Comments by johnmperry

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  • A character in The Clangers - a cheery, soup-making dragon (is there any other kind?). She made her soup from the volcanic wells at the heart of the Clangers’ world. Soup is the main part of the Clangers' diet, supplemented by blue string pudding.

    June 19, 2008

  • BBCtv animation show ostensibly aimed at children. But since it was broadcast around 6pm on Sundays, it became quite a family favourite. Broadcast between 69/11 and 72/11.

    They communicated using sounds "quite similar to" a Swannee whistle.

    The Clangers are small, pink mouselike persons who live under their planet's surface in caves protected by saucepan lids. The noise of the lids being closed (to protect their home from falling space debris) gave the Clangers their name. The series told of their encounters with iron chickens, seeds, and sentient musical instruments.

    They lived on a small, hollow planet far far away, nourished by Blue String Pudding, and Green Soup harvested from the planet's volcanic soup wells by the Soup Dragon.

    June 19, 2008

  • You drop a clanger rather than make one.

    June 19, 2008

  • Grocer's apostrophe!

    June 19, 2008

  • cf doxology

    June 19, 2008

  • a clothing style - zoot suit. also see zut!

    June 19, 2008

  • French imprecation/eclamation. Or so we are led to believe.

    June 19, 2008

  • A suit with high-waisted, wide-legged, tight-cuffed pegged trousers and a long coat with wide lapels and wide padded shoulders. This style of clothing was popularized by Hispanics, Italian Americans, African Americans, and Filipino Americans during the late 1930s and 1940s.

    June 19, 2008

  • short for glamorous

    also see glam rock

    June 19, 2008

  • Glam rock (also known as glitter rock), is a rock music style that developed in the UK in the post-hippie early 1970s which was "performed by singers and musicians wearing outrageous clothes, makeup, hairstyles, and platform-soled boots."

    June 19, 2008

  • its adjective probably isn't mingy

    June 19, 2008

  • oenophile

    June 19, 2008

  • pronounced /'neiti:z/

    June 18, 2008

  • in other words - testicles

    June 18, 2008

  • cf sophomore?

    June 18, 2008

  • v. to exaggerate; to hype

    June 18, 2008

  • re the definition - has anyone actually heard the word phiz used since Dickens? (short for physiognomy)

    June 18, 2008

  • a path that runs along or near a railway line to provide access for railway workers.

    June 18, 2008

  • Scottish for land tax, Irish for luck.

    Railway jargon:

    The part of the top of the track formation from the toe of the ballast to the edge of the formation; less commonly, the space between an outer rail and the edge of the track-bed or permanent way structure.

    June 18, 2008

  • hands or fists: "put up your dukes" = put up your fists and prepare to fight.

    June 18, 2008

  • variety of cherry

    June 18, 2008

  • also virginity

    June 18, 2008

  • a variety of cherry

    June 18, 2008

  • "bonnie and blythe

    and good and gay"

    - check bonnie

    June 18, 2008

  • Early Scottish usage was today's gay. So Bonnie Prince Charlie wasn't what you thought.

    June 18, 2008

  • In the tales of Archy & Mehitabel (Don Marquis, 1916 onwards) the watchword of Mehitabel the cat was "toujours gay archy, toujours gay." Archy was a cockroach who couldn't hack the shift key on the typewriter, so always wrote in lower case.

    June 18, 2008

  • Chinese for public bus is gong gong qi che

    June 18, 2008

  • Also another name of the Norse god Mimir.

    June 18, 2008

  • So what is a ¿ as used in Spanish (to introduce a question)

    June 18, 2008

  • Roll-on, roll-off. As in ferry. I.e. drive-through.

    June 18, 2008

  • Your hair gets lighter

    June 18, 2008

  • usually schadenfreude

    June 18, 2008

  • A tart doesn't have a pastry top - that's a pie.

    June 18, 2008

  • "Do androids dream of electric sheep?" was filmed as Blade Runner

    June 18, 2008

  • Also a chain for a fob watch - wiktionary: "A chain used to anchor a pocket watch or other fob to a waistcoat. With the passing of their use as a functional item, Albert Chains are still used as jewelry, worn in any number of manners."

    June 18, 2008

  • It's more like a public house (UK = "pub"; other folk = bar) that offers accommodation of some sort. Not as upmarket as a hotel.

    June 18, 2008

  • Contraction of "public house".

    June 18, 2008

  • British prison slang. Paedophile or any sex offender.

    June 18, 2008

  • meticulate seems to be a nonce-word. (Not a word used by nonces.)

    June 18, 2008

  • Wikipedia: "The Prince Albert piercing (PA) is one of the common forms of male genital piercing. The PA pierces the penis from the outside of the frenulum and into the urethra."

    So now we know!

    Different from ordinary albert.

    June 18, 2008

  • official Chinese way of transcribing Chinese words to Roman alphabet.

    June 18, 2008

  • Chinese name for Mandarin language = "ordinary language" - 普通�?

    June 18, 2008

  • What language is that? In putonghua the pinyin is yu nü. NB each character is a monosyllable.

    June 18, 2008

  • fervour?

    June 18, 2008

  • what did you mean? - machicolate?

    June 18, 2008

  • old UK vernacular for a bus conductress, i.e. female who sold and clipped the tickets on a bus

    June 18, 2008

  • Financial Times Stock Exchange Index

    pronounced footsie

    June 18, 2008

  • Preliminary foreplay

    June 18, 2008

  • in cockney rhyming slang, usually only the first word of the rhyme-pair is used, leading to mystification of non-cockney listeners.

    June 18, 2008

  • Cockney rhyming slang (usually truncated to Tom) = jewellery (or jewelry if you're unfortunate enough to be American)(except then it doesn't actually rhyme).

    June 18, 2008

  • to bury (six feet under) << to kill

    June 18, 2008

  • 1 A failure to fulfill a commitment or responsibility or to face a difficulty squarely.

    2 A person who fails to fulfill a commitment or responsibility.

    3 An excuse for inaction or evasion.

    June 17, 2008

  • Usually (?) means the amount by which stock depletes that cannot be accounted for. I.e. it's not broken, but stolen, often by the staff!

    June 17, 2008

  • Thunderous voice

    June 17, 2008

  • pertaining to skylarks

    June 17, 2008

  • My most unfavourite word: fantastic - seems to mean "desperately ordinary".

    June 17, 2008

  • Group of words such as definite and indefinite article, any, some etc.

    June 17, 2008

  • Used more and more as some sort of feeble

    intensifier.

    June 17, 2008

  • like piebald, but white and any colour except black

    June 17, 2008

  • that's a wrong link, gangerh. That links to word respelt, not your list which is here respelt

    June 17, 2008

  • Means wishing things had turned out differently. Jane Austen uses it a lot.

    “Oh! that my dear mother had more command over herself; she can have no idea of the pain she gives me by her continual reflections on him. But I will not repine. It cannot last long. He will be forgot, and we shall all be as we were before.�?

    Pride & Prejudice, Volume II chapter 1

    June 17, 2008

  • Amend just means to change (for better, for worse). Emend means to put right.

    June 17, 2008

  • also colloquial for the tongue

    June 17, 2008

  • also callipygean

    June 17, 2008

  • liquefaction?

    June 17, 2008

  • anti-diarrhoea medicine (proprietary).

    June 17, 2008

  • A hamburger (proprietary).

    June 17, 2008

  • also sailors' slang for the Royal Navy

    June 17, 2008

  • plural of ganglion?

    June 17, 2008

  • more usually panacea

    June 17, 2008

  • Also a valley-like geological formation

    June 17, 2008

  • Hardly a sacrifice not to eat meat for 40 days, particularly for those who couldn't afford it anyway! But this was more of a saying goodbye to the good times. After Lent, when the hens started laying again, was the time of Easter Eggs, well before Easter was hijacked by the Church.

    June 17, 2008

  • to have sexual intercourse with somebody

    June 17, 2008

  • Usually have few feathers on their heads - "as bald as a coot".

    June 17, 2008

  • Where's the gruesomeness in carnival? That is from "carne vale" - goodbye to meat, at the start of Lent.

    June 17, 2008

  • probably should be titillate

    June 17, 2008

  • The name of the Old English/Icelandic letter �? ð

    June 16, 2008

  • Exactly so. It is pronounced bog off rather than bog of. Echoes in fact of **** off, i.e. just about anything.

    June 16, 2008

  • Chinese do this a lot, because they can't handle character strings. Maybe others do too. I'm reminded of a protest march Gibraltar once, where a banner read "British we are and British we estay".

    June 16, 2008

  • I heard it in New York - two for the price of one (theatre tickets).

    In UK we say Bogof (buy one, get one free)

    June 16, 2008

  • ... and roger

    June 15, 2008

  • skipvia you forgot pat

    June 15, 2008

  • Don't really know if this is a word, or whether it's French. It was used a lot by Count Moriarty in the Goon Show.

    June 15, 2008

  • Romany for something good.

    "Kushti divvis" = good day.

    "Kushti scran" = good food.

    I've just come out of that café. I put some kushti scran in my goshkin (stomach).

    June 15, 2008

  • Chai must be an American thing. In UK we say char. As in "cuppa char please".

    It's also a Romany word for girl.

    June 15, 2008

  • It's a knife, razor, etc. Also shiv

    June 15, 2008

  • coca and cola are both words, so I added them back in - this is a twofer day!

    OK, so now substantiate hi-fi. What word is that? Or thesauri - a Latin plural of a Greek singular. And if you're including Latin plurals ...

    Basically, if a word is in the dictionary, it's a word.

    June 15, 2008

  • If Tuesday Weld had been Fredric March's third wife, she'd have Tuesday, March the Third

    June 14, 2008

  • I agree. Hear hear.

    June 14, 2008

  • Also refers to middle-age sports car owners: "Spending the Kids' Inheritance"

    June 13, 2008

  • Is it not also a noun, something which refers to itself?

    Here's a longer explanation quine

    June 13, 2008

  • ... and the 'o' sound in gateaux is a diphthong.

    June 12, 2008

  • Actually, I pronounce the 'r' in macabre

    June 12, 2008

  • an African village could be a kraal

    a sea-mist is a haar

    there is a gateway to a Japanese temple called a torii

    there's that xbox/gameboy (or whatever) thing called a wii

    in winter people go skiing

    June 11, 2008

  • There is a town in Lincolnshire, UK called Horncastle.

    June 11, 2008

  • There is a famous street in London - where Harrods is - called Knightsbridge. Maybe it doesn't have such a high ratio, but it does have a string of six consonants.

    June 11, 2008