Comments by ruzuzu

  • I like your lists.

    December 20, 2024

  • Welcome to Wordnik! I like your lists.

    December 20, 2024

  • Also see brugne.

    December 19, 2024

  • Also see thulwar.

    December 19, 2024

  • Excellent! I look forward to future amusement.

    December 16, 2024

  • "E. J. Sullivan, for instance, is a master both of illustration and decoration, with a curiously flexible technique, accomplished and fascinating in much the same way as the dangerous feats of an acrobat who keeps us wondering if he will avoid a cropper, and comes up smiling every time . . . ."

    --The Art of Pen Drawing: A manual for students, illustrators, and commercial artists by G. Montague Ellwood

    November 28, 2024

  • Also see kers.

    November 21, 2024

  • Also see kers.

    November 21, 2024

  • My new favorite list.

    November 5, 2024

  • Also see thingman.

    October 23, 2024

  • Added. Thanks, bilby!

    September 19, 2024

  • Compare pose from the Century.

    September 18, 2024

  • Nice! I have one, too--if you'd like to yoink any entries: oh--deer.

    September 9, 2024

  • Ooh. Fun!

    September 6, 2024

  • See bosh.

    August 22, 2024

  • I love this--arrived here after looking up stationer.

    August 14, 2024

  • I'm surprised this one hasn't been listed already.

    August 8, 2024

  • Compare speculum.

    August 8, 2024

  • See mirror-scale.

    August 8, 2024

  • See Claude glass.

    August 8, 2024

  • See Claude glass.

    August 8, 2024

  • See shotten.

    August 7, 2024

  • Fine. See my latest list.

    August 7, 2024

  • Surely someone could start a hay-loft list for it.

    (I really hope I didn't just nominate myself.)

    August 6, 2024

  • I'm guessing a polarberrita is supposed to come with extra ice but gets watered down quickly.

    July 31, 2024

  • What a fun list!

    July 30, 2024

  • Thank you, bilby from 2007. You're a rock star.

    July 30, 2024

  • I love this! You might enjoy the comments over on raccoonnookkeeper.

    July 23, 2024

  • Ditto to what the bear said.

    July 18, 2024

  • Such a great list! I just arrived here after looking up recense.

    July 16, 2024

  • This is my new lavorite fist.

    July 1, 2024

  • Fun!

    July 1, 2024

  • "Egyptian pyramids (with the exception of the most ancient, the Saqqara step pyramid) were square in ground-plan and fully pyramidal in shape. The specification for the gradient, known as the 'batter', of such pyramids was denoted by the hieroglyphic word śkd, meaning ratio."

    --From Reading the Past: Mathematics and Measurement by O.A.W. Dilke

    June 12, 2024

  • What a great list!

    May 7, 2024

  • I like your lists.

    May 7, 2024

  • Umbrage! Are there no cucumber lists around here?

    May 7, 2024

  • Vote for me! Obviously! My platform includes shoes, places to wait for trains, and, according to the Century Dictionary, "In physical geography, a shallow sea-bottom near a continent; a continental shelf: as, the Patagonian platform."

    April 5, 2024

  • Bilby, you should add it to the list: best-of-qms-f3E-ECnAs3S

    March 26, 2024

  • Oh, fun--I have a list like this, too, but yours is more official. See scrabble-names.

    March 11, 2024

  • Such a great list. I just arrived here after looking up arquebus.

    March 5, 2024

  • See dariole.

    February 21, 2024

  • I'm guessing this is about weaving. It would be easier to pull out the woof (or weft) than it would be to change out the warp.

    February 15, 2024

  • Even if we do, I nominate you to make one!

    February 14, 2024

  • Ha! I do, too.

    February 8, 2024

  • Yes, please--I nominate you to create it, tankhughes.

    February 6, 2024

  • Good one! Thanks, bilby.

    February 1, 2024

  • How interesting! Wood led me to the etymologies on wode.

    February 1, 2024

  • These are great!

    February 1, 2024

  • I just got deuzan as a random word.

    January 26, 2024

  • Bro. Amirite?

    January 26, 2024

  • This list is delightful.

    January 25, 2024

  • This is my new favorite list.

    January 25, 2024

  • Got it! Thanks, bilby.

    January 24, 2024

  • I quit stalling, I swear!

    January 24, 2024

  • I thought a fruit bat was a flying fox.

    January 18, 2024

  • It would be funny to spell it without the space.

    January 10, 2024

  • Have you ever heard of the "Bunnicula" books? The titular character is allegedly a vampire rabbit--but he's a vegetarian (he only sucks the juice out of vegetables).

    I know there's a lot of tension in the world of bunny-bilby relations, but maybe a shared love of hummus could be a place to start.

    January 10, 2024

  • Added. Thanks, bilby!

    January 8, 2024

  • I hear Tangerine Banjorine has a rider about orange M&Ms.

    January 5, 2024

  • Welcome to Wordnik!

    January 5, 2024

  • *starts rummaging around for the theremin*

    December 28, 2023

  • We definitely need an "Owl or Liverwort" list. Bilby, I nominate you to create it.

    December 27, 2023

  • Shipwrecked Solveig?

    December 27, 2023

  • Thank you!

    December 21, 2023

  • Brackets around brass razoo, please.

    December 20, 2023

  • Mmmm. Fufluns.

    December 20, 2023

  • Also see Parmesan.

    December 11, 2023

  • Also see comments on parmesan.

    December 11, 2023

  • This is my new favorite list.

    December 1, 2023

  • Hey, you sass that hoopy Ford Prefect? There's a frood who really knows where his towel is.

    November 29, 2023

  • Me too. Do you have room for some fufluns?

    November 21, 2023

  • There is! https://www.wordnik.com/lists/-meat-words-HGBQRrdMiFY

    November 6, 2023

  • I'd never heard of this! Do we suppose there's a meat list around here somewhere? Mincemeat, lunchmeat, etc.?

    November 6, 2023

  • This is my new favorite list.

    November 6, 2023

  • Be careful! I'm reminded of Charles Darwin--but he tried to do this with a beetle he was collecting. He wrote, "I will give a proof of my zeal: one day, on tearing off some old bark, I saw two rare beetles and seized one in each hand; then I saw a third and new kind, which I could not bear to lose, so that I popped the one which I held in my right hand into my mouth. Alas it ejected some intensely acrid fluid, which burnt my tongue so that I was forced to spit the beetle out, which was lost, as well as the third one." (As seen here: http://darwin-online.org.uk/content/frameset?itemID=F1497&pageseq=1&viewtype=text )

    November 2, 2023

  • You should add it to madmouth's love-across-kingdoms list!

    October 27, 2023

  • I like your lists.

    October 20, 2023

  • I love this! You should add it to mollusque's "not edible" list.

    October 20, 2023

  • This is fantastic! Arrived here after looking up gobbetmeal.

    October 19, 2023

  • Not yet, bilby, but I'm sure more will surface.

    August 29, 2023

  • Fantastic. Would you consider deviled eggs?

    August 29, 2023

  • This is fun.

    August 29, 2023

  • LitHub suggests the "contemporary debate over the use of the word snark began in 2003," when in "the inaugural issue of The Believer, Heidi Julavits defined snark as “a scornful, knowing tone frequently employed to mask an actual lack of information.”"

    See here: https://lithub.com/on-one-of-the-most-influential-essays-of-the-21st-century-of-snark-and-smarm/

    August 27, 2023

  • Also see coltan.

    July 27, 2023

  • I just learned that 7457 Veselov is an asteroid or minor planet named after Vyacheslav Afanasievich Veselov.

    July 26, 2023

  • I can't believe this hasn't been listed!

    July 25, 2023

  • It's a miss-tery! Har har.

    July 25, 2023

  • How did I miss this one? *favorited*

    July 24, 2023

  • This is a fantastic list.

    July 24, 2023

  • In Riga, Latvia, the Brīvības piemineklis or Freedom Monument (1935), features a sculpture of a woman holding up three stars. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_Monument

    July 12, 2023

  • "Bikini for a tapeworm" would be an excellent title for an album or song (perhaps sung to the tune of Christina Aguilera's "Genie In A Bottle.")

    July 12, 2023

  • I've returned to this list after looking up bemuse, which led to behead and befrumple, which led me right back here.

    To my shame, I must admit that I still haven't finished reading any version of Rabalais.

    June 23, 2023

  • I'm amused by comparing behead and decapitate. Or is bemused? Demused?

    June 23, 2023

  • You might also enjoy the belistful list.

    June 23, 2023

  • Paldies! Paldies!

    June 16, 2023

  • Also, I don't say it enough, but I'm glad you're here, vm.

    You too, tankhughes.

    June 15, 2023

  • Also see comments over on begs the question.

    June 15, 2023

  • Ooh. I'll be sure to yoink a few of these for my logical-fallacies list.

    June 15, 2023

  • My new favorite list!

    June 14, 2023

  • Huh. There's actually some interesting stuff over on colt--especially when you look at the old Century Dictionary definitions. (Always a pleasant surprise when the Century isn't being creepy.)

    And don't get me started on gelding.

    June 12, 2023

  • I was just reading this:

    During World War II, American auto manufacturers played a major role in assembling the famed "Arsenal of Democracy" that helped defeat the Nazis. This arsenal included tens of thousands of tanks called the M4, more popularly known as Shermans. After the war, auto manufacturers went back to building cars for the families that won the war. Over the ensuing decades, those cars have gotten gradually larger. Today, those pickup trucks and SUVs, which account for the majority of vehicles sold in the U.S. and intended to peacefully transport families and loved ones, are almost as big as the tanks they used to build.

    From https://www.vice.com/en/article/pkbxzg/american-cars-are-now-almost-as-big-as-the-tanks-that-won-wwii

    June 9, 2023

  • I like your lists.

    June 9, 2023

  • See comments on iroquois and fruit bat.

    April 20, 2023

  • Thank you, vm. Your suggestion of cohomology is appreciated--and not just because it is iroquoisy or fruit batty. (I'd watched an episode of NCIS recently that mentioned homology and cohomology.) But your vote of confidence in me is even more appreciated. I'm fond of everything you add to this site, too!

    April 20, 2023

  • See comments on ux.

    April 20, 2023

  • I think it's short for uxor.

    April 20, 2023

  • GPT-3, its successor, GPT-4, and its cousins Bard, Chinchilla and LLaMA do not have bodies, and so they cannot determine, on their own, which objects are foldable, or the many other properties that the psychologist J.J. Gibson called affordances. Given people’s hands and arms, paper maps afford fanning a flame, and a thermos affords rolling out wrinkles.

    Without arms and hands, let alone the need to wear unwrinkled clothes for a job, GPT-3 cannot determine these affordances. It can only fake them if it has run across something similar in the stream of words on the internet.

    -- https://theconversation.com/it-takes-a-body-to-understand-the-world-why-chatgpt-and-other-language-ais-dont-know-what-theyre-saying-201280

    April 7, 2023

  • What a great list!

    April 3, 2023

  • See comments on smyterie.

    April 3, 2023

  • Ah. A different version of the Century has it both ways (with smyterie listed first), and tells us it's "more properly smitery," from smite or smyte, "a bit, particle," and to see smit and smitch. It has the same quotation from Burns.

    (See here: https://archive.org/details/cu31924091890644/page/5722/mode/2up?view=theater)

    April 3, 2023

  • That's interesting, vm. The OED has it spelled as "smytrie" (same definition) with an example quoted from "The Twa Dogs" by Robert Burns.

    April 3, 2023

  • Also see harry-ruffian.

    March 29, 2023

  • See gad-hook.

    March 29, 2023

  • I didn't find anything for this in the OED, but the search did lead me to "rattener" (which also seems rascally).

    March 29, 2023

  • Also see blow-out.

    March 22, 2023

  • Nice one, vm! Compare blow-out.

    March 22, 2023

  • Provora is a proposed supergroup of eukaryotes made up of predatory microbes, "devouring voracious protists". It was reported that ten strains were isolated and cultured in 2022. They are predators of other microorganisms.

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Provora&oldid=1138715908

    March 20, 2023

  • Ooh. This looks ripe for some phony umbrage taking.

    Ahem.

    Umbrage! It should be potayto! potahto! to match exclamation! mark!

    February 22, 2023

  • I nominate tankhughes to make that list. Slay... sleigh...?

    February 10, 2023

  • Someone just listed racahout and glandiform. Please tell me an acorn list is in the works!

    February 3, 2023

  • Also see water hemlock.

    February 1, 2023

  • For the character created by P.D. James, see Adam Dalgliesh.

    February 1, 2023

  • I like your lists!

    January 31, 2023

  • Also see Vegetable Lamb of Tartary.

    January 31, 2023

  • Also see Vegetable Lamb of Tartary.

    January 31, 2023

  • Also see lists and comments on Googie.

    January 30, 2023

  • Also see comment on googie.

    January 30, 2023

  • Also see loremer.

    January 26, 2023

  • See fogbow.

    January 23, 2023

  • You have such interesting lists!

    January 23, 2023

  • I've been trying to figure out how I would normally say this (in the middle of nebraksa). I say "wind turbine" as if it rhymes with "turban," but if I were talking about a "turbine engine," then it would rhyme with the way Craig Morgan sings "combine" in the song "International Harvester."

    January 20, 2023

  • Trust, but verify (Russian: Доверяй, но проверяй, tr. Doveryay, no proveryay, IPA: dəvʲɪˈrʲæj no prəvʲɪˈrʲæj) is a rhyming Russian proverb. The phrase became internationally known in English after Suzanne Massie, an American scholar, taught it to Ronald Reagan, then president of the United States, the latter of whom used it on several occasions in the context of nuclear disarmament discussions with the Soviet Union.

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Trust,_but_verify&oldid=1116727092

    January 19, 2023

  • Compare undern.

    January 19, 2023

  • Would you consider copalin?

    January 19, 2023

  • Over on the word streak, vendingmachine added a comment about minerals which are "'too hard to powder easily.'"

    But now that I'm here, all I can think about is this definition from the Century: "To sprinkle with salt, spices, or other seasoning; hence, to corn; pickle."

    January 13, 2023

  • I just got posser as a random word.

    January 10, 2023

  • And I thought about leg-of-mutton sleeve, but that seems more like a style than just the fabric itself.

    January 10, 2023

  • See cheesecloth.

    January 10, 2023

  • I did have a piece of Texas sheet cake yesterday, but I'm not sure that should count either.

    January 10, 2023

  • I just added chiffon on its own, then I had immediate regrets because I saw you'd already added chiffon cake. Delete mine if you like!

    January 10, 2023

  • What a delicious idea for a list!

    January 10, 2023

  • Is it bad that the first thing this reminded me of is ketchup couverture?

    January 10, 2023

  • Versus bearberry.

    January 9, 2023

  • During World War II the Japanese built some nine thousand hydrogen-filled, paper balloons to carry small bombs to North America, hoping to set fires and inflict casualties. The first was launched November 3, 1944. The balloons rose to about 30,000 feet, where winds aloft transported them across the Pacific Ocean.

    On February 22, 1945, Kenneth Hamilton, living on a nearby ranch, observed a balloon floating eastward. It looked like "an orange ball with the sun shining on it. . . . As we were watching, it turned into a cloud of smoke and went to the ground." The balloons carried timing devices to release the bombs and then destroy the envelope. Alliance Army Air Field officials recovered a valve and pieces of shroud lines where the balloon came down.

    Parts of five balloon bombs were recovered in Nebraska from a total of 285 balloon bomb incidents reported across North America. Although the balloon bombs proved ineffective as military weapons, they caused six fatalities and a few minor fires in the United States. Only after the war was their story revealed.

    -- from a Nebraska Historical Marker near Ellsworth, Nebraska (as described here: http://www.e-nebraskahistory.org/index.php?title=Nebraska_Historical_Marker:_Japanese_Balloon_Bombs)

    January 9, 2023

  • I like this list. Would you consider adding missive and zeppelin mail?

    January 9, 2023

  • In my dream this New Year's Day, "continuousarity" was the same as consanguinity. Wonder what that portends.

    January 1, 2023

  • See comment on azured for its use in heraldry.

    December 28, 2022

  • "So they made these tools sometimes hollowed, — that is, in outline merely, which lightened them instantly, — and sometimes azured — that is, crossed by horizontal lines, as in the manner of indicating " azure " in heraldry."

    -- From Bookbindings Old and New: Notes of a Book-Lover, With an Account of the Grolier Club of New York by Brander Matthews. (1895)

    December 28, 2022

  • Also see CMB and cmb.

    December 27, 2022

  • See cosmic microwave background radiation.

    December 27, 2022

  • This is great! Would you consider induction and monad?

    December 21, 2022

  • Compare dinner-wagon.

    December 14, 2022

  • See losel.

    December 14, 2022

  • Also see kray.

    December 5, 2022

  • See seint or saint.

    December 2, 2022

  • Oh, man. This list is great.

    December 1, 2022

  • See comment on rhubarb rhubarb.

    November 30, 2022

  • See cite on blue wall.

    November 30, 2022

  • /Film's Ben Pearson talked with Chris White, Weta's VFX supervisor on "Black Panther: Wakanda Forever," about how he and his team used the idea of a "blue wall" when creating Talokan. The phrase is a diving term and essentially means, in White's words, "that there's so much, what we call 'turbidity,' or so much stuff in the water that things just kind of appear out of nowhere, and it's slightly claustrophobic."
     

    From https://www.slashfilm.com/1120681/black-panther-wakanda-forever-used-a-blue-wall-to-create-a-sense-of-unease-around-namor-exclusive/

    November 30, 2022

  • See the definition on whistle.

    November 16, 2022

  • See more at Seat.

    November 16, 2022

  • It isn't showing up as an open list for me. That happens to my lists every once in a while, too.

    November 16, 2022

  • Would you accept piebald?

    November 15, 2022

  • See pap.

    November 7, 2022

  • This is a fun list!

    October 31, 2022

  • Compare bourgie and bougie.

    October 31, 2022

  • See alum.

    October 28, 2022

  • Cf. kohl.

    October 28, 2022

  • "As a scholar who writes and teaches about American Indian cultural appropriation, I believe that scrutinizing |Sacheen| Littlefeather’s claim to Native identity is necessary. “Pretendianism” – the act of falsely claiming American Indian heritage – does real harm, and the case of Littlefeather may shed light on why people make such claims, and how they get away with it."

    From "Sacheen Littlefeather and ethnic fraud – why the truth is crucial, even it it means losing an American Indian hero" by Dina Gilio Whitaker (http://theconversation.com/sacheen-littlefeather-and-ethnic-fraud-why-the-truth-is-crucial-even-it-it-means-losing-an-american-indian-hero-193263)

    October 28, 2022

  • Compare gainshire.

    October 27, 2022

  • Compare gainchare.

    October 27, 2022

  • This is great!

    October 19, 2022

  • O! Look! A delicious food pellet!

    *pressssss*

    October 11, 2022

  • Also see saltire.

    October 7, 2022

  • I'll keep an eye out for more. Such fun!

    October 7, 2022

  • Would semordnilap count?

    October 4, 2022

  • I adore this list.

    October 4, 2022

  • Your wish, my command, &c.

    September 29, 2022

  • Also see Samson post.

    September 28, 2022

  • Gratiola amphiantha.

    September 19, 2022

  • Also known as "snorkelwort."

    September 19, 2022

  • See comment on azimuthally.

    September 14, 2022

  • You might also like the agentive-exocentric--v-n-n-compounds list by tankhughes.

    September 14, 2022

  • Oh, look! A delicious food pelleting!

    September 14, 2022

  • *press*

    September 14, 2022

  • There is spiroylic, though.

    September 7, 2022

  • That's fascinating. I'm not seeing anything in the OED or the 1895 version of the Century (see, e.g., http://www.micmap.org/dicfro/introduction/century-dictionary).

    September 7, 2022

  • Thanks, tankhughes. I used to play once a week, and I feel you've perfectly described each member of my former group. They eventually decided they'd rather get together to play Star Fleet Battles--and while I appreciate the idea of using a map of hexes instead of squares, I found having to stop and consult the rules in the middle of every battle was a bit tiresome. (When my friends play, they jokingly refer to themselves as space lawyers.)

    September 7, 2022

  • Thanks, alexz. I knew there had to be something.

    September 2, 2022

  • Ceci n'est pas une pipe.

    September 2, 2022

  • Dungeons and Dragons is a collaborative game based on storytelling. Each player is responsible for describing the actions of one character. The person running the game for them each session (the Dungeon Master) is like an omniscient narrator and provides each of the players with the setting--what the townspeople are doing, what the merchants might have for sale, what information innkeepers might have if the players' character were to simply ask, what random encounters might happen (based on the roll of the dice), including whether there are any monsters nearby that they could fight. Murderhobos don't care about any of the details--their characters just kill whatever or whomever they encounter.

    Edit: Maybe that's not a good translation. A murderhobo is a character that deals with every novel situation in the game by defaulting to death or destruction because it's all a fantasy world and they can do whatever they want there. It could just be the strategy of one player, or it could be the whole group. The hobo part comes from the fact that the characters tend to wander from place to place looking for adventure (or things to kill).

    September 2, 2022

  • There should be a name for this sort of thing. Lexicographer's paradox?

    Edit: Maybe it would be funnier to avoid defining it, though.

    September 1, 2022

  • Quiet enjoyment?

    August 31, 2022

  • I don't remember that ever happening on an almost Solveig tour, but boy were there some close calls with brown M&M's.

    August 31, 2022

  • Thanks tankhughes, this is fun! Some other words that show up near it in the Century are thaumasite, thaumatogeny, and thaumatrope.

    August 29, 2022

  • What do we think the definition from the Century means? ("See to haul back.") Is it like haul up or haul off?

    August 26, 2022

  • Bilby, I will indeed accept bumbastus--but only because of the first three letters.

    August 26, 2022

  • No, but I'll take this as the signal to start.

    August 26, 2022

  • I like that the American Heritage Dictionary notes that this has a "usage problem." I wonder how many other usage problems are out there.

    *wanders off to make a list*

    August 25, 2022

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