Comments by trivet

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  • My chemistry textbook in college had a picture of a shipwreck on the cover. I had played hide and seek through the bones of that ship as a child on a family vacation, thousands of miles away. The two have since been irrevocably linked in my mind.

    February 8, 2008

  • I don't know, but I'm quite enamored of the phrase.

    *scurries of to sneak up on some gouda*

    February 6, 2008

  • Go ahead, gangerh - the 'a' is optional.

    February 5, 2008

  • However happy he may be...

    February 4, 2008

  • How happy are you?

    February 4, 2008

  • Fantastic, bilby!

    February 4, 2008

  • Sionnach, I think I love you! But what about walrusine?

    February 4, 2008

  • Whoops! I missed the TV. Sorry skipvia.

    February 2, 2008

  • To quote the wiki:

    Alexander the Great's horse and arguably the most famous horse of antiquity.

    February 1, 2008

  • You can always kick back with a Rogue Ale...

    January 31, 2008

  • Sword of Peter Pevensie.

    January 31, 2008

  • Hah!

    January 30, 2008

  • *whimper*

    January 28, 2008

  • See tasseography.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Roland.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Fergus mac RĂ³ich.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Siegfried.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Charlemagne.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Bilbo Baggins.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Rhydderch Hael.

    And Gwydion in the Prydain Chronicles.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Gawain.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of El Cid.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Lancelot.

    January 27, 2008

  • Sword of Beowulf

    January 27, 2008

  • Are you a sympathetic puker, reesetee?

    January 24, 2008

  • I used to work in a vertebrate collections. Lots of boxes of bones and feathers and eggs and things hung out on my desk.

    January 23, 2008

  • This Christmas, I was given a Mr. Potato Head-style edible paperweight made out of a pear, dried apricots, raisins, marshmallows and a lot of toothpicks.

    January 23, 2008

  • I like your desk, reesetee.

    January 23, 2008

  • Aaah - I couldn't remember which prion went where.

    4 - Panjandrum?

    13 - blue?

    January 23, 2008

  • ooooh!

    8 - intaglio?

    9 - kuru/cjd

    16 - tara

    January 22, 2008

  • In jars, I hope.

    January 22, 2008

  • eeesh.

    January 21, 2008

  • GO and catch a falling star,

    Get with child a mandrake root,

    Tell me where all past years are,

    Or who cleft the Devil's foot;

    Teach me to hear mermaids singing,

    Or to keep off envy's stinging,

    And find

    What wind

    Serves to advance an honest mind.

    If thou be'st born to strange sights,

    Things invisible to see,

    Ride ten thousand days and nights

    Till Age snow white hairs on thee;

    Thou, when thou return'st, wilt tell me

    All strange wonders that befell thee,

    And swear

    No where

    Lives a woman true and fair.

    If thou find'st one, let me know;

    Such a pilgrimage were sweet.

    Yet do not; I would not go,

    Though at next door we might meet.

    Though she were true when you met her,

    And last till you write your letter,

    Yet she

    Will be

    False, ere I come, to two or three.

    -John Donne

    January 21, 2008

  • What the bear said.

    January 21, 2008

  • If you like Ukulele Lady

    Ukulele Lady like a'you

    If you like to linger where it's shady

    Ukulele Lady linger too

    If you kiss Ukulele Lady

    While you promise ever to be true

    And she sees another Ukulele

    Lady foolin' 'round with you

    Maybe she'll sigh (an awful lot)

    Maybe she'll cry (and maybe not)

    Maybe she'll find somebody else

    By and by

    To sing to when it's cool and shady

    Where the tricky wicky wacky woo

    If you like Ukulele Lady

    Ukulele Lady like a'you

    January 18, 2008

  • Huzzah!

    January 18, 2008

  • It is the kind of word that brings out one's insufferable side.

    January 18, 2008

  • Mmmmmm, tasty loaf products!

    *may never eat again*

    January 17, 2008

  • Thanks, y'all!

    January 17, 2008

  • Scrimmage is one of my favorite words. How did I miss this when you first made it?

    January 17, 2008

  • Eeeeeeeeew - thanks, sionnach!

    January 17, 2008

  • heehee.

    January 17, 2008

  • oooh, thank you! I'm glad I learned about the right to carry things where one will!

    January 17, 2008

  • TFD:

    1. A duty exacted, in some fairs or markets, for the right to carry things where one will.

    2. A tax on wares sold by the last.

    3. The lading of a ship; also, ballast.

    4. Room for stowing goods, as in a ship.

    January 17, 2008

  • Love!

    I'd like to favorite it, but wordie is being snippy this morning.

    January 16, 2008

  • Nice! but missing some of Bart Simpson's prank calls...

    January 15, 2008

  • This is very interesting (albeit disturbing) list, rfb. Thank you.

    January 15, 2008

  • Yarb and kewpid, you todally made my day!

    C_b, they're cute and friendly up close, too. For the most part.

    January 12, 2008

  • pbbbttt?

    January 11, 2008

  • The ball or the cookie?

    January 5, 2008

  • Too many coconuts for me.

    January 5, 2008

  • NuĂŸ-ecken are triangles of nutty goodness with their corners dipped in chocolate.

    C is a very good letter. Without it, there would be neither chocolate or cookies.

    January 5, 2008

  • Me, I'm anti-redhot and pro Lebkuchen. At least the kind my Gran made. No walnuts or firey sugar, just a glazy icing and if you were extra lucky, one of those silver balls...

    January 5, 2008

  • Oooh! I'd forgotten how fancy wordie has gotten. My first shared list!

    January 4, 2008

  • C_b, this list rules!

    January 4, 2008

  • My auntie makes NuĂŸ-Ecken, which are nutty German triangles with their corners dipped in chocolatey goodness. Mmmmm!

    January 4, 2008

  • There's always this...

    December 23, 2007

  • skipvia - see here.

    December 19, 2007

  • I don't believe I missed this! For the dregs:

    4. - R

    10. - C

    12. - H

    15. - F

    December 18, 2007

  • I don't know. I had a rather incautious sipping incident yesterday.

    My favorite are the stick men illustrations.

    December 15, 2007

  • Oh, you know, work and stuff.

    They kind of are Tweedle-Dee and Tweedle-Dum, aren't they? Still, I think Natasha wore the pants in that relationship...

    Not that either of them wore pants, really. Maybe that was their problem.

    December 15, 2007

  • I love warning labels!

    December 15, 2007

  • errr... Is #30 curious?

    December 15, 2007

  • I thought Boris was Natasha's sidekick, no?

    December 15, 2007

  • For 25 - Siegel, then?

    December 11, 2007

  • Hmmmm....

    2-if not what rolig said, Bolero?

    5-THRUSH?

    19-Marfan

    25-harrah????

    December 10, 2007

  • More naugas can be found here. And here.

    December 7, 2007

  • Does it count that my family calls all jays Gus and all Canada geese Rupert?

    December 7, 2007

  • I'd forgotten these!

    December 7, 2007

  • Thanks, I think I'll pass on those two. Cause I can.

    December 7, 2007

  • From OE:

    tip (v.2)

    "give a small present of money to," 1610, "to give, hand, pass," originally thieves' cant, perhaps from tip (v.3) "to tap." The meaning "give a gratuity to" is first attested 1706. The noun in this sense is from 1755; the meaning "piece of confidential information" is from 1845; the verb in this sense is from 1883; tipster first recorded 1862.

    December 7, 2007

  • OE sez:

    1918, of uncertain origin; no evidence for the common derivation from an acronym of port outward, starboard home, supposedly the shipboard accommodations of wealthy British traveling to India on the P & O Lines (to keep their cabins out of the sun); see objections outlined in G. Chowdharay-Best, "Mariner's Mirror," Jan. 1971.

    More likely from slang posh "a dandy" (1890), from thieves' slang meaning "money" (1830), originally "coin of small value, halfpenny," possibly from Romany posh "half."

    December 7, 2007

  • From Wiki:

    The Israeli Army diet was a fad diet that was popular in the 1970s. It was promoted as being based on the diet used by the Israel Defence Forces for new recruits but had no connection with the Israeli Army.

    The diet lasted for eight days with the dieter only eating one type of food for two days each:

    Days 1-2: Apples

    Days 3-4: Cheese

    Days 5-6: Chicken

    Days 7-8: Salad

    (black tea/coffee allowed on all days)

    December 7, 2007

  • Thanks, bilby - and what a "diet" it is...

    December 7, 2007

  • Nice list - what about Issaquah, Enumclaw and Snoqualmie?

    December 5, 2007

  • Pseudotsuga!

    December 5, 2007

  • Weirdnet strikes again!

    December 2, 2007

  • ĂŸ?

    December 1, 2007

  • Haribo macht Kinder froh - und Erwachsene ebenso!

    December 1, 2007

  • Steer, gelding, barrow, wether...

    December 1, 2007

  • More here.

    December 1, 2007

  • I like the cut of this list's jib, reesetee!

    December 1, 2007

  • It could be inKy black...

    November 30, 2007

  • Hey - I like pasketti! My mom made the best, even when she snuck in eggplant cubar...

    November 29, 2007

  • See here.

    November 28, 2007

  • Mmmmm, rhubarb!

    November 27, 2007

  • Crackers!

    more here

    November 27, 2007

  • Flexitarianism is a term used in the United States to describe the practice of eating mainly vegetarian food, but making occasional exceptions for social, pragmatic, cultural, or nutritional reasons.

    November 27, 2007

  • "It's okay to eat fish because they don't have any feelings.�? -Nirvana

    November 27, 2007

  • Most town ducks, like mallards, tend to be dabbling vegetarians, though few vegetarian animals will turn down free protein. See pika discussion.

    Opportunistic minnovores, perhaps.

    November 27, 2007

  • Depends on the duck - some are vegetarian, but others, like the merganser, are fishing ducks.

    November 27, 2007

  • Me, too!

    November 26, 2007

  • Happy Birthday, wordie!

    November 26, 2007

  • Just stay away from the subtraction stew:)

    November 22, 2007

  • I've heard -tucky used as a derogatory portmantesque suffix.

    November 22, 2007

  • Aw, shucks!

    November 22, 2007

  • What is it with the Tollbooth these days, u?

    November 22, 2007

  • see here

    November 22, 2007

  • 1. A knob, knot, or other small protuberance.

    2. One of a series of small ridges or grooves on the surface or edge of a metal object, such as a thumbscrew, to aid in gripping.

    November 22, 2007

  • I always thought it was the sound a hunting horn makes.

    November 22, 2007

  • Bah, humbug!

    Also, facade, hokum.

    November 22, 2007

  • The past and the present and the future.

    Faith and Hope and Charity,

    The heart and the brain and the body

    Give you three as a magic number.

    (Blind Melon, Schoolhouse Rock)

    Also -

    Coulda, shoulda, woulda / Hammer, anvil, stirrup?

    ps - this list is todally alsome!

    pps - three men in a tub: butcher, baker, candlestick-maker

    November 21, 2007

  • The Awful DYNNE!

    November 21, 2007

  • Gesundheit!

    November 21, 2007

  • Road trip!

    November 21, 2007

  • 45:farewell?

    I don't know if my brain stops at the same stations as yours, sionnach.

    November 21, 2007

  • It reminds me of Thanksgiving at my cousins' house. My uncle was German and he would fuss at the kids' table - "Fress nicht! Keine Schweinerei!" Good times.

    November 20, 2007

  • Hoover dam!

    November 20, 2007

  • I'll betcha that a baby rhino is a nuzzler.

    November 17, 2007

  • I'd second all of the below lists, plus Specific Excrement and minced oaths.

    November 17, 2007

  • Llamas nuzzle.

    November 17, 2007

  • ew, eew, EEEEW!

    An oyster is a most unappetizing blob of glup.

    You and Gollum are welcome all of my share, yarb.

    November 17, 2007

  • Fun! How 'bout Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego?

    November 17, 2007

  • We always called slowing through a stop sign without actually stopping a California stop.

    November 16, 2007

  • I do love nouns of assemblage!

    How about a romp of (river) otters / raft of (sea) otters?

    November 16, 2007

  • Tabs, please. And I second colleen's piscatory exclamation. I like the shiny new features.

    November 15, 2007

  • That's nobody's business but the Turks.

    November 13, 2007

  • A submarine‽ Pshaw.

    November 13, 2007

  • What a lovely word! Ten points for the nautilus.

    November 13, 2007

  • Rumpleteazer: Fortitude!

    um...

    mad: Lear

    omicron: omega

    fox:box?

    November 13, 2007

  • mercenaries: gallowglasses

    Napoleon: Marengo

    Butler: Edward ??

    November 13, 2007

  • Wow! I had no idea that pikas would scavenge. I remember them bustling about and making hay. Skipvia, thanks (I think) for that information. Next time I'm in the mountains, I won't take a nap.

    November 9, 2007

  • But if he did open the biscuits, he would whop them good and the can would split open with a pleasant wumpf.

    November 9, 2007

  • Wouldn't the fell beast just eat the biscuits, can and all? I'm thinking the kitchen is not his forte.

    November 9, 2007

  • Whoops! Try this one, then.

    November 9, 2007

  • Nope, I come from a long line of whoppers. My mother used to call biscuits in a can whop biscuits because you had to whop 'em good to get them open.

    November 9, 2007

  • What about when you whop someone upside the head?

    November 9, 2007

  • I like this list! Glassmaking is so exciting, I think. The year I taught across the hall from the art teacher, she had glassmakers come in and show the kids how to make glass. There was all sorts of excitement with torches and molten glass. I made a shiny glass bead!

    November 9, 2007

  • Seriously‽

    I didn't know there were so many weird food days out there.

    November 9, 2007

  • -osity is a most useful suffix...

    November 8, 2007

  • Oh, but a stirrup serves a purpose - it keeps you on the horse and lets you stand up and wield your mace.

    The stirrup pant lacks such utility. It keeps your ankles warm at the expense of an itchy instep.

    November 8, 2007

  • A most hideous invention. See here.

    Rather usefull for things like dance and baseball, but otherwise a crime against nature.

    November 8, 2007

  • Glad to see you have my favorite unit of measurement, the scruple! Did you make a list like this once before, reesetee?

    November 7, 2007

  • Not to be confused with attar...

    November 7, 2007

  • oooooh! 7-12 is Friends-themed

    7 - Rachel

    8 - Monica (monniker?)

    9 - Phoebe

    10 - Chandler

    11 - Joey

    12 - Ross

    November 6, 2007

  • And a Native American tribe/people.

    November 6, 2007

  • What a lovely word! And quite the mental image...

    November 1, 2007

  • *whimper*

    October 31, 2007

  • Ooooh! Don't forget lead pen (pencil), pencil colors (colored pencils), and colors (crayons/markers).

    October 31, 2007

  • Heh-heh. In the town where I grew up, goat-roper was a pejorative term for denizens of the next town over.

    October 31, 2007

  • Hemoglobin! (Or, just for today, hemogoblin...)

    October 31, 2007

  • I can't decide if I like the mad cow or the mange better, myself.

    October 31, 2007

  • I love those little germs!

    October 30, 2007

  • I wasn't nervous... Maybe I was a little bit concerned but it's not the same thing.

    October 29, 2007

  • Yes, but founder is such a triksy word...

    You've got the builders and entrepreneurs, the failures and sinkages, plus the nasty foot condition...

    October 29, 2007

  • Yeah, this list is todally awesome!

    October 29, 2007

  • This is how my mother usually describes her grandmother.

    October 29, 2007

  • Or flounder is to flail about and founder is to sink?

    October 29, 2007

  • Not so much French literature as coffee...

    Is there a Spanish cognate of amble/ramble? Cause that's my guess for #10.

    You can keep your Carthaginian beauty, sionnach, I'm done. I wouldn't mind another quiz, though, 'specially if I'm not late next time.

    October 29, 2007

  • Very popular with 12-year-olds on field trips...

    October 28, 2007

  • When I lived in Louisiana, places that served boiled crawfish or shrimp would have the raw ingredients for such a sauce out on the table so that everyone could make up his/her own version. Good times.

    October 28, 2007

  • The liver is what makes it so delicously earthy.

    October 28, 2007

  • Rimbaud?

    October 28, 2007

  • hee, hee!

    October 27, 2007

  • Awww, I'm late.

    I'd second a tenative Dido for #7. And for #8, errr...Sambo?

    I don't know anything about obscure raincoats.

    October 27, 2007

  • 8. to smooth (as plaster or cement) with a float

    For horses, see here

    October 27, 2007

  • If you have horses, though, sometimes you need to float their teeth to grind down sharp edges.

    October 27, 2007

  • Excellent career choice, npydyuan!

    October 27, 2007

  • In the US, they're little disks of sugar that come in packs about the size of a tootsie roll. Like these.

    October 27, 2007

  • Nice!

    October 25, 2007

  • Yup! Heard first at a raptor rehab center, but also out in the world of bird nerds.

    October 25, 2007

  • 'S okay, R, I do love to commentate.

    Hey, C_b - do you have mutes on your special poo list? I think they're specific to birds of prey. Also, whitewash.

    October 25, 2007

  • Or bats.

    October 25, 2007

  • What the bear said. *snicker*

    October 25, 2007

  • Eew, eew, EEW!

    Yet somehow oddly appropriate...

    October 25, 2007

  • evil?

    October 25, 2007

  • You can't really drink a gel, can you?

    More of a slurpy gulp.

    eeew.

    October 25, 2007

  • I hate the bubbles! They ricochet out of the straw and punch you in the roof of your mouth. Pearls, my ass. *twitch*

    October 25, 2007

  • Usually Hawaiian, occasionally message tees, these can be purchased in the Dad School gift shop.

    October 24, 2007

  • You know you love it - suspenders, bow ties, funny hats, loud shirts - one of the core elements of Dad School.

    October 24, 2007

  • See here.

    October 24, 2007

  • Does it wear spats?

    October 24, 2007

  • Mmmm...horse doovers.

    October 24, 2007

  • excellent! *yoink*

    October 24, 2007

  • What about pheasants?

    October 24, 2007

  • Sionnach, you rock out loud on cinnamon toast.

    Though I join reesetee in defending the birdies.

    October 24, 2007

  • Apartment, vitamin B?

    October 24, 2007

  • Witching hour? False dawn?

    October 24, 2007

  • I don't mind the occasional image/video, but I would mind if there were many more than there are now.

    I like the monochromatic look.

    And I wouldn't use messaging.

    That's my two cents for the day.

    October 24, 2007

  • I thought you were a skulker?

    October 23, 2007

  • Or, instead of making lists of conversation, you could use a conversation tag?

    October 23, 2007

  • When I was little the replica of this ship came to visit, complete with costumes and tours and history lessons. It was sooooo cool!

    October 23, 2007

  • My conscience definitely wears spats. And has a twirly cane.

    NOT a cricket, though.

    I only have one word for boot slippers: uggly!

    October 23, 2007

  • How about tail?

    October 23, 2007

  • What if the cricket is your conscience?

    October 23, 2007

  • Spats are cool, dammit!

    October 22, 2007

  • d'oh!

    October 22, 2007

  • I like the citation v. miscellaneous idea much better than categories and voting. One of the (many) reasons I like this site is that the only rating system you have is the number of people who have listed / commented / favorited a word. I dislike stars and precentages and the like.

    PS - my favorite new thing is seeing what other lists a word is on - good for finding new and interesting lists and wordtuplets.

    October 22, 2007

  • Thanks, O!

    October 22, 2007

  • Did you know that if you're playing Cranium and you have to hum the tune of Love Shack, that if someone guesses this song, it is nigh impossible to hum anything else?

    October 22, 2007

  • I prefer the white elephant when it comes to enforced workplace cheer...

    October 22, 2007

  • Good for making curtains that will roll right down...

    October 21, 2007

  • thanks!

    October 20, 2007

  • Boots with a smoking jacket? How gauche!

    October 20, 2007

  • What about the vergerhade dreams?

    October 20, 2007

  • I agree - run out?

    October 19, 2007

  • You've got to watch out for the crackling fireplace - it spits out twinkly little embers that land in your slipper, leading to the dance of the singed ankle...

    October 19, 2007

  • Nice! Nuthatch, ditz, ding-a-ling?

    October 19, 2007

  • Wow. Just...wow.

    October 19, 2007

  • Shuffleboard!

    October 18, 2007

  • What do you call a baby hedgehog, then?

    October 18, 2007

  • *shiver*

    October 18, 2007

  • aaaaw!

    October 18, 2007

  • It is nice and snarly, though.

    October 18, 2007

  • also, schmatte...

    October 18, 2007

  • HuhHuhHuh...reminds me of The Great Cornholio.

    October 18, 2007

  • Um....eeew!

    October 18, 2007

  • Like seedless grapes!

    October 18, 2007

  • Erlack!

    October 18, 2007

  • Yum! Even when my family calls them cornholes, making them sound much less appetizing...

    October 18, 2007

  • There was an interesting article in maybe the NYTimes a while back - apparently a significant majority of nuticle purchasers/dog owners are men.

    October 16, 2007

  • Pshaw! You don't want your dog to feel that his manhood...errr...doghood has been compromised. Come on!

    October 16, 2007

  • Ferkin awesome shirts, u!

    October 16, 2007

  • Fixed - thanks, colleen.

    October 16, 2007

  • JC Penny in frenchois.

    October 16, 2007

  • It is German for this .

    October 16, 2007

  • I always wanted a popple:

    However, they were deemed too frivolous. I wonder why?

    October 16, 2007

  • Hee-hee!

    October 16, 2007

  • JC Penny in frenchois.

    October 16, 2007

  • But of course!

    October 16, 2007

  • sweet!

    October 16, 2007

  • JC Penny in frenchois.

    October 16, 2007

  • Oh, I see. I'll have to think about it. I'm not sure NASCAR can be frenchoisifed.

    October 16, 2007

  • Nasqueur? Que?

    October 16, 2007

  • Does anyone else remember Popples?

    October 16, 2007

  • aka K-mart.

    October 16, 2007

  • Target, the big red super-store, in french-ois.

    October 16, 2007

  • Everything sounds fancier in frenchois!

    October 16, 2007

  • Thanks, rocks! Platypus hangs out in animalia with the rest of the menagerie...

    October 16, 2007

  • slinky, slinky! For fun it's a wonderful toy...

    October 16, 2007

  • I think there are more of these somewhere....

    edit:

    Ah-hah! -->here.

    'speciallly in the list comments...

    October 16, 2007

  • I think I knew a Celia once, if that helps.

    October 16, 2007

  • Bummer! I was really hoping it would look more waspish...

    October 15, 2007

  • *favorited*!

    October 15, 2007

  • Does it have a stinger on the end of its tail?

    October 15, 2007

  • Firefox, too...

    October 15, 2007

  • I wish I had such nice birds to watch - crows and jays, mostly. Though I do enjoy the raucous banter...

    October 15, 2007

  • Whaddaya know‽ Something new every day...

    October 15, 2007

  • Errrr - certain ungulates and I think some bats use leks as well...

    October 13, 2007

  • Grrrr!

    October 13, 2007

  • And if you haven't read The 13 Clocks yet, go read it - right now! Shoo!

    October 12, 2007

  • *Shiver* - it todally gave me nightmares when I was little.

    October 12, 2007

  • Lovely, sionnach!

    October 12, 2007

  • Oh, sugar!

    October 11, 2007

  • "Science", eh?

    October 11, 2007

  • Sweet! How did I miss it?

    *added*

    October 11, 2007

  • Oh, no, you didn't! :)

    Hmmmm... bogie and rattling cough?

    October 11, 2007

  • Neat!

    October 10, 2007

  • New & improved nobody-has-listed-this-word-adding, yay!

    October 10, 2007

  • Did you ever take the little disc out of the floppy and play with it? That was fun, but oh-so-against the rules...

    October 10, 2007

  • They totally flopped!

    More of a flap, really. I remember twiddling with them a lot.

    October 9, 2007

  • Help! My words went away! Not all of them, just the main list, but I luuuurved them... I tried to move a word to another list and *poof* - they all ran away.

    October 9, 2007

  • scallop

    October 9, 2007

  • Thanks, John!

    PS - the list of lists a word is on rocks the casbah!

    October 8, 2007

  • Can you no longer link to words in list descriptions? I was adding a word this morning and saw lots of brackets on an old list instead of nice blue words.

    October 8, 2007

  • Is this where interfering baggage comes from?

    Either way, nice and scathing!

    October 8, 2007

  • exxxxcelent!

    October 8, 2007

  • 1. Any basslike fish of the genus Centropomus, esp. C. undecimalis, inhabiting waters off Florida and the West Indies and south to Brazil, valued as food and game.

    Any of several related marine fishes.

    (Origin: 1690–1700; < Dutch snoek)

    2. A gesture of defiance, disrespect, or derision.

    Idiom: cock a snook or cock one's snook, to thumb the nose: a painter who cocks a snook at traditional techniques. Also, cock a snoot.

    (Origin: 1875–80; orig. uncert.)

    October 8, 2007

  • We had these!

    October 7, 2007

  • Or one of those annoying guys in a "fancy" restaurants who harasses you with the pepper grinder over and over again...

    October 7, 2007

  • Ditto, ditto, ditto and huzzah:)

    October 6, 2007

  • Three cheers!

    Hip-hip...

    October 5, 2007

  • Woo-hoo! Can we stop at lonesome town before we hit the pit of dispair?

    October 5, 2007

  • nice!

    October 5, 2007

  • It's just wrong.

    October 4, 2007

  • I call shotgun!

    October 4, 2007

  • Aren't they all? Must be part of Dad 101, along with dad jokes..

    October 4, 2007

  • < insert wise-ass remark here >

    October 4, 2007

  • Wha?

    October 4, 2007

  • Look who's talking, weasel-lover :P

    October 4, 2007

  • Oooh, another ungulate!

    October 4, 2007

  • hah!

    October 4, 2007

  • police officer, detective.

    1925, probably from Yiddish, lit. "sexton of a synagogue," from Heb. shamash "servant;" influenced by Celt. Seamus "James," as a typical name for an Irish cop.

    October 3, 2007

  • Why are all the sneaking words so delightfully onomatopoeic?

    October 3, 2007

  • These are lovely!

    *favorited*

    October 3, 2007

  • Oooh - another figment - I like the picture:)

    October 3, 2007

  • C_b, maybe you saw the Loup Garou...

    How close were you to Louisiana?

    October 3, 2007

  • A type of marriage which can be contracted in certain countries, usually between persons of unequal social rank, which prevents the passage of the husband's titles and privileges to the wife and any children born of the marriage. It is also known as a left-handed marriage because in the wedding ceremony the groom held his bride's right hand with his left hand instead of his right.

    October 2, 2007

  • I fad it up to here?

    October 2, 2007

  • Pure what?

    October 2, 2007

  • All funned out?

    October 2, 2007

  • me, too!

    October 1, 2007

  • Like those Your Name On A Grain Of Rice! kiosks in a mall?

    ...do they still do that? My memories of malls consist of stands with useless crap and Orange Juliuses. Talk about hellholes...

    September 27, 2007

  • lovely! I have dim memories of jokes that were also addition or multiplication problems - the punchline came when you turned the answer over.

    September 27, 2007

  • Oh - I missed the tool business. I don't think a mystery number is going to deter a hardened tool-pilferer.

    September 27, 2007

  • Tunicates rule!

    September 27, 2007

  • But aren't "items that may be subject to pilferage" kinda hard to engrave? Office supplies, grapes in the grocery store, my supply of soda in the staff fridge that someone keeps drinking...

    September 27, 2007

  • Oh, yeah - this one.

    September 26, 2007

  • What official notices? I want to see them!

    September 26, 2007

  • Wasn't there a list of these?

    September 26, 2007

  • yeeech

    good list, though...

    September 26, 2007

  • Those pesky little critters!

    September 26, 2007

  • grrrrr

    September 26, 2007

  • Your epidermis is showing!

    Uh, er, well, you're lentiginous!

    September 25, 2007

  • Yes, thanks for the clarification!

    September 25, 2007

  • An ovoo (Mongolian: Đ¾Đ²Đ¾Đ¾, heap) is a type of shamanistic rock cairn found in Mongolia...They serve as both navigational aids in a country with few roads and fewer signs, and religious sites, used in worship of the mountains and the sky as well as in Buddhist ceremonies.

    more here and here.

    September 25, 2007

  • Such a glorious word - thanks, yarb!

    September 25, 2007

  • I wasn't hatin', I was helping ;)

    September 25, 2007

  • ooooh, ooooh!

    *yoink*

    September 25, 2007

  • That is lovely!

    September 25, 2007

  • Ooooh - shiny!

    September 24, 2007

  • If you're ever in Portland, OR, you should go to Voodoo Doughnut for the bacon doughnut...

    September 24, 2007

  • A less madeupical explanation here.

    September 24, 2007

  • or a trifle?

    September 24, 2007

  • Yeah. What he said :)

    September 24, 2007

  • More here.

    September 24, 2007

  • yay!

    September 24, 2007

  • hee, hee!

    September 24, 2007

  • Oooh, thanks! I know I've forgotten a few.

    September 23, 2007

  • neat!

    September 23, 2007

  • The bristling of the body hair, as from fear or cold; goose bumps.

    (Late Latin horripilti, horripiltin, to bristle with hairs : horrre, to tremble + pilre, to grow hair (from pilus, hair).)

    September 23, 2007

  • I feel a list coming on...

    September 23, 2007

  • Not to be confused with an egress.

    September 23, 2007

  • I find the word aesthetically & glossologically displeasing. Also, I hate the way your mouth has to move in order to pronounce it.

    September 23, 2007

  • Ojai, CA has a pink moment.

    September 23, 2007

  • Reesetee, this is lovely - slithering rocks, especially!

    Are they some kind of precipitation?

    September 23, 2007

  • Sheesh!

    ---> :)

    September 22, 2007

  • How 'bout ass over teakettle?

    September 22, 2007

  • I say catty-corner and kitty-cornered...

    September 21, 2007

  • or prounounced without stuttering.

    September 20, 2007

  • mmmmmmmm.....

    September 20, 2007

  • Neat! Even better than hijinks... How does on pronounce this beauty?

    September 20, 2007

  • Thanks! I think I'll pass on the highways and byways for now, tempting though they may be...

    September 19, 2007

  • Searchin' for your lost bottle of DEET?

    September 19, 2007

  • Thanks, ineffable!

    September 19, 2007

  • Sweet! How 'bout Calapooia?

    September 19, 2007

  • er...the river is Molalla, actually.

    September 19, 2007

  • More marr, at least for me. It is also one of the seven sisters.

    September 19, 2007

  • Nope, I just drove through it a lot when I lived in upstate NY...

    September 19, 2007

  • Pennsylvania really does have the weirdest names! Wormleysburg, Couchtown?

    September 19, 2007

  • I stopped for gas here once, because the name was cool and I wanted to buy a postcard.

    September 19, 2007

  • yoink!

    September 19, 2007

  • We played a lot of car games. My favorite to play was one my dad made up. There were a lot of curvy two-lane roads to drive on, so when it was dark, we'd have to try to say "dim!" before my he could flick the dimmer switch on the headlights. You lost points/cred if you dimmed stationary lights or your own reflection on the river. And he wonders why I'm such a micromanager.

    September 18, 2007

  • ooooh! backwoods, zwieback, battlefront, frontman?

    September 18, 2007

  • I can't limit myself to just one locale.

    September 18, 2007

  • I work hard for a living...

    September 18, 2007

  • Nice! I'm so happy that you have diddly... nil, nadir, void, dearth?

    September 18, 2007

  • Yaarrr!

    September 18, 2007

  • We yelled "popeye!".

    September 18, 2007

  • Thanks guys! I tried to limit myself to more wet / less land and stick to natural enclosed bodies of water, but there is always some spill-over ;)

    September 18, 2007

  • life before 1881?

    September 18, 2007

  • Free e with every word purchased!

    September 18, 2007

  • I remember the hilarity of driving through Pennsylvania and trying to pronounce the various towns we drove through. That and the Scranton McDonald's.

    September 18, 2007

  • As opposed to a digital immigrant?

    September 18, 2007

  • mwah-hah-hah...excellent!

    September 18, 2007

  • Hee-hee! More names for my armchair traveler list.

    September 18, 2007

  • Seriously‽

    September 18, 2007

  • I like these! I also enjoy the names of xanax (double points for palindromosity), anxira, lunesta and perhaps my favorite (name-wise), tums...

    September 18, 2007

  • Why, yes.

    September 18, 2007

  • or mock apple pie with Ritz crackers?

    September 18, 2007

  • For me, "they" were little old ladies sitting around a quilt.

    September 18, 2007

  • Not just a boat, not just a hotel...

    See here or here.

    September 17, 2007

  • lovely! (makes my thumbs hurt, though...)

    September 17, 2007

  • Here's another one for you, bylanternlight - cran-tilly lace. (Though it might have been a lipstick and not a true gloss.) Either way, *huuuhg*.

    September 14, 2007

  • lovely!

    September 14, 2007

  • I never said I liked it - no matter how it is spelled.

    September 13, 2007

  • Me, too!

    September 13, 2007

  • This is perhaps my father's favorite word...

    September 12, 2007

  • mmm...

    September 12, 2007

  • I could never master makeup. I remember being schooled by my sister that eyeshadow went on the lids, not under the eyes as the name suggests...

    I think nail polish names take the cake for outre and off-the-map-of-sanity.

    Does anyone else remember Urban Decay from the mid-late 90's - they had colors like oil slick, mildew and bruise?

    yeeesh.

    September 12, 2007

  • I'm no wordinista - yoink away.

    September 12, 2007

  • But doesn't spiced mauve just make you want to lick your lips?

    Actually, reading this list made me throw up - just a little - in my mouth. I'm appalled by the names of most cosmetics.

    September 12, 2007

  • They blink sideways!

    September 12, 2007

  • And we won't know if he survives until the door is opened...

    September 10, 2007

  • What were the rest of them, then? I'm curious...

    September 10, 2007

  • My grandfather, a lapsed Catholic, had a "hail Mary" parking incantation.

    September 10, 2007

  • And what I wouldn't give not to hear it played. Yeesh.

    September 10, 2007

  • A second-rate imitator or follower, especially of an artist or a philosopher.

    French Ă©pigone, from Greek Epigonoi, sons of the seven heroes against Thebes, from pl. of epigonos, born after.

    September 10, 2007

  • Wordie got a facelift! I like the little icons for dictionary links. Could the recent lists go up closer to the top? I'm more interested in them than the various wordiest/citiest rankings, and I'm a lazy scroller... Thanks for all the schlepping and remodeling you've been doing!

    September 9, 2007

  • I'm a slaker, me...

    September 9, 2007

  • tasty!

    September 7, 2007

  • September 5, 2007

  • Skiffle is a type of folk music with a jazz and blues influence, usually using homemade or improvised instruments such as the washboard, tea chest bass, kazoo, cigar-box fiddle, musical saw, comb and paper, and so forth, as well as more conventional instruments such as acoustic guitar and banjo. Skiffle and jug band music are closely related...The Oxford English Dictionary states that skiffle was a slang term for "rent party"...Originally, skiffle groups were referred to as spasm bands.

    September 2, 2007

  • wow.

    August 30, 2007

  • Hear, hear for the new-and-improved recent comments!

    Sometime in the last few weeks, all of my list titles and descriptions seem to have gone awol - other lists show up just fine, but when I look at my own, nothing. Not the end of the world, just...odd.

    August 29, 2007

  • A sheer fabric of silk, rayon, or nylon made in a variety of tight smooth weaves or open lacy patterns.

    (Probably from French Ninon, nickname for Anne.)

    August 25, 2007

  • this just made the hate list.

    August 24, 2007

  • of horror, dog, cat?

    August 23, 2007

  • Ods bodkins! It could be fun.

    August 22, 2007

  • My little sister always forgot and breathed into the phone...

    The best part of rotary phones, though, is the clankety-clank of someone answering or hanging up, and the squeaky little ring of protest if you slam the earpiece down too hard.

    August 21, 2007

  • An open fire in a fireplace.

    A fireplace.

    (Perhaps Scottish Gaelic aingeal, fire, light.)

    August 21, 2007

  • That extra long cord was very important for other reasons as well... Your only privacy from family eavesdropping was stretching it around a corner and into a hideyhole.

    August 21, 2007

  • Anyone? Anyone? The tariff bill? The Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act? Which, anyone? Raised or lowered? ...raised tariffs, in an effort to collect more revenue for the federal government. Did it work? Anyone?

    August 19, 2007

  • This word seems to be rather the opposite of diapers...

    August 13, 2007

  • plethora?

    August 9, 2007

  • What a lovely slew of words!

    August 9, 2007

  • 5

    August 8, 2007

  • Charles

    August 8, 2007

  • Boyle!

    Locard has a principle and Ockham has a razor, do those count?

    August 7, 2007

  • Sounds like a most unpleasant medical procedure to me.

    August 7, 2007

  • I do - they're a lot of fun!

    August 3, 2007

  • Inspired by slumry's Jumblies.

    August 3, 2007

  • oooh! fingered, switch, sleeper, housework, fantastic?

    August 3, 2007

  • True, but sounds much better than folding kayak... Plus, they're great boats!

    August 3, 2007

  • Nice list - Klepper?

    August 2, 2007

  • What medical use‽

    August 2, 2007

  • It makes me think of a very small scone.

    August 2, 2007

  • New hobby? These are nice - my mom wove, once upon a time. I remember playing under the loom when I was little.

    August 2, 2007

  • Eeesh. I hope you get some sleep....or coffee.

    August 1, 2007

  • see humble pie.

    August 1, 2007

  • To eat humble pie (1830) is from umble pie (1648), pie made from umbles "edible inner parts of an animal" (especially deer), considered a low-class food. The similar sense of similar-sounding words (the "h" of humble was not pronounced then) converged in the pun. Umbles, meanwhile, is M.E. numbles "offal" (with loss of n- through assimilation into preceding article), from O.Fr. nombles "loin, fillet," from L. lumulus, dim. of lumbus "loin."

    August 1, 2007

  • Eeew, tripe! But yes, just for humble pie.

    August 1, 2007

  • Wha...? *looks around* I'm awake!

    August 1, 2007

  • Drum´ble

    v. i. 1. To be sluggish or lazy; to be confused.

    2. To mumble in speaking.

    August 1, 2007

  • Come to think of it, most -umble words are fun to say. I smell a list.

    August 1, 2007

  • lovely! such a scribbly, mumbly jumble of a word...

    August 1, 2007

  • Watch out, uselessness, you may give some parent a horrible idea...

    (didn't jennaren have a list of those?)

    July 31, 2007

  • Where can I fill out my application‽

    July 26, 2007

  • it simple, stupid, company, your nose clean, a lookout (sharp or otherwise)...

    July 25, 2007

  • On the sunny side, always on the sunny side...

    July 25, 2007

  • pippin!

    July 24, 2007

  • fuji, cortland, honeycrisp...

    July 24, 2007

  • riggin' pants!

    July 24, 2007

  • Those are some violent games, U!

    Oooh - I remember heads up, seven up! I'm not putting it on the recess list, though - to much of an inside game. A teacher's favorite because it is such a quiet game - all that heads down & sneaking around...

    King of the mountain rules!

    July 24, 2007

  • Steal the bacon? Chicken fight? 'Splain, please.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thanks, s! I know I'm forgetting some, and there are probably some regional variations, too...

    July 24, 2007

  • a stiff upper lip, me posted, to yourself...

    July 24, 2007

  • oooh, oooh - a good man down! (or can't you?)

    July 24, 2007

  • eeeew!

    July 24, 2007

  • eeeeep!

    July 23, 2007

  • I don't even want to think about it!

    July 19, 2007

  • Is that akin to "stick a fork in me, I'm done"?

    July 19, 2007

  • For me it was "oinks" aka onyx. My family prefers the pronounciation - for the hilarity.

    July 19, 2007

  • nice!

    July 19, 2007

  • Lovely!

    July 18, 2007

  • *snort!*

    July 18, 2007

  • sweet!

    July 18, 2007

  • Civet coffee. More here.

    July 17, 2007

  • They do!

    I wonder if they hear something we don't.

    July 17, 2007

  • What kinds of birds do you have?

    July 17, 2007

  • But it *is* the past tense of spit, unless you are cooking - who would want to eat a spat/roasted chicken?

    July 17, 2007

  • Hey! I like the shoe spats - they're so debonair.

    July 17, 2007

  • We sure love the euphemisms - the facilities, tee-tee house, commode, W.C.?

    July 16, 2007

  • Eeeesh! Though I do enjoy possible side effects... Though neither sauce nor insanely hot, might I suggest Slap Ya Mama seasoning?

    July 16, 2007

  • "Hot cakes cooked in bear grease or pork lard were popular from earliest times in American. First made of cornmeal, the griddle cakes or pancakes were of course best when served piping hot and were often sold at church benefits, fairs, and other functions. So popular were they that by the beginning of the 19th century 'to sell like hot cakes' was a familiar expression for anything that sold very quickly effortlessly, and in quantity." - Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins" by Robert Hendrickson

    July 14, 2007

  • The act or process of shaking violently, especially as a method of diagnosis to detect the presence of fluid and air in a body cavity.

    The condition of being shaken violently.

    July 14, 2007

  • Amber

    July 14, 2007

  • I remember this word from that New Yorker story about how the guy met his wife - feeling very chalant, etc. Didn't you put it up here, R?

    July 14, 2007

  • run over/overrun?

    July 14, 2007

  • From wiki:

    The ocotillo (Fouquieria splendens - also called the coachwhip, Jacob's staff, and the vine cactus) is a curious, and unique desert plant of the southwestern United States and northern Mexico. For much of the year, the plant appears to be an arrangement of large dead sticks, although closer examination reveals that the stems are partly green. When rain comes, the plant quickly becomes lush with small (2-4 cm) ovate leaves, which may remain for weeks or even months.

    July 14, 2007

  • Lovely - it goes with your very fine house! (mine has parquet)

    My mother has orange/red marmoleum - it looks like a dragon threw up on her floor.

    July 14, 2007

  • I learned ROY G. BIV for the rainbow...

    July 14, 2007

  • My Very Elderly Mother Just Served Us Nine Pies...Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge...SoCaToa...King Phillip Came Over From Greece Swimming...

    There were so many!

    July 13, 2007

  • Nice - extreme, bottom of something, infinity...and beyond!

    July 13, 2007

  • I like it! How 'bout susurrus?

    July 13, 2007

  • No, that's chocolate (Theobroma cacao)...

    July 12, 2007

  • Reminds me of these books I had growing up by William Steig.

    C ER.

    July 12, 2007

  • heaven!

    July 12, 2007

  • Ooooh, the comments are back - thanks, John!

    July 12, 2007

  • Hmmmm - frolic isn't quite jumpy enough for me. The Snoopy dance is perfect, o!

    July 11, 2007

  • Are Recent Comments a thing of the past? When I click on the link, I get: "Sorry, can't find a user by that name."

    July 11, 2007

  • Ditto! Plus, I think I might like stot even better than pronk.

    I smell a list...

    July 11, 2007

  • Good list - triplicate, triage?

    July 10, 2007

  • The priest fainted!

    July 10, 2007

  • Walla Walla, gado-gado, aye-aye, gris-gris...?

    July 10, 2007

  • Antelopes pronk.

    July 10, 2007

  • (a) A spar formerly used on board of ships, as a crane to hoist the flukes of the anchor to the top of the bow, without injuring the sides of the ship; -- called also the fish davit.

    (b) pl. Curved arms of timber or iron, projecting over a ship's side of stern, having tackle to raise or lower a boat, swing it in on deck, rig it out for lowering, etc.; -- called also boat davits.

    (Cf. F. davier forceps, cooper's instrument, G. david davit; all probably from the proper name David.)

    - Webster 1913

    July 9, 2007

  • An oven used to anneal glass. (more here.)

    July 8, 2007

  • Webster 1913:

    To form in idea; to fancy.

    To apprehend in thought so as to fix and hold in the mind; to memorize.

    July 7, 2007

  • Webster: an elaborate but useless ornament

    Also a skateboarding move and a band (see wiki).

    July 7, 2007

  • Squid have 10 tentacles, octopi have 8...

    July 6, 2007

  • Webster 1913:

    n. (OE. knarre, gnarre, akin to OD. knor, G. knorren. Cf. Knar, Knur, Gnarl.) A knot or gnarl in wood; hence, a tough, thickset man; -- written also gnarr. (Archaic)

    He was . . . a thick gnarre. - Chaucer.

    v. i. (imp. & p. p. Gnarred (?); p. pr. & vb. n. Gnarring. See Gnarl.) To gnarl; to snarl; to growl; -- written also gnarr. (Archaic)

    At them he gan to rear his bristles strong, And felly

    gnarre. - Spenser.

    A thousand wants Gnarr at the heels of men. - Tennison.

    July 4, 2007

  • Hey, U - I'm from a dead-end branch of Smiths, as my grandmother was one of three Smith sisters with no brothers. So not *all* of them are male-biased...

    July 3, 2007

  • eh?

    July 3, 2007

  • Oooh, but I love them so - 'specially their tender little hearts. Reesetee, where are the eyes?

    July 2, 2007

  • Also called the White Nun or Smee. See what Audubon has to say here.

    And a beautiful picture here.

    July 2, 2007

  • Artichokes have eyes, too‽ I thought they just had hearts...

    mind, dice (snake eyes), peas?

    July 2, 2007

  • It's the lonliest number since the number one...

    June 30, 2007

  • Thanks!

    June 29, 2007

  • 1. (law) To punish by a fine imposed arbitrarily at the discretion of the court.

    2. To punish by imposing an arbitrary penalty.

    Middle English amercen, from Anglo-Norman amercier, from Ă  merci, at the mercy of : Ă , to (from Latin ad) + merci, mercy (from Latin mercs, wages).

    how mercenary!

    June 28, 2007

  • Gracious! What a brouhaha!

    June 27, 2007

  • A crumblike topping for coffee cakes and rich breads, consisting of flour, sugar, butter, cinnamon, and sometimes chopped nutmeats.

    (German, streusel, from Middle High German ströusel, something strewn, from ströuwen, to sprinkle, from Old High German strowwen)

    Yum!

    June 27, 2007

  • As far as I'm concerned, the texture of the apples isn't really the point - it is all about the crunchy, crackly goodness that is the streusel on top. mmmmmmmmmm!

    June 27, 2007

  • Japanese children's television rules!

    Thanks, u.

    June 26, 2007

  • high horse, white elephant?

    June 22, 2007

  • I like smoothouse!

    June 22, 2007

  • Is this an exuberant version of hacky sack?

    June 22, 2007

  • Oooh, thank you!

    June 22, 2007

  • A broom makes a perfectly good stick horse...

    June 22, 2007

  • Wasn't there a lenghty discussion about wet bread once upon a time?

    June 22, 2007

  • Academically, I know this to be true, but they're pretty indistinguishable to me. I see pioneer and think covered wagons - even when reading biographical info. I get a lovely mental picture of a 'pioneer in the field of medicine' wearing buckskins and a stethoscope...

    June 21, 2007

  • Cool! (Always nice to have one's irrational assumptions vindicated...)

    Uselessness, in my counterintuitive brain, pioneers came *after* the frontiersmen, explorers, and trappers. More phlegmatic, less derring-do.

    June 21, 2007

  • I think you need some sort of sword to swashbuckle. A flintlock rifle just doesn't cut the mustard. And a bowie knife doesn't have the necessary panache.

    Feathers on a hat are jaunty. Tails are more, um, earthy.

    June 21, 2007

  • Oh, youse guys!

    June 21, 2007

  • or a coonskin cap.

    (...unless you're Davey Crockett)

    June 21, 2007

  • A musketeer, esp. one of the French royal musketeers of the 17th and 18th centuries, conspicuous both for their daring and their fine dress.

    A mosquetaire cuff or glove, or other article of dress fancied to resemble those worn by the French mosquetaires.

    June 21, 2007

  • I think it is hard to swashbuckle in a bonnet.

    June 21, 2007

  • racketeer, privateer, buccaneer, commandeer, musketeer - all very swashbuckle-y...

    June 21, 2007

  • I *love* this word! Thank you, arby.

    June 21, 2007

  • take care of business!

    June 20, 2007

  • Lovely! When I sew, I always need the seam ripper, or in my household, Jack...

    June 20, 2007

  • well enough alone?

    June 20, 2007

  • Reorganizing the closet. See also - yardage and wrap sheet.

    June 20, 2007

  • the high road, off, candy from strangers

    June 20, 2007

  • Nice!

    June 20, 2007

  • My parents always thought that saying "za" made them pretty cool (despite all assurances to the contrary). When they pronounced it, it was more of a "zAH!"...

    June 20, 2007

  • live, an apartment?

    June 20, 2007

  • a load off, a number, tea

    June 20, 2007

  • as good as you get?

    June 19, 2007

  • and match!

    June 19, 2007

  • And now I will hear it for hours, echoing through my brain...

    June 19, 2007

  • a little, and take, up the ghost?

    June 19, 2007

  • ...like the Shakers?

    June 18, 2007

  • ooooh! I think I hate you now. As bad as that darn earworm;)

    June 18, 2007

  • An old folk song that was popularized by Nirvana (among others, incuding Lead Belly). More from wiki here.

    June 18, 2007

  • Cornish mystery cave. More here and pictures here.

    June 18, 2007

  • Underground chamber of the Pueblo Indian villages of the southwestern U.S., notable for the murals that decorate its walls.

    A small hole in its floor, the sĂ­papu, serves as the symbolic place of origin of the tribe. Though the kiva's primary purpose is for men's rituals and ceremonies, it is also used for political meetings or casual gatherings.

    June 18, 2007

  • Chinese cave dwellings. See here.

    June 18, 2007

  • Yeah - the town I grew up in had a museum that was originally built as a Mormon church and it was a wispering gallery until they remodeled. It was really cool to eavesdrop on the unsuspecting or play with your friends...

    There is a more modern version in Chicago.

    June 18, 2007

  • One of such a form that sounds produced in certain parts of it are concentrated by reflection from the walls to another part, so that whispers or feeble sounds are audible at a much greater distance than under ordinary circumstances.

    Like this one.

    June 18, 2007

  • A priest hole is the term given to hiding places for priests built into many of the principal Roman Catholic houses of England during the period when Roman Catholics were persecuted by law in England, from the beginning of the reign of Elizabeth I. (more here.)

    June 18, 2007

  • Fun list - trompe l'oeil!

    What about the family height chart? That whole bit with the ruler and the pencil on your birthday and/or whenever you could convince your mom that you got a little taller - is there a more succinct word for it?

    June 14, 2007

  • A fichu is a large, square kerchief worn by women in the 18th century to fill in the low neckline of a bodice. The fichu was generally of linen fabric and was folded diagonally into a triangle and tied, pinned, or tucked into the bodice in front. (see here)

    June 13, 2007

  • I've seen granulate bugs (like this one)...

    You're probably right about inebriate, but I still like it.

    June 12, 2007

  • ungulate! (neither feathered nor flowery, but still quite lovely...)

    inebriate, stellate, flagellate, granulate?

    June 12, 2007

  • Interesting that so many of these are birdie words...

    June 12, 2007

  • Thanks, all!

    June 10, 2007

  • Ormolu (from French or moulu, signifying gold ground or pounded) is an 18th-century English term for applying finely ground, high-karat gold to an object in bronze. The French refer to this technique as bronze dorĂ©, which is used to this day though the item may be merely painted with a gold-tone paint... The manufacture of true ormolu employs a process known as mercury gilding or fire gilding, in which a solution of nitrate of mercury is applied to a piece of copper, brass, or bronze, followed by the application of an amalgam of gold and mercury. The item was then exposed to extreme heat until the mercury burned off and the gold remained, adhered to the metal object. Most mercury gilders died by the age of 40 due to exposure to the harmful mercury fumes. This gilding technique is similar to that also used on silver, which produced silver-gilt objects known as vermeil.

    June 10, 2007

  • Japanese porcelain made at the Arita kilns in Hizen province. Among the Arita porcelains are white glazed wares, pale gray-blue or gray-green glazed wares known as celadons, black wares, and blue-and-white wares with underglaze painting, as well as overglaze enamels.

    June 10, 2007

  • The word flivver is most commonly meant to indicate a Ford Model T. In a more general sense, a small, cheap car is meant.

    June 10, 2007

  • "I've got lots of brains," said the wombat. "You listen to them rattle." He shook his head and it rattled beautifully.

    (The Muddle-headed Wombat, by Ruth Park)

    June 9, 2007

  • blatherskite?

    June 8, 2007

  • (adj) : having a big belly,; gluttonous

    June 8, 2007

  • lovely!

    June 8, 2007

  • Why, yes! My brain went off on this odorous little tangent. Good times.

    June 8, 2007

  • Rusty and rancid; - applied to salt meat.

    June 8, 2007

  • Fetid, musty; rank; disordered and offensive to the smell or sight; slovenly; dingy.

    June 8, 2007

  • Producing or bearing frankincense.

    June 8, 2007

  • Being without mixture or adulteration; hence, strong; racy.

    June 8, 2007

  • Nice! (if a bit malodorous...)

    June 8, 2007

  • and bygones!

    June 7, 2007

  • Fun! Must be cause we've got all those arms and legs...

    Guts, covers, groceries, outskirts, cahoots?

    June 7, 2007

  • thankee!

    June 7, 2007

  • a porridge stirring utensil.

    June 6, 2007

  • yay! I love their little horns...

    June 5, 2007

  • thanks, V!

    June 5, 2007

  • Lovely! A baby llama/alpaca is called a cria. Larva, spiderling, gilt?

    June 4, 2007

  • Sadly, no. They're still pretty cool though, in an ur-chordate kind of way.

    June 4, 2007

  • A piece of armor for protecting the breast and back. / The breastplate alone.

    A defense or protection.

    Zoology: A protective covering of bony plates or scales.

    (Middle English curas, from Old French curasse, probably alteration (influenced by Old French cuir, leather) of Old Provençal coirassa, from Late Latin coricea (vestis), leather (garment), feminine of coriceus, from Latin corium, hide; see sker-1 in Indo-European roots.)

    June 2, 2007

  • n.: A penalty such as a fine.

    tr.v.: To penalize by fining or demanding forfeiture. / To acquire by trickery or deception. / To defraud or swindle.

    (From Middle English multen, to fine, from Latin multre, mulctre, from mulcta, fine.)

    June 2, 2007

  • sea squirt

    June 1, 2007

  • A nocturnal, forest-dwelling wild pig (Babyrousa babyrussa) of the East Indies, having long, upward-curving tusks in the male.

    (Malay babirusa : babi, hog + rusa, deer.)

    June 1, 2007

  • a loamy deposit formed by wind, usually yellowish and calcareous, common in the Mississippi Valley and in Europe and Asia.

    Origin: 1825–35; < G Löss < Swiss G lösch loose, slack (sch taken as a dial. equivalent of G s), akin to G lose

    May 31, 2007

  • I prefer loess.

    May 31, 2007

  • Once upon a time! Dark ages?

    May 31, 2007

  • contained!

    May 31, 2007

  • (Antiq.) A ``tear-bottle;'' a narrow-necked vessel found in sepulchers of the ancient Romans; -- so called from a former notion that the tears of the deceased person's friends were collected in it.

    May 31, 2007

  • Oh, a flounder's life is a wonderful life,

    A-lurkin' under the sea,

    I'd need no rehersal to be a demersal

    It's the life of a flounder for me!

    Oh, the life of a flounder for me!

    Oh, a flounder's life is a wonderful life,

    Your eyes are on top of your head,

    For lying quite hidden, then pouncing unbidden

    What a glorious life it would be!

    Oh, what a glorious life it would be!

    with apologies to pirates everywhere.

    May 29, 2007

  • This is a bully/big brother handbook! Uncles dandle and give horsie rides, surely!

    May 29, 2007

  • Aren't you a fart smeller;) I'm keeping them anyway. *neener, neener, neener*

    May 29, 2007

  • nice! I stole a few.

    May 29, 2007

  • monk hair!

    May 29, 2007

  • ooooh! rat-tail, tonsure, queue, pixie, caesar?

    And who could forget the hi-top fade?

    May 29, 2007

  • They're spooner quotes - if you go to the word listing for work and lobotomy, you'll get the full experience. Didn't want to list whole sentences...

    May 29, 2007

  • I don't know - the masses seem to have an unholy fondness for the toupee and the combover.

    May 29, 2007

  • Also known as a periwig, the peruke was popular during the 1600s and 1700s. It is currently worn by British Judges, although now only on ceremonial occasions. The wearing of the peruke was made fashionable by King Louis XIV of France. In the 1650s he began hiring wigmakers wearing full wigs, perhaps to cover his own accelerating baldness. Soon, in imitation of the king, the courtiers began wearing perukes a badge of honor. It was adopted by the future English King Charles II and his court, who brought the fashion to England when he was restored to the throne in 1660. In part, the peruke was a reaction to the close-cropped hair of the Puritans (so-called Roundheads). After King Louis's death in 1715, the massive peruque went out of fshion and was gradually replaced by smaller wigs.

    May 29, 2007

  • high heels.

    May 29, 2007

  • 1. A small brook; a rivulet.

    2. A long narrow straight valley on the moon's surface.

    (Low German rille or Dutch ril, running stream; see rei- in Indo-European roots.)

    May 29, 2007

  • More here.

    May 25, 2007

  • Yay! I've always loved this :)

    May 25, 2007

  • One hen.

    Two ducks.

    Three squawking geese.

    Four limerick oysters.

    Five corpulent porpoises.

    Six pair of Don Alversos tweezers.

    Seven thousand Macedonians in full battle array.

    Eight brass monkeys from the ancient sacred crypts of Egypt.

    Nine apathetic, sympathetic, diabetic, old men on roller skates with a marked propensity towards procrastination and sloth.

    Ten lyrical, spherical diabolical denizens of the deep who hall stall around the corner of the quo of the quay of the quivery, all at the same time.

    May 25, 2007

  • I wonder what else is taught in Dad School? There must be a class on embarrasing flair - mustaches, funny hats, shorts & knee socks, etc.

    May 24, 2007

  • Work is the bane of the drinking class. - Oscar Wilde

    May 24, 2007

  • Dad jokes are usually not very funny to begin with, but you laugh anyway because he is so proud of coming up with it. Then, because it is *so* funny, it gets told way past its expiration date...

    My dad loved this little wooden disc painted with the word "tuit". Someone gave it to him for Christmas and he was thrilled that he'd finally gotten a round tuit.

    Also - horrible puns & spoonerisms involving otters and terns. Some long drawn-out story about the beach and rocks and biblical justice with the punchline "leave no tern unstoned."

    May 24, 2007

  • I think everyone's father has a favorite spoonerism. They're the perfect dad joke...

    And thanks for the suggestions - this is still very much a work in progress.

    May 24, 2007

  • Chastity: I know you can be underwhelmed, and you can be overwhelmed, but can you ever just be, like, whelmed?

    Bianca: I think you can in Europe.

    -10 Things I Hate About You

    May 24, 2007

  • absotively!

    May 24, 2007

  • What you said. I always mix these things up - mouth in my foot, hatching chickens before they count, etc.

    May 24, 2007

  • toncheekgue

    May 24, 2007

  • parthenogenesis?

    May 24, 2007

  • Sweet! Much more thorough than mine...

    May 23, 2007

  • The ant has made himself illustrious

    Through constant industry industrious.

    So what?

    Would you be calm and placid

    If you were full of formic acid?

    -Ogden Nash

    May 23, 2007

  • Suggest away, I know I don't have them all...

    May 23, 2007

  • Prompted by the neat discussion and Valse's suggestion.

    May 23, 2007

  • A bottle opener (see here).

    May 22, 2007

  • Dogma? More of a jubjub bird, perhaps? I hear flapping wings and ponderous flight...

    May 22, 2007

  • I'd only ever encountered boule in bakeries, but:

    1. A pear-shaped synthetic sapphire, ruby, or other alumina-based gem, produced by fusing and tinting alumina.

    2. A round loaf of white bread.

    (French, ball, from Old French, bubble, from Latin bulla.)

    3. The lower house of the modern Greek legislature.

    4. - a. The senate of 400 founded by Solon in ancient Athens.

    - b. A legislative assembly in any one of the ancient Greek states.

    (Greek boul, assembly; see gwel- in Indo-European roots.)

    5. an inlaid furniture decoration; tortoiseshell and yellow and white metal form scrolls in cabinetwork (syn: boulle)

    May 21, 2007

  • I thought assimilation was the point.

    May 21, 2007

  • in utero, placebo, in situ, veto, post mortem, modus operandi...

    this is fun.

    oooh! - and n.b./note bene

    May 21, 2007

  • Likewise on both accounts, with extra cringes for the recent fad of belligerent used as a synonym for drunk/intoxicated. *huuuhg*

    May 21, 2007

  • Nice!

    habeas corpus, non sequitur, ad nauseam, persona non grata?

    May 21, 2007

  • *yeech* - but what if a nail-biter doesn't eat the nails, only gnaws them off and spits them out?

    May 18, 2007

  • usury, tomfoolery?

    May 18, 2007

  • see poetrie...

    May 17, 2007

  • no roomba, then?

    May 17, 2007

  • A lot of them I met when I was still a lab rat. More recently, in an article in the NY times.

    May 17, 2007

  • or the hickey doo where sweatshirt strings come out of the hood.

    May 17, 2007

  • I walk along the street of sorrow,

    The boulevard of broken dreams.

    Where gigolo and gigolette

    Can take a kiss without regret

    So they forget their broken dreams.

    You laugh tonight and cry tomorrow,

    When you behold your shattered dreams.

    And gigolo and gigolette

    Awake to find their eyes are wet

    With tears that tell of broken dreams.

    Here is where you`ll always find me,

    Always walking up and down.

    But I left my soul behind me

    In an old cathedral town.

    The joy you find here, you borrow,

    You cannot keep it long, it seems.

    But gigolo and gigolette

    Still sing a song and dance along

    The boulevard of broken dreams.

    (Harry Warren, Al Dubin)

    May 16, 2007

  • I think that people tend to hold onto regionalisms as defense against the homogenization of the world. I remember reading about some island on the east coast that had a distinctive accent. Somehow, a bridge was built or something connected it more easily to the mainland and more people started to move there (and more islanders commuted to the mainland to work...)

    In response, island accents thickened, especially for the younger generation who spend more time on the mainland - a badge of belonging/"I was here first"

    May 16, 2007

  • ...lizards?

    May 14, 2007

  • Listen to the BBC radio series if you have a chance - I prefer it to all other incarnations...

    May 14, 2007

  • nice!

    May 10, 2007

  • Nice! conk?

    May 10, 2007

  • nice! I like the Mikado quote!

    May 7, 2007

  • Can't believe I forgot that! Thanks, o.

    May 7, 2007

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