A list of 54 words by rdsfox.
- quotidianwas added by rdsfox and appears on 364 lists
- labilewas added by rdsfox and appears on 112 lists
- laconicwas added by rdsfox and appears on 501 lists
- inurewas added by rdsfox and appears on 174 lists
- insouciancewas added by rdsfox and appears on 198 lists
- opprobiumwas added by rdsfox and appears on 7 lists
- volte-facewas added by rdsfox and appears on 28 lists
- probitywas added by rdsfox and appears on 194 lists
- sublunarywas added by rdsfox and appears on 53 lists
- stultifywas added by rdsfox and appears on 150 lists
- catharticwas added by rdsfox and appears on 82 lists
- chutzpahwas added by rdsfox and appears on 124 lists
- alambuswas added by rdsfox and appears on just this list
- hapticwas added by rdsfox and appears on 78 lists
- tropewas added by rdsfox and appears on 186 lists
- penetraliumwas added by rdsfox and appears on 7 lists
- ennuiwas added by rdsfox and appears on 485 lists
- callowwas added by rdsfox and appears on 187 lists
- lissomewas added by rdsfox and appears on 122 lists
- grimoirewas added by rdsfox and appears on 104 lists
- phantasmagoricwas added by rdsfox and appears on 42 lists
- morasswas added by rdsfox and appears on 97 lists
- amoralwas added by rdsfox and appears on 44 lists
- diasporawas added by rdsfox and appears on 105 lists
- susurrationwas added by rdsfox and appears on 120 lists
- monomythwas added by rdsfox and appears on 15 lists
- ombrophobouswas added by rdsfox and appears on 20 lists
- nascentwas added by rdsfox and appears on 291 lists
- bucolicwas added by rdsfox and appears on 265 lists
- librocubicularistwas added by rdsfox and appears on 35 lists
- quaintrellewas added by rdsfox and appears on 22 lists
- uguisubariwas added by rdsfox and appears on 3 lists
- zanywas added by rdsfox and appears on 66 lists
- vulpinewas added by rdsfox and appears on 125 lists
- illiberalwas added by rdsfox and appears on 28 lists
- bokehwas added by rdsfox and appears on 38 lists
- contabescowas added by rdsfox and appears on just this list
- soporificwas added by rdsfox and appears on 323 lists
- maudlinwas added by rdsfox and appears on 269 lists
- quiescentwas added by rdsfox and appears on 211 lists
- diaphanouswas added by rdsfox and appears on 322 lists
- lucubratorywas added by rdsfox and appears on 16 lists
- burkewas added by rdsfox and appears on 28 lists
- miasmawas added by rdsfox and appears on 311 lists
- halcyonwas added by rdsfox and appears on 440 lists
- verisimilitudewas added by rdsfox and appears on 438 lists
- convolutewas added by rdsfox and appears on 20 lists
- chicanerywas added by rdsfox and appears on 269 lists
- quixoticwas added by rdsfox and appears on 554 lists
- mercurialwas added by rdsfox and appears on 387 lists
- ablutionwas added by rdsfox and appears on 123 lists
- chiaroscurowas added by rdsfox and appears on 226 lists
- revenantwas added by rdsfox and appears on 130 lists
- apotropaicwas added by rdsfox and appears on 102 lists
- ullagewas added by rdsfox and appears on 56 lists
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
Mokomoko (もこもこ) is a haptic onomatopoeia – one of my favorites, in fact – that conjures up the soft, huggable qualities of billowing clouds or fluffy sheep. Don’t confuse it with mokumoku, which has similar connotations but refers specifically to movement, while the latter is grounded in the realm of motionless.
http://www.spoon-tamago.com/
July 11, 2013
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
Toska - noun /ˈtō-skə/ - Russian word roughly translated as sadness, melancholia, lugubriousness.
No single word in English renders all the shades of toska. At its deepest and most painful, it is a sensation of great spiritual anguish, often without any specific cause. At less morbid levels it is a dull ache of the soul, a longing with nothing to long for, a sick pining, a vague restlessness, mental throes, yearning. In particular cases it may be the desire for somebody of something specific, nostalgia, love-sickness. At the lowest level it grades into ennui, boredom.
Vladimir Nabokov, cited in A Field Guide to Melancholy by Jacky Bowring
July 14, 2013
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
samidin —those who endure, to borrow Raja Shehadeh's evocative term in The Third Way, his memoir on Palestinians under occupation, 30 years ago.
http://www.zcommunications.org/in-gaza-dignity-is-the-battleground-by-noam-chomsky
July 20, 2013
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
In Portuguese, there are words like “saudade,” for the beautiful sadness that immobilizes us and sweetens the air. This American sensation wants a sharper word, something like “helpless” but more tannic, more acute.
http://www.newyorker.com/online/blogs/sashafrerejones/2013/07/jay-z-this-charming-man.html#entry-more
July 30, 2013
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
The word SIBYL (in English, /ˈsɪbəl/) comes (via Latin) from the Greek word σίβυλλα sibylla, meaning prophetess. The earliest oracular seeresses known as the sibyls of antiquity, "who admittedly are known only through legend"1 prophesied at certain holy sites, under the divine influence of a deity, originally— at Delphi and Pessinos— one of the chthonic deities. Later in antiquity, sibyls wandered from place to place.
August 25, 2013
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
Czech
litost lee-tosht (noun)
This is an untranslatable emotion that only a Czech person would suffer from, defined by Milan Kundera as "a state of torment created by the sudden sight of one's own misery." Devices for coping with extreme stress, suffering, and change are often special and unique to cultures and born out of the meeting of despair with a keen sense of survival.
January 24, 2014
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
Greek
meraki may-rah-kee (adjective)
This is a word that modern Greeks often use to describe doing something with soul, creativity, or love — when you put "something of yourself" into what you're doing, whatever it may be. Meraki is often used to describe cooking or preparing a meal, but it can also mean arranging a room, choosing decorations, or setting an elegant table.
January 24, 2014
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
French
esprit de I'escalier es-pree de less-ka/-iay (idiom)
A witty remark that occurs to you too late, literally on the way down the stairs. The Oxford Dictionary of Quotations defines esprit de l'escalier as, "An untranslatable phrase, the meaning of which is that one only thinks on one's way downstairs of the smart retort one might have made in the drawing room."
January 24, 2014
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
panish
duende dwen-day (adjective)
This wonderful word captures an entire world of passion, energy, and artistic excellence and describes a climactic show of spirit in a performance or work of art. Duende originally meant "imp" or "goblin" and came to mean anything magical. It now has a depth and complexity of meaning that crosses artistic borders, from flamenco dancing to bullfighting. The Spanish poet Garcia Lorca wrote an eloquent essay on duende that explores the complex and inspirational flavor of its sense, and I know no better introduction.
January 24, 2014
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
unmerited grace
March 22, 2014
rdsfox commented on the list art-space
wild, melancholy, and elevating
March 22, 2014