Comments by ry

Show previous 200 comments...

  • it's up to you. i seem to recall that the supposed double entendre in the lyric and song title was only ever speculative and was disavowed by the songwriters. yet it persists in the zeitgeist

    March 20, 2014

  • 1 to fill out a form containing blank lines indicating where data should be entered.
    2. to resolve missing pieces of information necessary to complete a history or analysis of some event or occurrence.

    3. interj. "you can figure out the rest", "you can infer the remaining information"

    March 20, 2014

  • adj. describing something that is essentially unchanged from one instance to the next, with only names or other particular details changed. cf. cookie-cutter

    March 20, 2014

  • this is the best translation I could come up with for "chattering delirium"

    March 20, 2014

  • thanks yarb! i'm glad you're entertained

    March 20, 2014

  • hi madmouth! Some glaring omissions on my part and so thanks. i took the liberty of adjusting a couple of your additions to suit my orthographic cacoethes, hope that's ok. you're persona grata on my lists anytime

    March 20, 2014

  • indeed it is

    March 20, 2014

  • this definition doesn't go with the word. I've been tagging such instances glitch definition, but I can't with this one, I think because of the apostrophe

    March 20, 2014

  • I went on a hunt for a pronunciation and was frustrated. However I did find that the Humr are an African tribe, one out of the grouping of Arabic-speaking nomadic cattle herding tribes known as the Baggara inhabiting the Sahel region. Humr means "the red ones."

    see also Umm Nyolokh.

    March 19, 2014

  • see tardigrade, water bear

    March 19, 2014

  • older Irish colloq., see strap game

    March 19, 2014

  • a swindle in which a strap or belt is folded at its midpoint, then rolled up tightly; the mark is enjoined to bet that he can arrest the unrolling of the strap when both ends are pulled, by inserting a pencil in center of the roll.

    March 19, 2014

  • yum

    March 19, 2014

  • you could always make your own list...

    March 18, 2014

  • Jeez, maybe I'm a whippersnapper or something; I can't understand why this (and fart) are tagged "offensive"? "Impolite" and "use carefully" I could agree with, but offensive?

    March 18, 2014

  • curba, degree-day, dichas

    March 18, 2014

  • as indicated above, the following definition is found under the Century Dictionary & Cyclopedia entry at sorrow:

    n. The devil: used generally as an expletive in imprecation, often implying negation. Compare devil, n., 7. Sometimes the muckle sorrow. Also spelled sorra.

    March 18, 2014

  • could go on your lists of heraldic terminology

    March 18, 2014

  • madmouth anticipated this list: list of mustard diseases

    March 18, 2014

  • made me think of amphiscian

    March 18, 2014

  • doesn't make sense that amphiscii is the plural of this word, because shouldn't then the singular be amphiscios (or amphiscius)?

    March 18, 2014

  • found on dict.org<blockquote>Golden sulphide of antimony, or Golden sulphuret of antimony (Chem.), the pentasulphide of antimony, a golden or orange yellow powder.</blockquote>

    March 18, 2014

  • from the Webster's 1913 dictionary<blockquote>(old chemistry) stannic chloride; the chloride of tin, SnCl4, forming a colorless, mobile liquid which fumes in the air. Mixed with water it solidifies to the so-called butter of tin</blockquote>this could go on glypheme's "Magic Ingredients" list.

    March 18, 2014

  • from Wikipedia:

    A camoufleur is a person who designed and implemented military camouflage in one of the world wars of the twentieth century. The term was originally a person serving in a First World War French military camouflage unit. In the Second World War, the British camouflage officers of the Middle East Command Camouflage Directorate, led by Geoffrey Barkas in the Western Desert, called themselves camoufleurs, and edited a humorous newsletter called <em>The Fortnightly Fluer</em>. Such men were often professional artists. The term is used by extension for all First and Second World War camouflage specialists. Some of these pioneered camouflage techniques.
    See also comments under camofleur

    March 17, 2014

  • *facepalm* ...camoufleur is obviously the correct form. I think that is why I had little success finding citations.
    Here is a google books search ngram showing that camoufleur is by far the more prevalent spelling; in fact the number of instances of camOfleur is below the threshold needed to appear in the graph.

    March 17, 2014

  • see black fox

    March 17, 2014

  • this is slide-spitting!

    March 17, 2014

  • this is amazing. thank you for finding this.

    March 17, 2014

  • see comments at bumbaclot

    March 14, 2014

  • This word is of Jamaican origin. In Jamaican patois it means ‘blood cloth,’ referring to a menstrual pad, and commonly is used as an expression of anger or annoyance, or a general derogatory epithet.

    March 14, 2014

  • defined at Hesperian

    March 12, 2014

  • another glitch. Wordnik seems to have some trouble with straight apostrophes in urls...

    March 12, 2014

  • coined here, I think: ludophones


    "Words that have a unique and often antic sound."

    March 12, 2014

  • fun variant: hell-bent for leather, which shows up on Wiktionary (but not reflected on its own word page here)

    March 12, 2014

  • I was looking for this list, and i found it

    March 12, 2014

  • didn't you have a list called "Drinky-time, or the most happy of hours" or some such? Maybe it was someone else...

    March 12, 2014

  • a military engineer specializing in the camouflage of structures

    March 12, 2014

  • intrigante

    March 12, 2014

  • this could go on hernesheir's list of heraldry terms

    March 11, 2014

  • see note under spitfire

    March 11, 2014

  • interesting note about the development of spitfire/shitfire on etymonline.com; apparently “shitfire” originally appeared meaning cannon; “spitfire” was a euphemization of same. The reference to a volatile personality (one who “spits fire”) came much later.

    March 11, 2014

  • see shitfire

    March 11, 2014

  • I like it. somewhat lessens the (subjective) vulgarity and specifically denigrates ability, intelligence and social standing where the other term is, depending on context, either a generalized and pointless epithet, or needlessly histrionic

    March 11, 2014

  • will advise
    Corporate jargon for F*** Off.
    I am working on the Alabama case files right now, and will have them on your desk by 4pm, unless you call me into another meeting about the break room microwave again. Will Advise.
    urbandictionary.com Word of the Day, 2014-03-11

    cf. please advise.

    March 11, 2014

  • miscellaneous, a. mixed, farraginaceous (literary), indiscriminate; spec, hotch potch, general.
    Allen's Synonyms and Antonyms, Frederic Sturges Allen, 1920

    derived, I assume, from farrago.

    March 10, 2014

  • internet abbreviation of as fuck; as in, "cold af," "sexy af"

    March 10, 2014

  • ok, that's enough, I have to copycat hernesheir's never on Craigslist concept with my own list

    March 9, 2014

  • most people say to read Dubliners and Portrait of the Artist... first, as a kind of ramp-up. then Ulysses (& only then, finally Finnegan's Wake). I don't know, i only ever read the first one in that sequence.

    March 7, 2014

  • I've now ransacked it! Thanks much ruzuzu.

    I hate to add the capitalized words when they are already listed as lowercase forms but i have to go as the cacoethes moves me

    March 7, 2014

  • could go on a list of sailing or nautical words

    March 7, 2014

  • i empathize. i have a notebook like that. know it hasn't been thrown out but i haven't been able to find it for a couple years

    March 7, 2014

  • old term for rum

    March 6, 2014

  • I'm reading these in his voice in my head, and giggling like a schoolgirl

    March 6, 2014

  • The Emperor Nicholas was travelling upon this chausee, a few days previous to our journey, and when in the neighborhood of Moscow, he remarked that he met very few carriages or carts. The Yemshick, or driver, informed him that the officers ... had forbidden the common people to travel upon it... .

    The Czar, His Court and People: Including a Tour in Norway and Sweden, Sir John Maxwell, 1848 (archive.org)

     It is judicious to carry a quantity of rope in one's vehicle for use in case of accident. A Russian yemshick (driver) is quite skillful in repairing breakages if he can find enough rope for his purpose.

    Overland through Asia; Pictures of Siberian, Chinese, and Tartar Life Thomas Wallace Knox, 1871 (gutenberg.org)


    March 6, 2014

  • popular personification of the fog, mist, and overcast endemic to San Francisco and environs. Derived from, and incarnated in, a Twitter account of the same name

    March 5, 2014

  • this is another one that could go on the great Never For Sale On Craigslist list.

    March 5, 2014

  • agh i totally should have remembered that from art history...sometimes i think i feel my cultural literacy fleeing me. Or probably other minutiae more relevant to my current walk of life are usurping the neural pathways involved

    thanks

    March 5, 2014

  • hi ruzuzuzuzu so good to hear from you and i'm afraid my complete lack of a sense of humor is obturating my response. FYI "pipe" has a ribald slang meaning in French, but I'm sure you didn't mean that
    anyway have a lovely day and thanks for the comment :D

    March 4, 2014

  • ‘Like basilosaurus, pontogeneus was first recognized from “Dr.” Albert Koch's “Hydrarchos”, a 114-foot (35 m) skeleton he had assembled in 1845 from the fossilized remains of several different archaeocetes. Koch's “sea serpent” toured the US and Europe before being destroyed in the Great Chicago Fire on October 10, 1871.’


    March 4, 2014

  • This sounds yummy

    March 4, 2014

  • I remember a goofy song that might have been directly inspired by this, or vice versa. Literally about a panda named Yolanda escaping from the zoo; the chorus went something like "Yolanda / nothing rhymes with you except Rwanda / another day we'd name you Amanda / but Yolanda sounds more Eastern European / which is nice"

    ...and I had to go and find it, didn't I: Swooping Swoopily Like a Swooping Swooper

    March 4, 2014

  • I can't find a definition for this anywhere. But the imagery seems obvious: a puckered, pinched expression of fussy, Puritanical disapproval

    March 4, 2014

  • thieves' vinegar?

    March 4, 2014

  • This is great! Think I will tarry awhile here. Can I suggest: fnord, sbirro, and maybe drad

    March 4, 2014

  • why has this been looked up 56 times

    March 4, 2014

  • Paraphrased from Wikipedia: a name for a group of deities in ancient Mesopotamian cultures (i.e. Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian, and Babylonian), meaning something to the effect of ‘those of royal blood’ or ‘princely offspring’. According to The Oxford Companion to World Mythology, the Anunnaki ‘are the Sumerian deities of the old primordial line; they are chthonic deities of fertility, associated eventually with the underworld, where they became judges. They take their name from the old sky god An (Anu).’

    They don’t seem to be named specifically, and it sounds like there were purported to be some hundreds of them. So, to my mind, analogous to other cultures’ cohorts of demigods, angels, Titans, or what-have-you, but with a netherworld spin.

    March 4, 2014

  • Sanskrit, Ānanda (आनन्द) – bliss, delight, peace. In Hinduism—well, there is a whole lot more involved in this concept and its nesting within the Hindu system of values than I can attempt to understand, let alone relate, at this time

    March 4, 2014

  • alternate form of stop-motion

    February 28, 2014

  • Anyone working on a list of folk beliefs or mythological figures?

    February 27, 2014

  • i did mean to say earlier that rhyming Cuchulain with Lucullan was/is a stroke of genius warranting a slow clap if not three cheers.

    February 27, 2014

  • Lucullan, Wagnerian, Byronic, Lynchian, Malthusian, Junoesque, Victorian, DanteanOrwellian: can these legitimately be called eponyms? If not, is there a name for them other than "proper adjective"? I feel like there might be.

    February 27, 2014

  • The entry is under Lucullan.

    February 27, 2014

  • if you add Odin, consider adding Huginn and Muninn, Grip, Kutkh, and possibly other raven figures of various cultures

    January 21, 2014

  • see comments at unfuckwithable

    January 8, 2014

  • more commonly rendered as unfuckwittable or unfuckwittible (from which the usual pronunciation may be gleaned) and definitely not coined on Wordnik; it was used in rap songs as early as 2001 (Too $hort, Talkin' Shit) and probably earlier.

    January 8, 2014

  • German, "trident"; saw this used (here) to refer specifically to the trident of Neptune/Poseidon

    January 7, 2014

  • lovéd

    December 7, 2013

  • A fan of actor Tom Hiddleston.

    December 7, 2013

  • From From Urbandictionary.com (can also be seen in the tweets at right):
    1. managerial we
    word of the day: November 24, 2013
    When a manager says ‘we’ and means ‘you’
    Bossman: We need to fix this
    Wageslave: OK, should I set up a meeting for us?
    Bossman: No, just do it. That was the ‘managerial we’; I meant ‘you’

    November 26, 2013

  • from urbandictionary.com:
    1. sleep tattoos
    word of the day: November 14, 2013

    N. The markings on the body from sleeping for an extended period of time, caused by blankets, clothing, or any other thing one would sleep on. Commonly found on the chest, face, and arms.
    person 1: I just had the best nap of my life
    Person 2: whats that all over your chest?
    Person 1: oh those are just some sleep tattoos from my blanket.

    November 15, 2013

  • of or relating to thanatopsis

    November 13, 2013

  • yeah, but it's spelled existent. and they don't mean precisely the same thing.

    November 13, 2013

  • One of the rarest and most threatened mammals on earth has been caught on camera in Vietnam for the first time in 15 years, renewing hope for the recovery of the species, an international conservation group said Wednesday.
    The Saola, a long-horned ox, was photographed by a camera in a forest in central Vietnam in September...
    via NPR, November 13, 2013

    November 13, 2013

  • A Russian street name for the opioid desomorphine

    November 12, 2013

  • this word annoys me, I don't know why. maybe because I've seen it used one too many times by people who are more or less financially illiterate.

    November 11, 2013

  • an eye-dialect variant of 'vagabond', based on an archaic lower-class English accent, seen in Dickens and elsewhere

    November 11, 2013

  • today, a highlight of the usually jejune words-of-the-day posted by urbandictionary.com; meaning "grab a drink or smoke a cigarette".
    Interesting that gulyasrobi already had this on a list of Old Western Slang.

    November 11, 2013

  • This is wonderful. I can give you a few more candidates from the comics: Bizarro Superman, Grendel, Ghost Rider, Venom(?), Typhoid Mary...and I'll stop there.

    November 6, 2013

  • Also known as irony mark or, sometimes, snark.
    Can be approximated in some unicode fonts using the Arabic question mark, ؟

    November 5, 2013

  • read this in an article last night, can't find definition. possibly a nonce word; definition to the effect of "a mountaineer whose home turf is the Alps; or broadly, a mountaineer"

    November 5, 2013

  • just before (an event).

    See examples above.

    November 5, 2013

  • something fun to say when you accidentally bump, bludgeon or otherwise injure another.

    November 5, 2013

  • a person who uses a fencing foil; a fencer.

    November 5, 2013

  • it's much more useful than "inverted exclamation point" or "signo de apertura de admiración"

    November 5, 2013

  • for your lists of criminals and scoundrels

    October 24, 2013

  • a fan of the Yo, Is This Racist? blog and podcast

    October 24, 2013

  • What two-bit SEO marketers are trying to do when they post their clients' blurbs on Wordnik. Any site that utilizes user-generated content is liable to receive many of these not-so-wonderfully non sequitur ejaculations of advertising, the goal being not to win patronage from thee and me, but for Google to find such-and-such name in context on ever more and sundry websites and thus rank them "higher" in search results.

    October 23, 2013

  • what language is this?

    October 11, 2013

  • a vernacular interjection-type phrase. 
    Posed as a question (sometimes as are we cool?) it means “do you understand,” or “do you have any disagreement or argument with me, or with (some issue)?” Often repeated back, in response, it confirms understanding, agreement, mutual accord. Spoken declaratively, it can signify that things are going well, conditions are favorable, or that the speaker is on good terms with another.


    from Urbandictionary.com:
    When in doubt as to whether or not someone is able to get over themselves and whatever disagreement they may have had in the past with another, the question is often posed.
    Hey, dude, we cool?
    Yeah, man. we cool.

    October 11, 2013

  • I think I've seen LoCal once or twice but SoCal is the construction usually used to describe that portion of the state.

    Also note, I think NorCal is a more common usage than NoCal...Googlefight agrees

    October 2, 2013

  • Does she do so in rhyme, to the accompaniment of sick beats?

    September 26, 2013

  • I've heard it sometimes also pronouncedly pronounced "reel-a-tor"

    September 22, 2013

  • Wordnik blog turned up this delight:

    http://theweek.com/article/index/249725/kill-the-apostrophe

    September 20, 2013

  • oh ok, that's fine then. I was trying to make a reference to a recent tweet-recycling kerfuffle.

    September 17, 2013

  • This is a mangled Goonies reference(?)

    September 17, 2013

  • recycling words of the day, eh?

    September 15, 2013

  • undefined

    September 15, 2013

  • I disagree that this should be banned; it seems a powerfully cynical, eviscerating satire-in-miniature of the practice it describes.

    September 15, 2013

  • 1. quietly but intensely enraged.

    2. very drunk; may refer to hair-trigger irritability or a metaphorical saturation with alcohol to the point of flammability.

    September 15, 2013

  • sham poison ripoff whoops don't hippies lax violent gross boogers

    September 15, 2013

  • They stole my wallet and left me for dead in an alley

    September 5, 2013

  • rude, shoddy, botch, simpletons, crap, difficult, ripoff

    September 5, 2013

  • disaster confusing immoral degraded spam chintzy fake vituperative hacker ripoff cheesy discourteous duplicitous vapid truculence incompetent expensive spendy horrible negative perverted loser

    September 5, 2013

  • I think this maybe should go on the lolcats list.

    September 5, 2013

  • adj.: that makes one say "eww"

    September 5, 2013

  • I thought this might be a typo where knuckleduster was intended, but urbandictionary.com has a couple definitions which relate to working on cars under circumstances causing the technician's hands (including knuckles) receive cuts and scrapes. Looks like it may refer to the one performing the work, or to the vehicle itself.

    September 5, 2013

  • I was thinking about verbing and newspapers (bilby's citation below, as well as the Seattle Post-Intelligencer). Could intelligence be a verb?

    September 3, 2013

  • also a fictitious substance used to "freeze" the character Han Solo in a state of suspended animation, in the 1980 film Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back; see the flickr content.

    September 3, 2013

  • a morally and aesthetically repugnant thing sort of similar to the Snuggie.

    August 27, 2013

  • makes me think of animism, but that's not really it. Maybe resistentialism? :D

    Or something that begins with "auto-"...

    Unfortunately, wildcard search seems to be out of service here at the mo.

    August 27, 2013

  • colloquial name for the statuette given in bestowing of an MTV Video Music Award. Can be seen in the flickr stream below

    August 26, 2013

  • the reason for there being no definitions found on this page is because the word is capitalized. Wordnik is case sensitive and most entries are found under the lowercase form, e.g. iota (excepting of course proper nouns and such).

    August 25, 2013

  • so is this synonymous with nihilartikel?

    August 21, 2013

  • "Making a mistake at work is seldom a good thing....Unless you work in Uppsala University, Sweden, where accidentally leaving equipment running over the weekend led to the creation of the most absorbent material known to man.

    "A powdered form of magnesium carbonate, upsalite's structure is so porous and pitted that it has a surface area of 800 square metres per gram....Upsalite is also riddled with pores narrower than 10 nanometres. This means it is incredibly water absorbent, even at relatively low humidity, and keeps water locked up tight."

    August 19, 2013

  • There is at least one species of procyonid over there, and it's not the olinguito :D

    Not sure if you moved to the Bay Area or just within it, but if the former, welcome!

    August 19, 2013

  • walirlan, what is the problem here? It's not English. Whether it qualifies as English loanword from Japanese, or just a transliteration into the Latin alphabet of a Japanese historical term, there is nothing objectively wrong with the word.

    August 19, 2013

  • the <img> tag doesn't seem to be working in comments. Either that or I'm doing something wrong. See the comment I just put on olinguito.

    August 16, 2013

  • united in adoration of this ecstatic conjunction of zoology, English, and cuteness.

    August 16, 2013

  • This is an interestingly unique colloquialism. A deliberate spoonerism of the term ass-backwards; in being so, it both further evokes the explicit definition and partially euphemizes.

    I feel like this word has been increasing in general usage, at least in the US.

    August 16, 2013

  • To make a spoonerism of (a phrase or pair of words).

    August 16, 2013

  • see bass-ackwards.

    August 16, 2013

  • much like the Telegraph columnist, what I find most tiresome is criticism of this word's alleged misuse. It's such a low-hanging fruit, so easy to spot. But come on it happens all the time—let's also ticket everyone for not making complete stops at stop signs! 

    August 16, 2013

  • A "new" form of carbon stronger and stiffer than any known material. Also known as linear acetylenic carbon, carbyne is an indefinitely long chain of carbon atoms that are joined together by sequential double bonds or alternating single and triple bonds (a polyyne). Detected reportedly in asteroids, and synthesized only in vanishingly minute amounts in a lab. Only a single molecule thick, meaning that, for a given mass of carbyne, the surface area thereof is relatively immense. 

    "The researchers found that carbyne is massively strong (6.0–7.5×107N∙m/kg, vs. 4.7–5.5×107 N∙m/ kg for graphene), very high tensile stiffness (it’s almost impossible to stretch), fairly chemically stable, and yet surprisingly flexible." 

    August 16, 2013

  • A small (~2 lb.) mammal, Bassaricyon neblina. Member of the raccoon family, native to Colombia and Ecuador, recently classified by scientists at the Smithsonian Institution. Named probably in relation to the olingo. Super cute.

    Smithsonian article

    August 15, 2013

  • Thanks for listening! I've just discovered that you seem to have fixed the thing where very large lists wouldn't load—for instance, outcasts loads in ~300ms! I'm ecstatic!

    August 3, 2013

  • magnelephant

    August 2, 2013

  • line breaks in my comments have absconded. por ejemplo, I left a comment on scowlful where I excerpted a poem and separated the lines with hard returns; now it seems to appear as one solid text block.

    August 2, 2013

  • Wait, I can't edit my comments? I don't like it!

    August 2, 2013

  • you guys changed some stuff. I like it!

    August 2, 2013

  • a fan of Lady Gaga

    July 31, 2013

  • name for fans of New Kids on the Block musical group

    July 31, 2013

  • a fan of the Green Bay Packers, an American football team.

    July 31, 2013

  • Turned this up in Google Books:<blockquote>The musket gripp'd ; the brow firm set ; a scowlful smile of joy;
    And shoulder square by shoulder, as of old at Fontenoy : —
    Up ! where the battery-flash the heaven with battle-thunder stuns,
    Where the swarthy cannoneers of France yet prime and point their guns,
    Then on them with that levell'd steel, one charge . . . Too late ! ... the breath
    Of war's red throat across the field has borne a waft of death.</blockquote>“The Death of Sir John Moore”, 1809, from The Visions of England by Francis Turner Palgrave.

    July 31, 2013

  • see comments at rassum frassum

    July 29, 2013

  • just saw this in a corpseak-laden document about an internal mentoring program.

    I have deep misgivings about the word, engendering a crisis my usually laissez-faire attitude towards English usage may not survive

    July 29, 2013

  • can't find a real definition for this, but here is an excerpt of an exchange on Yahoo! Answers—not the most reliable linguistic resource, I know—that nevertheless jibes with what I've heard:

    What does "rassa frassa" mean? It was in an email from a co-worker. Is this Klingon? Or what? Thanks.

    Best Answer - Chosen by Asker

    Madame M

    It's supposed to be the sound of low-level, angry grumbling -- as mentioned above, Yosemite Sam says it when he's angry at Bugs Bunny. "Rassa-frassa-frick-frackin rabbit."

    I can't find an etymology, but if you put it into a search engine, you'll get all sorts of complainers who are using it in their blogs to express discontent (-:.

    Other Answers (1)

    Ulquiorra

    It's what Yosemite Sam says on "Bugs Bunny" when he wants to swear, except I've always thought he said "Rassum Frassum"

    "rassa frassa" has ~15K exact results on Google where "rassum frassum" has ~21K.

    July 29, 2013

  • see slangwhanger

    July 27, 2013

  • Literally, to be holding a bet on a horse in a race. To have a stake in something, to have a vested interest. Most often used in negative constructions. The above phrase has approx 500,000 hits on Google, whereas have no horse in the race and have no horse in this race have 3.5 and 1.5 million hits, respectively.

    July 23, 2013

  • from Wikipedia

    A sleeper agent is a spy who is placed in a target country or organization, not to undertake an immediate mission, but rather to act as a potential asset if activated. Sleeper agents are popular plot devices in fiction...

    cf. sleeper cell

    July 23, 2013

  • "A long or big con is a scam that unfolds over several days or weeks and involves a team of swindlers, as well as props, sets, extras, costumes, and scripted lines. It aims to rob the victim of thousands of dollars, often by getting him or her to empty out banking accounts and borrow from family members."

    from Amy Reading, The Mark Inside: A Perfect Swindle, A Cunning Revenge, and a Small History of the Big Con, Chapter One: Confidence via this Wikipedia article

    July 23, 2013

  • designer/typesetter/typographer jargon for the registered trademark symbol, ®.

    July 23, 2013

  • is that supposed to be now, or does ow have a particular definition there? Obsolete spelling of oh?

    July 23, 2013

  • tail stretcher?!

    July 23, 2013

  • see chibouk

    July 22, 2013

  • chibouk (chibouc)

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    (Wordnik has the word "chibouc", undefined.

    An 1838 illustration of a Turkish coffee house with patrons smoking from long-stemmed chibouk pipes, as featured in Travels in the western Caucasus by Edmund Spencer.

    A chibouk (French: chibouque; from the Turkish: çıbuk, çubuk (English: "stick"); also romanized čopoq, ciunoux or tchibouque)1 is a very long-stemmed Turkish tobacco pipe, often featuring a clay bowl ornamented with precious stones. The stem of the chibouk generally ranges between 4 and 5 ft. (1.2 and 1.5 m), much longer than even Western churchwarden pipes. While primarily known as a Turkish pipe, the chibouk was once popular in Iran, as well.

    (seen in story by Edgar Allen Poe)

    (comment copied from CarlosG's list)

    July 22, 2013

  • you must realize that in English there are many possible additions to words in the standard lexicon; nearly any word can take suffixes or prefixes altering its meaning, intenseness, part of speech, &c. &c. The number of possible permutations is nearly unlimited. Therefore most dictionaries and reference works do not contain entries for many words which are, strictly speaking, allowable in standard English; words which do not usually, but may conceivably, have additions like -ish, -ment, -ness, -ly, -liest and so forth. For a reference work (or website) to omit such entries is not a failing. It is your responsibility as an informed reader or student to deduce any definitions that may be missing in such cases from the combined definitions of the base word and the combining form/suffix/prefix/whatever (or seek out a more comprehensive reference, such as the OED or another unabridged dictionary). Please do feel free to add comments here offering any such deductions, under the word's entry as you have been doing, but comments in a continuous stream expressing surprise that this or that bizarre term is "missing," may become wearisome to others who are viewing them all over the Community page.

    Also it helps if you ensure you are spelling the word correctly.

    July 21, 2013

  • see incongruity

    July 21, 2013

  • Don't be. Dictionaries and reference works often omit entries for all possible inflections and combinations of works like offbeat plus such suffixes as -ness, -ment &c. Having entries for the suffixes themselves is sufficient; the minimally apperceptive reader can break down any word not having its own entry into its component parts, look each up, and devise the definition for themselves. Otherwise the dictionary would be overflowing with entries for possibly less useful words like confutableness, or whatever.

    July 20, 2013

  • spam

    July 20, 2013

  • you will enjoy this list!

    July 20, 2013

  • sounds a little bit like the English word grandstanding.

    July 18, 2013

  • stomodeum

    July 16, 2013

  • A kind of gas mask used in coal mines. In Miracle at Springhill, Leonard Lerner, 1960, the name is said to have originated in Nova Scotia and to be "derived from that of a German scientist, Alexander Bernhard Draeger, who invented a type of special equipment for breathing in a mine choked with gas." See comments at draegerman.

    July 16, 2013

  • "In the technical jargon of Maritime coal-mining operations, a draegerman is a specially trained rescue worker. A draeger was a gas mask that permitted descent into tunnels where poisonous seepage had occurred." Casselman's Canadian Words Bill Casselman, 1995.

    "To those who are unfamiliar with coal mining, it should be explained that a draegerman is a particularly skillful and robust young miner who has been specially trained in rescue work." The Atlantic Monthly #158, 1936.

    July 16, 2013

  • per balkaar.com (?!) "An obsolete Shetland word for a witch or sorceress"

    Also turned up in a Google Books search, in A Etymological Dictionary of the Scottish Language, Volume 1 by John Jamieson, 1825: "...this designation is given to a pretended sybil or prophetess..."

    Found in works of Sir Walter Scott via same search.

    July 16, 2013

  • how poignant.

    July 15, 2013

  • see also boak.

    July 15, 2013

  • thanks for the additions, ruzuzu and bilby

    July 12, 2013

  • Where did you find all these? hippocratic face! Thank you.

    July 11, 2013

  • how so?

    July 11, 2013

  • what the heck

    July 8, 2013

  • alexz I also originally posited a single word, like litotes, pleonasm, &c. But now that I've been down the rabbit hole and spent far too much time looking at lists of rhetorical figures and such, I'm no longer sure there exists a single word that describes it.

    Perhaps it's time for some pseudo-Greek coinage!

    July 8, 2013

  • see rabbit hole

    July 8, 2013

  • telofy's rhetorical figure is still a mystery to me. Something like cherry picking a straw man, but with the opposite intent.

    July 6, 2013

  • Oh this is great.

    the phrase how the west was won might go here, although it might be superfluous with manifest destiny and march to the sea. I'm also thinking of the phrase the old, weird America but it's more about folk music than any historical event(s), so maybe not

    July 3, 2013

  • Some neurological sequela is forcing me to specify that Inkhorn Leghorn would be Foghorn Leghorn's city cousin.

    July 3, 2013

  • amazing, wonderful (from http://obsoleteword.blogspot.com/)

    July 3, 2013

  • chronic hysteresis loop

    July 3, 2013

  • hi sequin! You were close—semantic satiation is the phrase; also I think jamais vu can encompass it.

    July 3, 2013

  • Got this error message from a database today, evoking an existential crisis

    July 3, 2013

  • chancellor of charm, earl of erudition?

    July 2, 2013

  • "hunger is the teacher of skills"; cf. necessity is the mother of invention

    July 2, 2013

  • wow this is just the word I needed a couple of days ago when I commented on tack-driver. In fact, I'm gonna edit that comment

    July 1, 2013

  • "one who presents the teeth," a person who smiles falsely or forcedly. A neologism probably coined by novelist Florence King in a column in The National Review.

    June 29, 2013

  • See autonomous sensory meridian response; note the citations above all refer to "Age Specific Mortality Rates".

    June 28, 2013

  • a physical sensation, similar to frisson, caused by stimuli varying from person to person; having one's hair cut close with clippers about the nape of the neck is a common example. Not recognized by science but widely discussed on the internet (1 2 3). Usually called ASMR.

    June 28, 2013

  • seems to be a go-to metaphor amongst hoplophiles.

    June 28, 2013

  • yeh, It's not in any reliable reference site, I think it's a case of spurious info propagating thru the interwebs...but who am I to stop that process. Who knows, before too long it may be the official name.

    But I think it came from this document, or one like it. It shows up as inymph in google. but if you open the link and find the sentence, it just says "nymph".

    June 25, 2013

  • I think this might be an OCR error, not a real word, judging by the Google hits :(

    June 25, 2013

  • to force oneself to act.

    used as an imperative, the speaker is demanding action on a particular item within the interlocutor's purview. The implication is the speaker desires that they be all over it like a cheap suit or perhaps like white on rice.

    June 24, 2013

  • a funny animal with a silly name and it's not listed anywhere!

    June 24, 2013

  • ooh shiny

    June 24, 2013

  • see vandemonian

    June 24, 2013

  • having to do with either the mythological centaur Chiron, or the astronomical centaur (see 2nd definition in Wiktionary entry under centaur) designated 2060-Chiron.

    June 23, 2013

  • from Wikipedia:

    Heimaey (-is), literally Home Island, is an Icelandic island. At a size of 13.4 km² (5.2 sq. miles), it is the largest island in the Vestmannaeyjar archipelago, and the largest and most populated Icelandic island outside the main island of Iceland. Heimaey lies approximately 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) off the south coast of Iceland. It is the only populated island of the Vestmannaeyjar islands, with a population of approximately 4,500.

    June 23, 2013

  • This is defined under, and is linked to from, psalm-melodicon. A couple more for the musical instrument listers!

    June 21, 2013

  • alexz: have you perchance perused the Arsenal for Civil Defunse list? I think you might like it.

    June 20, 2013

  • well thank you for 1) the kind words 2) listening to my didactic rambling 3) giving me a nice list to add words to. I'm off to check out the rest of your lists, then...

    June 20, 2013

  • possible derivation of runcible?

    June 20, 2013

  • see koozie.

    June 20, 2013

  • this is the kind of insight for which I rely on you.

    I like "PwnCloudr". I think I'd be glad to get in at the ground floor at PwnCloudr, and be blithely paid in stock options

    June 20, 2013

  • seems not unlike rapprochement(?)

    June 19, 2013

  • See also these lists:

    Violence

    Words that hurt

    June 18, 2013

  • possibly a variation on lethologica?

    June 18, 2013

  • we're talking about words!

    June 18, 2013

  • see psithurism

    June 18, 2013

  • wilbur, this is the best citation ever.

    June 17, 2013

  • I've done a bit quite a few. I have to politely say it would be good of you to put comments on the actual word page (for instance, see the comment I've added on boomeranging) instead of in the entries of your lists. That way, anyone who later looks up the word will see your comment (instead of it being all but hidden, here on your list).

    Also, if you're not finding expected definitions for words on your lists, you should be aware that wordnik is case-sensitive & the default entries for most words are lowercase. In fact, my OCD tells me you should take the time to fix up this list so all its entries are lowercase...but that's entirely up to you of course.

    Basically the idea is that if someone clicks on a word on someone else's list, your list will show up on the word page, and vice versa. If the words on your lists are capitalized or otherwise differ from the default entries, that doesn't happen.

    This is a great list. I wouldn't have made such a long-winded comment otherwise :)

    June 17, 2013


  • per calypso27:
    Boomeranging - yes, this IS a word. (Ex. 'The multiple shards came at me, boomeranging in heavy arches')

    June 17, 2013

  • from Hull Zero Three by Greg Bear:

    "Don't look now, but we're brachiating."

    "In public?"

    June 17, 2013

  • this list would be extremely useful for creating random internet startup names (be sure to use camelcase!): CitePile! GigaTrak! AutoClient! CopyGraph! MegaMiniPlus! StokeBaboon!

    June 17, 2013

  • 'The state of being tired to the point that one can no longer pronounce the word "tired."'

    (http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=ti-ti)

    my coconspirator says this. I think she picked it up from some friends who are on the younger side/

    June 17, 2013

  • wow this is a cool word. And not listed yet

    June 17, 2013

  • In Charles Stross' The Jennifer Morgue he writes an afterword in which James Bond is dissected and discussed as a classic Mary Sue, at least as regards the creator, Ian Fleming's, relationship with the character. Very interesting.

    June 17, 2013

  • a good single-word replacement for tempest in a teapot or much ado about nothing

    June 12, 2013

  • see flickr content!

    June 11, 2013

  • this is usually rendered as, and is defined under, lampblack

    June 11, 2013

  • astaxanthin?

    June 11, 2013

  • from urbandictionary.com:

    A word, normally repeated three times as in [homina homina homina], to express shock, befuddlement, or general speechlessness. Often when looking at a particularly attractive member of the speaker's favored sex. It probably comes from Ralph Kramden on "The Honeymooners."

    Attractive Female: Hello.

    Me: Homina homina homina.

    I first saw this used, I believe in a comic book, by a character who had just narrowly avoided some potentially fatal violence.

    June 10, 2013

  • the list title.

    June 10, 2013

  • I smell politics.

    June 10, 2013

  • tienwru, if you mean etymologically, it's similar to affinity, which is from the Latin ad-, to, + fīnis, boundary; meaning "related by marriage" (literally, "bordering on" or "adjacent to").

    June 10, 2013

  • saw this today in a column in the Telegraph, used to describe Scottish novelist Iain Banks, who died this Sunday (2013-07-09). Doesn't seem to be formally defined anywhere, online at least.

    sionnach has a list from his novel The Crow Road.

    And another list from another of his books.

    June 10, 2013

  • from Wikipedia:

    A cimeter or scimitar is a large, curved butcher's knife, with a blade typically 10-12" (25-30cm) long. It is used primarily for cutting large pieces of meat into retail cuts such as steaks.

    I used to use these working at a seafood counter. I've never seen one in anyone's kitchen other than my own (and my then-boss' kitchen).

    June 7, 2013

  • noddy, you are looking for skeuomorph?

    June 7, 2013

  • (The) War on Fun is a perceived crackdown on nightlife, events, and various other parties of partiers in a municipal area. Commonly mentioned in press in San Francisco, CA, referencing actions and measures implemented by the San Francisco City Council, police department, and California Bureau of Alcoholic Beverage Control.

    Stop the War on Fun

    topic: War on Fun

    June 6, 2013

  • see fly blind

    June 6, 2013

  • This has same definition in Latin; one who chats

    June 6, 2013

  • In San Francisco we have the War on Fun.

    June 6, 2013

  • deinonychus' comment is language often used in reference to homeopathic preparations which consist almost entirely of water.

    June 6, 2013

  • see take something as read

    June 6, 2013

  • an intensifier applied to a question; or also, in UK English, a standalone interjection expressing surprise or anger in regards to some matter under discussion.

    June 6, 2013

  • defined (by Wiktionary) under double-plus-ungood

    June 6, 2013

  • trying to figure out the poetic meter of this sentence. does it have one? anyone know this stuff?

    your prob′ lem is that′ you lack struc′ ture said he′

    don′ ning his weld′ ers mask′

    May 24, 2013

  • alexz I always picture the faller with their head aimed roughly in the direction of the fall when take a header is used, whether protecting it or not; for instance, a sot passes out while leaning on the railing of a pier and takes a header into the water.

    May 24, 2013

  • ian.squire.92, I think you are looking for the third definition in the Wiktionary entry under cheese. Any tense would be perfectly permissible in Scrabble, except maybe cheesen.

    May 24, 2013

  • came across this in an old Guardian UK article and find it's been attended to by assiduous wiktionarists. The gratifyingly droll phrase beware of deepities is the subheading beginning the paragraph in the article

    May 24, 2013

  • by far the most common usage of this phrase is "to take it as read that...(something is the case)"

    also commonly mis- or alternately-phrased as take it as written or sometimes take it as writ

    May 23, 2013

  • this is one of those "there's a name for that" kind of words.

    (Is there an adjective that? Something that means "having a detailed meaning"?)

    May 23, 2013

  • dolan pls

    May 21, 2013

  • thanks for the addition, danama.

    May 20, 2013

  • I just started adding a bunch of words then realized the scope of my undertaking. *ule *ular *ute etc. return a plethora of words that could be added to this list...

    May 17, 2013

  • a meme-ish phrase used when one has reached a milestone or accomplished something noteworthy. Derived from video games in which the player works through a hierarchical sequence or tree of goals; "unlocking" one allows further progress through the game, access to more difficult achievements, and often new powers, abilities, etc.

    May 17, 2013

  • to infuse some undertaking or event with great and painstaking effort, weighty gestures, elaborate histrionics, florid melodrama, or all of the above

    May 16, 2013

  • 乾杯, a toast in Japanese: "drain the glass"

    May 15, 2013

  • good morrow all

    i found a way—i think—for you to remove terms added to your open lists by others. see my comment up in here: http://support.wordnik.com/wordnik/topics/cant_delete_other_users_words_on_own_list

    May 15, 2013

  • alternate/archaic spelling of sangreal

    May 15, 2013

  • I have fond(ish) memories of producing this sound, back in the fifth grade.

    also: not listed?!

    May 15, 2013

  • thus tag it, then

    May 14, 2013

  • from Wikipedia:

    A term coined by researchers in Cornell University's Social Media Lab that describes small/innate lies which are usually sent electronically, and are used to terminate conversations or to save face. For example sending an SMS to someone reading "I have to go, the waiter is here" when you are not at a restaurant is an example of a butler lie.

    http://birnholtz.hci.cornell.edu/paper0940-hancock.pdf

    May 13, 2013

  • so this is mostly a list of acts & types of verbal or written deception.

    see also:

    Fubbery and Blaflum

    Pants on fire

    Not Quite The Real Thang

    Misdirector's Cut

    Loaded Dice

    disinformation

    May 13, 2013

  • I've not.

    May 12, 2013

  • seeing this word caused the phrase plumbum oscillans to dredge itself up from the back of some rattling, rusted file cabinet of my brain. at first i could not remember a thing about it.

    May 10, 2013

  • (probably pseudo-) Latin for "swinging the lead"; British doctors' slang for malingering, or seeking a sick note to take time off work. I believe I saw this a while back in an old Eric Partridge slang dictionary. It may originally have been a British armed forces' slang term, equivalent to the U.S. goldbricking

    May 10, 2013

  • I'm a fan of the origin of this phrase; it's an attribution to Julius Caesar (usually "alea iacta est"), supposedly stated as he gave the command to his army to begin crossing the river Rubicon, officially entering Roman land, and thereby irrevocably committing himself to civil war. Thus also the phrase cross the Rubicon.

    May 10, 2013

  • Slovak, "stink"

    May 8, 2013

  • Howdy.

    May 8, 2013

  • merci mille fois, chezmoi, I have added it.

    May 7, 2013

  • do bilbies inhabit these?

    May 7, 2013

  • this is notable for the fact that the definition not only states nothing about the word but seems entirely unrelated. Perhaps just a bug though.

    May 7, 2013

  • a bizarre new addition to corpspeak lexicon?

    Today in a meeting one of my coworkers said "Let's gestate this," as some kind of coda, tabling a discussion.

    Also: twitter spambots seem to have this word in heavy rotation at the moment: see Tweets

    May 3, 2013

  • A nullified attribution intended to convey the absurdity of a statement.

    "Thank god it's Monday," said no one ever.

    from urbandictionary.com

    (copied from carlos-words--1)

    May 2, 2013

  • from wikipedia:

    The Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which unskilled individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly rating their ability much higher than average. This bias is attributed to a metacognitive inability of the unskilled to recognize their mistakes.

    May 1, 2013

  • from The Scarcliff Dictionary of Branding

    theronym

    Posted on December 30, 2007 by Brent

    A brand name derived from the name of an animal.

    Ford Mustang sports car

    Chicago Bears American football team

    May 1, 2013

  • variant of ma'am

    April 30, 2013

  • dudette

    April 30, 2013

  • so basically two consecutive palindromes (lexical or not) that can be concatenated to produce an acceptable word eg debedded. In fact, the simple plural of most single-word noun palindromes would be a circular palindrome: madams, ewes, rotators

    April 30, 2013

  • metadex? tabuloplex? hyperlist?

    April 26, 2013

  • see grey goo

    April 25, 2013

  • lots of folks have sciency-fictiony (I just made that up) lists just like this one. Here are the ones I have been raiding:
    Speculative Megastructures
    Artificial Intelligence
    Humanoids
    Blinded with Science
    Technical Terms for Fictional Concepts
    akmed13's Words
    Criswell Predicts
    Science Fiction Double Feature
    They Came From Outer Space!
    technobabble
    Star Trek and Star Wars
    words... of the FUTURE
    nanomenclature
    Transhumanity
    this modern world

    defenders-of-the-stratosphere
    and deinonychus’ dazzling Pure science
    plus a couple others I can't find now.

    thanks everyone!
    (that said, a lot of the words on this here list were not otherwise listed—surprisingly so, in some cases)

    April 25, 2013

  • can be a transitive verb:

    -To assault or attack, as a target or location, by means of drone(s).

    "That feeling...gripped me when my village was droned just days ago." -- Farea al-Muslimi, Yemeni journalist, before a US Senate subcommittee, 2013-04-23

    April 24, 2013

  • great find! I am recalled of a twitter parody account called DEVOPS BORAT, rife with esoteric jokes and broken English. I find it hilarious but perhaps that's just me.

    April 23, 2013

  • I am tidally locked in childlike wonder to this list. whole oceans of choice words and hidden gems in unlimited detail! You've a rare talent.

    April 17, 2013

  • "The surface of last scattering refers to the set of points in space at the right distance from us so that we are now receiving photons originally emitted from those points at the time of photon decoupling."

    from Cosmic microwave background radiation on wikipedia

    I find this a remarkable phrase on several levels

    April 17, 2013

  • “There are things known and there are things unknown and in between are the doors of perception.” Aldous Huxley

    April 10, 2013

  • I pretty much agree, especially in terms of usage vs. convention...I mainly wanted to have a link to where the entry is found

    April 10, 2013

  • also used as an interjection, meaning "let us begin"

    April 10, 2013

  • your fathers name was Ion as in Beam? or Lon as in Cheney?

    April 10, 2013

  • notwithstanding ALL the examples, I believe the proper form is Legionnaires' disease

    April 10, 2013

  • carlosG commented this on his list, but I wanted to also have it here because I like it a lot:

    zOMG:

    zOMG is a variant of the all-too-popular acronym "OMG", meaning "Oh My God".

    The "z" was originally a mistake while attempting to hit the shift key with the left hand, and type "OMG"

    Also used in all-caps, 'ZOMG' is generally used in a sarcastic manner, more often than not a humiliating fasion. It is also used as a device for stating the obvious.

    "zOMG! you r teh winz!!one!!eleven!"

    http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=zomg

    April 8, 2013

  • This is a contraction of "I don't". See tweets at right. Commonly heard, but I did not realize people had started spelling it phonetically as such.

    April 8, 2013

  • exclamation point is definitely more common here in California. I couldn't speak for all the hill people, desert dwellers and fancy-pants east coasters around. I say we squash the beef and all start calling it the ecphoneme! (found that in an unretraceable "Related Words" meander from here).

    Also, it looks like frogapplause as well feels somewhat strongly about this phrasing!!!

    April 5, 2013

  • Southern U.S. colloquial: jarringly fetid.

    April 5, 2013

  • yes, medical device user documentation can be surprisingly pregnant with eldritch menace, I find. I imagine it's different if you are a doctor or technician. "Ho hum, another day, another cirrhotic stigmata"

    April 3, 2013

  • up,up,down,down,left,right,left,right,b,a,start

    April 3, 2013

  • I find myself agreeing with pterodactyl. There is something irksome about two or four bangs.

    ...also, gotta love these algorithms—America is listed as a synonym above.

    April 3, 2013

  • "run and tell that" = "proceed to alert given authority figure(s) as to my doings, if you wish; I am unconcerned" = IDGAF

    April 2, 2013

  • to beat down; to kick someone's ass. Also describes a single, forceful blow to the head. cf. maul, wallop

    March 28, 2013

  • this is great

    ✖⊚✖⊚

    March 28, 2013

  • a large number, 10 to the power of 10 to the power of 100.

    March 27, 2013

  • humbug

    March 25, 2013

  • cf. Words that kick serious ass.

    March 25, 2013

  • Science fiction author Stephen Baxter's descriptions of this state are vivid and trenchant. Can't remember the book(s) they were in, though.

    March 23, 2013

  • beautiful, beautiful. thank you dreaday, and bilby for pointing me to this

    March 23, 2013

  • check this one out

    March 22, 2013

  • my (embarrassing) list contemporary-character-classes is tangentially related to this

    March 22, 2013

  • variant of what's your poison

    March 21, 2013

  • defined under the night is young by Wiktionary although I believe this construction is much more common

    March 21, 2013

  • see could have, would have, should have

    March 21, 2013

  • see pull the plug

    March 20, 2013

  • backflips

    March 20, 2013

  • corporate jargon for "what the fuck" — as endearingly defined on urbandictionary.com

    March 20, 2013

  • see frosh

    March 15, 2013

  • crocodiles and alligators has extra crocodilians.

    March 15, 2013

  • i've fallen off the "top listers" sidebar. woe.

    March 13, 2013

  • see pissing contest

    March 13, 2013

  • I use it as often as I can (to wit, as remains below the annoyance threshold of my coworkers and clients)

    March 13, 2013

  • I will accept it as a real word/construction when in non-formal writing its usage vs. the standard usage exceeds an arbitrary ratio...say 24:1. Which I give even odds of happening by 2050.

    March 12, 2013

  • See teju

    March 11, 2013

  • A lizard, Tejus rufescens or Tejus teguexin. See teju

    March 11, 2013

  • "of large size and most repulsive aspect"...oh Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia, you old roustabout, you.

    March 11, 2013

  • cf. hunormous

    March 11, 2013

  • Proper names of specific stars probably don't belong here but may also be of interest

    March 11, 2013

  • I always thought this was an archaic euphemism for a prostitute. Can't find any citations right now though.

    March 1, 2013

  • I can offer a definition from my personal experience. In many cases synonymous with the "San Francisco Burrito" or "Mission Burrito", this is a large portable meal(s) consisting of meat, cheese, rice, beans, salsa (hot sauce, pico de gallo, or both), sour cream and certain optional ingredients (frequently lettuce, minced cilantro, or guacamole), wrapped in a large (usually 14-inch) tortilla, further wrapped in two layers of aluminum foil. It typically weighs 0.5 - 1 kg, contains >1500 calories, and by many is—indeed can only be—eaten in intervals over the course of a day. It is most often purchased from a taqueria or taco truck. Several Mexican-American chain restaurants, notably Chipotle, have adopted versions into their menus.

    March 1, 2013

  • no I agree. It makes me think of the phrase soil oneself. Ew. Even though I find the phrase in one's own filth somehow hilarious.

    February 26, 2013

  • bilby, you may then enjoy the strange output of Horse_ebooks on Twitter, whence it was taken.

    February 25, 2013

  • cf. mephitic

    February 18, 2013

  • It should be noted that this is Georgian

    February 18, 2013

  • see fuck all

    February 18, 2013

  • this is awesome

    February 13, 2013

  • Latin, "he has lost his purse".

    February 12, 2013

  • Ah, see I'd seen it with different spelling(s), now I'm thinking it must have been in older works. Mark Twain maybe.

    ngram

    February 12, 2013

  • bzzzt, try again.

    February 11, 2013

  • I kind of admire the plucky little devil.

    February 11, 2013

  • metaphor describing a tendency or urge to do the wrong thing under a given set of circumstances, for no other reason than that it is possible to do so. cf. shoulder angel, shoulder devil.

    possibly coined by Poe in his short story (1845) of the same name. Also used by Neal Stephenson in the Baroque Cycle books.

    February 7, 2013

  • Ancient Greek, "nineteen years"; see Metonic cycle.

    (cf. ennead)

    February 7, 2013

  • Transient lunar phenomonon (TLP): refers to short-lived lights, colors, or changes in appearance of the lunar surface. Claims of short-lived phenomena go back at least 1000 years, with some having been observed independently by multiple witnesses or reputable scientists. Nevertheless, the majority of transient lunar phenomena reports are irreproducible and do not possess adequate control experiments that could be used to distinguish among alternative hypotheses.

    February 7, 2013

  • it's probably not tui sarcomas

    February 7, 2013

  • According to Eric Partridge (who I am disinclined to doubt) this was once a term for a strange sex act involving the armpit.

    February 6, 2013

  • A type of omelette popularized in California during the gold rush of the 1850s, containing bacon and oysters.

    February 6, 2013

  • "‘guacolate’ has been looked up 497 times" and appears as a related word under capsaicin (along with paedophile and tyrannosaurus). According to Google, it may be some kind of chocolate-avocado cake recipe.

    February 5, 2013

  • see bird's eye chili

    February 5, 2013

  • bird's eye chilies. One translation of the Thai phrik khi nu.

    February 5, 2013

  • A cultivar of capsicum annuum, under widespread cultivation in South Asia, bearing as fruit a small, very pungent hot pepper, commonly used in cuisine of the cultures in this area. A.k.a. phrik khi nu, Thai chili pepper, cabe rawit in Indonesia, Thai dragon, boonie pepper and other names.

    February 5, 2013

  • see bird's eye chili

    February 5, 2013

  • see bird's eye chili

    February 5, 2013

  • also phrik khi nu; the bird's eye chili, very common in Thai and other southeast Asian cuisine

    February 5, 2013

  • the bird's eye chili pepper

    February 5, 2013

  • this guy has a database of cultivars (with pictures!) that puts my piddling list to shame.

    February 5, 2013

  • I want to go there

    February 4, 2013

  • see African bird's eye

    February 4, 2013

  • an African cultivar of c. frutescens, also known as the piri-piri pepper.

    February 4, 2013

  • see African bird's eye

    February 4, 2013

  • see Scoville scale, Scoville heat unit

    February 4, 2013

  • describing the action (increase in viscosity) of a dilatant fluid under shear strain. See also non-Newtonian fluid.

    February 4, 2013

  • Ruritania

    Westeros, Winterfell from the Ice and Fire books

    Fillory from The Magicians

    Arbre from Anathem

    February 2, 2013

  • see comment at busy beaver

    February 1, 2013

  • see stick (of eels)

    February 1, 2013

  • Hi

    February 1, 2013

  • a pic will make u puke.

    February 1, 2013

  • unagi kabayaki is served in a soy-sauce-based glaze which is (delicious and) sticky. 25 eels to the stick hm?

    February 1, 2013

  • yay thanks! I added some more. There are def. a lot of historical nations and archaic names out there, but I tried to limit it to the ones that could be considered poetic.

    Helvetica should probably be Helvetia on this list. Or perhaps Confœderatio Helvetica

    January 31, 2013

  • an imaginary, but not metaphorical place. Is there a list for that?

    January 30, 2013

  • netherstocks

    January 30, 2013

  • I added Legionnaires' disease because it's lexically pretty unique—a possessive medical eponym named for a group rather than an individual—and found that there are a bajillion possessive-eponymic diseases named for their describers/discoverers (which may be a reason that sionnach disallowed names on x's y.... Anyway, if anyone wants to add them here, go ahead, but there are a lot.

    Edit: there is also a ton of scientific laws, natural phenomena, and logical paradoxes named in this way. The listers at Wikipedia have done this job already.

    January 30, 2013

  • Oh that is excellent. Another every potential list is an existing list situation! Except, that one disqualifies proper nouns...nor shall I fail to ransack it. thanks!

    January 30, 2013

  • Any of these? Cipangu, Antioch, Abyssinia, Anatolia, Thule, Iberia, Khorasan, Arabia Felix

    January 30, 2013

  • bum's rush

    edit: oh for Pete's sake, go here.

    January 29, 2013

  • hell's bells, fool's errand

    January 28, 2013

  • seen here.

    January 28, 2013

  • enthralling, but I'm not sure what I'd do if I found it crawling on me :D

    likewise with the gelatin slug caterpillar also posted on that site

    January 28, 2013

  • "mate with malice," a yerba mate drink spiked with aguardiente or pisco, consumed mainly in rural Chile

    January 27, 2013

  • Those are good ones, Sr. z, thanks

    January 27, 2013

  • butter tea revolts me, but people in Tibet reportedly drink a ton of it. Should it go here?

    January 27, 2013

  • I wouldn't be surprised to find that the Watford library photocopier repair bill Emergency Action Commitee meeting planner assistant was a milquetoast

    January 27, 2013

  • I had noticed this too. I thought it might be related to Google's recent efforts to "personalize" search by ranking certain results based on your search and browsing history. alexz, do you have a Google account with which you were logged in, when you noticed those results?

    January 27, 2013

  • fbharjo made this list approximately 104× better.

    January 26, 2013

  • ricin?

    January 26, 2013

  • an alcoholic mixed drink consisting of coffee liqueur, "white crème de cacao," and heavy cream.

    January 26, 2013

  • 1) a drink of instant coffee, water and sugar cooked together, combined then with vodka. 2) Allen's Coffee Brandy, a coffee liqueur popular in Maine.

    January 26, 2013

  • merely a cloud on the horizon. Or perhaps we're in the eye of the hurricane. Still, it's an ill wind that blows nobody good, and every cloud has a silver lining–we'll be right as rain. I guess just wait and see which way the wind is blowing. Maybe there's a rainy weather report around here somewhere.

    January 26, 2013

  • shouldn't it be tempest in a teapot?

    (google books ngram)

    January 26, 2013

  • kǔdīng chá, "bitter spikeleaf tea," a Chinese infusion with folk-medicinal uses, made with any of various plant species. One of the most commonly used is the holly species ilex kudingcha, which may explain the invigorating and focusing effects attributed to the drink, being that three other holly species (ilex paraguariensis or yerba mate, its close relative ilex guayusa, and yaupon holly) are known to contain caffeine.

    January 26, 2013

  • caffeinated chewing gum available under various brand names.

    January 26, 2013

  • see comments at cassine and yaupon holly.

    January 26, 2013

  • ilex vomitoria contains a certain amount of caffeine; thus its use in brewing black drink and, later by European settlers, cassine.

    January 26, 2013

  • My guess is that it's simply an attempt at metaphor that didn't really come off (metaphor misphire?)

    January 26, 2013

  • cassine or cassina were names given by early European colonists of North America to drinks brewed from caffeine-containing yaupon holly as substitutes for coffee and tea. See also black drink.

    January 26, 2013

  • guaraná, distinct from guarana, is used in Brazil to denote any of the various guarana-infused soft drinks available there.

    January 26, 2013

  • Swedish coffee drink; brännvin (i.e., vodka or possibly aquavit) with coffee added.

    January 26, 2013

  • commonly drunk in Tibet. Black tea leaves are brewed in boiling water for an extended period; the resulting tea preparation is then transferred to a vessel also containing yak butter and salt, and mixed therewith.

    January 25, 2013

  • a coffee preparation very popular in Senegal, to the point of being referred to as the "spiritual beverage" of the country. The coffee beans are roasted with the addition of grains of Selim a.k.a. Guinea pepper, and sometimes cloves; then is ground and brewed in the normal filter method.

    January 25, 2013

  • an espresso with steamed milk, cinnamon, and honey. cf. melya

    January 25, 2013

  • Also: a coffee drink consisting of a Thai iced tea with a double shot of espresso.

    January 25, 2013

  • see cha-yen

    January 25, 2013

  • "Thai iced tea", a popular tea drink in Thailand and the U.S.; strongly brewed black tea (traditionally Ceylon tea) with additional ingredients, usually orange blossom water, star anise, crushed tamarind, sugar and condensed milk or cream.

    January 25, 2013

  • fair enough Messer alexz, changed. bilby, essentially that is correct, however, I found recently that in fact, either spelling is acceptable in en_US (for the color, not the surname of course), gray being only the more common.

    January 25, 2013

  • what fun!

    January 25, 2013

  • what I see when I read kaisersmarrn in the trending words list. Every single time.

    January 25, 2013

  • See comment on kopi jawa. I saw it on Wikipedia so it must be true!!

    In my poking around today, several times I saw the phrase coffee liqueur used as though it is the regular descriptor for that class of drinks, so...I'm not sure. caffè Borghetti is a thing.

    January 25, 2013

  • "Coffee with scent," coffee with Portuguese (pomace-based?) aguardiente added.

    January 25, 2013

  • in context of coffee brewing, this refers to preparing coffee in a pot or pan, often over a fire. cf cowboy coffee

    January 25, 2013

  • espresso served with a piece of lemon rind, or slice of lemon, intended for application to the rim of the cup.

    January 25, 2013

  • aka dry cappuccino, prepared with less than the normal amount of milk.

    January 25, 2013

  • cappuccino with greater than the normal amount of milk.

    January 25, 2013

  • a cappuccino chiaro.

    January 25, 2013

  • a triple-shot red eye.

    January 25, 2013

  • coffee prepared in a saucepan

    January 25, 2013

  • "Parisian coffee"; espresso with hot cocoa and cognac

    January 25, 2013

  • oops, fixed.

    January 25, 2013

  • I added kopi luwak but it's unclear whether kopi jawa is not also a style of preparation (in addition to generically referring to Javanese coffee).

    January 25, 2013

  • A Thai iced coffee drink that also contains soybeans, corn and sesame seeds

    January 25, 2013

  • coffee with a teaspoon of unsweetened cocoa and some honey.

    January 25, 2013

  • Wikipedia has: "The Indonesian phrase Kopi Jawa refers not only to the origin of the coffee, but is used to distinguish a style of strong, black, and very sweet coffee."

    January 25, 2013

  • mexican tripe soup

    January 24, 2013

  • yes, and dated, and inaccurate...real Mexican breakfasts are generally heavy on the tortillas and beans, sometimes with eggs, various soups, and on Sundays, the hangover-curing menudo.

    Edit: the flickr content reminds me that fried plantains, chorizo, avocado, roasted chiles, and various aguas frescas are common/traditional elements as well.

    January 24, 2013

  • Oh I see, clever boots. Specific preparations, yes. Avoiding straight synonyms for coffee. I was thinking about chocolate coated espresso beans, yeah, anything you find like that seems cool.

    So monsignor bilby, my question is can you say "I'm drinking kopi luwak (god help me)?" or must you say "I'm drinking coffee made from kopi luwak (when will this nightmare be over)."

    January 24, 2013

  • a clever person. Probably related to slyboots. See also boots.

    January 24, 2013

  • alexz! Thanks for your additions. Mountain Dew, Pepsi and Coke all have caffeine, but soda, pop and soda pop are words describing any soft drink regardless of caffeinatedness, so maybe those shouldn't go here.

    January 24, 2013

  • tea. so-called from the perception that gossip took place while drinking it.

    January 24, 2013

  • In Japan, canned coffee (缶コーヒー) drinks have been ubiquitous for many years, the first brands were marketed in the late 1960s.

    January 24, 2013

  • espresso with lime

    January 24, 2013

  • hmm good point, I don't know. Basically what I want here is names of specific drinks and possibly methods/accoutrements of brewing. So unless someone starts feeding civets coffee grounds and then getting them to drink a lot of water...

    January 24, 2013

  • see comment at kaapi

    January 24, 2013

  • sometimes refers to a style of coffee called South Indian coffee, Indian shaken coffee, or meter coffee. Instant coffee with milk and sugar, poured from one glass to another until well-frothed.

    January 24, 2013

  • yet another red eye coffee variant.

    January 24, 2013

  • "Parisian coffee"; espresso with hot cocoa and cognac

    January 24, 2013

  • sweetened espresso with rum + lemon peel

    January 24, 2013

  • see also red eye

    January 24, 2013

  • Another name for the red eye coffee preparation.

    January 24, 2013

  • Name for a coffee drink. See comment at red eye

    January 24, 2013

  • Also a name for a coffee drink. See comment at red eye

    January 24, 2013

  • Also a coffee drink. See comment at red eye.

    January 24, 2013

  • see comment at red eye

    January 24, 2013

  • one of the more common names for that coffee drink which is made by adding an espresso shot to a cup of black coffee.

    January 24, 2013

  • espresso with pepper

    January 24, 2013

  • jokingly defined either as a cigarette and a glass of water, or a cigarette and a cup of coffee.

    January 24, 2013

  • Vietnamese iced coffee with sweetened condensed milk, and sometimes with chicory. A.k.a. cafe da. Properly cà phê đá.

    January 24, 2013

  • Vietnamese, "iced coffee with milk". See cafe da/ca phe da.

    Orthographically, cà phê sữa đá.

    January 24, 2013

  • a type of calorimeter used for holding oxygen at elevated pressures and temperatures.

    January 24, 2013

  • a term of art in manufacturing; modifier describing an "undesirable uneven or rough surface on a molded part."

    January 24, 2013

  • "The deposition on a surface of hard layer or dispersion in a fluid of particles of carbon as a result of the breakdown of oil in a high temperature environment; also known as coking."

    January 24, 2013

  • "Ring of rubber bonded cork gasket materials designed for sealing flat flanges against fluid leakage."

    January 24, 2013

  • reesetee, my version (slightly paraphrased from William Gibson) is sleep is no longer an option. Now to make my own version of this list.

    January 24, 2013

  • are these the kinds of things you are talking about? tires as planter boxes, a spoon to cook heroin, binder clips as cable stays, mason jar as barware or hurricane candle-holder; stethoscope for safecracking, CDs as bike reflectors? I hesitated over spoon because it seems to be the de facto "proper tool for the job" (is there a word that means "proper tool for the job")?

    January 23, 2013

  • a polymer ring that prevents metal-to-metal contact between piston/rod and bore/gland, and absorbs transverse loads.

    January 23, 2013

  • January 23, 2013

  • A minute amount of liquid leaked (or leached) from a seal or weld.

    January 23, 2013

  • also backrinding. in rubber molding processes, a "breaking up" of the rubber normally observed around tool split lines. It results from the rubber shrinking during cure and tearing away at points where the molding is held.

    January 23, 2013

  • "The coat of plaster directly beneath the finish coat. In three-coat work, the brown is the second coat."

    January 23, 2013

  • a flow measurement term that indicates the range of specific flow meter, or meter type, is able to measure with acceptable accuracy; the ratio of maximum valve flow capacity to minimum controllable flow capacity.

    January 23, 2013

  • turndown ratio.

    January 23, 2013

  • also a fictional music genre...like, some amalgam of K-pop and frat rap (which are not fictional)

    January 23, 2013

  • "The minimum amount of air which will allow the complete combustion of the fuel is called the theoretical air." Theoretical in that 100% combustion of fuel is not usually achievable in real-world conditions. Found in an online glossary of boiler terminology.

    January 23, 2013

  • a pollution control apparatus that removes particulates from air/gas released from commercial processes or combustion. Specifically, a large chamber or room housing bag filters (long, cylindrical bags or tubes made of woven or felted fabric) that filter gas streams from a furnace.

    January 23, 2013

  • a receptacle from which a blast of air is supplied (e.g., to a forge or blast furnace); also,

    "A chamber below the grate or surrounding a burner, through which air under pressure is supplied for combustion of the fuel."

    (From British Gas' online glossary of boiler terms)

    January 23, 2013

  • I can't find the list, but this is absolutely a fictional music genre.

    January 23, 2013

  • "That space that is full of boiler water between two parallel plates. It usually forms one or more sides of internally fired boilers."

    January 23, 2013

  • "A short piece of pipe or tube that is closed at one end."

    (From British Gas' online glossary of boiler terms)

    January 23, 2013

  • "A furnace or boiler wall is reinforced with this structural device to prevent motion of the wall." (From British Gas' online glossary of boiler terms)

    motion of the wall, i.e., caused by an expanding boiler tank.

    January 23, 2013

  • "A thermodisk is a temperature sensing device. When heat is applied to the disk, a bi-metal plate will bend." (from http://www.kingsmanind.com/fireplaceterms)

    January 23, 2013

  • never for sale on Craigslist?

    January 23, 2013

  • "Orsat gas analyzer, a device used in gas analysis. This apparatus measures certain gaseous constituents (e.g. carbon monoxide) by absorption in separate chemical solution." (From British Gas' online glossary of boiler terms)

    Patented before 1873 by one Mr. H. Orsat, according to Wikipedia.

    There is also a Mr Orsat Miljenić, as of 2013 the Croatian Minister of Justice

    January 23, 2013

  • Orsat

    January 23, 2013

  • Unhydrated hydraulic cement.

    January 23, 2013

  • heard this today, fell over in a joyous hysterical blackout

    January 23, 2013

  • so, so many hours spent on some of these. Tekken most of all.

    January 23, 2013

  • avec plaisir, ruzuzuzuzuzu. I only wish there were more famous paintings of tuna.

    (I was about to start a "fishing methods" list, but that well's been exhaustively minedboy has it—by our incredibly assiduous friends)

    January 23, 2013

  • Whenever I see an instance of this word I recall Calvin (of Calvin and Hobbes) mentioning one of his new favorite bedtime stories, Captain Coriander Salamander and ’er Single-Hander Bellylander in one of the strips (being the sequel to his perennial favorite, Hamster Huey and the Gooey Kablooie). Those titles were burned into my mind somehow.

    January 23, 2013

  • And is cilantro an analogous shibboleth? I am neutral in any case, though. Schadenfreude is a perfectly functional word I neither like nor dislike. Cilantro, while I extol its food qualities, is also not a good or bad word per se to my ear/mind (I do like "coriander"). However the words here definitely all give me physical creeps, or nearly.

    on another note, now I'm curious....exactly how much did you all prefer the Wordie site to the current site?

    January 23, 2013

  • whoa, I enjoy how cinematic this one seems.

    "Sir!" the clerk rushed in, stammering and sweating.

    "What is it, man? Spit it out!" said the Super. The clerk held up the telegram. It read simply:

    FACEGUARD STOP

    The Super's meerschaum pipe clattered to the platform below, shattering. "May God have mercy on our souls."

    January 22, 2013

  • "a man-made object used to attract oceangoing pelagic fish such as marlin, tuna and mahi-mahi. They usually consist of buoys or floats tethered to the ocean floor with concrete blocks."

    January 22, 2013

  • that's weird, because cuts of sole are usually called fillets...same with most flatfish (except Alaskan halibut fillet, which is sometimes thick enough to be called loin, at least toward the head—but at that point it's little more than a marketing term. Fishmongers will sometimes offer "'loin cut' halibut steaks"). I have heard the construction loin out, as in "get those tombo loined out."

    January 22, 2013

  • I can't find a definition to back me up, but, for swordfish, tuna, some shark, and other large food fish such as opah, a loin refers to one of the four long, unbroken muscles that the fish uses for propulsion and from which steaks can be cut. These are quadrants, back/belly/left/right, such that the back and belly loin together, from a given side, forms what would be called the fillet in a smaller fish.

    This google image search may shed some light on the subject.

    January 22, 2013

  • added a comment to loin to clarify this matter

    January 22, 2013

  • also armpit of the world

    January 22, 2013

  • An interval or temporary state during which a person seems to possess extraordinary focus, determination, and physical ability; ensuing domination of opponents, in athletics, is sometimes implied. cf. in the zone.

    (From the popular Sega video game, Altered Beast, in which the hero transforms into various beasts with exceptional abilities.)

    January 22, 2013

  • Oh my goodness, wow. This is a cool list! indeed marky, fo sho. on the real. word is born. oh snap, here I go...

    January 22, 2013

  • a bloody great knife used in Japan for cutting loins (*ugh*) from whole caught tuna

    January 22, 2013

  • hah. wait, why schadenfreude? Wouldn't I be a masochist for making this list? So, then, schadenfreude for you...?

    (And on bilby's part, sadism—zounds, bilb, that was excruciating)

    cilantro = a dangerous controlled substance, more addictive than crack cocaine. fact.

    January 22, 2013

  • a set of surveillance procedures covering the whole transfusion chain from the collection of blood and its components to the follow-up of its recipients, intended to collect and assess information on unexpected or undesirable effects resulting from the therapeutic use of labile blood products, and to prevent their occurrence and recurrence' (http://www.ihn-org.net).

    January 22, 2013

  • cf. vireosylvia

    January 21, 2013

  • "Local monarch has abdicated, obviating investiture. Annexation of fecund cornea-meat tracts proceeds apace". --Associated US Railway, Standard Code Cipher, 1905.

    January 21, 2013

  • cf. dwarf male, nannandrous

    see also dimorphism

    January 21, 2013

  • "Send 15 battalions of Adonis-class musquetoons; under attack by biomechanical aculeate megalomacrogyne". --Associated US Railway, Standard Code Cipher, 1905.

    January 21, 2013

  • I'm literally getting a strange sort of hernial, nauseous, panicky feeling in my gut, reading these "hated words"-type lists.

    January 21, 2013

  • passing of red or pink urine following ingestion of beets due to the presence of betalain pigments (e.g. betacyanins) in beetroot.

    January 21, 2013

  • I wonder if it does indeed succor hogs?

    January 21, 2013

  • folk name for taraxacum officinale or dandelion. See also piss-a-bed

    January 21, 2013

  • Aka sand. An anti-caking agent in some foods.

    January 21, 2013

  • also, disgustingly, one of the "natural flavors" of food ingredient listings. Used to impart a "vanilla" flavor to puddings, candies, etc.

    January 21, 2013

  • using old or vintage machinery, equipment, software, etc., either pragmatically or as a hobby. The "Computer Desktop Encyclopedia" at computerlanguage.com claims this is synonymous with retrocomputing and conflates (disputably, to my mind) these terms with steampunk.

    Urbandictionary.com has:<blockquote><strong>Retrotech</strong> high tech aesthetic circa pre-1987. <em>I prefer to use Casio keyboards because they are so retrotech.</em> tags: retro, retro-tech, hi-fi, relic, kitsch</blockquote>cool word, but what I like most is the groovy, swell images in the flickr content below

    January 19, 2013

  • what's up with the flickr content here? A bunch of Second Life cheesecake—and Paul McCartney?

    January 19, 2013

  • Prone to taking the position that someone else will solve one's problems. From Swedish nån annan, "someone else" + -ism

    Popularized in 2006 Swedish parliamentary elections.

    http://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/N%C3%A5nannanism

    I am in support of this term entering the English lexicon.

    January 19, 2013

  • That was me!! And, also, "mega list commenting" is not a problem; the site is the better for it (in fact I think it should have a more lofty term applied, maybe compleating or something). If only there were some more customizable feed of recent comments...not just the Community page...

    January 18, 2013

  • awesome, keep it up!

    January 18, 2013

  • this is meant to be a pun on luchtanvaal, meaning "air raid" in Dutch

    January 17, 2013

  • thankee kindly yarb, it is indeed a marvellous piece of research...tho none of it mine |-D

    January 17, 2013

  • hi ruzuzuzuzuzu (that is how I read your name whenever I see it). I guess this is a bit late, but thanks for saying so. This is great fun.

    January 17, 2013

  • semeliminal?

    January 17, 2013

  • As you will. I was thinking that for some people it is very loaded—terror, hate, betrayal...say it to a military history buff, political partisan, or 9/11 conspiracy theorist and you will definitely get a reaction.

    January 17, 2013

  • A software protocol and API for use with image scanning hardware. The term is simply twain styled in caps, but the widely-held backronym is "technology without an interesting name."

    January 17, 2013

  • broke all to sh*t (sometimes euphemistically defined as "beat all to stuff"

    January 17, 2013

  • meinheer could be added, but note it is nowhere actually defined

    January 17, 2013

  • edit 11/9/2015: it's an alternate spelling of mynheer. Duh

    trying to find a definition or explanation of this is like like squeezing blood from a turnip. Obviously a corruption or (Dutch?) translation of "mein Herr"; it appears all over the place as a (sometimes mock) honorific in the 19th c. in google books; I'm absolutely certain I've heard it said somewhere (Rogers & Hammerstein?), pronounced "myn-eer"; but no real definition or etymology anywhere.

    January 17, 2013

  • Italian. A colony of marine polyps, such as coral

    January 17, 2013

  • "From what we have seen, I think the term zoophyte inapplicable to coral ; it is neither an animal plant, nor a plant animal : nor can it be called a zoolite ; as it is certainly not a stony animal. It is with more propriety a polipaio..."

    Ferrarra, Alfio, M.D. 1812. On the Coral Fishery in the Sicilian Seas. Journal of Natural Philosophy. Vol 33

    January 17, 2013

  • a special seal used for private correspondence. Used e.g. by medieval monarchs. (...similar to privy seal?)

    "S SECRETVUM" below is probably an abbreviation of this.

    January 17, 2013

  • "A private seal" (Merriam-Webster)

    January 17, 2013

  • (botany) Pertaining to species of plants in which male members are markedly smaller than females, such as in some algal species of Oedogonium that have antheridia produced in special dwarf filaments. (McGraw-Hill Science & Technology Dictionary)

    January 17, 2013

  • the dwarf male component of a nannandrous plant

    January 17, 2013

  • also kiefekil

    January 17, 2013

  • for the bird listers. Also estrelda

    January 17, 2013

  • A fossilized animal. Also zoolite.

    January 17, 2013

  • divination with use of weights/scales. Greek zygon, "balance" and manteia, "divination."

    January 17, 2013

  • ‘globigerina-shells’ has been looked up 98 times, and is not a valid Scrabble word.

    January 17, 2013

  • bilby, would you remove Luke skystalker, Gummint, Download limit, and the Harry Potter one? A tiny voice from my, like, hypothalamus is telling me, Wormtongue-style, that they don't belong here.

    January 17, 2013

  • Hi! Are you the one behind listsofnote.com? Your list The BFG was linked to from there. In any case, the lists you have here are very cool! Thank you!

    January 17, 2013

  • "One who travels in a cheap automobile with a family"

    (Criminal Slang: The Vernacular of the Underground Lingo, Vincent Joseph Monteleone, 1949)

    "For instance, the gypsy ('ambulanter' in tramp parlance) is one of those groups Josiah Flynt describes as ‘born on the road’."

    (from cynicalreflections.net blog)

    January 16, 2013

  • Ah. equipment, package, gents, sags, giggleberries, coin purse, yambag, jubblies? and I see jewels but how about family jewels? Also possibly redundant, but scrote and ball bag are common in en_UK. One more that I personally like but is probably not really in common use: James Westfall and Dr. Kenneth Noisewater

    January 16, 2013

  • I can't believe Siege Perilous isn't listed anywhere

    January 15, 2013

  • the "some kind of female sharper" is word for word what the Oxford said. And, bilby, it mentions preñado as well, as a possible (though dubious) etymology...uncanny.

    January 15, 2013

  • GACH, s. Filth or dirt of children. Glouc.

    (Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English, Thomas Wright, 1886)

    January 15, 2013

  • for the fruit and vegetable listers!

    January 15, 2013

  • Another list, oh! so full of words that are also of interest here: fuckward bound

    January 15, 2013

  • I kind of want to make a list just out of the words in the reverse dictionary column here.

    January 15, 2013

  • "thin dime" also refers to an imprecise but tiny amount of money, as seen the tweets →

    January 15, 2013

  • hmm it is so. But since the fork assay is employed after the prescribed baking time, doneness is anticipated; fork-crumb cleavage is normally a confirmation. For some advanced bakers it might well be a vestigial (or, in the case of Mrs. ry, talismanic) observance.

    January 15, 2013

  • His crest should be firm, thin, and well-risen ; his neck long and straight, yet not loose and pliant, which our north countrymen term withy cragged...

    (Farriery on a New and Easy Plan: Being a Treatise on the Diseases and Accidents of The Horse, John Badcock, 1883)

    WITHY-CRAGGED, adj. Said of a horse whose neck is loose and pliant. North.

    (Dictionary of Obsolete and Provincial English, Thomas Wright, 1886)

    January 15, 2013

  • ...because it's done.

    January 14, 2013

  • does anyone have a list of mixed metaphor and catachreses?

    January 14, 2013

  • I propose that the words "quod google" with a link (à la LMGTFY) replace the text "Sorry, no definitions found." for words with no definition.

    Wiktionary has several cites, including:

    2004 — 11 June, Rex F. May, “Re: alternative to D-Day”, soc.history.what-if (Usenet):

    And, even if it were possible, it would have severely messed up Operation Keelhaul, q. g. (quod google).

    January 14, 2013

  • I want to check the OED on this one, but, obs. term for some kind of female "sharper" or con artist?

    January 14, 2013

  • logwood, sumac?

    January 14, 2013

  • add wastel!

    January 14, 2013

  • abounding counterintuitivity. However the wiktionary entry talk page reveals that a common rendering of the usual phrase is "when you're up to your neck in alligators, it's easy to forget that the initial objective was to drain the swamp" which makes more sense...but is a butterfingered and lumbering idiom in any case

    January 14, 2013

  • Indeed, I was half-hoping I might trick somebody in that way. evil laugh!

    January 10, 2013

  • was wondering how old this one was. Google Books turns it up in The Rye House Plot or, Ruth, the Conspirator's Daughter, Vol I, George William MacArchur Reynolds (1800):

    It is no secret that my exchequer is as empty as a nutshell whence the kernel has been extracted...

    January 10, 2013

  • "face like a well-skelped arse" = blushing mightily. Scots

    January 9, 2013

  • surprisingly not a euphemism

    January 9, 2013

  • Note that in the citation (Denham's listing), the terms are given in the plural, so I back-formed singulars to make this list. I may not have done so correctly for each term. Will attempt to correct as needed. LMK of any you notice.

    Also found this helpful article.

    January 9, 2013

  • Why are so many of these on bilby's I Can't Believe It's Not Listed list?

    January 9, 2013

  • sorne would be an OCRtifact or possibly just a typo

    January 9, 2013

  • perhaps it's a variant spelling of the colloquial sheisty?

    January 9, 2013

  • What I think to myself about once a minute while browsing Wordnik

    January 8, 2013

  • this reminds me of hearing the word bombtastic many times during the '90s on KMEL FM radio in San Francisco

    January 8, 2013

  • a film archetype.

    from tvtropes.com:

    Let's say you're a soulful, brooding male hero, living a sheltered, emotionless existence. If only someone — someone female — could come along and open your heart to the great, wondrous adventure of life...It's Manic Pixie Dream Girl to the rescue!

    The Manic Pixie Dream Girl is there to give new meaning to the male hero's life. She's stunningly attractive, high on life, full of wacky quirks and idiosyncrasies (generally including childlike playfulness and a tendency towards petty crime), often with a touch of wild hair dye. She's inexplicably obsessed with our stuffed-shirt hero, on whom she will focus her kuh-razy antics until he learns to live freely and love madly.

    January 8, 2013

  • List to-do: phrases first attested in Chaucer. Lists of phrases from Shakespeare abound on the internet; ol' Geoff has been getting short shrift

    January 8, 2013

  • yesterday or the other day. Could go on your new coinages lists and/or "love to hate"-type lists

    January 8, 2013

  • topsy-turvy seems to be at the milder end of this spectrum, yeah—but I have a few like that, so ima add it.

    January 7, 2013

  • thanks! This is a great list. Found a few more good ones.

    January 7, 2013

  • in ancient Rome, a stamped lead token used to identify soldiers and slaves, or a stamp or mark used to identify certain imperial property

    January 7, 2013

  • rubric?

    January 7, 2013

  • "Yeth-hounds, hounds without heads, supposed to be animated by the spirits of children who have died without baptism. 'These hounds are believed,' says Mr. Halliwell, who quotes a superstition current in Devonshire, 'to ramble among the woods at night, making wailing noises.'"

    from The Lost Beauties of the English Language, Charles Mackay, 1876

    January 5, 2013

  • changeling?

    January 5, 2013

  • Obamadon gracillis, a small (~30 cm) extinct lizard of the late Cretaceous – contemporary to the dinosaurs but not a dinosaur. Named for U.S. president Barack Obama.

    January 4, 2013

  • archaic. the month of August, when things get dryer. See etymologies of sere on Vocabulary.com and etymonline.com

    January 4, 2013

  • This supports bilby's hypothesis (in comments for gentlemen.) that it is a generic name for a man, or for a man perceived as a gentleman, which use probably predates the nicknames.

    January 4, 2013

  • Shinicle, a bonfire. A distant fire or light ; — a little shine. — {Jameson.)

    from The Lost Beauties of the English Language, Charles Mackay, 1876

    also mentioned in the Wikipedia article for moot-hill as, possibly, a signal to gather at such a place.

    January 4, 2013

  • I can attest to its use in professional and semi-professional settings to refer to automotive, computer, and other equipment in which something is munged, borked, banjaxed or otherwise bollixed. In fact I'm adding it to my situation-normal list.

    January 4, 2013

  • Seems to have been the nickname, originally, of James J. Corbett (1866-1933), heavyweight boxing champion who once K.O.ed the celebrated John L. Sullivan, as well as James Woolnaugh, a U.S. Army General active in WWII and Korea. Also later used in reference to several other sports figures.

    January 4, 2013

  • spectacular old word for a dictionary or glossography. Would well suit any "words about words"-type list.

    January 4, 2013

  • also melicratum, hydromel. Obsolete. From Glossographia Anglicana Nova, Thomas Blount, 1656: Melicratum is a Drink made one part of Honey, and eight parts of Rain Waters.

    January 4, 2013

  • oh that is fun. that's kind of what I meant. But more in the sense of "adopt" into one's spoken/written corpus. Or English in general

    January 4, 2013

  • Thanks ruzuzu! I just moved it to a different list though

    January 4, 2013

  • A hunting technique of the great white shark.

    from Predatory Behavior of White Sharks (Carcharodon carcharias) at Seal Island, R. A. Martin, et al (2005):

    Polaris Breach (POL): the shark leapt partially or completely out of the water in a vertical or nearly vertical head-up orientation, with or without a seal grasped in its jaws. In POL that launch a shark completely from the water, the shark may clear the surface by as much as 3 m and often rotates tail over head around the centre of gravity, located ±1/3 along its standard length, re-entering the sea head-first close to its original exit point.

    January 4, 2013

  • we named our daughter Amity.

    January 3, 2013

  • a sweet tooth fairy and title of a face-melting post-rock-ish jam I heard today.

    January 3, 2013

  • no, in fact I did not mean "completely ducked"

    January 2, 2013

  • you'll note I didn't say B__ A___ once. |-D

    Yes I too like place names like these. Perusal of city maps showing neighborhoods and pondering significances is a happy thing. But the weirder ones seem to be more fun. I wish there were a list like this out there for every major city

    January 1, 2013

  • well, thanks for putting it in perspective bilby. I should perhaps change it to "A middling percentage of Americans have heard of..."

    But seriously, you haven't heard of the Haight? Epicenter of the 1960s American hippie subculture, free love movement etc etc?

    December 31, 2012

  • a euphemism for tough s***. "Too bad for you."

    December 31, 2012

  • recently she's adding almost 1 new word per day, so, a bit better than par (they should have ~100-word expressive vocabulary by 24 months). Which tickles me pink, but it's harder to track additions—know I'm missing some—so now seems a good cutoff point, to preserve this list as an artifact of this stage

    December 31, 2012

  • I see what you're saying...maybe I'm hearing something different in my head when I read these than others would.

    December 31, 2012

  • I think it serves a purpose in that it can be used to effect a self-effacing, farcical pomposity. But also when used in seriousness it is a useful bellwether...or shibboleth? Litmus test?.....a thing, anyhow, for discerning wordsmiths from people who think they are better with the language than they are. (Along with irregardless, ekcetra, verbage and so on...& now I'm off to look at all the 'hate' lists)

    December 31, 2012

  • oh, it's because the proper phrase is it's just a flesh wound

    December 29, 2012

  • How am I the first one to have looked this up?

    December 29, 2012

  • v cool. Also Pretty words for when things get ugly turned up.

    December 28, 2012

  • Are we perhaps being told to refer to a woodcut illustration under the given entry in the original print version?

    Also: walrus-bird!!

    December 28, 2012

  • I like how traditional lexicographers used q.v. where wordniks use brackets.

    December 28, 2012

  • military euphemism, using NATO phonetic alphabet, for clusterfuck

    December 28, 2012

  • It seems to be a colloquial variation of creature as well as an alternate spelling of craythur

    (based on this google book search)

    December 28, 2012

  • Welp this began half-serious, but now it's only ~8% serious—& much more fun

    December 28, 2012

  • The result of a messy death by automobile, explosive, small arms fire, etc. "Hair, teeth and eyes all over the highway" "About to blast his hair, teeth and eyes all over the wall" Also, any horribly ugly botch or mess of a situation. "it's hair, teeth and eyes all over the place."

    December 28, 2012

  • hey, this is a perfect sweet tooth fairy

    December 27, 2012

  • this, for me, is the most vivid, trenchant and telling of all the various and sundry f-word constructions

    December 27, 2012

  • doesn't it also mean jumbled, muddled? bilby might know

    December 27, 2012

  • isn't arse over elbow common in the UK these days as well? I think arse over tit can also be used to mean "badly confused" or screwed up in some way.

    December 27, 2012

  • “Hold fast, madam!” cried the aeronaut, as the Empyrean spun earthward. “T'will be settled, by one means or other, ere long.”

    December 27, 2012

  • nope, spam. Link building is required to be relevant to the site in question, you see. Half-cocked SEO flimflammer

    December 27, 2012

  • Sorry, that was obtuse of me. Fomalhaut is the common name. Formalhaut looks like a typo (or possibly a little-used alternate spelling, per this ngram.)

    December 27, 2012

  • Latin, probably "grape-gatherer," or a translation (by Ovid?) of Ptolemy and Plutarch's Protrugeter, apparently "fruit-plucking herald." A northern star, Epsilon Virginis, a giant.

    December 27, 2012

  • sa‘d al-su‘ud, "luck of lucks." A more or less equatorial star, Beta Aquarii, a supergiant

    December 27, 2012

  • from the Greek, "girdle". A northern star, Delta Leonis

    December 27, 2012

  • as-saratan, "the two signs." Beta Arietis, a binary star

    December 27, 2012

  • ‘unuk al-hayyah, "the serpent's neck." A northern (I think) star, Alpha Serpentis.

    December 27, 2012

  • al-raqis, "trotting camel" or "the dancer." A northern star, Mu Draconis.

    December 27, 2012

  • al-tinnin, "the great serpent." A northern star, Gamma Draconis.

    December 27, 2012

  • ancient Assyrian or Babylonian name for the star Sigma Sagittarii, recovered by archaeologists

    December 27, 2012

  • ra’s al-ḥawwa, "snake collector's head." A northern star, Alpha Ophiuchi, a binary system

    December 27, 2012

  • al-dabih, "the butcher." A southern star, Beta Capricorni, multiple star system—several stars visually aligned but not proximate

    December 27, 2012

  • The more common traditional name was Deneb Kaitos, "the whale's tail."

    December 27, 2012

  • a southern star, Theta Eridani.

    December 27, 2012

  • gienah ghurab, "right wing of the crow." A southern star, Gamma Corvi.

    December 27, 2012

  • A southern star. "Atria" is a modern coinage, a contraction of its Bayer designation, Alpha Trianguli Australis.

    December 27, 2012

  • hmm—beauty's in the ear of the beholder—<em>caveat auditor</em>—hem, haw....ok, some candidates:
    up-jumped
    entrails
    steganography
    Ganesha
    stoic
    Bandersnatch
    ultracentrifuge
    analemma
    hie
    Aeroflot
    Azerbaijan
    untergang

    December 27, 2012

  • Portway

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portway

    December 25, 2012

  • Cherry, pumpkin and apple pies, baked into a cake. The turducken of pies.

    December 25, 2012

  • OMG. I'm glad of this list. I've always taken issue (also umbrage) with the cellar door thing

    December 25, 2012

  • a (mock-drunken) corruption of a gentleman and a scholar. Local to Northern California, as far as I know

    December 25, 2012

  • That movie was called War Horse, actually

    December 24, 2012

  • songs like that are usually about a real person aren't they? So who was Gentleman Jim?

    December 23, 2012

  • "ever each"? As in, each and every

    December 23, 2012

  • Well, I started with just musical, but the list extended itself to include any performative act specific to the recognition of death. Anyhow—go ahead

    December 23, 2012

  • ooh fbharjo I never saw the below comment. Thanks for the welcome and the...vote of confidence?

    December 23, 2012

  • TOP Ohrisfmas Gifts! Weap them on Hestive

    Tnere will |be Ohrisfmas~~exeroiseB and

    Otir Ohrisfmas. Laundry Work. Will plrt. Hm.

    Tiie Spirit of Ohrisfmas fjtints Brightly Through monllts and ォar. Corn® ^,, When-Your fijft Ss I Will (fmm\ Pkm of Fine Jewelry

    December 23, 2012

  • see comment at goos

    December 23, 2012

  • "Aristotle in his Poetics defined the kommos as an antiphonal song of lament between an actor and the female chorus, which was one of the most visually compelling exhibitions of physical and psychological pain."

    December 23, 2012

  • transliteration of Greek μοιρολοι. Also "mirolòyi", myriologue. General term for a lamenting of the dead.

    "In uncovering the origins of the word, Alexiou notes that the term moira is found in formulaic phrases in Homer as the agent of death (in other words, a personified force)."

    December 23, 2012

  • A dirge composed and performed by professional mourners in classical Greek funerals. In the classical period, the thrênos was still remembered as a distinct type of lyric poetry, but it was interchangeable with goos, especially in tragedy (e.g., formal laments of a female chorus in Greek drama), and could be used to refer to any kind of lament, not necessarily for the dead.

    (mostly taken from "The Ritual Lament in Greek Tradition" Alexiou, 1976)

    December 23, 2012

  • Also góos. Greek, historical: part of the ritual lamentations of women in a classical Greek funeral, with the thrênos and kommos. An "improvised discordant weeping performed by kinswomen and close friends of the deceased"

    December 23, 2012

  • 'sblood, sirrah, this thrice-damned juggernaut is become my nemesis! Avaunt! To the eyrie—p'raps in my laboratorium I can yet devise some canny expedient, so to confound the malign engine of destruction

    December 21, 2012

  • A general comment:

    Slang and Its Analogues, John S. Farmer ed., 1890

    is available at the Gutenberg pjt: http://archive.org/details/slangitsanalogue01farmuoft

    is enthralling

    December 18, 2012

  • same as ackman

    December 18, 2012

  • It comes from popularized version of the history of Wyatt Earp. I don't know it well, but he was in Dodge City, and at some point it became well-advised for him to leave

    December 17, 2012

  • ok I need to stop

    update: I can't

    December 17, 2012

  • ok, some of the ones I've added aren't really used "quite often," but they should be.

    December 17, 2012

  • Could it be an ocrtifacts-type corruption of cornball?

    December 16, 2012

  • I have no idea — bilby?

    December 14, 2012

  • A term of address to a male, similar to bro or broseph.

    very curious about the etymology of this one

    December 14, 2012

  • "give me a beer, please"

    December 14, 2012

  • Margaret Thatcher to press in 1989, on the birth of her first grandchild

    December 14, 2012

  • Oh hai. sorry dude I don't know if I can be your friend, I didn't go to college. Or did you mean high school graduate?

    December 14, 2012

  • It's definitely pejorative in my observation of its usage (cf. flavor of some of those tweets ‑‑>), but not by virtue of being a portmanteau or the "bro"part.

    December 14, 2012

  • I kind of made this up, but found some instances in the blogosphere. (1 2 3)

    Used to relate something to both parent and chilld when speaking to non-family members, or to both parents when speaking to the child, though it relates only to the speaker: "We're nervous about the admission process," "we decided not to go," "we'll see," "we're not rich" "we're disappointed" "our youngest."

    December 14, 2012

  • The majestic plural; a first-person plural pronoun used by a sovereign or person of high office to refer to him- or herself.

    December 14, 2012

  • well, that ended quickly.

    Thanks hernesheir.

    bilby, har har.

    December 14, 2012

  • thanks amigos, I fret no further

    December 14, 2012

  • I always thought this phrase referred to something being extraordinarily difficult, nigh impossible

    December 14, 2012

  • Swedish (or Danish) name for the UK

    December 13, 2012

  • a variation on peckerwood

    December 13, 2012

  • furthermore: both the projects and the slurbs could be described as ghetto (adj.); however, while projects are commonly considered to be part of "the ghetto," only a very sordid slurb would be so classed.

    December 13, 2012

  • well in the U.S. at least, that almost always refers to a housing project; usually these do not appear in suburban areas. Perhaps slurbs are the free-market version of the projects.

    December 13, 2012

  • *clap clap* nicely done, bilby

    December 13, 2012

  • this appears to be distinct from defibrinate but I haven't found an exact definition yet...

    December 13, 2012

  • but that etymology is totally apocryphal. welp, never mind, not to begrudge you some wordplay, at all, no sir!

    (But, I think with "thresh" reported (by etymonline.com) to have a root meaning "stomp" or "step," the probable original phrase meant something like stomp-bump)

    December 12, 2012

  • I know what you mean (turgid, turbid and turpid cause me the most devilment).

    Also: evanid?

    December 12, 2012

  • The Portway was a Roman road running from Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester) (in Hampshire, England) to Sorviodunum (Old Sarum)

    December 12, 2012

  • Australian? (In horse racing) a racecourse for the trot and pace

    December 12, 2012

  • southwest Brit Eng dialect, a narrow lane or passageway

    December 12, 2012

  • a canal used for recreational purposes

    December 12, 2012

  • An ill-planned or unplanned suburban area, with tracts of undifferentiated, often poorly-constructed houses.

    1960s? "slum" + "suburb"

    December 12, 2012

  • I didn't realize there was already sweet-tooth-fairy-tale...jeez I feel quite the parvenu...

    December 12, 2012

  • this should be a word of the day

    December 12, 2012

  • a helicopter piloted by bats (order chiroptera)?

    December 12, 2012

  • I could easily be wrong, but I believe that "term of art" is more common in legal contexts

    December 12, 2012

  • ewwwwww

    December 11, 2012

  • oh I was having this same problem. Try another machine.

    December 11, 2012

  • a retroreflector or retroreflective surface.

    December 11, 2012

  • abbreviation for "localization". (A twee and precious one, imo, but very useful as a twitter hashtag.)

    December 11, 2012

  • An "otherworldly" (i.e., Aos Sí, aka—popularly—sidhe) woman from Irish myth, best known as the sister of the sea goddess Fand, and perhaps an early sea deity herself.

    December 11, 2012

  • "Keyboard, video, mouse." See KVM

    December 11, 2012

  • a marketing name, and word of art in the fishing industry; the original Hawai'ian 'ahi usually referred to bigeye tuna

    December 11, 2012

  • specialized terms or language particular to a given profession, art, science, technical field; jargon

    December 11, 2012

  • the albacore tuna, Thunnus alalunga.

    December 11, 2012

  • gubmint?

    December 11, 2012

  • A variety of hardtack, made using finer flour.

    December 11, 2012

  • aka "non-lexical vocable", a filler sound with no semantic value; something spoken that is not a lexeme. Term used in audio transcription. I don't have a ref. just now. See also speech disfluency

    December 11, 2012

  • derpface...somehow the "vi" became "ri" in my brain. I'm tempted to delete my comment. Notwithstanding any of the foregoing: contains-2x-r-long-i

    December 11, 2012

  • my favorite word ever

    December 9, 2012

  • Oh, but I was referring to the syllable as spoken with long i, not the written form (note the diacritic).

    But now I've actually found one more: ribavirin

    December 9, 2012

  • this may be the only word in English that has the syllable "rī" in it twice.

    December 8, 2012

  • I love this list. What's interesting is how unsubjective these are. Very few of them do not seem to have the "powerful, evocative" property. (On a collaborative list I might have expected otherwise.)

    December 8, 2012

  • http://vedyadhara.ignou.ac.in/wiki/images/a/ad/UNIT_3_POTENTIOMETRY-II_(pH_METRY).pdf

    December 8, 2012

  • When a MCU receives the BAS code Chair Command Kill (CCK) from the CCT, it drops the connections at all its ports, releasing all associated conference resources.

    (from this draft ETSI standard)

    December 8, 2012

  • what I don't get is how erinmckean's comment got on twitter already. See "Tweets" above. Who here is @greatbandnames?

    December 8, 2012

  • deinonychus, erinmckean, I have initiated operation sweet-tooth-fairy-land. But where does it end? fried egg drop bombs away team spirit guide dog? God have mercy on our souls.

    December 8, 2012

  • engineering/mfging abbreviation for optical

    December 6, 2012

  • The number of worms an individual host carries which, depending on the worm, can be measured either directly—e.g., Ascaris lumbricoides—or indirectly—e.g., schistosomiasis.

    —Segen's Medical Dictionary (from thefreedictionary.com)

    December 6, 2012

  • Captain Carrot Ironfoundersson of the Discworld series (wikipedia)

    Also, Captain Carrot (and his Amazing Zoo Crew) of the DC Comics universe (ComicVine)

    December 6, 2012

  • aka Hawkeye

    December 6, 2012

  • ruzuzu, it should be "no soy marinero" not "marinaro" :D

    December 6, 2012

  • the jaunty reaperman of El Dia de los Muertos, or such is my understanding. I could be wrong.

    December 6, 2012

  • from Wikipedia: ADSR envelope

    December 6, 2012

  • or Ananda Tandava. Siva's Dance of Bliss; representing the cycles of creation/destruction and birth/death. As performed, it is allegorically representative of the five manifestations of eternal energy: creation, preservation, destruction, illusion and release.

    December 6, 2012

  • Prolagus thx! A great site. I'm embarrassed to've had no inkling of it for the past several years.

    I work w/ scanning/documents & such, and I'd never heard "scanno." It does seem a bit awkward—there being no such beast as the phrase "scanographical error."

    December 6, 2012

  • actually just words containing the syllable

    December 5, 2012

  • Considering starting a list called "sweet tooth fairy land": three two-word collocations, concatenated.

    December 5, 2012

  • I have heard this used by grade schoolers in San Francisco, California. A variation on ginormous/humongous

    December 5, 2012

  • Would the various "soldier" animals belong here? E.g., soldier beetle soldier fly, soldier fish, soldier crab, soldier bug etc.

    December 5, 2012

  • obsolete, same as catarrh. Runny nose, sore throat

    December 5, 2012

  • due credit to the editors of:

    Strumpets, Street People, and Scallywags

    Unsavoury Types

    thou varlet!

    and

    Unsavory characters

    December 5, 2012

  • Not sure how this works, fbharjo, but thanks, and also: what?

    wait: you cannot logically can't back-form the phrase "hold thresh" from threshold because the hold particle is of unknown origin!

    December 5, 2012

  • many of these filched from liminal-words

    December 4, 2012

  • "handsome" digger wasps?

    December 4, 2012

  • a collocation referring to the topos (in fiction and pop culture) in which an artificial computer intelligence, usually after gaining sentience/self-awareness, threatens or inflicts destruction on its creators

    November 30, 2012

  • I clicked the "random word" link and came to this page. The odds are incogitable. And now I will go back to my sci-fi novel about ghost-in-the-machine, rogue AIs

    November 30, 2012

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