Comments by asativum

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  • If the platypuses were streaming, wouldn't you have seen them? And if not, how did you know they were platypus streams?

    June 14, 2008

  • To add a reed instrument to a band.

    June 14, 2008

  • Sense, dudes -- sense. Make sense, sense things, get insensed, dollars and sense, sixth sense, senseimilla.

    What's not to like?

    June 14, 2008

  • I take it the civil war there is still going?

    June 14, 2008

  • Not quite on point, but ostensibly there is no equivalent to the word cuckold to describe a woman whose husband has been unfaithful. (Unless, I suppose, you count wife.)

    June 14, 2008

  • Not to be taken for granite.

    June 13, 2008

  • Uh-oh. I think Wordie is going all sentient on us and spontaneously generating ominous entries. Surely the next step is commandeering all our words for use against us.

    June 13, 2008

  • In newspaperish, also very small type, such as is used for sports-page box scores and the like.

    (Can I just remark upon how much I like the phrase "such as is"? Very satisfying to say. One of the few uses of "such as" that doesn't make my skin crawl.)

    June 13, 2008

  • I'd've never guessed that boxed rocks cared much about eyeshadow and mascara, but there you have it.

    Oh. Sorry. You said cosmology. Never mind.

    June 13, 2008

  • yarb, I think it's LShL. Turn your monitor upside down and you'll see what I mean.

    June 13, 2008

  • Яetro. I like.

    June 13, 2008

  • Also an extensive tract of level open land set in an extensive tract of level open land set in an extensive tract of mostly level, mostly open land known as Illinois.

    June 13, 2008

  • Palooka, have you ever tried to argue metaphysics with a box of rocks? Not as dumb as they look.

    June 13, 2008

  • I think you're right, Pro. Only... Only, it looks like some of the big kids on the list figured out the Wordie Paradox before I did. Oh well.

    June 13, 2008

  • I'm with you, Pro. All my spam seems to be about remembering something I can't enlarge, too.

    June 13, 2008

  • Ooh. Haven't been here in a bit. My thoughts, for what they're worth*:

    Friends: No, no, no. Please? No? We have oodles of other social networking sites for friends (or "friends"). Wordie is for words, and words about words, and wordiness. (Or is that Wordieness?) I don't need friends. I need words. Words are my friends.

    Forum: I love that Wordie is so aggressively linear about its nonlinearity. Forums are too easy. This way, it's like a big conversation. Or really, a bunch of them, at a very strange garden party. Only you can rewind and revisit conversations, if you can find them again in the crowd, behind the topiary where you left them. Or something.

    Bulk add: Let's just keep bickering about it for a while.

    * About $0.63 Canadian, but that's for the lot of them.

    June 13, 2008

  • Something it's very difficult to do with the word add in Wordie. See Mentions.

    June 13, 2008

  • Yay! I got here. But I'm deeply disappointed to see all y'all got here almost a year ago...

    June 13, 2008

  • Nifty. Thanks all. Sorry about not making the list open; I meant to, but failed.

    Add takes me to words I've added, which is a cool feature.

    And kewpid, thanks for the secret to seeing those comments. Kewl.

    June 13, 2008

  • Go on. Just try to read those 12 comments.

    June 12, 2008

  • More polation than one needs at a given moment.

    June 12, 2008

  • The latter is underhanded behavior. The former is underhanded behavior using defunct crania.

    June 5, 2008

  • But see Thomas Jefferson on the relative merits of newspapers and government. (Before he ran the government and tried to censor newspapers, of course.)

    June 3, 2008

  • Mein' Grossmutter faehrt Motorrad,

    Ohne Bremsen, ohne Licht,

    Und der Schuppo an die Ecke

    Sieht die alte Hexe nicht.

    (Do correct my grammar, please.)

    Rough translation:

    My grandmother drives a motorbike,

    without brakes, without lights,

    and the copper on the corner

    doesn't see the old witch.

    Perhaps it loses some of its charm in translation. Or in the grammar of an addlepated three-year-old.

    June 3, 2008

  • Looks like you've got an interesting salad there, mate.

    June 1, 2008

  • Er. What about whatsit and stuff? Or whatever.

    May 31, 2008

  • I believe the Hums got as far as the gates of Vienna, didn't they?

    May 31, 2008

  • i'd rather be silly than josh.

    May 31, 2008

  • i'd rather be silly than josh.

    May 31, 2008

  • don'tcry, is that some kind of Reagan-era tax protest chant?

    May 27, 2008

  • I use it more as a synonym for accessory or accompaniment, but not exclusively in a sartorial sense. So a turkey dinner's accoutrements might include cranberry sauce and stuffing.

    May 27, 2008

  • Also the name of a Juneau, Alaska, social-service organization (homeless shelter? Soup kitchen? I forget). Tourists like posing for pictures in front of its sign. In fact, it's named for a vast mining pit carved out of a mountain near town.

    May 22, 2008

  • Hongry has now been used at least twice on Wordie. Is it therefore a word?

    May 22, 2008

  • In mathematics, I believe a hypercube is a four-dimensional surface; in one sense it is to an ordinary cube what a cube is to a two-dimensionsal square. Like other 4D objects, when rotated in 3-space, it appears to change shape, but I'm pretty sure that's the only way time is involved. You can perhaps imagine your way to the time-altering speculation from here.

    May 22, 2008

  • I believe the term comes from beer of low alcoholic strength, rather than low volume. If I remember right, it's made by sparging used malted barley with hot water and fermenting the resulting (very thin) wort, or by re-mashing spent grains or somesuch -- akin to a second pressing for wine or olive oil. But I could be wrong; I don't have my brewing references handy.

    See also my list Wort to the Wise for more beer and brewing terms. There are some other good lists out there as well.

    May 21, 2008

  • Ah, but as John Chiardi once reminded NPR listeners some years ago, in Aesop the lion demanded a third for himself, a third for his lioness and cubs, and said the others could have the final third if they could take it from him. (Or something like that. My math may be off.)

    Other versions I've read have the lion slaughtering companions that protest such a division and adding their carcasses to the pile -- his pile, the lion's share. That is to say, all of it.

    Not that anyone would understand you if you used it to mean "everything" anymore, sadly.

    May 21, 2008

  • Precisely! Thanks much sarra.

    May 19, 2008

  • Yes indeedy, a hoo-hah it was meant to be.

    May 19, 2008

  • Other than as a rack for storing whiffleball equipment?

    May 19, 2008

  • John's everywhere, isn't he?

    May 19, 2008

  • Ostensibly named because cooks would throw lumps of fried batter to the hounds during hoo-has to quiet them.

    By some tellings, dog salmon get their name similarly.

    May 16, 2008

  • Boobs is for boobs. Too babytalk for me. Like pee and poop, always jarring when said by an adult and not addressed to a toddler. Gotta go bye-bye now.

    May 14, 2008

  • I'm told that in German, one sneeze brings a "Gesundheit" (good health), a second "langes Leben" (long life) and a third "viele Kinder" -- many children!

    May 14, 2008

  • Isn't this spelled ouchmophobia?

    May 12, 2008

  • Excellent! Glad to hear it, and another fine case of Wordiesleuthing. (Oh, oh, oh, oh...)

    May 12, 2008

  • A mrvlous word if never there was one.

    And yet -- I actually feel like I've seen it before.

    May 12, 2008

  • Doesn't Alp rhyme with scalp?

    May 12, 2008

  • I'm pretty sure Joan studied pataphysical science in the home, oh, oh, oh.

    May 11, 2008

  • What Joan studied in her home before an unfortunate encounter with Maxwell Edison.

    May 11, 2008

  • sionnach & sarra: Many thanks! Were we in the same room, I'd stand and give you a novation.

    May 11, 2008

  • I'm hongry.

    May 11, 2008

  • Misspelling of Peronably, adverb, done in the manner of Juan or Eva Perón.

    May 11, 2008

  • Ouch.

    May 11, 2008

  • Casserole, found in the upper Midwest of the U.S. Quoth Wikipedia: "It consists of a starch and a protein (meat and/or a vegetable) mixed together with a binding ingredient (most often canned soup or a sauce) and a topping."

    You betcha!

    May 11, 2008

  • Hay, how about roman numerals? As in Henry XVIII? Or better yet, the number XXVI?

    May 11, 2008

  • Isn't there some suggestion that the word uncle was once nuncle, and eventually transformed in the same way a napple became an apple? Or have I been had by spurious etymologistifiers again?

    May 11, 2008

  • Also known as asphalt in the U.S., though some asphalt is grayer than blacktop.

    May 11, 2008

  • Aha! No doubt sweetmeat will prove to have started life as a playful alternative to helpmeet, and from there it's just a hop, skip and jump to sweetbreads. Told you so.

    Thanks, sionnach!

    May 8, 2008

  • Helpmate sounds like helpmeet, which sounds like sweetmeat, which always makes me think of sweetbreads. Blech. I mean, sweetbreads are tasty, cooked right, but not very husbandly. To me.

    OK. Sorry. Back to your thread.

    May 8, 2008

  • The element known to bring down MinnesotaMan.

    May 8, 2008

  • Peruse Wordie and learn to preserue Pruines.

    May 8, 2008

  • Surely if silence can be pregnant, a goldfish can be too...

    May 8, 2008

  • One who dabs, usually used of men of a certain age and bearing. "Now there's a dabber fellow."

    May 6, 2008

  • Oxymoron.

    May 6, 2008

  • Truly an inspired list. Now I wontvbe able to get any work done thinking about silent Vs... You could always make like a Roman and declare U and V identical.

    Gangerh, I'm sure I'm all too unsilent for most, but thanks for the vote!

    May 6, 2008

  • jennaren, consumption of asparagus lends a distinct (and strong, as dontcry points out) odor to the eater's urine. But it turns out that only a sizable minority of human beans can smell it...

    May 5, 2008

  • Pass the hotdish please!

    May 5, 2008

  • You got it, Pro. See more of me here.

    May 2, 2008

  • And that vanishing art form, erotopera.

    May 2, 2008

  • Surely it's always roadrunner or coyote, never both?

    May 2, 2008

  • Oh dear. Booby flaps, truck titz, Sparky the Corvette What haf I wrought?

    May 2, 2008

  • Nice additions. Thanks!

    May 2, 2008

  • Greek root for asparagus.

    April 28, 2008

  • "Asparagus is a useful companion plant for tomatoes," Wikipedia opines. "The tomato plant repels the asparagus beetle, as do several other common companion plants of tomatoes, meanwhile asparagus may repel some harmful root nematodes that affect tomato plants."

    This makes a curious, if utterly unscientific, sort of sense: red/green, long/round, vegetable/fruit...

    April 28, 2008

  • Amino acid abundant in asparagus.

    I should have known you'd beat me here, sionnach.

    April 28, 2008

  • Portuguese for asparagus. But who's Hortense?

    April 28, 2008

  • S2(CH2)2CHCO2H "may be the metabolic precursor to other odorous thiol compounds," Wikipedia tells us.

    Elsewhere, she informs us that only about two in five of us can sense the odoriferous effects of consuming the phalliform shoot. If you can't, it's not your fault; it's genetic.

    April 28, 2008

  • Soon to be banned in Florida (perhaps), lampooned on NPR and sold by these folks. (And these, and these. Among others.)

    April 27, 2008

  • Little known fact: This is actually one of those words the French don't like to admit they borrowed from another language, in this case English. It comes from "pie (of) the territory," a Welsh delicacy much like an empanada: minced meat, onion and herbs in a sort of starchy pouch, originally made for shepherds to take with them.

    Anyway, these were a hit with the French for a while in the 18th century, though they they mangled the transliteration (and pronunciation). They functioned as a sort of early take-out food, favored in particular by wealthy merchants and the like visiting Paris. They would take a pied-à-terre back to their apartments, and eventually the term came to refer to the apartments themselves.

    Naturally, the French came up with a dubious back-formation to disguise the foreign derivation. See the work of Prof. Da Nes for more detail.

    April 27, 2008

  • Thus explaining the etymology of incisor, no doubt.

    April 27, 2008

  • As distinct from personb.

    April 27, 2008

  • Remind me to be selective which Nigerians I let congratulate me...

    April 27, 2008

  • Unrelated to tomatophobia.

    April 27, 2008

  • Great word. From Babylon:

    "A person whose love of words is greater than their knowledge of words."

    April 27, 2008

  • Disco.

    April 27, 2008

  • Still here.

    April 27, 2008

  • Verse not written by pros.

    April 27, 2008

  • Irritable pomes

    April 27, 2008

  • Tyrannosaurus:

    Bones unmask his true nature.

    Here birdie, birdie.

    Tests Confirm T. Rex Kinship With Birds, The New York Times, April 25, 2008

    April 27, 2008

  • You know, this makes a lot more sense than I one I keep hearing about the Pope defecating in the woods.

    April 27, 2008

  • List Search Results for “ExistentiaList�?

    Search lists:

    No matching lists.

    Or is that the point?

    April 27, 2008

  • Tuscaloosa!

    April 27, 2008

  • But what is two-up?

    April 27, 2008

  • To proach again.

    April 26, 2008

  • Shan't miss oddocomplete myself; tripped me up too often. If it returns, perhaps it can be something each Wordie can turn on/off. (Hey John, I avoided user!)

    Bulk add would be cool, OP. But maybe tough to protect it from spambots?

    April 26, 2008

  • Pan-pipes always remind me of Lovecraft, though I think he may have just said pipes most of the time.

    "There in the moonlight that flooded the spacious plain was a spectacle which no mortal, having seen it, could ever forget. To the sound of reedy pipes that echoed over the bog there glided silently and eerily a mixed throng of swaying figures, reeling through such a revel as the Sicilians may have danced to Demeter in the old days under the harvest moon beside the Cyane."

    -- H.P. Lovecraft, The Moon-Bog

    April 26, 2008

  • On the other hand, I'd advise against Camusfudge. It always leaves me faintly bewildered.

    April 26, 2008

  • A synonym for Wordie-mania.

    April 26, 2008

  • Young, sionnach? For some reason I always envisioned him as ancient, quite bald, bent double by his hours over a hot keyboard, shuffling to the train muttering extracts from New York Times articles under his breath.

    Oh, and blind. I'm quite sure he's blind. All the truly great seers and prophets are blind, aren't they?

    April 26, 2008

  • Not to get into details, but this explains a lot Pro...

    April 22, 2008

  • Here's one found in the wild: antiaurosemantonym

    You can see it lurking at the top of pulchritude, contributed by logophile, and not far from its tentative definition: a word that sounds unlike its meaning. There's even a reference to skipvia's list on the subject.

    April 22, 2008

  • Somehow I missed this. Antiaurosemantonym is luverly!

    April 22, 2008

  • Vegetarian is one of those confusing food words. I was once offered some organic lamb at dinner, and was very surprised to think that some lamb might be synthetic.

    April 22, 2008

  • I keep seeing this word on the comments list and thinking it's something like mulctintet, aka The Five Frauds. (Or maybe that's mulctinet, a rigidly disciplined fraud.)

    Then this time I thought it said malquintet. It's like one of those optical illusions: My brain just can't quite see it right.

    April 22, 2008

  • Erm. That's an Apple ad, right?

    April 22, 2008

  • Totally dissed in favor of BFF Armageddon.

    April 22, 2008

  • Favorited.

    But you know, once you pay for the CGI time to animate elaborate renditions of Ragnarok*, you pretty much have to get some use out of them.

    *(Why should Armageddon get all the attention?)

    April 22, 2008

  • I've never seen wha'd'ya know good written out, so the apostrophes could vary. Still, seems like a good candidate.

    April 20, 2008

  • Woo doggie might be appropriate.

    April 20, 2008

  • Exclamation, typically of exhilaration or delight, with the first syllable drawn out to varying degrees: "Woo, doggie!"

    Heard in Arkansas and Mississippi.

    April 20, 2008

  • Louisianans love inviting locals to pinch tail and suck head.

    (The heads make neat finger-puppets, too!)

    April 20, 2008

  • This analysis

    Brought to you by network news

    (and the DoD).

    Behind TV Analysts, Pentagon’s Hidden Hand, The New York Times, April 20, 2008

    April 20, 2008

  • Hey, I like the simplicity of cereal pinball. But ricocereal has a great ring to it too -- maybe it's the technical term?

    But what's the term for something serendipitous that I couldn't have done better if I had tried?

    April 20, 2008

  • Approximation of an Arkansas idiomatic greeting. Roughly "what's up"?

    April 20, 2008

  • My favorite usage of this is one I first encountered in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, meaning roughly "these days." As in: "Anymore, I don't go there," or: "Anymore, you don't hardly have to know someone to get in there."

    April 20, 2008

  • Grew up in Illinois, and "quarter of" was not only understood by one and all, but standard usage, probably on par in frequency with "quarter to" and "quarter til".

    Anyhow, I got to say, y'all are mighty literal.

    April 20, 2008

  • There is indeed a Luncheon meats list, replete with baloney and silver star’s blue ribbon dutch loaf.

    April 20, 2008

  • Hm. I think I could argue that cheese, milk and even cows are, in fact, made from vegetables. After all, cows are indisputably vegetarians (except perhaps in modern factory farms). In some sense, milk is essentially processed grass.

    That said, I'm happy to let others avoid what they want (or, rather, don't want), as long as they don't make me eat cheese.

    April 20, 2008

  • Erm. Never was good at grammar... Quorn's the vegetarian, or you?

    April 19, 2008

  • Come to think of it, blue whales do look a little mousy.

    Mussels, not so much.

    April 19, 2008

  • See: synonym

    April 19, 2008

  • My new favorite word.

    April 19, 2008

  • An unnatural attraction to contemplating one's navel. Alternatively, love of navels.

    April 18, 2008

  • Irrational fear of contemplating one's navel. Also, fear of navels.

    April 18, 2008

  • Poisonous iron-age landmines for nutlets. No wonder I haven't seen many subshrubs around lately.

    April 18, 2008

  • Nice! Another form of omphalopathy.

    April 18, 2008

  • But wait. I understand what a zucchina is. But what's a broccola? The veggie seems singularly fractal to me, tough to make singular.

    Broccoli always reminds me of the absurdly funny sketch on Saturday Night Live about an over-the-hill rocker singing "chopping broccoli" over and over again.

    April 18, 2008

  • Bravo! Thanks... If they refer to proneness, add 'em to the list!

    April 18, 2008

  • c_b, presumably because calling them penises would be both confusing and more off-putting.

    April 17, 2008

  • Have you ever suddenly considered the literal meaning of a common phrase? For me, it seems to happen most dramatically with scatological references like this one...

    April 17, 2008

  • Groan-ups.

    April 17, 2008

  • See cumbent.

    April 17, 2008

  • To be confused with recumbent, accumbent, decumbent and procumbent. Perhaps there are more?

    April 17, 2008

  • Really, just how many words do we need for being prone that end in -cumbent?

    April 17, 2008

  • The incumbent was found recumbent among the procumbent subshrubs.

    April 17, 2008

  • I've always wanted to see a tropical annual procumbent poisonous subshrub. Or any kind of subshrub, for that matter.

    April 17, 2008

  • Pertaining to Theocrates, or Theocritus, a poet of ancient Sicily.

    April 17, 2008

  • Also: without support, as during parliamentary debates.

    April 17, 2008

  • Gangerh, as a stopgap, you could just post an empty list (presumably with a clever title) and solicit descriptions in the comments; once a word is settled on, it can be added to the list. Just a thought.

    April 17, 2008

  • Akin to contemplating one's navel.

    April 17, 2008

  • Words about contemplating your navel.

    April 17, 2008

  • Dubbel is a style of Belgian beer, if that helps any.

    April 15, 2008

  • As distinct from il Duce.

    April 15, 2008

  • I've got a recipe for banana wine around somewhere. Probably several. (Meantime, here's a banana wine recipe from the web. Never tried it.)

    April 15, 2008

  • This really ought to be a word. Oh wait -- it is.

    April 15, 2008

  • A specific egress!

    April 15, 2008

  • Sounds like ancient Velcro to me.

    April 15, 2008

  • Redundant, at least in certain families.

    April 15, 2008

  • I think that's a Wordie koan, frangio.

    April 15, 2008

  • Shear brilliance.

    April 15, 2008

  • The refusal to contemplate any navel but one's own.

    April 15, 2008

  • The belief that everything can be contemplated in one's navel.

    April 15, 2008

  • The act of making everything about the contemplation of one's navel.

    April 15, 2008

  • Addiction to contemplating one's navel.

    April 15, 2008

  • Spooky...

    April 15, 2008

  • Hm. That comment was supposed to go on aright, which I got to from the random word list. Bug?

    April 15, 2008

  • Of or pertaining to the inaccurate contemplation of one's navel.

    April 14, 2008

  • Contemplating the navels of others.

    April 14, 2008

  • Seizure from over-contemplation of one's navel. Figuratively, any seemingly extreme agitated state brought on by contemplation of one's navel.

    April 14, 2008

  • Pretending to contemplate one's navel.

    April 14, 2008

  • False contemplation of one's navel.

    April 14, 2008

  • Did you mean: travelocity

    Wordie: Trigulocity

    Wordie : trigulocity. Wordie is a social network for people who love words. List words, add comments and citations, and discuss.

    wordie.org/words/trigulocity - 11k - Cached - Similar pages - Note this

    April 14, 2008

  • "Indricotherium is a genus of extinct mammals that lived in Asia during the late Oligocene and early Miocene epoch of the Tertiary Period (37-32 million years ago). ... The correct Latin names for fossils in this group (the indricotheres) are a matter of uncertainty. It is also widely known as "Baluchitherium" ("beast of Baluchistan"), as it was first discovered in Baluchistan, western Province of Pakistan."

    - Wikipedia

    April 14, 2008

  • Also, an interjection in the American South. As in, "Aright, let's git 'er done."

    April 14, 2008

  • Inspired by the introspection at typology.

    April 14, 2008

  • An expert at studying one's navel. Also, a navel surgeon.

    April 14, 2008

  • Feverish condition brought on by over-contemplation of one's navel.

    April 14, 2008

  • In several Southern states, it's mandatory. And some folks are looking to make it easier all the time! (I think the bill was defeated in the end -- for now.)

    April 14, 2008

  • Not to revive this thread, but sionnach, wouldn't it just be better to butter both sides of a single piece of bread? Simpler, and saves on Fancy Feast Elegant Medleys White Meat Chicken Tuscany in a Savory Sauce with Long Grain Rice and Garden Greens*, too.

    * When did cats start eating better than I do?

    April 14, 2008

  • Better than omphalosepsis, I suspect. But yes, I aspire to be a leading omphalologist.

    April 14, 2008

  • Are you one of those lactose intolerants?

    (Shamelessly stolen from a brilliant Pearls Before Swine comic that I can never find online.)

    April 11, 2008

  • The problem is that the maps just count responses. So a ton of respondents, it appears, come from the Northeast; ergo, every pronunciation appears concentrated in the Northeast.

    What they ought to map, by color, is the relative proportion of responses received so far from a given region (state, city, whatnot).

    So: Points for neat research idea, marked down for information-poor illustration of results.

    April 11, 2008

  • Plethora, have you noticed that raising the volume makes it more likely the thing shows itself?

    Its like the way things always show up in the last place you look. Spooky.

    April 11, 2008

  • Further broken down between useful listings or citations and mere sniping from the gallery.

    Put me down for the sniping section.

    April 11, 2008

  • This just blew my mind. You're saying rocket science isn't rocket science, then?

    April 11, 2008

  • Which had better not be too literally unique, or you won't make much money using it.

    April 11, 2008

  • Symphonies don't multiply?

    April 11, 2008

  • Neat map, but too sparse representation in the Western states, it seems to me, to tell me much about some of these...

    April 11, 2008

  • You can't fool me, seanahan. Washington was clearly from Washington. Why else would his parents have named him that?

    April 10, 2008

  • This one's going in the wallet; I'm sure it'll come in handy.

    April 10, 2008

  • Does that make the place where they hold gatherings of dishonest flashy Australians the lair of the liar lair fair?

    April 10, 2008

  • I thought it was made from Italians.

    (But every American knows that Australians are just like Southerners, only with funnier accents and a penchant for large knives.)

    April 10, 2008

  • Clearly it should be shelvefulze, parallel to mongooze, which I believe was filed under mongoose somewhere around here.

    April 10, 2008

  • Well, a resident of Virginia is a native or inhabitant of the United States, right?

    For that matter, a native or inhabitant of the United States is a native or inhabitant of a predominantly English-speaking country (for now, anyway). So Bilby, I'd guess that makes you a Virginian too!

    This could really solve a lot of problems, you know?

    April 9, 2008

  • Don't forget bidness, which is what a bidnessman does if'n the gubmint doesn't get in his way.

    April 9, 2008

  • Or even gummint. Clearly hickbonics spelling needs to be reformed.

    April 9, 2008

  • Hm. Always thought this was spelled heighdy. Seems more bumpkinish that way.

    April 9, 2008

  • Looks like ham trumps prosciutto. See March 14 news story.

    April 8, 2008

  • And here I always thought WeirdNet's proclivities amounted to a feature, not a bug.

    April 8, 2008

  • Recent evidence suggests it actually traces back to medieval English, and a common hunting prank among the noble set.

    Tethered young goats were used as bait to attract bears, wolves and other predators. The hunter or gamekeeper would often nap within earshot of the kid while waiting for the beast to show up, at which point the kid would make a ruckus, waking the napper and bringing the bear (or whatnot) to its speedy demise. Of course, it was the work of a moment for a neighboring squire to instead make off with the kid -- thus, kidnap. Also the origin of the phrase, to get your goat.

    April 8, 2008

  • The chromosomal alteration bit I've heard before -- a sport can be a mutant, essentially. I would assume that's the derivation for the word's use for a person who's a little off.

    Then there are sport peppers, which with a little celery salt makes a fine accompaniment to a Chicago hot dog.

    April 8, 2008

  • Certainly wouldn't want people to get the wrong impression!

    April 8, 2008

  • That's a beaut!

    April 8, 2008

  • Goes well with fuss and bother.

    April 8, 2008

  • A piece of string walks into a bar. The bartender says, "Hey buddy! Can't you read the sign? We don't serve string in here." And tosses him out onto the curb. (Repeat ad nauseum.)

    Finally, the string thinks a little, musses up his hair, contorts himself into a hopeless tangle and goes back in. The bartender looks at him suspiciously and says, "Say, aren't you that piece of string I just threw out of here?" To which the string replies, "I'm a frayed knot."

    An oldie but... well, an oldie, anyway.

    April 8, 2008

  • Wonderful additions -- thanks!

    April 8, 2008

  • Q: How many Teamsters does it take to screw in a light bulb?

    A: Twelve. And it isn't funny, pal.

    April 8, 2008

  • Then there's Arlo Guthrie's Motorcycle Song. I'm not sure what it's about, but it does establish that pickle and motorcycle can rhyme. Sort of.

    April 8, 2008

  • Not to worry, Pro: I think we both understood your meaning. Misunderstanding is just more amusing.

    April 8, 2008

  • Cops on Rollerblades

    Protect the Olympic flame.

    Busing of the torch?

    Olympic Torch Relay in Paris Halted as Protests Spread, The New York Times, April 8, 2008.

    April 8, 2008

  • I've been to New York and no one spat relish at me. Am I missing something?

    April 8, 2008

  • Suddenly Pslam 23 makes so much sense...

    February 25, 2008

  • Erm, yes, and it's not particularly kind. I'll let Answers.com describe it succinctly, and you can infer the rest:

    In the grim slang of the British army during World War I, it referred to a quadruple amputee. This is one of several expressions that first became popular in World War I, or that entered American army slang from British English at that time.

    February 25, 2008

  • Also once a slang term for a skirt or dame.

    (My, what a lot of daffynitions WeirdNet has for twist!)

    February 25, 2008

  • Anyone know what this means in a rhetorical context? (Hey, I'm actually using Wordie to learn something specific!)

    February 18, 2008

  • Writers, producers

    May be nearing a new pact.

    This is a good thing?

    -- Producers Say Writers Could Return on Monday, The New York Times, Feb. 9, 2008

    February 9, 2008

  • Ooh! Just noticed the online article includes recipes as well...

    February 7, 2008

  • Eat the cats and snakes

    And the rodents multiply.

    Dinner is served. (Rats!)

    -- For Vietnamese, The Year of the Rat Starts With Lunch, The Wall Street Journal, Feb. 6, 2008 (or see the video).

    February 7, 2008

  • De-preciate it, reesetee!

    February 7, 2008

  • Numbness, pain, tingling.

    Twelve pork-plant workers fall ill.

    Answer: Don't blow brains.

    -- A Medical Mystery Unfolds in Minnesota, The New York Times, Feb. 5, 2008

    February 6, 2008

  • Now this I'd like to see: One dimensional, never reaches any kind of culmination...

    Come to think of it, doesn't that pretty much describes most strip teases?

    February 5, 2008

  • And?

    February 5, 2008

  • Not to bump one of the most disturbing words in the English language back to the top, but I've been finding more rhetorical uses for this word every day. Along with copremetic, which I assume would be the adjectival form or whatnot.

    February 5, 2008

  • Brilliant.

    February 5, 2008

  • Wow. Without context, this could mean so many things: Mugging someone named Jesus, who's using a pogo stick. Mugging Jesus while one is on a pogo stick oneself. Christ on a pogo stick, jumping... I gape in awe the versatility of this phrase.

    February 5, 2008

  • As in: "I received define because I neglected to feed demeter."

    February 5, 2008

  • Welcome to Marin:

    Sail. Stay. Fish. Play. Swim. Surf. Dine.

    (Don't touch the water.)

    -- Continued recommendation to avoid water near Marin sewage spill, San Francisco Chronicle, Feb. 2, 2008.

    February 3, 2008

  • Any truth to the idea that goiter is a necessary/helpful condition for yodelers?

    February 3, 2008

  • How may I help you?

    Whoops. There goes the Internet.

    Try again next month.

    Indian call centres for British firms 'badly hit' after two severed undersea cables knock out internet, (London) Daily Mail, Jan. 31, 2008.

    February 1, 2008

  • I imagine it has something to do with hot in the sense of live, like an electric circuit can be hot. In other words, click it and something happens, you're linked to other information. By contrast, in the cold, dead world of print, a "link" (or citation) does nothing; you have to do the work.

    Then again, it could be that someone realized something like 99% of all Web traffic would shortly be porn, and so they thought it would improve their search-engine scores to use "hot". Then the opposite would presumably be homelylinks

    February 1, 2008

  • Dale Carnegie's other self-help book, in which he explains how to better persuade people by calling upon the forces of darkness.

    January 31, 2008

  • Spencer Honey was a state official in Arkansas. Very tall, solidly built man. Always felt odd asking for him on the phone. Oh, and I was once in a school where there were two students, both girls, named Unique.

    Others I've met: Shannon Doah, Obadiah Butterworth, Dixie Land and Abby Rhodes.

    January 28, 2008

  • Heh. 'Cause here in the States, they're more or less little sugar tablets with generic ascorbic acid flavor.

    January 28, 2008

  • Hope, Faith, Charity, April, May, June, August, Moon Unit...

    January 28, 2008

  • Well, that one's easy. I'll take the food and racks out, stuff you in, and close the door. Probably requires an American-size fridge, of course.

    January 28, 2008

  • Several servals

    Spotted strolling Seattle,

    Seeking savanna.

    "Spotted in Seattle -- yet another wild cat," Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Jan. 26,2008.

    January 28, 2008

  • Why on earth would anyone want a cubic egg? And really, it doesn't cube them -- it more squares them. Or rectangularizes them. Or something.

    January 28, 2008

  • Said one scholar to the other: "One man's Mede is another man's Persian."

    "Are you shah?" the other replied.

    "Sultanly."

    January 28, 2008

  • Brilliant.

    January 28, 2008

  • Erm. Wouldn't this be a paper cup?

    January 28, 2008

  • 201

    January 27, 2008

  • It essentially comprises the epitome of words that a plethora of people get wrong...

    January 27, 2008

  • This is now one of my favorite words.

    January 27, 2008

  • The zoo-keeper, having prepared a shipment to another zoo, was stymied when drafting the cover letter. "Enclosed are the two mongeese..." He scratched it out and wrote: "Enclosed are the two mongooses..." He scratched that out too.

    Finally, he wrote: "Enclosed is the mongoose you requested. Also enclosed is the other mongoose you requested."

    January 27, 2008

  • Thanks! Always wondered about that. (See mongoose.)

    Not sure I'd get too jocular with octopuses, or octopi for that matter, given then Mr. Potatohead story; they don't seem to have much of a sense of humor.

    January 27, 2008

  • It's a variant spelling of malarkie, clearly, and refers to the characteristics of underhanded Arkansans. From mal + Arkie

    January 27, 2008

  • And yet, when you think of the bumps on the cold, plucked skin of a dressed goose, it's maybe a little less sweet.

    Goose sure is tasty, though.

    January 27, 2008

  • Fear of falling off a ship after slipping on a square, baked whole-wheat wafer?

    January 27, 2008

  • Neat list.

    January 27, 2008

  • ...

    (This comment intentionally left blank.)

    January 27, 2008

  • I vaguely remember having the opportunity to compare the ingredients of Nutella bought in Europe and a jar of the stuff bought in the U.S., and was surprised by some difference. Now I can't remember if one lacked chocolate, or used peanuts where the other used hazelnuts...

    January 27, 2008

  • Oughtn't it be octopi?

    January 27, 2008

  • Mmm. My list would include, in rough chronological order, french vanilla, pink bubblegum, and finally pralines and cream, all B&R flavors. Alas, these days my favorites would make an even shorter list.

    January 27, 2008

  • Nice list. Why are things porcine usually so amusing?

    January 27, 2008

  • Wonderful; I'd quite overlooked her.

    January 27, 2008

  • Yikes. Just don't Spoonerize it.

    January 27, 2008

  • I'm surprised no one has commented on just how odd this word is. Say it a few times: fun, fun, fun! Cheers one up and all, yes; fun, yes; but odd.

    January 27, 2008

  • What fascinates me: the words you're listing or citing. It's fun trying to figure out how you go from one to the next, the common threads; it makes me think I'm getting a picture of your knowledge and/or interests. True all over Wordie, of course, but usually in slower motion.

    January 27, 2008

  • Surgery? Organ donation? Maybe not quite the effect you're looking for.

    And for an ignorant American, what is two stone, anyway?

    January 27, 2008

  • What Treeseed said!

    January 27, 2008

  • Hmph. Figures WeirdNet would be classist.

    January 26, 2008

  • Also a P.G. Wodehouse character: Bingo Little, went to school with Bertie Wooster (and is fond of reminding him of such). Loves not wisely, nor terribly well for the most part. Participant in The Great Sermon Handicap.

    January 26, 2008

  • Having properties of coffee.

    January 26, 2008

  • Wow. WeirdNet doesn't even try to touch and.

    January 26, 2008

  • Moisturizer makes things moist. Clearly moisterizer makes them moister, Mister.

    But shouldn't it really be called greasturizer or oilyizer? And whilst I'm at it, why do so many people hate the word moist?

    January 26, 2008

  • Give us your tired,

    your poor, your huddled masses?

    Well, maybe next year.

    "Longer waits to become citizens," The Boston Globe, Jan. 25, 2008

    January 26, 2008

  • Wow. Just noticed you have 1142 words posted, in just 7 days. That's remarkable.

    January 26, 2008

  • Having never gotten my skirt caught in my pantyhose (another good reason to avoid both, imo), I can't say I know how you feel. But don't worry about it -- I never bother to click on those buttons, for the most part. For me, some enterprising Treeseed doesn't provide a definition, it's WeirdNet or nothin'. Well, or I go all DIY on Wordie.

    January 26, 2008

  • You don't say?

    January 26, 2008

  • Not many around these days, so it's no horde. Just a bored bard board.

    January 25, 2008

  • Sigh. Not my day. Apologies all around, with two on Fridays.

    January 25, 2008

  • Doesn't it always?

    January 25, 2008

  • I third sionnach and reesetee. In fact, maybe I'll start using lynx again, just for Wordie.

    January 25, 2008

  • Many sorries, resetee! I think I fixed it...

    January 25, 2008

  • And two syllables, too -- who knew?

    January 25, 2008

  • Didn't Bacon collaborate with the Earl of Sandwich too?

    January 25, 2008

  • Oops. My bad, reesetee.

    I'll just stick to News Haikus.

    Plus, I'm out of dimes.

    January 25, 2008

  • The markets tumble;

    Housing, economy suck.

    Here's 600 bucks.

    -- "Congress, Bush Reach Deal on Stimulus Package," The Wall Street Journal, Jan. 24, 2008

    January 25, 2008

  • When something is puddingstone, it is impossible or very difficult to change.

    January 25, 2008

  • Hooley it is, then! Thanks.

    January 25, 2008

  • Wasn't Shakespeare the guy who wrote Colours of Good and Evil and the Meditationes Sacrae?

    January 25, 2008

  • Also the nasal structure of some protestant ministers.

    January 25, 2008

  • Erm -- accident?

    January 25, 2008

  • Or repurpose the word to some good use:

    Noxema: like eczema, but worse.

    January 25, 2008

  • Well said, reesetee,

    And you as well, uselessness.

    S: please pass the bag.

    January 25, 2008

  • Ah, well, we don't really know that, do we yarb? Kind of Bede's point.

    January 25, 2008

  • Is there any truth to the story that they're called "life savers" both because of their resemblance to a flotation ring like those found on ships, and because the hole in the middle would keep a child from choking on one?

    January 25, 2008

  • Do not try to bite off the head of the wrong kind of a cinnamon bear. Also, be warned that cinnamon bears do not, in fact, taste like cinnamon bears; nor do they smell like them.

    January 25, 2008

  • Awww. How cute. Or not.

    January 24, 2008

  • I dunno about rout, unless there's a meaning I'm unfamiliar with. They aren't usually planned, and a good proportion of the people there didn't actually plan to attend, at least not quite like that.

    Are there other citations for hooley? I'd like to stick to words in reasonably common use. Admittedly, I've only done a very cursory search.

    January 24, 2008

  • Rivals loathe Romney,

    For pandering, deep pockets.

    He says: Sour grapes.

    -- "Romney Leads in Ill Will Among G.O.P. Candidates," New York Times, 24 Jan. 2008

    January 24, 2008

  • And a fun word to teach to seventh-graders.

    January 24, 2008

  • You can stick to exit; I'm afraid we must use exeunt -- isn't it the plural?

    January 24, 2008

  • Oh, man, kumquats are great. Tart, sweet; pop 'em in your mouth and eat 'em whole... And don't forget the limequat, lemonquat and the rest of their -quat ilk. Dade City, Fla., has an annual kumquat festival.

    January 24, 2008

  • Got bash; what's a hooley?

    January 24, 2008

  • Yikes. Great link, reesetee. Poor thing is probably just lonely. But why doesn't it reassure me that the cama project is headed by a Dr. "Lulu" Skidmore?

    January 24, 2008

  • A cross between a llama and a camel. No, really. So sayeth Wikipedia: "bred by scientists who wanted to see how closely related the parent species were. The dromedary is six times the weight of a llama, hence artificial insemination was required to impregnate the llama female." We also learn that the poor beast "apparently inherited the poor temperament of both parents." Thus proving the heritability of irritability, at least among Camelidae.

    January 24, 2008

  • Minature, um, camel fodder? What do ordinary camels eat for that matter? (And it turns out there really is something like a Shetland camel: see cama.)

    January 24, 2008

  • What's the deal with these? Are Shetland people short too?

    January 24, 2008

  • Apparently, despite the name, the ones plucked, shrink-wrapped and frozen at the local Piggly-Wiggly may actually be male. Which makes them Cornish -- never mind.

    January 24, 2008

  • I've never seen it, and it's one of the (relatively) few nonviolent concepts that truly disturbs me.

    January 24, 2008

  • What's with shrinking critters down so they fit in a pocketbook? Or a Foreman Grill, for that matter.

    January 24, 2008

  • Shetland camels?

    January 24, 2008

  • Apparently greener, as seen at puke bowl.

    January 24, 2008

  • You might be surprised

    How well life can be condensed

    Into a haiku.

    January 24, 2008

  • Oh man, how could I have lived this long without benefit of the word callithump?!

    January 24, 2008

  • Nice of them to make

    Their name five syllables, no?

    (And thanks, uselessness.)

    January 24, 2008

  • Likewise. But you know there's be a market.

    January 24, 2008

  • Once cheap, copper soared,

    Til a cent cost more to make.

    Now it's just habit.

    January 24, 2008

  • In the interest of completeness, if not taste, I will note that copremesis probably belongs here. Unfortunately.

    January 24, 2008

  • Camels.

    January 24, 2008

  • Just a copper shell;

    Most of it seems to be zinc.

    --Wikipedia

    January 24, 2008

  • Y'know, someone could turn this into a brand name.

    January 24, 2008

  • You know, that's what I always thought too. Then I realized that for pinning to a bulletin board, you don't need the anvil at all -- you just open the stapler wide and whack it.

    Come to Wordie to discuss exciting word-like topics, including different kinds of specific excrement and how to use a stapler!

    January 24, 2008

  • Hm. I may need to think about this too much. Hen and stag parties I'll take: I've heard them used generically as gatherings of women and men, respectively (if not necessarily respectfully).

    Spelling bee, bachelor party and sleepover strike me as too specific: They're not so much shindigs as particular kinds of shindigs: you do something so specific.

    But I'll take bee, wake, reception, picnic, banquet, chautauqua and shower -- and, while I'm thinking of it, rendezvous, too.

    January 23, 2008

  • You say ceilidh,

    I say ceilidh,

    Let's call the whole thing off!

    January 23, 2008

  • Five haikus on change,

    Didn't even cost a dime.

    Ha! How cool is that?

    January 23, 2008

  • Hm. If context is what things are taken out of, and wazoo what things come out of, does this mean that the next time someone asks for some context, I should tell them to go look up their wazoo?

    January 23, 2008

  • That is ineffably cool.

    January 23, 2008

  • You never know when you need a hippo stomach, mollusque. Or pickled mammal parts. (See pickled pig lips.)

    January 23, 2008

  • Oh dear. Can't a nation of 300-million mainly English-speakers* agree on how to stress the syllables of a Gaelic word?

    (edit): * Erm -- and their lovely and decidedly independent neighbors to the north, of course... Sorry! Excusez-moi!

    January 23, 2008

  • Not to be confused with Yazoo City, Miss., out of which little more than Amtrak, the River of Death, a few odd movie references, and a lot of kudzu seems to come.

    January 23, 2008

  • I like barn-raising, and thanks for party too -- I was remiss in not listing it sooner. I'm going for events that are planned or for which people gather. Is gabfest too spontaneous/general?

    January 23, 2008

  • Excellent. Thanks, reesetee! And to leave you a spare "c" or two, I used "k" for kaffee klatsch.

    January 23, 2008

  • Oddly, the random word feature now brings up different words -- but says none of them have been listed, even when they have...

    January 23, 2008

  • Thanks!

    January 23, 2008

  • Good one -- thanks!

    January 23, 2008

  • Pronounced "hoo-ha," I hope. Because then I have a chance of saying it right.

    January 23, 2008

  • Wikipedia does say the word was used like thingamajig in the early 20th c. So could be.

    And thanks for calling attention to it; I'm adding it to my Shindigs list.

    January 23, 2008

  • From a suburban Taco Bell sign. I imagine the slogan would be: "The fajita that repeats on you!"

    January 23, 2008

  • Seen near the airport in Tampa, Fla., I think.

    January 23, 2008

  • One of my favorite signs, from a roadside Huddle House, which is sort of like a Waffle House, only more so.

    January 23, 2008

  • A guy I knew named Joe would say he didn't even know her whenever someone found him listening to Joe Cocker.

    January 23, 2008

  • Said he to she: "Do you like Kipling?"

    Said she to he: "I don't know, you naughty boy -- I've never kippled."

    D'oh. I just saw sionnach's list on this, um, sophisticated little gag. Oh well. Maybe someone will get here from somewhere else. Someday.

    January 23, 2008

  • I always thought this had something to do with the ordeal of water. But maybe that's witching water.

    January 23, 2008

  • Julia, I think you misunderstood. The proprietors of the stamp shop aren't fond of fish. The heading clearly states:

    "Veal, Lamb and Foul Stamps"

    January 23, 2008

  • Or for why you stole it?

    January 23, 2008

  • Well, there's also the Hussites, led by Jan Hus. Some others: the Albigensianism (a form of Dualism), Docetism, Gnosticism.

    But this could get dicey. I remember once asking an amateur Catholic historian about heresies, and he said: "Oh, like the Presbyterians?"

    Maybe stick with pre-Reformation heresies, though even that might get sticky when you get to concepts like Nestorianism...

    January 23, 2008

  • Not to be confused with free est.

    January 23, 2008

  • Got 'em at a convenience store in New Orleans. Eventually a more adventuresome coworker tried 'em. Chewy, he said.

    Mine were in a single-serving pack, but you can get your own 14 oz. jar online. Or learn more about the whole dazzling array of pickled pork bits at this blog.

    January 23, 2008

  • Oh dear. Is this the start of a Wikipedia-A.Word.A.Day smackdown? I'll get the popcorn!

    January 23, 2008

  • Arrr, beat me to it, sionnach! But much funnier than I would have done.

    January 22, 2008

  • Also: more slick.

    And an ostensibly sophisticated person, usually preceded by "city".

    January 22, 2008

  • Not sure this belongs here, but after some discussion around the word confuzzle, including John's musings about a FAQ at brusselsprouts''s profile, I notice that FAQ remains unlisted and unclaimed.

    Perhaps Wordies could give John a hand? Or is that only a recipe for more confuzzlement?

    January 22, 2008

  • Don't despair; it doesn't take long to get the hang of it, mostly because there isn't really much hang to get. Read comments from the bottom. Follow links. List words. Ask questions. Most of all: Have fun.

    January 22, 2008

  • Ooh! Maybe we'll get a theological debate going. Any Docetists out there? Ebionites? Apollonarians? Eutychians? Nestorians?

    OK, maybe this isn't such a good idea...

    January 22, 2008

  • Urgh ... head ... about ... to ... explode ...

    January 22, 2008

  • Aw, shucks, sionnach...

    I think that makes two of us, resetee. And maybe only two of us.

    January 22, 2008

  • A close relative to duck and cover, the life-saving advice once billed for both nuclear annihilation and tornadoes. In my mind, anyway.

    January 22, 2008

  • Excellent. Nicely done! I was gearing up to it, but was a little daunted by the prospect.

    January 22, 2008

  • So I could sip a sambuca whilst listening to a somnambulist in a sombrero playing a somber samba on a sambuca?

    Cool.

    January 22, 2008

  • This word always reminds me of an old joke:

    A Catholic priest and a Protestant minister were in a heated theological argument. After a lull, one (take your pick) said, "Well, we must remember that we worship the same God."

    "Yes," said the other. "You in your way, I in His."

    January 22, 2008

  • Ah, but it only takes a little history to make the connection clear! Mother Adélie Hubbard was the mother superior of a small convent of Spheniscidan nuns in pre-Reformation London. Toward the end of her life, the nuns were called to feed a nearby community of Dominican friars decimated by a famine. The nuns themselves were on the verge of starvation but nonetheless were inspired by Mother Hubbard to heed the call.

    The first verse of the popular children's nursery rhyme is a reference to this event: Old Mother Hubbard is of course the mother superior herself; the cupboard represents the convent's food stores; the Dominicans were known as the "dogs of God" (a Latin pun: Domini canes); a bone makes a poor meal, symbolizing the fact that the nuns had little to spare; and of course, the cupboard was bare -- starvation ultimately wiped out both communities. (Subsequent verses are later additions, and probably just pleasant nonsense.)

    The dress, as you can see, got its name from its loose fit -- as on an emaciated nun -- and its lack of a belt. Spheniscidines wear no adornment of any kind, including belts.

    More on this etymology from cultural linguist and medieval English scholar Gentoo Humboldt at the Royal Fiordland University in Oslo.

    January 22, 2008

  • May I recommend Brewer's Dictionary of Phrase and Fable? The 1898 version is available online, but half the fun is leafing through the actual book and following cross-references endlessly. I believe the most recent is the sixteenth edition

    January 21, 2008

  • Thanks to arby, who suggested tenderhooks on my Malapropisms I've heard list a couple months ago. Better late than never!

    January 21, 2008

  • Sorry; forgot to note that my tongue was planted firmly in cheek. See my list Malapropisms I've heard (and, for fun, Other malapropisms

    January 21, 2008

  • Used for horses that have had a tough road to hoe, no doubt.

    January 21, 2008

  • I love how the two lists complement each other: Reesetee's of dragons and other beasties, Narniabound's of named worms. Another testament to the infinite possibilities of language, and therefore of Wordie!

    January 21, 2008

  • Hm. That's a good list. But I imagine just names and appellations for the God of the Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition would make a pretty interesting list.

    Maybe I'll tackle it after checking the lightning rod on my roof.

    January 21, 2008

  • I think this is my new favorite word. Just think, next time you're mad at a legislator, you can accuse him/her of being inquorate. Unless their legislative body has convened, I suppose.

    January 21, 2008

  • Wow. Don't tell me no one has a names-of-God list. Would that turn Wordie into a Kabbalistic endeavor?

    January 21, 2008

  • Fascinating; thanks!

    January 21, 2008

  • Urgh. Yes, that's the one. So grateful...

    January 21, 2008

  • Because there are so many things that do?

    January 21, 2008

  • Properly preceded by the word "my" when said, with a cackling laugh by crones of a certain age.

    January 21, 2008

  • You're saying, then, that that @, from the Arab ar rub', is a quarter quintal?

    January 21, 2008

  • I've never heard the song (for which I gather I should thank my stars), but from the comments it sounds more insulting than complimentary. Perhaps it's milder as a ringtone?

    January 21, 2008

  • I'll second that: A great read for anyone who's played Scrabble. Or wondered about those of us who do. (And those aren't mutually exclusive groups.)

    January 21, 2008

  • Well said, yarb. Until Walt and other bowlderizers got hold of them, the fairy-tale and nursery-rhyme canon was a pretty fearsome thing. But that's what made them good lessons, cautionary tales if you will, with plenty of text and subtext for kiddie and adult alike.

    January 21, 2008

  • This is a remarkable book. And some of the words are truly disturbing. I remember one referred to a particularly gruesome effect of extreme constipation that still makes me queasy. (I seem to have blocked the word itself, thankfully.)

    January 21, 2008

  • Ceviche,si. British sailors, I'll take a pass on. (And what a difference a preposition could make, no?)

    January 20, 2008

  • Oh, man, you haven't lived* until you've had really good fried dill pickles. Think about it: salty, sour, crisp, crunchy, tangy, even a little sweet! And it supplies all the major snack groups, too: fat, salt, sugar, zip... Now where can I get some...

    * OK, maybe you've lived, but you haven't really, truly enjoyed everything there is to enjoy about it, in particular fried dill pickles.

    January 20, 2008

  • Thanks! He did. Any suggestions welcome. I seem to have misplaced much of my Lewis library...

    January 20, 2008

  • Thanks reesetee! That is odd. I assume they'd taste limey, but I haven't the faintest what that would mean.

    January 20, 2008

  • Fabulous list! When you get a chance, it would be great to see what more of these mean...

    January 20, 2008

  • Whilst trying to refresh my memory about some of the characters, I discovered that the full text is online.

    I love how Lewis plays with language throughout his books, right under your nose. And he came up with some of the most wonderfully apt names for characters.

    January 20, 2008

  • This is a conventional pose? And what does it have to do with Arabs?

    January 19, 2008

  • Perhaps this is a rare variant meaning "to censor by placing a bowl over the offending material and carefully excising it in a neatly circular way." (Not to be confused with boulderize, to censor by dropping large boulders on the offending material until it can no longer be seen or read.)

    January 19, 2008

  • An English hop dating to the 19th century.

    January 19, 2008

  • Scientific name for the hop plant.

    January 19, 2008

  • North Dakota town in which Dr. Martin Arrowsmith practices in the Sinclair Lewis novel Arrowsmith.

    January 19, 2008

  • Fictional setting of Main Street, the Sinclair Lewis novel about small-town life.

    January 19, 2008

  • Quite unrelated, also the name of "the Reverend Paul Peter Prang, of Persepolis, Indiana, Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church ... His weekly radio address, at 2 P.M. every Saturday, was to millions the very oracle of God. So supernatural was this voice from the air that for it men delayed their golf, and women even postponed their Saturday afternoon contract bridge." -- It Can't Happen Here, by Sinclair Lewis

    January 19, 2008

  • "Mrs. Adelaide Tarr Gimmitch, the celebrated author, lecturer, and composer," and character in Sinclair Lewis' novel It Can't Happen Here.

    January 19, 2008

  • See also Windrip.

    January 19, 2008

  • Berzelius "Buzz" Windrip is the fascist president of It Can't Happen Here, a cautionary novel by Sinclair Lewis. One verse of a campaign song written on his behalf:

    Buzz and buzz and keep it up,

    Our cares and needs he’s toting,

    You are a most ungrateful pup,

    Unless for Buzz you’re voting!

    January 19, 2008

  • Also the last name of Elmer Gantry, title character of the novel by Sinclair Lewis.

    January 19, 2008

  • Largest city in Winnemac, and a setting for several Sinclair Lewis novels.

    January 19, 2008

  • Fictional state in several Sinclair Lewis novels, including Babbitt, Dodsworth, and Arrowsmith, among others.

    January 19, 2008

  • Samuel Dodsworth is the title character and hero of Dodsworth, published 1929.

    January 19, 2008

  • Title character in Sinclair Lewis's first "serious" novel, Our Mr. Wrenn: The Romantic Adventures of a Gentle Man, published in 1914.

    January 19, 2008

  • Does that mean soaking them in citrus juice, or lime water, the solution uncommonly known as Ca(OH)2? Or calcium oxide? Help! Is there a pickler in the house? Where's Peter Piper when you need him?

    January 19, 2008

  • I can't believe I forgot fried pickles! Mmmm. Wish I could have some right now. Thanks reesetee!

    January 19, 2008

  • Funny. When I searched without being logged in once, I was redirected, repeatedly, to word. Seemed appropriate somehow.

    January 19, 2008

  • Hey, thanks! Really, I didn't mean to offend. And I really wasn't trying to make a crack about snacking on vegans; I meant pickled in the sense of polluted, or even lightly tipsy. Forgot about the yeasties, for which I have a certain fondness as well...

    January 19, 2008

  • No, pickled punks need not apply. Besides, some of the punks I have known have been belligerent whilst pickled.

    Reesetee, I do believe that may be it. I think I'll have a luncheon meat sandwich with plenty of pickles. Or maybe I'll have a sub. Or a grinder. Or a po' boy. Or ...

    January 19, 2008

  • Amazing what you can buy on eBay these days. Plucked from the Wordie ad feed:

    *

    Dictionary words

    Browse a huge selection now. Find exactly what you want today.

    www.ebay.com

    *

    Market with Google

    Do You Sell Products Online? Use Google to Boost Your Business!

    www.google.com

    *

    *

    Ads by Google

    January 18, 2008

  • On the Veldt.

    January 18, 2008

  • Easier to say than pickle-like

    January 18, 2008

  • A Polish pickle, Wikipedia tells us: "they are prepared using the traditional process of natural fermentation in a salty brine which makes them grow sour." And Wikipedia is never wrong, right?

    And please, hold your pickle polish jokes.

    January 18, 2008

  • They go so well with luncheon meats, don't you think? See also In a pickle for other luverly fermented foodstuffs.

    January 18, 2008

  • Oh, I don't mean to be insensitive. Just trying to have fun with words.

    But I wasn't joking about my fondness for vegans; they, like so many others with restrictive diets, have ushered all sorts of tasty alternative foods (if also perhaps a few food alternatives) into our lives.

    As for pickling, I've found it does a lot of people good. And I love the word: pickle, pickled, pickler, pickling, picklesque.

    In fact, I think it's time for a list of pickles...

    January 18, 2008

  • Last I checked I was still a member of Animalia, which pretty much rules me out as a vegetable. But I have a certain fondness for vegans. They're good pickled.

    January 18, 2008

  • Pretty much: Chop(i)TOO-liss. I've heard the i pronounced to varying degrees. But I'm no local.

    January 18, 2008

  • So when the mugger says: "Your money or your life!" that's marketing? I mean, he's giving a set of instructions for creating an offering that has value for his, well, customer... What's wrong with the traditional definition: Stuff you say to get people to buy (into) things.

    January 18, 2008

  • What did Idaho? I dunno; Alaska.

    January 18, 2008

  • A peat bog of northern climes, notably Southeast Alaska.

    January 18, 2008

  • A street in New Orleans, and a lot of fun to say.

    January 18, 2008

  • Hole in the floor of a kiva symbolizing the hole from which people entered this world from the previous. A sort of omphalos. (Also sípapu.)

    January 18, 2008

  • I remember reading somewhere that the word primarily, or perhaps only, had meaning no. 1. Then Dashiell Hammett slipped it into one of his stories, knowing full well what it meant, but counting on readers (and editors/censors) to misinterpret as something along the lines of no. 2.

    January 18, 2008

  • Nothing. Or as a verb, to eighty-six something.

    January 18, 2008

  • Alternative to Arkansan for one from Arkansas. Which unfortunately reminds me of the old ditty: "What did Tennesee? She saw what Arkansas."

    January 18, 2008

  • Salvadoran meat pocket; I've seen them in cheese, pork, and cheese-and-pork varieties, at a pupuseria, of course. Tasty!

    January 18, 2008

  • Have you ever smelt spelt?

    January 18, 2008

  • I tried my hand at limericking at recrudescent. Not sure I succeeded terribly well. Come to think of it, I may have simply succeeded terribly.

    January 18, 2008

  • Interesting that no one claims carnal knowledge. Or office girls, for that matter.

    January 18, 2008

  • Depending how metaphorical the places need to be, consider pilfering a few from my Never been there list.

    January 18, 2008

  • At least in much of the U.S., you'd have to pronounce it like Spanglish: maybe "illeho" or "immiho". Personally, however, I think the proper term is either undocumented-worker-journalist (undowojo) or permanent-resident-alien-journalist (perresaljo).

    January 18, 2008

  • Erm... Some of by best friends are vegan? (I wouldn't even mind my sister marrying one.)

    January 18, 2008

  • Great list! Don't forget all manner of fungus! Or maybe that's a separate list: Portabello, shitake, oyster...

    January 18, 2008

  • Doesn't it have those small, circular crunchy bits embedded in it? I thought those were peppercorns.

    Oh dear...

    January 17, 2008

  • I find this phrase exceedingly disturbing.

    January 17, 2008

  • Pass the tasty loaf products, please! I do believe it's the dash of non-mammalian excreta, not exceeding 5mg/lb, that makes it so delectable.

    January 17, 2008

  • Good gravy, turn your back on a list of cold-cuts for a few hours and it mushrooms (so to speak). I do love Wordie so.

    And arcadia, have at it! There must be a place for Tofurky and other wonders of textured vegetable protein somewhere around here.

    January 17, 2008

  • From Silver Star Meats, of McKees Rocks, PA:

    "Silver Star’s Blue Ribbon Dutch Loaf is a real “blue ribbon winner�? – the Pennsylvania Food Processors’ choice for the Best Ready to Eat Loaf (Consistency and Flavor) in 1986."

    "Made with only the best ingredients, the finest cuts of pork and savory blend of natural spices, Silver Star’s Blue Ribbon Dutch Loaf is a top-of-a-very-distinctive-line of prepared loaves. We offer a variety of tasty loaf products, including our fine pickle and olive loaves, plus 14 others."

    January 17, 2008

  • Speaking of which, is there a list of luncheon meats yet? I could use some olive loaf.

    Edit: Aw, heck, I just went ahead and added it as an open list. Enjoy!

    (And, disturbingly, when I Wikipedia'd olive loaf to make sure it was what I meant, I encountered this line: "This meat-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it." Which reminded me of those priapic aquatic elves again...)

    January 17, 2008

  • I always though Hap hooked up with Hope. 'Less I'm wrong, of course.

    January 17, 2008

  • And what should Google skæppe but http://gramtrans.com/, which tells us:

    skæppe

    skæppe n bushel

    skæppe v yield; pay

    lavabo

    lava+bo n neu s idf nom lava home

    røvagtig

    røv+agtig adj utr s idf nom ass like

    røv+agtig adv ass like

    dejes

    dej n utr p idf gen doughs'

    January 17, 2008

  • (v.) To nix or deep-six something.

    January 17, 2008

  • Well, like they say: The oily fish gets the worm.

    January 17, 2008

  • I had a Texan tell me with a straight face once that all y'all was the plural for y'all.

    But sionnach, assmarmot?

    January 17, 2008

  • Didn't Ruth run off with that fellow Guile?

    January 17, 2008

  • Hm. I believe I might. I'm pretty sure I got it from an old book with mead recipes in it. So then:

    See also: rodomel

    January 16, 2008

  • Also a colloquial name for the mighty eulachon, or Thaleichthys pacificus, an anadromous smelt of the north Pacific. It is also called the candlefish because, as Wikipedia tells us, "if caught, dried, and strung on a wick, it can be burned as a candle."

    I can only imagine how that was discovered.

    January 16, 2008

  • There's also lastage, a kind of transport fee.

    January 16, 2008

  • Mmm. The finest part of the chyle; so much better than run-of-the-mill chyle, not to mention the dregs. (In fact, please don't mention the dregs.) And better still when properly incrassated with a little humor. Nourishing indeed for any body.

    Bilby, I think you should get some sort of award for posting that. You made my weekend, and it's only Saturday.

    December 30, 2007

  • There's got to be a word for that.

    December 30, 2007

  • They need a word for this? Except for sionnach's charming comment under chunder (hey, it rhymes!), I can't imagine why...

    December 29, 2007

  • Most people consider residents of Arkansas (USA) to be Arkansans, but for a time there was a minority push by some there to use Arkansawyer.

    Arkie is, perhaps, a term of endearment ordisdain, no doubt kin to the dustbowl-era Okie.

    December 27, 2007

  • Pertaining to myt, including tose about how Oedipus wrecks Tebes; how Tor, Norse god of tunder, bet on a race with Tought itself; or how Tweetie Bird taught he taw puddy tat.

    December 25, 2007

  • This really should be a species of social insect that, penguin-like, pushes one of its own out over the pond to see if a frog is waiting...

    December 25, 2007

  • Magic with people? Magic by people? Magic for people? Wait -- magic made from people?

    December 25, 2007

  • I love this list!

    December 25, 2007

  • Dare I suggest Smackover, Ark., and Kankakee, Ill.?

    December 22, 2007

  • Wunnerful -- thanks!

    December 22, 2007

  • Great list. I think I'll steal a few for my Wort to the wise list of brewing terms!

    And bilby, you're right on skunked. I believe hops are the culprit.

    December 21, 2007

  • Some conversations can certain get you down.

    December 20, 2007

  • Once a lad from the fertile crescent

    had an idea he considered incandescent:

    He treated his chlamydia

    with baths most fastidia,

    But his condition soon proved recrudescent

    December 20, 2007

  • Perhaps also a turn of phrase used to liken someone (or something) to one who digs ore from the ground. Not to be confused with minoralogy.

    December 20, 2007

  • I'd have thought it was a very one-sided conversation.

    December 20, 2007

  • An easy way to sort it out: The parson is the personage of the parsonage, but not every person in a parsonage is a personage.

    December 20, 2007

  • Isn't a ha'nt dialect for a ghost, or haunt?

    December 18, 2007

  • Doesn't this make more sense: Posting a googlewhack on Wordie means it eventually shows up on Google once the page is indexed; then Google automatically searches M-W and Urban Dictionary to offer googlers possible definitions; those sites, not being among the Wordiescenti return a placeholder/error messge.

    Just Occam's shaving thingy.

    December 8, 2007

  • Gimpork, but this gets my vote for one of the funniest comment exchanges on Wordie!

    December 8, 2007

  • 'sblood, or just bloody?

    December 8, 2007

  • Lists like these leave me in awe.

    December 8, 2007

  • New one on me -- thanks!

    December 8, 2007

  • Great list! Maybe eldritch?

    December 8, 2007

  • Most assuredly: Cheese-rolling, sword-dancing and mangold-wurzel-hurling go well together of an autumn weekend, especially if accompanied by ale-imbibing.

    December 8, 2007

  • Good idea! I just merched it.

    December 6, 2007

  • Man, I can't tell you the number of times I've blown right through my fuss budget.

    December 6, 2007

  • On my Wordie up! page, I posited a way to bring the wordiemobile to the masses, and reesetee wisely suggested raising it here: The other kind of -mobile, one of those dangly things with lots of words hanging from it, maybe even interchangeable wordies to hang from it...

    December 6, 2007

  • That might be the best yet, though I remain partial to wordiemobile. (Say, I wonder if Wordie could sell a wordiemobile, of the sort one hangs over a child's crib, with interchangeable words dangling from the contraption.)

    December 5, 2007

  • I stand corrected. I'm not convinced there are any hoverports out there, but I'll take it. As for sallyport, well, I was still on the fence until I used the Google and found, among other things, this page. I'm not quite sure what these gentlemen are doing, but they seem to be enjoying themselves, so in sallyport goes!

    December 5, 2007

  • Thanks, c_b! That's high praise from a true Wordie...

    December 5, 2007

  • Gosh, folks -- thanks for being so generous with your words. I'm taking 'em all except sallyport -- isn't that two words? -- and hoverport (not sure what one is).

    I was going to nix jetport, seaport et al, on the theory that I wanted non-port ports, but then I realized I already had airport and heliport, and figured what the heck.

    December 5, 2007

  • I love 'em. Many thanks. Taking a pass on taghappy and wierdie -- I think I've seen -happy used generically too often to make it quite Wordie-specific enough. Much the same for wierdie -- seems too much like a slightly nuanced application of existing usage...

    Pedantic? You betcha!

    December 5, 2007

  • I like your Meta list, but it is indeed a little more than I want. (Besides, you've done such a great job with it -- no sense duplicating it!) I'm going for Wordie-exclusive words. Even madeupical, while charming, isn't quite Wordie-specific for me.

    November 22, 2007

  • I'll take word apnea and tagony. Thanks!

    November 22, 2007

  • These are beauts -- thanks!

    November 22, 2007

  • I want to live in Wordietown and ride in the Wordiemobile! I just started Wordie up!, but so far I only have these two. Are there others? Or has someone already done this?

    November 22, 2007

  • Then there are the real/commonly used ones: Arklatex, Texarkana, Texahoma, Arkahoma, Floribama...

    November 22, 2007

  • I was standing in line (or is that on line?) in a hardware store once and saw a sign for Polish Remover. I remember thinking, "Oh boy, someone's going to be offended."

    November 22, 2007

  • A voice, too. What a versatile word.

    November 22, 2007

  • Yarb was a wordie most renowned

    Whose views on rhymes were quite sound

    He was offered up "lozenge"

    to rhyme against "orange"

    and promptly dropped, dead, to the ground.

    Yeah. I see what you mean.

    November 21, 2007

  • Not used much any more, but: skirt, twist.

    November 21, 2007

  • You might enjoy my Wort to the wise list for a bunch more alcohol-related words, including perry, metheglin, melomel, pyment and more. I've also got A great ferment going on, but I think you have most of those, and then some...

    November 21, 2007

  • Gotcha. So it either happens or it doesn't. I can rest easy now.

    November 21, 2007

  • Very cool. Neither of which qualify.

    November 21, 2007

  • So how does one get that nifty definition next to a word?

    November 21, 2007

  • Great concept. Not sure if they qualify, but I have a handful of vowelless words at Disemvowled . They'd make pretty short storms, though.

    November 21, 2007

  • We have more than commandments! We also have doctrine, precepts, clergy, laity, churches, synagogues, temples, mosques, scriptures, pantheons, angels, demons, devils, saints, sinners... You name it, we have it, or will shortly. Very catholic, in fact.

    November 21, 2007

  • Nice list. Also: Faux, bunk or bunco, con, mock

    November 21, 2007

  • Nifty. How about shouldn't've, wouldn't've and couldn't've?

    November 21, 2007

  • Hey nonny no? More of a phrase than a list.

    November 21, 2007

  • Or a nice cup of expresso?

    November 21, 2007

  • Informal, properly used for close friends, and often misused by Bavarians, to hear Austrians tell it...

    November 21, 2007

  • I have to agree with snowswim. It's a candidate for the word that sounds least like its meaning. (Is there a word for that?)

    November 20, 2007

  • Like it's spelled, no?

    November 20, 2007

  • Blech. Then again, I'm one of those lactose intolerants.

    November 20, 2007

  • Tripartite? Maybe it doesn't quite fit.

    November 20, 2007

  • Lovely word. Applies to achenes, where I found this one lurking pleasantly in the definition.

    November 20, 2007

  • How about wolpertingers?

    November 20, 2007

  • Probably better than Voltaire's Candida

    November 20, 2007

  • Wordie Mobile is cool. But wouldn't the Wordiemobile be even cooler? Beat that, Oscar Mayer!

    November 20, 2007

  • Hm. I was thinking more of the beverage made by fermenting pear juice -- ie, a kind of cider made from pears. But perhaps Mr. Perry the philosopher indulged in perry.

    November 14, 2007

  • Umbanda?

    November 13, 2007

  • Great list! I already feel faint. Maybe ague, flux, pox, scrofula, scurvy, palsy...

    November 13, 2007

  • Likewise. And just because these aren't (commonly used) words doesn't mean they shouldn't be!

    November 13, 2007

  • I keep running across these now. Another, at the grocery store: produce

    December 21, 2006

  • Oh, man, this list makes me shudder. Nice job. I think you overlooked downsize, however.

    December 20, 2006

  • Prof. James Moriarty, credited by Wikipedia as "the first true example of a supervillain".

    December 20, 2006

  • That's a great article. Thanks!

    December 19, 2006

  • Comprise is often misused in place of compose. Comprise means to be composed of, or to contain/embrace -- so to use an example from the American Heritage (fourth edition, quotes from bartleby.com): "The traditional rule states that the whole comprises the parts and the parts compose the whole. In strict usage: The Union comprises 50 states. Fifty states compose (or constitute or make up) the Union."

    December 19, 2006

  • Just ran across a couple more today: entrance (to captivate, and something you go in through) and intern (to imprison, and a low-paid or unpaid employee in training)

    December 18, 2006

  • Aha! One of the most interesting kinds of etymology. Thanks for bringing that to my attention.

    December 18, 2006

  • Homosassa, FL, is fun. So is Hopatcong N.J.

    December 18, 2006

  • Scat, fewmet, spoor (ooh -- have to add those last two to my list of archaic words)

    December 17, 2006

  • Not sure how narrowly you're defining this, but maybe: leading or lead, kerning or kern, pica, point...

    December 17, 2006

  • How about rye? Duck fart?

    December 17, 2006

  • I've heard suite pronounced suit in the South (of the US).

    December 16, 2006

  • New Orleans has an Esplanade, but I think it's an Esplanade Street.

    December 16, 2006

  • Clicking the Wikipedia link is the best bet if you don't recognize it.

    December 16, 2006

  • From the Russian for "fast," or so I've always heard, which the French adopted for a place to get a quick bite to eat.

    December 16, 2006

  • Without the ultimate e, Wikipedia tells us it's the circumcision specialist in modern Judaism.

    December 16, 2006

  • Lead

    (On a related note, I was very surprised to find some Polish remover at a store once.)

    December 16, 2006

  • Kick? Not a thing, exactly. Oh, and biscuit. Drop biscuits. Tasty.

    December 16, 2006

  • Oh -- a hand.

    December 15, 2006

  • Maybe too obscure. You play a mark (or a dupe) if you're a con artist, in this case using play to mean string along, fool or take advantage of.

    December 15, 2006

  • Yup. Businessspeak (which shouldn't be a word, if it isn't already). Sorry to confuse.

    December 15, 2006

  • Not high priority, but it would be cool to see which lists contain a word when you click to a word's page.

    December 15, 2006

  • line, product

    December 15, 2006

  • plug

    draught

    hair, ponytail

    barge

    fast one

    December 15, 2006

  • Nice list. King? Innocent. Drunk. Smart. Marks, or maybe unsuspecting victims? Better yet, a dupe.

    December 15, 2006

  • How about comprise?

    December 15, 2006

  • I'll second asterisk, which I usually hear as Asterix. (No Obelix, though.)

    December 15, 2006

  • job

    December 15, 2006

  • muchness? maybe glut to pair with dearth; scarce, scant. Then the pedestrian: lots, tons, many, all, most, more, less,

    December 14, 2006

  • Heywood J. Buzoff is one, isn't he?

    December 14, 2006

  • So it goes. Thanks for the heads-up! I'll have to think about including controvertible, I think.

    December 13, 2006

  • Indeed! Where are my manners? I should have thanked you here as well as at my own list. Off to add incontrovertible...

    December 13, 2006

  • Masterful. Thanks! Wasn't familiar with bloats, skulks, flanges, troops, sedges and towers, and I thought I knew a lot these.

    As for a swagger of pirates -- well, I was originally planning to avoid "made up" collectives, but I can't resist this one. And aren't they all, at some point, made up anyway? Thus cracking the door to who knows how many more, I'm sure.

    December 13, 2006

  • Thanks! Suggestions welcome, of course.

    December 13, 2006

  • A real debt owed to Nkocharh's list, sans prefix.

    December 13, 2006

  • Explicable seems, well, perfectly explicable. But maybe plicable deserves a berth?

    December 13, 2006

  • Nice list, and I'll pilfer some for my own list (of the same words with their prefix or suffix). But I think Nkocharh has us all beat for sheer quantity...

    December 13, 2006

  • googolplex?

    December 13, 2006

  • couth, ert

    December 13, 2006

  • What about gift and grow (as in "to grow a business")? Was trying to figure out how to skewer "to gift" myself before running across this list.

    December 13, 2006

  • who suggested the first three in my Malapropisms I've heard list. For obscure reasons, I am keeping separate track of the ones I've heard in use, but happy to collect others...

    December 12, 2006

  • What about "comprise"? Nobody gets that one right.

    December 12, 2006

  • Gormless is a beaut! Not sure what I'll do about defenstrate (which is a great word on its own merits) or decapitate. Both capitate and fenestrated have meanings (health insurance, at least in the USA, and architecture respecively), if not quite the opposite of their de- counterparts.

    December 12, 2006

  • Wonderful. I'll add them. Lately I've actually heard people say they were gruntled, more as a joke than anything.

    December 12, 2006

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