October 13, 2007

  • 6/6/66. We all gon' die.

    October 13, 2007

  • How about bunch of baloney? Or perhaps bunch of bologna? Also, festering of filth?

    October 13, 2007

  • By ass I mean "tail end of something, in this case, words." Nevermind. Bad joke. *shame*

    I do feel sorry for Ming, though, whoever that is.

    October 13, 2007

  • If persiflaging is wrong, I don't wanna be right!

    October 13, 2007

  • But oom is already one, for words like gloom and room and bloom.

    October 13, 2007

  • It's like sweat. It secretes from my pores.

    October 13, 2007

  • Doing this, more often than not, makes an ass out of (yo)u and me.

    October 13, 2007

  • 1) Everything you've said is based on assumed assumptions. And we all know what happens when you assume...

    2) Language would be better if all words ending in either D or T simply didn't require pronouncing those letters at the end when spoken. I don't care how you spell it, just don't say it. That's not my opinion, it's a fac.

    3) There's nothing logical about supposively. Excuse me while I gouge my eyes out.

    4) I'm a boy. We should hook up, maybe.

    5) Was I going somewhere with all this? Nah, I guess I forgot what I was getting at in the overwhelming novelty of mirroring your five-point comment format. If nothing else, it was fun. And hopefully you've learned that when it comes to confusing parts of English, you can always count on me to set the record straight -- even when I get sidetracked along the way.

    October 13, 2007

  • Yes, see its presence on my Filthy Stinking Rich list.

    October 13, 2007

  • Gigglefits for when one forgets to laugh.

    October 13, 2007

  • "I do like Republicans. I like macho men. I want a man who exudes manliness when he walks into a room without saying anything. I want a man who can strangle a puma to death with his bare hands. Feisty!"

    October 13, 2007

  • I'd say, after the "s" -- presumably one has multiple wits. The dictionary says that "wits" should be plural when referring to one's "powers of intelligent observation, keen perception, ingenious contrivance, or the like." However, the dictionary also puts the apostrophe before the "s" in this particular phrase. Still, the dictionary has been wrong before... ;-)

    Edit: On the dictionary page for end, definition #33, this phrase is listed with apostrophes in either place (dictionary.com, anyway).

    October 13, 2007

  • A phrase used by phone support techs to indicate a user is incredibly stupid. Only when one grabs a pen and paper and writes down "ID 10 T" does it become obvious that we're talking about an idiot. See also: PEBKAC.

    October 13, 2007

  • See also: ID-Ten-T Error.

    October 13, 2007

  • I've always heard the second part reversed: PEBKAC.

    October 13, 2007

  • Haha, how could the dictionary leave that part out?

    October 13, 2007

  • How very esoteric of you. Oh wait, I can't use that word because it describes stuff and we don't believe in adjectives anymore. So... um... in my opinion, your statement has characteristics similar to that of a puzzle.

    October 13, 2007

  • The package had Randy Moss on the front.

    October 12, 2007

  • Pronounced "nayb". Short for neighbor.

    October 12, 2007

  • For some thought-provoking discussion, see: waxed paper.

    In other news, last night I dreamed that Celestial Seasonings had partnered with the NFL for a promotional campaign targeted at 20- and 30-something male sports fans. Oddest dream I've had in a while. It was probably prompted by a recent conversation I had with someone about how tea may or may not be overtaking coffee as the most popular breakfast drink in America.

    October 12, 2007

  • Good points. It's worth noting that in a media-saturated culture like ours, we tend to identify with movies and TV shows (and to a lesser extent, songs and books) even more than things from our history or traditions. How many times in conversation has someone said to you "Have you ever seen some movie?" and when you answer yes, they relate the conversation you're having to a particular scene in said movie? Or if you answer no, they'll describe the scene in detail so you can still understand the reference.

    Curious that it happened in this thread, even... three of us better understand the concept by looking at it through the lens of a Star Trek episode. As time goes on and the internet becomes more influential, how much of a role will web memes play in our daily conversation? I already mention them a lot, personally, but only as inside jokes to people who are "in the know." Someday they may be more widespread.

    October 12, 2007

  • ThE mOsT aNnOyInG tHiNg EvEr? YeS.

    October 12, 2007

  • That is pretty awesome. Nice job. And favorited!

    October 12, 2007

  • And I just tagged it. How meta can you get?

    October 12, 2007

  • Indeed.

    October 12, 2007

  • You win.

    October 12, 2007

  • Derren Brown's subtle way of referring to a "bunch of bankers" in an episode of his "Trick or Treat" TV show. I watched it a couple times and didn't notice until someone pointed it out to me.

    October 12, 2007

  • Haha, best literal etymology I've seen in a long time!

    October 12, 2007

  • The kimchi refrigerator debuted in 1995 and quickly became a very popular appliance in Korea. No special word for it, but in Hangul the phrase is 김치냉장고. More information here and here.

    October 12, 2007

  • If I could be part of any "secret society" or somesuch legendary thing, I would join the Inklings.

    October 12, 2007

  • Not sure about the "tea is usually hot" thing. Go to a restaurant and order sweet tea. It's gonna be cold. Now the real question is, is it a sweet drink that IS tea, or is it regular tea that has been made sweet by the addition of sugar? If it's the latter, shouldn't it really be sweetened tea? And why do we drop the iced part from the name in this situation, since the drink is still cold -- shouldn't we still indicate temperature here?

    Furthermore, what do you do with cold tea, straight out of the refrigerator, that doesn't have ice in it? Calling it iced is inaccurate. Chilled tea would be a far better description.

    October 12, 2007

  • Interesting note on that page, below the article. Seems it was perhaps the first Onion article ever? Even preceding the Onion itself? Interesting. Shame they come across so litigious there though.

    October 12, 2007

  • Confession, I thought of the same episode! It is kind of funny that the metaphors they spoke in were in English, using words that were meant to have literal meanings... but I suppose a culture could start with one language and then evolve to the point where all the original definitions are lost and only figures of speech remain. Maybe. At any rate, it's just a TV show... ;-)

    October 12, 2007

  • You mean you don't play this at your workplace?

    October 12, 2007

  • Don't you mean madeupical? That's far more forgivable. ;-)

    October 12, 2007

  • Huhwhat?

    October 12, 2007

  • Ulysses Everett McGill may well be the best-dialogued character of our time.

    October 12, 2007

  • Hilarious! The Onion is great.

    October 12, 2007

  • What the hey ho? Did they block it as a result of you coming here all the time, or just as a matter of happenstance? Either way, major suckage.

    October 12, 2007

  • Why not?

    October 12, 2007

  • October 12, 2007

  • We todally need an American version. I propose wee ooh.

    October 12, 2007

  • My hero.

    October 12, 2007

  • Haha, where ya been? ;-)

    October 12, 2007

  • I'm in ten deep, you'd think I was Aaron Burr from the way I'm dropping Hamiltons.

    October 12, 2007

  • That's fascinating stuff. I wasn't aware of the musical connection either... if I read that right, the game can play out aurally as improvised music, like jazz? There's a lot of complexity to Capoeira that I wouldn't have expected from my (lightweight) background in the Asian martial arts.

    October 12, 2007

  • How about pen? Have you ever penned a story?

    October 12, 2007

  • I was referring more to the tendency of Wordie pages to rise to the top of the heap, particularly when searching for uncommon words. I don't think John's employing spammer strategery, I think we're just lucky.

    October 12, 2007

  • Oh yes, there they are. Hiding their faces from the bankrupt Wheel of Fortune contestants, trying not to feel rejected.

    October 12, 2007

  • So... ahm... John... when can we tag lists? :-P

    October 12, 2007

  • That's cool! Didn't know all that about Capoeira. How is it a game? I've taken a little Aikido and loved it. (When I get some money) I'm going to continue my training in that... but I've always found Capoeira fun to watch, if a little intimidating.

    October 12, 2007

  • When she sits around the house, she's really fat.

    October 12, 2007

  • Pervasive in Google search results. Somehow, automagically appearing near the top of the list over and over again, to the point of annoyance. Nobody knows why.

    October 12, 2007

  • On a second Googling now, it seems Wordie links are fourth and fifth in a search for "todal". I'm constantly amazed at how googlipresent this site is. Someday we'll show up first in everything.

    October 12, 2007

  • Something you don't give.

    October 12, 2007

  • I'm trying to find my vowels, have you seen them?

    October 12, 2007

  • Bloody brilliant!

    October 12, 2007

  • I hereby deem chained_bear's suffix correct. Sorry John. Future Wordies, you'll want to look at cheesois. Nothing to see here.

    October 12, 2007

  • For what it's worth, I didn't write that description. The Todal is a monster in James Thurber's book The 13 Clocks. I've never read it (and had never heard of it), but after trivet listed it I got curious about the "blob of glup" thing and did a little Googling. The description I posted comes from this page, which really just summarizes all the fragmented descriptions that Thurber scattered throughout the book. Apparently. I'm not that imaginative. ;-)

    October 12, 2007

  • Okay skipvia, gotcha. Real science is always amoral and objective, but there's a lot of pseudoscience out there that rightfully earns the "bad science" title. But yeah, it's a shame that the phrase's meaning has changed in the vernacular.

    October 12, 2007

  • Love your defeatist description. That's the spirit!! ;-)

    October 12, 2007

  • There's nothing "pretty" about it. It's like a real-life Jabba the Hutt, only more disgusting.

    October 12, 2007

  • Recently overheard at work. Like, thirty seconds ago recently.

    October 12, 2007

  • Mmm, and Kelly LeBrock...

    But skipvia, there are plenty of real scientists who would dismiss spurious "research" as bad science, not because they disagree but because it's simply not scientific. In that case, you're not dealing with empirical facts, you're dealing with rhetoric and spin.

    October 12, 2007

  • I wish one would lob a scimitar at me...

    October 12, 2007

  • Naw, you've got some good ones I didn't catch. Besides, isn't imitation the highest form of flattery? Why would I complain? ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • That. Is. Disgusting.

    October 11, 2007

  • Doesn't "bad science" usually refer to dishonest research, agenda-driven experiments, and disregard for the scientific method? In other words, it's not real science. But your definition sounds more like it is real science, just inconvenient for certain worldviews.

    October 11, 2007

  • This is a good list! You might also take a look at this one...

    October 11, 2007

  • We have it.

    October 11, 2007

  • Wow, I think you blinded me with that list. ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • 'Cause, you know, that's totally something Christ went around doing. ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • I fear you.

    October 11, 2007

  • Aye, that it were. For sure.

    October 11, 2007

  • Yes, it's very meta. :-P

    October 11, 2007

  • See: moistened bint.

    October 11, 2007

  • See: watery tart.

    October 11, 2007

  • Erm, burr, cur, slur, whirr, fur, blur, never mind.

    October 11, 2007

  • Good story! Mine involved jumping over chairs (backs and all) lined up in a row, each time making it trickier by adding another one to the lineup. Eventually, of course, it'll be one chair too many. I think I was able to clear four of them before visiting the emergency room. Ahh, college.

    October 11, 2007

  • A rare exception. ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • Burnt toast.

    October 11, 2007

  • Bahahaha!

    October 11, 2007

  • It's science!

    October 11, 2007

  • I still use the flying toasters screensaver! Well I did until my hard drive crashed... :-(

    October 11, 2007

  • "You might be a king

    Or a little street sweeper

    But sooner or later

    You'll dance with the reaper...

    Get down with your bad self!"

    -Death

    October 11, 2007

  • Or gunion for short? :-P

    October 11, 2007

  • Isn't that redundant? ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • Hmm, it was many months ago. I did a lot of extensive "research" on the nets to verify each word. So though I can't recall it specifically now, I'm pretty sure I saw it used that way a couple times. Probably because people are strange, and consider themselves ironic.

    October 11, 2007

  • I prefer the term data cotton candy.

    October 11, 2007

  • I refuse to consider the possibility. Wikipedia is like Snopes, that is, infallible.

    October 11, 2007

  • This is how I twisted my ankle in college one time and I'm lucky it wasn't a lot worse. I have since changed my ways. ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • A Todal is a creature that looks like a blob of glup that makes a sound like rabbits screaming and smells like an old unopened room. It is made of lip and feels as if it has been dead for a dozen days. It moves about like monkeys and shadows and cannot be killed. It was created as an agent of the devil to smite those who do evil but not to their fullest extent.

    October 11, 2007

  • This word should be a slangy form of warfaring, which should also exist.

    October 11, 2007

  • I must say, I don't have much confidence in the mass adoptability of contrived grammar.

    October 11, 2007

  • So there's this guy and he's posting spam links on Wordie, can we ban his account?

    October 11, 2007

  • Bwahahahaha.

    October 11, 2007

  • Hey, that is stylish! But... flagged. Wait 'til John hears about this, you spammer!

    October 11, 2007

  • Here it comes...

    October 11, 2007

  • Never underestimate the power of Wordies. ;-)

    October 11, 2007

  • The stab potential is greatly reduced. Not good.

    October 11, 2007

  • *snerk*

    October 11, 2007

  • Surely you can disable something without breaking it?

    October 11, 2007

  • Oh come now, c_b, do you still expect conversations to stay on-topic around here? More to the point, do you want them to? :-P

    October 11, 2007

  • Oh, it's Latin. That makes sense. Thanks for posting those! Turns out plumbum (lead) is the root word for plumbing, a reference to traditional waterworks being made of that metal. Funny, that's been cited as one of the contributing factors toward the fall of Rome, as it led to brain disorders that may have compounded over several generations. Yet the word has made its mark on even modern language.

    October 10, 2007

  • To life, more like. We're totally relifing it.

    October 10, 2007

  • Oh. How uncultured I am. ;-) So are we basically talking about seltzer then? I've enjoyed flavored seltzers in the past, but I don't think I'd like it plain. Maybe it wouldn't be so bad.

    October 10, 2007

  • Old-timey for father. Also, an acronym for public address, passive-aggressive, physician's assistant, and the postal abbreviation for Pennsylvania.

    October 10, 2007

  • You mean like tonic? People drink that straight? Gross.

    October 10, 2007

  • Apparently a portmanteau of Chanukah and Kwanzaa, and maybe it's not too far-fetched to think there's some Christmas in there too. A silly way to avoid the rather dull catch-all "holidays" and still include just about everybody. See also: Christmahanukwanzaakah.

    October 10, 2007

  • Haha, those are awesome! And yet, tragically dorky. ;-)

    October 10, 2007

  • As in, "I want a regular coke"? How quaint. ;-)

    October 10, 2007

  • It's part of my new super-duper word-rating scale. Not a favorable score.

    October 10, 2007

  • Busted.

    October 10, 2007

  • That was called for.

    October 10, 2007

  • Hey, good eye, I was wondering what the etymological connection was. I'm still confused about why they used such an odd chemical symbol for it, but there are quite a few elements that do that.

    October 10, 2007

  • How do you order a Coca-Cola Classic without the hassle of repeating yourself?

    October 10, 2007

  • I lol'd.

    October 10, 2007

  • Okay John, I'm fed up. It's time for change!

    What do I mean? Well, the recurring problem of people not understanding to put word comments on word pages, and putting them on their lists instead, of course! If Wordie has one primary usability concern, that's it. So the question is... what can be done to make it clearer for new users? I have no ideas. Get to work!! ;-)

    October 10, 2007

  • Yes! That was the floppiest part! I also had a bad habit of bouncing mouse trackballs around the house.

    October 10, 2007

  • To transform something into gold.

    October 9, 2007

  • Interesting, Niederhoffer sounds like a rather eccentric cat. I wish I had some financial smarts like that, but I just program computers and write philosophy books. :-P

    October 9, 2007

  • The takeover of a mainstream religious denomination by a group of radical extremists. Coined, as far as I can tell, by this book.

    October 9, 2007

  • Eh, it's a non-fiction thing about my faith journey and personal philosophy. I ask a lot of questions and complain a little about the state of modern Christianity, and quote the old theologians, and make a case for libertarianism as the only foundation for just society. Pretty boring stuff. ;-)

    Fortunately, I had precious little written and didn't lose much in the crash. It's my music and my pictures and my old college essays that I was most upset about. I've learned to make regular backups from now on, anyway...

    October 9, 2007

  • "Why wait to get the stuff you want?"

    October 9, 2007

  • There's a real estate company here in town called Berger-Briggs. Every time I see one of their signs, I think of Ronnie Cordova saying "BERGER?!?!" Actually it was probably spelled burger in the script, but it's a guy's name and that wouldn't make sense. Of course nothing makes sense in the frightening kung-fu world of Sockbaby.

    October 9, 2007

  • Mine will wear a straitjacket and Groucho Marx glasses.

    October 9, 2007

  • I first heard this word in the original Tomb Raider game. Should I be ashamed to admit that?

    October 9, 2007

  • I had more fun playing with the little latch on the floppy drive door, than the floppy itself. Later I would take a liking to spinning CDs around my index finger.

    October 9, 2007

  • The root word for "old fogey."

    October 9, 2007

  • I have a smudge of somethingorother on my living room window that looks like a faerie (or at least what I would imagine one to look like).

    October 9, 2007

  • Good call. Also For The Ladies. ;-)

    October 9, 2007

  • You know, I have friends who have done this for years, but I've never tried it myself. Though I suspect 50,000 words would make for a month more tortuous than fun. In the meantime, I'm writing a "real" book with no time frame for completion, and it will probably take many many years to finish. Especially since the hard drive it was stored on crashed over the weekend, and I lost what little I already had written. :-(

    October 9, 2007

  • Bro, you're a god among bros.

    October 9, 2007

  • For The Lose (contrast with FTW), or Fruit of the Loom, or Free Talk Live.

    October 9, 2007

  • I'm speechless. Speechless and grimacing like you wouldn't believe.

    October 9, 2007

  • This word always makes me think of the same quote!

    October 9, 2007

  • Don't look at me, it's Latin that sux. ;-)

    October 9, 2007

  • It's sometimes used in legal terminology, as in "John Smith et ux." similar to "et al." or "etc." If John Smith gets divorced, her title become ex-ux.

    October 9, 2007

  • Funny you should mention that place, npydyuan, because I was born there. It's a few miles off the coast of Cambodia, actually. No nukes, just a lot of really dangerous slingshots.

    And John, forgive me for hoping you're kidding.

    October 9, 2007

  • Um, for what it's worth, this slang phrase seems to have been birthed from D.H. Lawrence's naughty novel Lady Chatterley's Lover. One of the characters names his... piece... this, as a counterpart to his lover's "Lady Jane."

    October 9, 2007

  • Agreed!

    October 9, 2007

  • And, er, see precocious for an eerily similar comment by me (which is, may I remind you, the oldest of the three in the bunch). We all must be on the same wavelength.

    October 9, 2007

  • Yes, my casbah rocked too. Unfortunately, on some pages there's a group of links in that list of lists that are inactive -- they don't respond to clicks or mouseovers. Usually that group of links begins around the third item in the list, and covers four or five items below it. I think it might be a CSS z-index issue, of one of the elements on the left extending too far over and covering up a portion of the list. I'm using Firefox 2.0.0.6, for what it's worth.

    October 9, 2007

  • No prob, at least you're quick to amend. ;-) Also, I saw jennarenn added , and I thought "that's pretty cool." Now I don't want to add it, but it's worthy of a favorite. But that generates a 500 error. :-(

    October 9, 2007

  • Pertaining to the period of time between the writing of the Old and New Testaments.

    October 8, 2007

  • Palm reading. Beautiful word.

    October 8, 2007

  • Do I smell a new list? :-P

    October 8, 2007

  • Figures that guy would think it's a good thing... ;-)

    October 8, 2007

  • Where'd I put my ear trumpet?

    October 8, 2007

  • Too bad nobody can agree on how to spell it.

    October 8, 2007

  • Clam!

    October 8, 2007

  • Oh noes, the random word function done BROKED!!

    October 8, 2007

  • Yesterday I took a stroll down Memory Lane.

    October 8, 2007

  • Hmm, never heard of this one before. So we have Maundy Thursday and Good Friday... I wonder if all the days of that pre-Easter week have special names?

    October 8, 2007

  • But taser just doesn't make sense as a verb. A walker walks. A shooter shoots. A driver drives. A taser tases.

    October 8, 2007

  • A comment preview feature might be nice but I'd also want to keep the option to skip it and post immediately, otherwise WordPlay games would be severely hindered... you know, if we ever play again.

    October 8, 2007

  • Apparently a cross between illusion and hallucination.

    October 8, 2007

  • No larch? Or newt? ;-)

    October 8, 2007

  • The "date modified" on the file was February 2005. I wish I remembered the origins of this list, all I know for sure is that I compiled myself it for fun back in college. Who knew there would one day be a web site for doing exactly that (only better)?

    October 8, 2007

  • Most likely, no.

    October 6, 2007

  • Five stars out of five. If a word has this tag, it's absolutely perfect in every way. I love it, and yes, we're getting married next year.

    October 6, 2007

  • Four stars out of five. If a word has this tag, it's allowed to eat a the cool-kids table in the cafeteria.

    October 6, 2007

  • Three stars out of five. If a word has this tag, it's a shining example of linguistic mediocrity. Don't love it, don't hate it, just don't care.

    October 6, 2007

  • Two stars out of five. If a word has this tag, it's a minor irritant that should probably just go away. But I'm not losing sleep over it.

    October 6, 2007

  • One star out of five. If a word has this tag, it flat-out sucks.

    October 6, 2007

  • I've always foregone the "u" and stuck with the classic bwahahaha. Of course, I've never had anyone in particular in mind when doing so.

    October 6, 2007

  • I thought you were only supposed to be able to add a word to a list once... at least that's how it used to be?

    October 6, 2007

  • Excellent! Looks smashing. But I'm curious, why does the same SoG list appear twice on the crypts of lieberkühn page? (Edit: Ooks, I just added "smashing" and ended up on the list twice, myself)

    (Edit2; When I visited my list, I saw that my one click on "add to your words" had actually added the word twice. I've since deleted the second instance. And I'm seeing double around the site quite a bit now? Did you borked it?)

    October 6, 2007

  • Sir, I send a rhyme excelling,

    In sacred truth and rigid spelling,

    Numerical sprites elucidate,

    For me the lexicon's dull weight,

    If nature gain, not you complain

    Tho' Dr. Johnson fulminate.

    October 6, 2007

  • So you're a piphilologist, are you?

    October 6, 2007

  • None of the women I know chuckle. They do, however, snerk, plarg, and hootle.

    October 6, 2007

  • Aha, finally I found the word I've been gehunteschpundting for!

    October 6, 2007

  • Does it always substitute for slang? ;-)

    October 6, 2007

  • Thanks zillions. But since you asked... I'd prefer to see each list associated with the person who owns that list. And if each username is a link, it should probably point to that user's profile or something, not the same place the list title links to. If that makes sense. Difficult concept to explain.

    October 6, 2007

  • In Florida there's a clinic for a Dr. Doctor. Doctor Ron Doctor.

    October 5, 2007

  • Seconded, but after the bevy of cool stuff John's been rolling out lately, I hesitate to ask for even more. ;-)

    October 5, 2007

  • Okay, so this list is favorited.

    October 5, 2007

  • For what it's worth, I made the same mistake first time around, commented that it wasn't a typo at all (and of course harassed reesetee a little in the process) ...and then saw my error and quickly deleted my comment before anyone had the chance to see it. ;-)

    October 5, 2007

  • The plural form is fine, but there's also an "r" missing in the third syllable. :-)

    October 5, 2007

  • What a subtle way to introduce a new feature... :-P

    Also noticed the Wikipediesque icons for offsite links... very nice.

    October 5, 2007

  • I thought classes were meant to reduce redundancy...

    October 5, 2007

  • Patty for short?

    October 5, 2007

  • *unless you're trying an expeeryment.

    October 5, 2007

  • The poor lad don't know what he's asking fer.

    October 5, 2007

  • I think it's hilarious that you know me so well. I've been more than cringing since oroboros' initial blink post, and now you've just pushed me

    OVER THE EDGE!!

    October 5, 2007

  • Holy craparoni!

    October 5, 2007

  • (And thanks also for the thesaurus.com link, much appreciated!)

    October 5, 2007

  • There are three pronunciations of banal, but only one definition. It's just that nobody can agree on the "right" way to say it... is it "BAY null," "buh NAHL" or "buh NAWL?"

    October 5, 2007

  • What about annelidous?

    October 5, 2007

  • It's science!!

    October 5, 2007

  • Article link? I'm a Meyer fan but hadn't heard this before. I do prefer to use IDs for most things, personally, though I wonder what's really so "bad" about classes.

    October 5, 2007

  • There may be some good reasons for it though, privacy concerns and whatnot... I mean, I love photography and its related technologies, but I certainly oppose big brother stuff like CCTV surveillance in public places. Still, one shouldn't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

    Though I bet, truth be told, cyberludditism is just an excuse for nerd elitism. :-)

    October 5, 2007

  • Oh, that was a terrible joke from my college days: grab some ketchup packets in the cafeteria, approach a lunching friend and loudly proclaim "I found your condoments by the cash register... you really shouldn't leave those things lying around..."

    October 5, 2007

  • Actually, it sounds pretty disgusting.

    October 5, 2007

  • On the contrary, there's a proven correlation. Science said it, history proved it, and I vouched for it. The connection is so real, etymology doesn't know about it yet. But it's pretty much indisputable fact amongst educated people. Some groups have even organized their own religions around this unwavering truth. You bet your buttons, you can totally bank on it.

    October 5, 2007

  • I learned the word on PBS's now-infamous Frontline report The Merchants of Cool. The Mook is a made-up character presented to teenagers as real; he's the male counterpart to the female Midriff.

    October 4, 2007

  • I am highly offended that you categorize "useless waste of space" as an insult.

    October 4, 2007

  • I keed, I keed!

    October 4, 2007

  • This misunderstanding isn't very hilarious.

    October 3, 2007

  • Oh... yeah... but then I'd have to wake up.

    October 3, 2007

  • Or hitchhike.

    October 3, 2007

  • You do have to wonder what the company was thinking, naming their gum "three teeth." Like they're trying to imply what your mouth will look like if you chew enough of it...

    October 3, 2007

  • Wait, what?

    October 3, 2007

  • Is there a variation that applies only to one's mind?

    October 3, 2007

  • Dang, I would hate to be drafted... but that's a bit extreme.

    October 3, 2007

  • Fingernails on a chalkboard? Or my personal nightmare, toenails on granite.

    October 3, 2007

  • The slang of a future generation, no doubt. "Did you see that hovcar? Ride was fassin'!"

    October 3, 2007

  • Snoozers like me must be gluttons for punishment. This morning I subjected myself to the same expergefactor no less than five times, and was nearly late to work. ;-)

    October 3, 2007

  • Literally "three teeth." Good for fights with rival reporters.

    October 3, 2007

  • Ha, there was a guy who went by the name Cark on a (now defunct) web site I used to frequent. I always assumed it was just a funny-sounding typo for what I figured was his real name, Carl.

    October 3, 2007

  • I never really understood this phrase. Is it meant to be taken literally, like wearing a jockstrap?

    October 3, 2007

  • Gotta give the guy credit for wanting to get into Michigan. *shudder*

    October 3, 2007

  • Oh, and this list. :-P

    October 3, 2007

  • So that's what holds jennarenn back... ;-)

    October 3, 2007

  • *hums the Imperial March*

    October 3, 2007

  • The conversion of a vector image into a raster, or bitmap, one.

    October 3, 2007

  • Don't forget about rasterization!

    October 3, 2007

  • Till we kill you, yeah.

    October 3, 2007

  • For more font personification, see also: The Return of the Serif (on a blog I'm quite sure kewpid reads...)

    October 3, 2007

  • Agreed, I knew I had heard this word before. Sadly, your designer friend may not be as creative as s/he thinks. :-P

    October 3, 2007

  • I suspect it's probably pretty widespread in the design world. I've used it plenty of times myself. Very handy! ;-)

    October 3, 2007

  • It's stuff like this that makes you glad to be a man.

    October 3, 2007

  • *barf*

    October 3, 2007

  • The Script Creation Utility for Maniac Mansion. A programming environment made by the legendary Ron Gilbert for LucasArts (at that time, LucasFilm Games) to create point-and-click adventure games back in the day. Obviously the tool was built for their first one, Maniac Mansion, but it was reused to create popular games like the Monkey Island and Indiana Jones series.

    October 2, 2007

  • Glad I'm not the only one around here who's seen that. ;-)

    October 2, 2007

  • Sherlock Holmes. I need to read those again.

    October 2, 2007

  • Grog contains one or more of the following:

    - Kerosene

    - Propylene Glycol

    - Artificial Sweetener

    - Sulphuric Acid

    - Rum

    - Acetone

    - Red Dye #2

    - SCUMM

    - Axle Grease

    - Battery Acid

    - and/or Pepperoni

    Stuff is so acidic it eats right through the mug. Guybrush Threepwood once freed a man from prison by burning the lock away with a disintegrating mug of grog.

    October 2, 2007

  • Funny how so many of these are sports-related... I agree! I'm a fan of the word ¡gól!

    October 2, 2007

  • There must be a total of like four people in the world who can honestly say "I understand Japanese culture." Problem is, they're all locked in padded rooms and can't be reached to explain it to the rest of us.

    October 2, 2007

  • Okay, gotta add newgrass, rockabilly, happy hardcore, and crunk rock. :-P

    October 2, 2007

  • Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!

    October 2, 2007

  • Surgical removal of the internets!!

    October 2, 2007

  • Do you cough the dust out of your throat first?

    October 2, 2007

  • Trivet: Boooo! :-P

    October 2, 2007

  • What a shame that words relating to the moon (a nice thing) will always carry the connotation of insanity (not so nice). It's still a pretty word.

    October 2, 2007

  • I'm not going through there again... you're just going to have to deal with it. :-P

    October 2, 2007

  • Long live George Orwell. :-)

    October 2, 2007

  • See discussion here.

    October 2, 2007

  • I don't know what Middlemarch is, but this would make a nice girls' name.

    October 2, 2007

  • I missed one? Which one?

    October 2, 2007

  • If quizzes are quizzical, then what are tests?

    September 30, 2007

  • How do you get three syllables out of that? I get, um, one.

    September 30, 2007

  • I was also surprised, upon revisiting this list, to see that sloshed isn't included! Wonder if NAJP is still around?

    September 30, 2007

  • The S-Word. I'm in eternal ruin for even thinking it.

    September 30, 2007

  • Peanut butter?

    September 29, 2007

  • Haha, that's hilarious! It's funny, I noticed that immediately after I finished the last line, the site went "down for maintenance" so I figured you were probably doing something like that. :-)

    Actually I was hoping you might, because while I love leaving that little rabbit trail as an easter egg for future generations to discover, I felt bad about cluttering things up with it all today. So, nice compromise. :-)

    September 29, 2007

  • Great web site! The best part is, there's no entry for That Which Will Not Be Spoken.

    September 29, 2007

  • What an ugly word. Absolutely hideous.

    September 29, 2007

  • Someday you'll thank me. ;-)

    September 29, 2007

  • See 1 bottle of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 2 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 3 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 4 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 5 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 6 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 7 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 8 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 9 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

  • See 10 bottles of beer on the wall.

    September 29, 2007

Show 200 more comments...