T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
496.1 | isn't a Peccadillo ...? | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Fri Mar 18 1988 16:54 | 8 |
| Ian --
I always thought that the word meant an armadillo-like critter with
a large ...
beak, for going after grubs, etc., like a woodpecker. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.2 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Mar 18 1988 17:35 | 2 |
| No. An armadillo has a snout, while a peccadillo azimuth (one of my
favourite words).
|
496.3 | I always thought the best words in English were: | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Fri Mar 18 1988 17:43 | 3 |
| "You're hired"
--bonnie
|
496.4 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Sat Apr 02 1988 00:23 | 10 |
| I wouldn't go so far as to say I had a favorite word, but some nice
ones are:
egregious (the ever-popular)
dizzard
unctious
I'll remember more later.
Jon
|
496.5 | some more | LEZAH::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Sat Apr 02 1988 05:17 | 8 |
| fave words include omphaloskepsis (contemplating ones own navel)
peregrinate (travel)
Boustrophedon (a printer thingummy that prints in both directions)
-jody
|
496.6 | | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Mon Apr 04 1988 23:56 | 1 |
| one i really like is defenestrate
|
496.7 | effluvia | CHARON::MCGLINCHEY | Sancho! My Armor! My TECO Macros! | Tue Apr 05 1988 00:34 | 1 |
|
|
496.8 | indubitably | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | 2 Cups de-coffinated caffeine please | Tue Apr 05 1988 05:22 | 3 |
| Being English and therefor able to say it correctly ..... :-)
|
496.9 | Stickability | SPUD::SCHARMANN | Computer Freek - Beware | Tue Apr 05 1988 14:14 | 5 |
|
To stick to a job or task until finished.
Also to stick to a goal and don't loose sight of it.
|
496.10 | $-MONEY-$ | WAGON::SWINIARSKI | NANcy--*NANSKI*--SwiniarSKI | Tue Apr 05 1988 18:19 | 1 |
|
|
496.11 | cwm | PAMOLA::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Tue Apr 05 1988 19:04 | 0 |
496.12 | smegma | ME::TRUMPLER | I juggle tectonic plates | Tue Apr 05 1988 20:12 | 7 |
| Re .9 (nit):
>Also to stick to a goal and don't loose sight of it.
If you let loose the sight of something, does that make it invisible
or blind?
:-)
|
496.13 | | GOLD::OPPELT | If they can't take a joke, screw 'em! | Tue Apr 05 1988 22:16 | 4 |
|
1) Anile
2) Amatorium
|
496.14 | feelings | XNTRIK::LARRY_M | | Wed Apr 06 1988 05:12 | 2 |
| My favorites are FUZZY and FLUFFY, because they sound like they
feel.
|
496.15 | :-) | ESDC2::SOBOT | Steve Sobot, ESDC-II | Wed Apr 06 1988 14:45 | 17 |
|
re .12
Yes, it does have a certain ring to it !
disgusting bit follows, KP3 for the squeamish (another good word?!)
I'm just going down to breakfast to get s'meg 'n bacon !
:-} (not feeling too well)
Cheers, Steve
|
496.16 | if you call it a word... | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Apr 06 1988 16:14 | 10 |
| My favorite word:
"wherely"
No, I didn't make that up. It was used in a report by a captain
in the U.S. Air Force some 30 years ago. And it wasn't even used
as an adverb!
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.17 | | SPUD::SCHARMANN | Computer Freek - Beware | Thu Apr 07 1988 14:18 | 12 |
| RE:12
> If you loose sight of something, does that make it invivible or
blind?
By all means NO!!!!. What it refers to, is not to loose sight of
your long range goal (what your desire is to be in life) If you
keep the desire to become a programmer, in sight you'll acheive
your goal.
Chuck
|
496.18 | | ZFC::DERAMO | Trust me. I know what I'm doing. | Fri Apr 08 1988 00:46 | 9 |
| I always thought that the expression was
"to lose sight of ..."
as opposed to
"to loose sight of ..."
Dan
|
496.19 | Ecdysiast | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | I Came,I Saw,I concurred | Fri Apr 08 1988 03:14 | 4 |
| Now THERE'S a thing to behold ;-)
Dj
|
496.20 | palimpsestuous | MANANA::RAVAN | 1 order of magnitude, to go | Fri Apr 08 1988 17:01 | 1 |
| The family that erases together???
|
496.21 | | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Fri Apr 08 1988 19:45 | 4 |
| One of my favorites is actually a suffix, "-aster," as in poetaster,
logicaster, grammiticaster.
Jon
|
496.22 | hmmm...heavy metal? | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | modem butterfly | Fri Apr 08 1988 20:21 | 4 |
| does that apply to stratocaster(sp?) too?
-Jody
|
496.23 | One real, two spurious | UBRAD::KENAH | My journey begins with my first step | Fri Apr 08 1988 21:31 | 28 |
| Enantiomorphism -- first encountered in a discussion (by Martin
Gardner) of Tweedledum and Tweedledee -- they're mirror-image
twins.
Two others, really non-words, but great expletives.
1.When I was a kid, there was a daily comic strip called Red Ryder.
Red had a sidekick named Little Beaver; he was an Indian boy.
Little Beaver's ultimate putdown for a person or situation was:
Gus-dusting!!
I always liked this, and have used it for decades.
2.This is a true story: I once lived with a woman and her three-year-old
son. One day, Sarah was explaining breast feeding to her son. Now,
Sarah was many things, but large-breasted was not one of those things.
So, after Sarah finished talking about lactation, and feeding the baby,
her son looked at her, then down to her rather flat chest, then back at
her face, then down to her chest again, then back at her.
He then very solemnly said, "That's Ruh-DIK-i-luss!"
Ever since, I've found it very difficult to pronounce "ridiculous"
correctly.
andrew
|
496.24 | I like the short | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Mon Apr 11 1988 22:34 | 22 |
| re: 16
Don't they have lots of wherely birds in the Air Force?????? :) :)
My favorite words are the clear, concise, picturesque nouns and
verbs for everyday things -- verbs like
slither
congeal
chill
flutter
and nouns like
narthex
lintel
barm
calyx
Big words, except in specialized contexts, leave me cold.
--bonnie
|
496.25 | Puddler | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Mon Apr 11 1988 23:54 | 10 |
| It is a term used to refer to ducks
that are not diving ducks. Ducks fall into one of two categories:
diving ducks or puddlers.
Now that it's spring, haven't you all seen those puddlers out there
puddling in the puddles?
Spd
|
496.26 | now *that's* a word | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Tue Apr 12 1988 14:56 | 6 |
| I don't suppose you happen to know what kind of ducks live at the
hotel down the road? I've never seen them on the pond; they spend
all day walking up and down the sidewalk looking for pedestrians
to harrass. Doesn't sound like a diver or a puddler.
--bonnie
|
496.27 | :-D | HAMPS::HILL | Nick Hill - UK Corp. Actts | Tue Apr 12 1988 15:26 | 8 |
| Extrinsic is nice, for the eyebrows it raises.
I know "Time for a drink?" is a phrase, but it has a very acceptable
tintinabulation to it.
And tintinabulation is Ok too.
Nick
|
496.28 | One possibility | KESEY::GETSINGER | Eric Getsinger | Tue Apr 12 1988 18:40 | 1 |
| RE: .26 -- Is the hotel a dive?
|
496.29 | Those ducks sound like peddlers to me! | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Wed Apr 13 1988 23:58 | 1 |
|
|
496.30 | Jeez | TLE::HUNZIKER | | Thu Apr 14 1988 00:23 | 5 |
| This word is very satisfying when you are frustrated, disgusted,
or amazed at some unbelievably stupid thing you have just done.
There is much satisfaction in drawing out the "eeeeeeeez" and,
if truly upset and in the right company, you can add a suffix
to it: -us.
|
496.31 | you mean, "jes' us?" as in "nobody else here"??????????? | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Thu Apr 14 1988 20:23 | 4 |
| I need a :-) symbol that tells the reader my face is expressing
honest bewilderment here. Preferably with tongue in cheek.
--bonnie
|
496.32 | Sword | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Tue Apr 19 1988 19:01 | 30 |
| re. 12
I think "smegma" is a nice word too. I wonder if "smegmatic" was one of the
original medieval humours that never made it. What kind of a temperament is
a "smegmatic" one?
While on S, I like
"sdrucciola" (3 line poem, all lines rhyming: also aloic (?) curds backwards
"squamous" (like spotty marks on snake. very Lovecraft)
"schmaltzy" (& all yiddishisms: so fun to say)
especially, things like "Oedipus, Schmoedipus: what's wrong with loving your
mother?")
"Schwarzchild radius" (ref Black holes)
"spondee" (and all feet: e.g. "anapaests" = Return of the Dactyls)
"sblood" (& "sdeath" etc. What's the term for the practise of blasphemy
avoidance in this manner
"silverfish" (little critters that get into old books)
word-struck
of Great Britain
|
496.33 | no takers | VIA::RANDALL | back in the notes life again | Wed Apr 20 1988 16:59 | 8 |
| re: .32
I doubt that one could adequately describe a smegmatic personality
in a public, comany-maintained notes file . . .
But it's fun to think about.
--bonnie
|
496.34 | More sibilants | ERIS::CALLAS | I've lost my faith in nihilism. | Wed Apr 20 1988 18:58 | 10 |
| While we're at it "scrofulous" is another nice one. It's from scrofula,
the King's Evil, a nasty disease that supposedly can be cured only by
the touch of the King.
Also "skene," a type of Scots dirk. I used it for a family name in a
play. Members of that family all had sharp tongues.
A friend of mine set a story in the town of Squamous, New Jersey.
Jon
|
496.35 | | MARKER::KALLIS | Why is everyone getting uptight? | Wed Apr 20 1988 19:14 | 5 |
| Re .34 (Jon):
But isn't all of New Jersey ...?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.36 | speaking of digusting words.. | SKIVT::ROGERS | Lasciate ogni speranza, voi ch'entrate | Wed Apr 20 1988 20:00 | 6 |
|
I've always favored "priapism" as a dictionary tester. If it's there the
dictionary is probably okay.
Larry
|
496.37 | | HOMSIC::DUDEK | It's a Bowser eat Bowser world | Thu Apr 21 1988 20:32 | 5 |
| Re .32
Thanks a lot! I was eating my lunch when I read that note!
Spd
|
496.38 | halibut | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Mon Apr 25 1988 11:06 | 0 |
496.39 | proselytute | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | showtime, Synergy... | Mon Apr 25 1988 17:50 | 9 |
| overheard on a mailing list:
proselytute, n: A person who is a door-to-door salesperson
for their religion, or any person who considers their day
misspent if they have not ruined it for the heathen scum.
So you have your visiting proselytutes who come into your home,
and you street-corner proselytutes who practice on the sidewalks
of our fair cities.
|
496.40 | Mword | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Thu Apr 28 1988 18:19 | 16 |
| myrmidon
Mycenae
Menelaus
Mercutio
mercury
memento mori
Mordred
Morte d'Arthur
mousetrap
Mrs Malaprop
Mutius Scaevola
Mnemon
manta
mantra
mangrove
Mistress Quickly
|
496.41 | I rather favor Mandrake | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Thu Apr 28 1988 18:45 | 5 |
| Re .40:
Good to have a favorite word. :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.42 | where do you park *your* camels? | REGENT::EPSTEIN | Bruce Epstein | Thu Apr 28 1988 19:27 | 3 |
| re: .40 -
Mordred, and Morte d'Arthur, but not Merlin?
|
496.43 | Merlin? Bleeearrgh! | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Thu Apr 28 1988 19:44 | 28 |
| M is for me a dark and sombre letter, and a lot of the words I pick echo that
side. Merlin was a tedious old goat, probably invented by Tolkein, and the
word is dull.
On that note, Tolkein is by far a more interesting name than any of those
that he devised in his famous books about Wombles.
I really like mandrake, though.
Also:
myth
which occurs in a superb quote from "Cyrano de Bergerac"
"A lie is a sort of a myth, and a myth is a sort of a truth."
also the quintessentially horrible:
melanoblastoma
On a more cheerful note:
moonshine
moonfaced
minim
midshipman
Michael Milken
etc.
|
496.44 | I forgot mackerel | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Thu Apr 28 1988 19:51 | 20 |
| All fish names are good.
Especially:
cod
turbot
lemon sole
hammerhead shark
kipper
red herring
poisson d'avril (april fool in French)
monkfish
flounder
conger eel
barracuda
salmon
Have you heard of the language HALIBU PROLOG?
Can you imagine the joke, to which the final line would be the song:
"Salmon chunder deafening"?
|
496.45 | " ... then, by Heavens, sir, find me _more_ such old goats!" | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Thu Apr 28 1988 20:51 | 14 |
| Re .43:
> ...... Merlin was a tedious old goat, probably invented by Tolkein, and the
>word is dull.
A merlin is a small European falcon.
Merlin, according to lore, is still alive, though he was entombed
in rock. As far as the tales of _Morte d'Arthur_ go, he was nearly
the only one with a sense of humor until Sir Dynadan. Far from
tedious, he was the only one who kept Camelot from collapsing into
a huge soap opera. See what happened after he departed?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.46 | a secretive old ham | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Thu Apr 28 1988 22:15 | 39 |
| > Merlin, according to lore, is still alive, though he was entombed
> in rock. As far as the tales of _Morte d'Arthur_ go, he was nearly
> the only one with a sense of humor until Sir Dynadan. Far from
> tedious, he was the only one who kept Camelot from collapsing into
> a huge soap opera. See what happened after he departed?
What happened? Monty Python took over! And Merlin was responsible
for the onset of the silliness, when (according to la Morte d'Arthur) he left
a Whoopee cushion on Siege Perilous.
Now, a much more triff book on knightly meanderings is "Orlando
Furioso", which melanges many storylines concerning the activities of the
knights of Charlemagne. There's also a fair amount of magic, which is the
technology used to fuel all the circumnavigation and space travel that goes on.
The best sequence, for my money, is where an English knight travels to the Moon
which is a sort of solar system Lost Property Office: everything that's gets
lost on Earth reappears on the Moon, including Orlando's wits (he is Furioso:
literally mad with love for most of the epic). When was this written?
Early sixteenth century, I think. Does some one know?
The best bit of Cyrano de Bergerac (recently turned by Steve Martin
into a film about a fireman, but I haven't seen that) is also about the moon.
For various complicated reasons, Cyrano wishes to delay someone who passes him
in the street, so he lies down, starts groaning, and pretends to be a man who
has just fallen from the moon. A fantastic conceit.
More areas like fish, which are for me rich in good words:
chess
snakes
magic swords
cloud types
heraldry
American surnames
botany
Shakespeare
ancient history
alchemy
|
496.47 | this is really about _a_ favorite word! | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Thu Apr 28 1988 22:30 | 30 |
| Re .46:
> What happened? Monty Python took over! And Merlin was responsible
>for the onset of the silliness, when (according to la Morte d'Arthur) he left
>a Whoopee cushion on Siege Perilous.
That last's propoganda spread by Morgana le Fay. As for Monty Python,
well, if Merlin wasn't, er, tied up at the time, Monty Python probably
would have been Monty Earthworm. The one that gets the bird.
>The best sequence, for my money, is where an English knight travels to the Moon
>which is a sort of solar system Lost Property Office: everything that's gets
>lost on Earth reappears on the Moon, including Orlando's wits (he is Furioso:
>literally mad with love for most of the epic).
Done by Astolpho, as I recall. Got a lot of his own wits back that
way. There was magic, but Malagicci was relatively small potatoes.
_Orlando Furioso_ was Ariosto's poem, but the stories go _much_
further back than that.
>For various complicated reasons, Cyrano wishes to delay someone who passes him
>in the street, so he lies down, starts groaning, and pretends to be a man who
>has just fallen from the moon. A fantastic conceit.
And the first story to suggest you could get to the moon with rockets.
Now if he'd just left it at that and not included the iron chair
and lodestone, the geese, the bottles of dew ....
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
496.48 | goodnight | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Thu Apr 28 1988 23:21 | 14 |
| A short one: it's way past my bedtime and time to go home. Clearly, Steve
Kallis Jnr, you know these books well: I'm impressed by your recall.
I'm sorry that I'm only allowed *one* favourite word. In reality, I have
tens of thousands! A few other sources of good words have occured to me:
Dickens
zodiacal signs
Australian argot
things named after people: (eg Boycott, Shrapnel, Malquist)
English Common Law (scutage, tort, trespass, malfeisance)
joyoflex type words (oxymoron, homonym, clerihew, irony)
(of course, clerihew falls in the things named after people category
as well.)
|
496.49 | huh? | VOLGA::B_REINKE | where the sidewalk ends | Thu Apr 28 1988 23:52 | 5 |
| in re .43....
I don't recall any Wombles in any of Tolkein's books.
Bonnie
|
496.50 | riposte courteous | HERON::BUCHANAN | zut bleu! | Fri Apr 29 1988 13:02 | 8 |
| > I don't recall any Wombles in any of Tolkein's books.
wombles, schmombles: don't get hung up on this "truth" thing
My entries in this notesfile are pure ornamental, and where truth
enhances the decorative qualities of the reply (as in this one
for instance), it may be used. But truth is only one colour on the
palette.
|
496.51 | aha, a solution! | VIA::RANDALL | I feel a novel coming on | Mon May 02 1988 20:07 | 6 |
| re: .43, .45
If Merlin's an old goat, can we use him in the Walpurgis night
celebration being discussed elsewhere?
--bonnie
|
496.52 | mockery of Things Better Left Unmocked | HERON::BUCHANAN | a man, a plan, a canal: Suez | Mon May 02 1988 23:17 | 16 |
| > If Merlin's an old goat, can we use him in the Walpurgis night
> celebration being discussed elsewhere?
Which Walpurgis night celebration discussion do you mean?
Press KP7 for:
BONDAJ::ANCIENT_NAUGHTINESS_BY_EMAIL
or
ARKHAM::SUMMONING_GREAT_CTHULHU
Also there's some lively conversation going on in the academic networks.
Send your Walpurgan queries to lovecraft @miskatonic.edu for some
sanity-bending enlightenment.
The rats! The walls! The rats in the walls!
|
496.53 | "Yogash ... will guide you to your mount, which best be kept invisible" | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Mon May 02 1988 23:27 | 21 |
| Re .52:
>Press KP7 for:
>
> BONDAJ::ANCIENT_NAUGHTINESS_BY_EMAIL
>or
> ARKHAM::SUMMONING_GREAT_CTHULHU
That latter conference is now:
NKRMCN::EVOKING_YOG_SOTHOTH
... but the node's almost impossible to reach due to network load.
There is a related Conference,
AZTHTH::BUBBLE_AND_GNAW
Cthulhu f'thagn.
|
496.54 | | GNUVAX::BOBBITT | showtime, Synergy... | Tue May 03 1988 20:44 | 8 |
| a friend of mine told me of a conference called
HASTUR::TRY_SAYING_IT_FOUR_TIMES_FAST
moo ha ha
-Jody
|
496.55 | Yvingy is a _what_? | MARKER::KALLIS | loose ships slip slips. | Tue May 03 1988 21:21 | 17 |
|
Re .54 (Jody):
You might also like --
HALI::CARCOSA
and
MLSTRM::DESCENT
But isn't this all getting a little esoteric?
"Hai, n'ygak! You are off and free ...."
Steve Kallis, Jy.
|
496.56 | �a! �a! | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | Monsters from the Id | Wed May 04 1988 10:01 | 7 |
| re:.55
That's a louse-y title for a note, Steve.
Yeah, and fhtag'n you, too!
--- jerry
|
496.57 | Typo for Yngvy | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed May 04 1988 18:33 | 0 |
496.58 | Yngvy is a louse! | SLTERO::KENAH | My journey begins with my first step | Thu May 05 1988 23:27 | 0 |
496.59 | haberdasher | HERON::BUCHANAN | nihilistic technofetishist | Thu Jun 02 1988 21:15 | 0 |
496.60 | | YIPPEE::LIRON | | Thu Jun 02 1988 23:26 | 10 |
| tessitura
deliquescent
chulo
ferraiolone
fluxion
presentient
spirulate
strisciando
takkanah
chonolith
|
496.61 | | IOSG::VICKERS | Entropy isn't what it used to be | Fri Jun 03 1988 12:46 | 9 |
|
Melifluous
Ineluctable
Macrophage
Israel (I just like the look and sound of it)
Behest
Paul V
|
496.62 | IAMB FOND OF: | NWD002::ANDERSOMI | | Fri Jun 03 1988 21:57 | 2 |
|
Anapest
|
496.63 | soul mate! | HERON::BUCHANAN | nihilistic technofetishist | Sun Jun 05 1988 15:05 | 21 |
| > Anapest
Me too! I encountered it in a "Times Crossword" about fifteen years
ago, in a different spelling, and plural: ANAPAESTS
The clue was abstruse even by "Times Crossword" standards:
Return of the Dactyls.
For those lucky enough not to have had a classical education, let me
explain. Latin poetry can be subjected to an analysis called "scansion" which
identifies the metre of the poem: which vowels should be pronounced long and
which short. The whole process is extremely bizarre. In the iambic
hexameter, for instance, each line contains six "feet". To oversimplify, in
this case, each foot will be one of two kinds: a dactyl or a spondee.
A dactyl consists of three syllables: one long and then two short, whereas a
spondee consists of just two syllables, both long.
The anapaest, which is rarer, and doesn't crop up in iambic hexameter
at all, also has three syllables: two short *and* *then* one long. So it's
a "reversed" or "Returned" dactyl.
|
496.64 | my mistake . . . | BLURB::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman | Sun Jun 05 1988 18:02 | 4 |
| I thought Anapest was a city that Hungarian refugees founded
in the Himalayas.
--bonnie
|
496.65 | A foot too far | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Danger was this man's speciality | Mon Jun 06 1988 16:09 | 6 |
| A footnote to .63. One of the rarer kinds of metric foot was the
`sesquipes' - it was (my memory of this is very shaky) an exceptional
foot that was actually a foot and a half long. Hence `sesquipedalian',
which may very well be someone's favourite word. Mine's `curmudgeon'.
b
|
496.66 | We don't use the metric system in the U.S. | CLT::LASHER | Working... | Mon Jun 06 1988 20:52 | 5 |
| Re: .65
Isn't a metric foot a decimeter?
Lew Lasher
|
496.67 | metric foot definition | COMICS::DEMORGAN | Richard De Morgan, UK CSC/CS | Tue Jun 07 1988 10:25 | 2 |
| A metric foot (used for length of wood etc in the UK) is 30cm which
is 11.81102362 inches to the limit of my calculator.
|
496.68 | champagne for my real friends.... | AYOV18::OAVAX | | Sat Jul 30 1988 21:01 | 1 |
| Does anybody like peristalsis?
|
496.69 | | NEARLY::GOODENOUGH | Jeff Goodenough, IED/Reading UK | Mon Aug 01 1988 12:12 | 5 |
| > Does anybody like peristalsis?
Couldn't live without it :-)
Jeff.
|
496.70 | | CAMONE::MAZUR | | Mon Aug 01 1988 17:47 | 12 |
| > Does anybody like peristalsis?
I think that Mikhail Gorbachev does. He's hoping that the Soviet
people will stomach his new policies.
I guess you could say that he hopes the people adequately perform
peristalsis on peristroika.
-Paul
|
496.71 | Tough to swallow | DECSIM::HEILMAN | Neurotransmitters take a holiday | Tue Aug 02 1988 21:57 | 3 |
| If you were having trouble swallowing, would that be
peri-stasis? or perhaps peri-stall-sis?
|
496.72 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Great Caesar calls (he's such a tyrant!) | Thu Aug 25 1988 07:25 | 3 |
|
If you think peristalsis is bad, you should imagine
reverse peristalsis...
|
496.73 | | LAMHRA::WHORLOW | Abseiling is a real let-down! | Fri Aug 26 1988 02:07 | 7 |
| G'day,
.... 'Twould be enough to make one sick...
djw
|
496.74 | blech | WMOIS::B_REINKE | As true as water, as true as light | Fri Aug 26 1988 04:46 | 11 |
| in re .73 in re .72
fer, sure...
or in simpler terms, my immediate reaction to .72 was
oh guck!
BJPR
|
496.75 | Read This Book! | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Fri May 19 1989 00:01 | 17 |
| From the Literary Life and Other Curiosities, Robert Hendrickson,
Penguin, 1982 (a must have for all JOYOFLEXers) ...
Authors' favorite words:
o Carl Sandburg: Monogahela (a river in Pennsylvania ... which,
BTW, means something like "river whose banks are always
caving in" in some indian language)
o James Joyce: cuspidor
o Baudelaire: hemorroides
From popular polls: melody, murmuring, lullaby, golden, silver
moon, cellar door, dawn.
-- Cliff
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496.76 | My Faves | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T... | Fri May 19 1989 00:10 | 35 |
| Some words:
o Carminative -- a preparation to eliminate intestinal
gas
o Onomatapoeia -- the quality of sounding like what it
describes ... said of words or language
o Tintitabullation -- the ringing of bells
o Mellifluous -- smooth souding
o Triskadecaphobia -- fear of the number 13
o Infracaninophilia -- rooting for the underdog
o Gegenschein -- a faint light spot in the sky, directly
opposite the sun ... also called "counterglow" (another neat
word)
... and some phrases:
o Proud flesh -- the swollen flesh around a healing wound ...
a medical term
o Absolute ceiling -- the maximum altitude at which an airplane
can maintain horizontal flight under normal conditions
o Flowering spurge -- a kind of flower
o Hoary puccoon -- aother flower
-- Cliff
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496.77 | | FRECKL::HUTCHINS | If you want it, go after it... | Fri May 19 1989 17:57 | 3 |
| Vicissitude -- changeable; talk to someone about their
vicissitudability...
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496.78 | thigmotropic | COOKIE::DEVINE | Bob Devine, CXN | Fri May 19 1989 19:53 | 4 |
| thigmotropic = the action of bugs squeezing into very
tight cracks to hide
This word could easily be applied to engineering...
|
496.79 | | SEEK::HUGHES | Thus thru Windows call on us(Donne) | Sun May 21 1989 21:26 | 13 |
| Re: < Note 496.76 by SHALOT::ANDERSON "Give me a U, give me a T..." >
> o Tintitabullation -- the ringing of bells
^ ^
I don't want to be excessively nit-picky, but since it's one of
your favorites (and mine), can we please amend it to:
o Tintinnabulation -- the ringing of _little_ bells
(Big Tom and the Great Bell of Khiev do not qualify)
Jim
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496.80 | One of the few made-up words I like... | PSTJTT::TABER | Who in their right mind...OH! | Tue May 23 1989 16:46 | 8 |
| One of my favorite words -- appropriate to the season -- was a word made up
a few years ago as part of a contest run by some magazine that I forget
(New York?) They were looking for a word that would be to olfactory input
as "mellifluous" is to auditory input. An example is the wonderful smells of
Spring. The word had to be as pleasing to speak and hear as "mellifluous."
The winner was "ozmirrah." OED promised to add it to the update.
>>>==>PStJTT
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496.81 | ^-- See personal name... | SSGBPM::KENAH | Omphaloskepsis - Navel Observatory | Tue May 23 1989 17:08 | 5 |
| Perhaps not my favorite, but in the top ten. It's the act
of contemplating one's navel.
andrew
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496.82 | Arachnodactylic - Spider-fingered | SSGBPM::KENAH | Omphaloskepsis - Navel Observatory | Tue May 23 1989 17:10 | 4 |
| I have long, thin fingers. This word describes this characteristic
perfectly.
andrew
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496.83 | Tonka | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | ACE is the place | Thu May 09 1991 21:20 | 12 |
|
After seeing the movie "Dances With Wolves", I feel good about the word
"Tonka"
which is the Lakota (Sioux) word for "Bison".
I grew up in Minnetonka Village, Minnesota, and played with Tonka Toys,
and 30 years later finally understand what is a Tonka.
|
496.84 | | POWDML::COHEN_R | | Mon May 13 1991 17:26 | 4 |
|
Of course, Tonka was just bought by Hasbro of Rhode Island.
So, what does Hasbro mean in Sioux?
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496.85 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Mon May 13 1991 17:53 | 3 |
| Hasbro -- Hassenfeld Brothers, same as in English! %^}
andrew
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496.86 | Funny... | SMURF::CALIPH::binder | Simplicitas gratia simplicitatis | Wed May 15 1991 15:35 | 1 |
| ...I thought Hasbro meant "gobs of money."
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496.87 | | CALS::GELINEAU | | Mon Aug 02 1993 13:20 | 10 |
| ubiquitous
't'isn't
calliope
terpsichore
Montana
raison d'e(^)tre
laurel
pyrrhic
--angela
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496.88 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | Pardon me? Or must I be a criminal? | Mon Aug 02 1993 19:18 | 4 |
| >'t'isn't
'Tisn't correct to insert an apostrophe where no letters have been elided.
'Tis wrong to write "'t'is" isn't't?
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496.89 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Aug 05 1993 19:23 | 12 |
| G'day,
Reminds me of the following interchange...
A child: "Ain't that quaint!"
Parent: "There is no such word as 'Ain't'." "The word is 'isn't'."
Child: "Very well.... Isn't that quisnt!"
derek
|