T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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88.1 | Dictionary gives its OK to "womyn" | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | Rick | Mon Jun 17 1991 21:17 | 41 |
| NEW YORK - Random House officially trotted out its new Webster's
College Dictionary Tuesday (although the book has been available in
some markets since May). The editors chose some 180,000 entries,
including several hundred words and phrases that weren't in the 1987
edition. Here's a sampling:
� chill: in addition to what one does to wine, chill also can refer to
relaxation ("chill out")
� Def: as in excellent
� dissing: showing disrespect for anyone
� herstory: women's history
� homeboys: a person from the same locality as oneself; a close friend
� jocks: athletes or computer jocks
� love handles: the cutesy name for the bulges at the sides of one's
waist. Those who use a less flattering term might be accused of
"weightism" (bias against the overweight)
� mall rats: people who hang out in malls
� outing: (more than a picnic) the intentional exposure of a secret
homosexual, especially a prominent figure
� play date: an appointment made by parents to have their children play
together
� virus: as in computer
� white-bread: disparaging, pertaining to the white middle class
� wimps: ineffectual, timid people of any gender. (Not to be confused
with WIMP: "Weakly Interacting Massive Particle.")
� womyn: an alternative spelling to avoid the suggestion of sexism
perceived in the sequence m-e-n.
|
88.2 | This? You mean `ther'? | ULYSSE::WADE | | Tue Jun 18 1991 10:33 | 31 |
| >> herstory: women's history
I suppose we'll have to wait for the next edition
to officialise the word I heard in the mouth of
the Mayor of NY [Dinkins?] in relation to those
Gulf War soldiers who happened to be womyn:
SHEroes.
With individual syllables being gender-purged,
isn't this whole thing now getting really silly?
How much longer before a female `person' becomes
`perdaughter'?
Any others?
|
88.3 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Tue Jun 18 1991 12:16 | 17 |
| HERCULES
Silly name ! Obviously should be HISCULES.
HERPES
Incredibly arrogant. We, the myn, are entitled to
our own HISPES.
HERON
This noun simply negates the existence of the male animal.
We should demand the addition of HISON.
HISPANIC
Come on, don't womyn panic as well ? The word HERPANIC must
be added (it's certainly as good as herstory)
Cheers,
roger
|
88.4 | Shear! Shear! | XANADU::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Tue Jun 18 1991 14:33 | 0 |
88.5 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Jun 18 1991 15:38 | 4 |
| As a result of recent discussion with a colleague we believe that
FEMALEDICTION should be added. If this is shouted at you by someone
FEMALEVOLENT (this obviously means flying on a broomstick) you will
probably turn into a frog.
|
88.6 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Jun 18 1991 15:42 | 2 |
| And of course a marriage breakup is not a divorce. It is a
schism and schersm.
|
88.7 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Tue Jun 18 1991 15:54 | 2 |
| Normally, a schism and schersm is not influenced by heredity
or hisedity.
|
88.8 | Not to trivialise this too much, but .... | ULYSSE::WADE | | Tue Jun 18 1991 18:46 | 30 |
|
This is getting really silly, so I feel safe
in throwing in (for the Brits only I think)
the following:
What is the name of Mantovani's wife?
Why, Womantovani, of course!
Which reminds me .. if women is now womyn,
what is woman? Please, not woperson. Because
that just has to become woperdaughter .....
|
88.9 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jun 18 1991 19:52 | 4 |
| Perhaps in addition to the gender-free term "whine", we should have
the gender-specific "whene", for something men do so very well.
Ann B.
|
88.10 | Oh! My aching shead? | WOOK::LEE | Wook... Like 'Book' with a 'W' | Wed Jun 19 1991 07:18 | 5 |
| re: .-*
I think I'm getting a sheadacshe!
Wook
|
88.11 | society for Her, It, Him Integration (HIHI) | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Wed Jun 19 1991 10:02 | 13 |
| I was thinking of starting an It Recognition Society (IRS). Itstory
is a much more comfortable word than prehistory or preherstory, and
could be applied to recent events like the erruption of Krakatoa. The
only thing preceding itstory would be godstory.
Then I became aghimated (I'm male) about the implications. While a
homosexual couple raising a child might be delighted to have the words
mothim and fathim, and while many cartoon characters could be described
as itsos and itsoines (are you *sure* you know the sex of R2D2 or
Bugs Bunny?) I decided she was rather over the top. Dropping "sister"
from the language in favour of "brothim" and "brother" would make much
of English lhimerature unintelligible, though I think I would prefer
the term "brothit" to "sibling".
|
88.12 | hmmm | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Wed Jun 19 1991 16:18 | 8 |
| >Dropping "sister" from the language in favour of "brothim" and
>"brother" would make much of English lhimerature unintelligible,
>though I think I would prefer the term "brothit" to "sibling".
Perhaps the better term would be "sishim." Then we could refer to
the head of the family unit as the "sishim engineer."
--bonnie
|
88.13 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Wed Jun 19 1991 17:09 | 8 |
| > � womyn: an alternative spelling to avoid the suggestion of sexism
> perceived in the sequence m-e-n.
So what is the alternative spelling for abdomen ? examen ?
hymen ? Tien-An-Men ?
Thanks
|
88.14 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Jun 19 1991 21:43 | 1 |
| ... and what is the alternative for the "amen" at the end of a prayer?
|
88.15 | | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Wed Jun 19 1991 22:02 | 4 |
|
"examen"?
Don't you mean "examine"?
|
88.16 | | BOOKIE::DAVEY | | Wed Jun 19 1991 23:46 | 5 |
| > ... and what is the alternative for the "amen" at the end of a prayer?
awomen... preceded of course by both hymns and herns.
John
|
88.17 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Thu Jun 20 1991 11:06 | 9 |
| > "examen"?
Oops, you're right. I withdraw "examen" which is not current
in English. It's the French word for "exam" (actually I wouldn't
be surprised if the latter was an abbreviation of the former, I'll
have to check).
Cheers,
roger
|
88.18 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu Jun 20 1991 12:08 | 5 |
| re: .12
"sishim" is explixitly sexist, so would certainly not be allowed.
The politically correct term would be "sistit engineer". I still prefer
"brothit" for the general case, and maybe "brothem engineer" as an
alternative term for "parent".
|
88.19 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jun 20 1991 15:51 | 5 |
|
I don't mind the whining so much. But you should all understand that
people will be put off by the stridency of these complaints.
JP
|
88.20 | I'm a brothem engineer | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu Jun 20 1991 17:06 | 10 |
| re: .18
This is tricky. I thought that combining the feminine "sis" with
the masculine "him" would yeild a unisex noun -- or at least a
bisexual one.
I like "brothem engineer" for parents, though. Such an impressive
title.
--bonnie
|
88.21 | Vivat regina | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Dotting jots and crossing tittles | Thu Jun 20 1991 17:10 | 3 |
| `Regimen' offends on two counts. What did Elizabeth I have?
b
|
88.22 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Thu Jun 20 1991 17:15 | 12 |
|
Ref: .19
>> I don't mind the whining so much. But you should all understand that
>> people will be put off by the stridency of these complaints.
Just to clarify your point, John .....
which people will be put off what and why?
Jim
|
88.23 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jun 20 1991 18:21 | 23 |
|
Jim,
Why, the people whom y'all hope to convince that such dictionary
additions� are sowing the seeds of destruction for Western
Civilization. "Strident" and is variations is often used as
a put-down in discussions about feminism... you can probably
guess which way that put-down is usually pointed.
I erred, as I often do, in not directing the humor-impaired to insert
smiley faces wherever they think appropriate.
I think I'm generally in favor of dictionary modifications that increase
the size of the lexicon. If I didn't delight in shades of meaning and
wordplay/spellplay, why would I read this file? I get much more irate
over reductions in the lexicon, e.g., the disappearance of the distinction
between "ensure" and "insure."
� E.g., "womyn," even if it's a separate entry rather than
an alternate spelling of "women."
JP
|
88.24 | My view ... | ULYSSE::WADE | | Thu Jun 20 1991 19:09 | 18 |
| John, thanks for your explanation. I *thought* I knew
to what you were referring, but didn't like to assume.
As for convincing anybody of anything; I cannot talk
for others in here, but my view is as follows:
There is a lot of gender-specific language that doesn't
reflect the actual and potential place of women in
society. Such language should be done away with. So,
for example, I prefer, and use, words which recognise
that either sex could be meant (such as `salesperson',
`chair', and `they' - replacing `his or her').
But I fail to see what positive effects words like
`womyn' or `herstory' are supposed to achieve.
Jim
|
88.25 | All the news that fits, they print. | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Thu Jun 20 1991 19:27 | 14 |
| Well, the original objection to woman, is that it produced a
visualization of half the human race as being some distorted
subset of the other half. Wo-man as some kind of defective man.
The root of woman (It says here in the AHD.) is wif-man, where
"wif" means woman. So, the implication is that male humans are
The Real Thing, and us other kind are Imitations.
Herstory is different. It's a way of underlining that what we
learned in school as history is his-story: the male view of what
happened that was important and why it was important. The term
"herstory" refers to those buried facts that history considered
unimportant, but that women (and especially womyn) don't.
Ann B.
|
88.26 | meanderings | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu Jun 20 1991 19:50 | 27 |
| None of the following has any bearing on what these words mean to
us today . . . but I guess it relates to how words change:
Wif-mon didn't exactly mean "woman" to the Old English speakers
who coined it in the same way it means "woman" to us. Something
like "keeper-person" would be a more accurate rendition of the way
it's used in the Old English writings.
Other 'wif' compounds are 'huswif' and 'ale-wif'; in at least one
case the alewife is clearly a person of the male sex. Presumably
the keeper-person's identification as female reflects the social
role.
In very early English writings, 'mon' probably really was
gender-neutral. There's a poem in which the classic reference to
"thot mon who ne mourne" (not spelled right) for his lost country
and lost lord is a woman who'd been taken captive in battle.
When they wanted to refer to a person of the male sex, they used
'wir' ('were', as in 'werewolf') derived from the Latin 'vir',
man.
And the "man" in "human" is not the same man as the man in
"woman." The man in human is part of the Latin word 'humanus' and
not a compound at all.
--bonnie
|
88.27 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jun 20 1991 19:54 | 15 |
|
I take delight in many of these new words exactly because they
provide more shades of meaning. That these different shades
are very important to some people for good reason (as Ann points
out in .25) is by itself be enough for me to support their use.
I would also point out that those who rail against such language
extensions seem to be taking up the (religious) argument that a
dictionary should be prescriptive rather than descriptive. And
while I don't mean to deprecate anyone's religion, the prescriptive
approach seems to me unenforceable and therefore doomed to failure.
JP
|
88.28 | JOYOFLEXers give their OK to "womyn" | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | Rick | Thu Jun 20 1991 20:17 | 15 |
| Five years ago, this conference had a serious discussion on the topic.
See 143.* "Is Man Sexist"
My favorite extract:
>...Words have gender, people do not. People have sex, words do not.
So, unless Ann has significantly changed her position, there's not much
more to say.
I do like the punsters (and weirdos who generally contribute to this
conference) line of thinking (albeit demented) when they hear "Womyn" and
"Herstory" have been introduced to the language.
|
88.29 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Thu Jun 20 1991 20:46 | 7 |
|
I love it when people place a bombshell such as "demented" (which
is explosive only in the context of a topic such as this one) with
absolutely no warning or subsequent explanation...it made my day.
JP
|
88.30 | | WHO301::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Fri Jun 21 1991 00:01 | 4 |
| To a deconstructionist, the fact that "human" and "history" have no
etymological relation to "man" and "his" is completely immaterial.
-dave
|
88.31 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Fri Jun 21 1991 04:21 | 8 |
| To replace the incorrect fragment with the correct frag???t, instead
of wo-man, it should be wo-woman, er, wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-
Now, what does this do to the English language? It sounds to me like
a rolling access violation. And it only applies to fe-fe-fe-fe-
It is interesting to note that, to avoid sexist discrimination,
John's wife cannot keep her own name. Only by taking his name
can she achieve parodi.
|
88.32 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Fri Jun 21 1991 13:21 | 33 |
| re. 27
> I would also point out that those who rail against such language
> extensions seem to be taking up the (religious) argument that a
> dictionary should be prescriptive rather than descriptive. And
The prescriptive vs. descriptive argument is more adapted
to a discussion on the role of grammar. Lexicon is a completely
different part of language.
Most people expect that a dictionary should contain a list of
commonly accepted words, with their _proper_ (commonly accepted)
spelling; it should be both descriptive and prescriptive.
Of course, there's nothing wrong with adding new words to a
lexicon, and this happens in all living languages. The Larousse
dictionary, for example, adds ca 1000 words every year, and removes
about as many obsolete ones.
A good general-purpose dictionary will add a word, or an alternative
spelling, only when it is acceptable by a large part of the population.
Words that belong to specialized language (technical jargon, slang...)
should be mentioned as such.
I wonder if the new issue of Webster's, as described in .1, is
really careful in that respect. Adding "herstory" looks like
an affirmative, voluntarist move, rather than a recognition
of a linguistical fact.
I'll stick with my old Harrap's for a while :)
Cheers,
roger
|
88.33 | | MYCRFT::PARODI | John H. Parodi | Fri Jun 21 1991 15:46 | 19 |
|
Gee, I've never thought of Parodihood as an achievement...it's just
something that sort of happens. But thank you. As a matter of fact,
Alison took both available names and used the European (or is it
only Dutch?) convention of "maiden" (gulp) name last. So she's
a Parodi-Bieling.
I'm not sure the result is discrimination, though it is annoying.
On the rare occasions you find a bureaucrat who's heard of hyphenated
names, they almost always say that my last name should come last and
thus her proper name should be Bieling-Parodi.
This is discrimination only in the sense that such rudeness,
ignorance, and officiousness would probably not be tolerated by
men if they were the ones who tradionally changed names for marriage.
JP
|
88.34 | asides on names | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Fri Jun 21 1991 16:25 | 35 |
| In the midwestern US, the old custom was that when a woman
married, she dropped the middle name she had been given at birth
(which she usually hates anyway :) ), replaced it by her own birth
surname, and took on her husband's surname. Thus Bonnie Jean
Randall became Bonnie Randall Schutzman. (No hyphens.) The custom
had been dying out, but in the recent mailings from my high school
class reunion committee it appears that most of the married women
with professional careers have resumed the old style.
It was a way to trace family on both sides. You could tell by
looking who both sides of the family were -- and it wasn't
uncommon to find many boys who had their mother's maiden name as
their middle name. I suspect that the tiny population spread out
over the vast area had something to do with it. When there
weren't any neighbors in 15 miles, it was important to feel
connected to someone.
The hyphen was an English custom used when the bride's family had
equal or greater social standing than the groom's -- as for when
the youngest daughter of an earl married an untitled gentleman of
good family. Later in Victorian times some people started to view
it as a sign of pretension. (An aside: it was never uncommon for
the man to take his bride's family name when a family's only
offspring was a daughter, to keep the family name from dying out.)
I notice that since I moved to the northeast, my name creates
nothing but confusion. I've had to explain it over and over and
over again, and I've been told on more than one occasion to make
sure and use my "real" middle name instead of "that one." When
the big push for hyphenated married names hit in the '70's, the
publicity and so on created a lot of puzzlement at home, since
nobody could figure out why they wanted to make such a big deal of
a hyphen instead of a space. At least now I understand why...
--bonnie
|
88.35 | Ahem. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Fri Jun 21 1991 22:24 | 14 |
| Just to clarify a point, no legitimate dictionary has ever given its
"okay" to any word. Not even once. Dictionaries RECORD HOW WORDS ARE
BEING USED. They DO NOT PRESCRIBE THE CORRECT WAYS TO USE WORDS.
Yes, I'm shouting. If people use `womyn' then it's right for it to
appear in a dictionary. But that appearance does not *sanction* that
word or its use.
Yeah, I know. I'm beating a dead horse. Nobody cares; they're all too
busy inventing words to replace the 10 or 20 million we've already got.
:-)
-d
|
88.36 | | ULYSSE::WADE | | Sat Jun 22 1991 15:59 | 11 |
| Ref 88.35
>> If people use `womyn' then it's right for it to
>> appear in a dictionary.
So the word `flourescent' should appear? Based
on my observation, that alternative spelling of
`fluorescent' is *far* more common than `womyn'
for `women'. But it is used, and its meaning
is clear. So, bung it in the dictionary! Why
not!!
|
88.37 | Let us reason together like... | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Sat Jun 22 1991 20:46 | 12 |
| There is to my mind a significant distinction between the deliberate
use of an altered word, such as `womyn,' and a simple mistake in
spelling, such as `flourescent,' which latter malformation is due to
the user's lack of care, education, or spelling ability (this last to
include learning disabilities).
As it happens, I personally think rather little of `womyn' - but
language is mutable to serve the purpose of communication, and I admit
freely that `womyn' communicates a sensibility that `women' does not
impart.
-d
|
88.38 | Woperchild | STAR::CANTOR | IM2BZ2P | Sun Jun 23 1991 06:53 | 13 |
| re .36
Of course 'flourescent' should appear in the dictionary, if enough
people use it. It's a good thing you told us about it, though. If you
hadn't mentioned what it meant, I would have assumed it described the
phenomenon of turning into a fine white powder, perhaps like Lot's wife.
re several early replies
'Woman' --> 'Woperson' --> 'Woperdaughter'. No, that last step is wrong.
It should be --> 'Woperchild'.
Dave C.
|
88.39 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sun Jun 23 1991 11:01 | 4 |
| My impression from notes files is that the spelling "thier" is
almost as common as "their" and there is a traditional English spelling
rule "'I' before 'E' except after 'C'" so it is arguably more correct.
I expect to see it in dictionaries soon.
|
88.40 | Not necessarily, as Maggie Dubois once said. | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Mon Jun 24 1991 02:29 | 13 |
| Re: .39
Your citation of the I/E rule is incomplete.
I before E
Except after C,
Or when sounded like A,
as in "neighbor" and "weigh."
I think you'll find that "their" fits the latter category. Sorry, no
argument allowed, you didn't pay for one. :-)
-d
|
88.41 | Oh, boy! Another tangent to go off on. | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Mon Jun 24 1991 08:33 | 6 |
| .40> I before E
.40> Except after C,
.40> Or when sounded like A,
.40> as in "neighbor" and "weigh."
I don't know about that rule. I've always thought it rather weird.
|
88.42 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Mon Jun 24 1991 12:20 | 11 |
| re .35
>Just to clarify a point, no legitimate dictionary has ever given its
>"okay" to any word. Not even once. Dictionaries RECORD HOW WORDS ARE
>BEING USED. They DO NOT PRESCRIBE THE CORRECT WAYS TO USE WORDS.
You obviously never played Scrabble, not even once :)
Cheers,
roger
|
88.43 | How to pronounce "their", "there" and "thier" | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Jun 24 1991 13:13 | 8 |
| Where my wife comes from "their" is pronounced "zurr". The
lengthened "r" is important to distinguish it from "there". I have
never heard "weigh" pronounced as "wurgh". She dropped a lot of her
accent at university, but I knew three of her grandparents.
To be fair and complete, "those" is usually pronounced as
"zumzayre", and often put into writing as "them there". The preceding
"them" obviously modifies the pronunciation of the following "there".
|
88.44 | Wrong-o. | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Mon Jun 24 1991 18:52 | 12 |
| Re: .42
I play Scrabble. The Scrabble Dictionary is not a dictionary. If I
stretch a point, I can accept that it is a lexicon in that a lexicon can
be a vocabulary list; but a dictionary describes forms, meanings, and
usage - or, in the case of an interlanguage dictionary, translated
equivalents. The Scrabble Dictionary does nto satisfy these criteria.
Calling it a dictinoary does not prove said appellation's correctness.
So *there*! :-)
-d
|
88.45 | Neither weird leisure seized either foreign financier. | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Jun 25 1991 02:04 | 13 |
| Re: .41
.40> I before E
.40> Except after C,
.40> Or when sounded like A,
.40> as in "neighbor" and "weigh."
.41> I don't know about that rule. I've always thought
.41> it rather weird.
Yes. The quoted rule is not complete. The complete rule lists about
six or eight exceptions to the rhyme quoted above. "Weird" is one of
them. So are words taken from German, such as weisenheimer.
|
88.46 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Jun 25 1991 12:34 | 14 |
| re: .44
I had never heard of a "Scrabble Dictionary".
What my Scrabble set has to say on the subject is "Tous les mots se
trouvant dans n'importe quel dictionnaire g�n�ral sont permis, a
l'exception des noms propres, ceux consider�s comme mots �trangers, les
abbr�viations et les mots compos�s avec apostrophe ou trait d'union"
As a specialised dictionary a "Scrabble Dictionary" would be
specifically excluded by the rules of the game. It may have some other
use, though.
Part of the game is the foreplay in establishing your own
dictionary as "general".
|
88.47 | The Scrabble "Dictionary"... | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Tue Jun 25 1991 16:10 | 11 |
| ...is merely one more way to cash in on the popularity of Scrabble and
people's demand for "authority." It is a list of about 20,000 words,
many of then abstruse, grouped by the number of letters they comprise
(hee, hee) and then, within each group, alphabetically.
I've never seen any except an American English edition, and I haven't
even seen one of those for at least 25 years. The copy my mother had
was given the imprimatur of Selchow & Righter and published by Dell as a
trade papervback.
-d
|
88.48 | I have a Scrabble dictionary | KAOA12::YUEN | Advanced Flukeware design | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:12 | 14 |
| Re: <<< Note 88.47 by SMURF::CALIPH::binder "Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis" >>>
> ...is merely one more way to cash in on the popularity of Scrabble and
> people's demand for "authority." It is a list of about 20,000 words,
> even seen one of those for at least 25 years. The copy my mother had
> was given the imprimatur of Selchow & Righter and published by Dell as a
I have a paperback copy of the "Official Scrabble Dictionary". I don't
remember who published it, could have been Dell. I'll check when I get home.
It's about 5-10 years old. I'm sure it has quite a bit more than 20,000 words.
More like 80,000.
Duncan.
|
88.49 | The illogical eight | SOFBAS::TRINWARD | | Tue Jun 25 1991 17:14 | 8 |
| re: .45
Neither weird leisure seized either foreign financier...
At least, that's the sentence I learned it from
- SteveT, who's_amazed_sometimes_at_the_trash_that's_retained
|
88.50 | But it's still not a dictionary | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Not Sold in Stores | Wed Jun 26 1991 23:18 | 16 |
| > As a specialised dictionary a "Scrabble Dictionary" would be
> specifically excluded by the rules of the game. It may have some other
> use, though.
The official SCRABBLE dictionary is the only dictionary used
in tournaments. It was put together from as many dictionaries
as the lexicographers could find, and included only those words
you referred to above. I couldn't imagine playing a serious
game of SCRABBLE without it.
> Part of the game is the foreplay in establishing your own
> dictionary as "general".
Sounds kinky.
-- C
|
88.51 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | This note is illegal tender. | Thu Jun 27 1991 05:11 | 5 |
| Re .42
It remains true that the dictionary doesn't prescribe how to use words.
The instructions inside the Scrabble set prescribe how to use them.
|
88.52 | | IEDUX::jon | As much imagination as a caravan site | Wed Jul 03 1991 17:47 | 12 |
| To continue the rathole on the lexicons specified by various local
varients of Scrabble:
British editions of Scrabble specify the use of a specific default
dictionary (unless another is agreed to be the players). I seem to
recall it is Chambers. In any case, it is an old-established
dictionary and not a special scrabble word list. Lists of British
English words ordered by number of letters are available for Scrabblers
but the acid test of acceptability is whether or not it is in the
dictionary (and not excluded by the Scrabble rules as foreign etc).
Jon
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88.53 | The name of the list | AYOV27::ISMITH | Off to Severance City | Thu Jul 04 1991 10:31 | 8 |
| .52�recall it is Chambers. In any case, it is an old-established
.52�dictionary and not a special scrabble word list. Lists of British
I think Chambers produce a book called Scrabble Words, which will be
something like a dictionary but without all those tiresome definitions
to wade through.
Ian.
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