T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
787.1 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Mar 22 1990 21:53 | 1 |
| Divorce?
|
787.2 | | TERZA::ZANE | shadow juggler | Thu Mar 22 1990 22:30 | 5 |
|
Re: Note 787.1 by SSDEVO::EGGERS
Bravo!
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787.3 | Lex be serious | ULYSSE::WADE | | Thu Mar 22 1990 22:41 | 12 |
|
Come now. I have been assured that, through the medium
of this notesfile, I would be able to avail myself of
the finest brains in the company.
I expected that a great hoard of insightful, witty and
clasically correct suggestions would be revealed.
Don't disappoint me :-)
|
787.4 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Mar 23 1990 00:34 | 1 |
| Half wife
|
787.5 | | KIPINA::TWIGG | | Fri Mar 23 1990 03:21 | 4 |
|
Half-wedded
|
787.6 | half & half = creamy | NYSSA::BIELSKI | Do we need a bigger Texas? | Fri Mar 23 1990 05:45 | 26 |
| Betwixt and between.
------------------
canoodle - to cuddle
Canterbury Tales - unfinished literary work by Chaucer, largely in
verse, consisting of stories told by pilgrims on their way to
Canterbury
canter - a smooth, easy pace like a moderate gallop
cantilena - a smooth, flowing lyrical passage of vocal, or sometimes
instrumental music
cantrip - (1) a magic spell (2) a prank
cantus firmus - a simple melody serving as the main theme in a
contrapuntal work
<take your pick, I vote for "cantrip". Found the above selection in my
dictionary about half way between the "agony" and the "ecstasy". Guess
you just have to know where to look.>
Stan B.
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787.7 | More, please! | ULYSSE::WADE | | Fri Mar 23 1990 09:35 | 14 |
| *Now* we are getting there! Now I begin to see
the imagination and wit that I expected.
`Cantrip' looks good, and the mysterious method
of its definition is appealing. `Half-wife' is
also excellent!
But are there any classical scholars out there
who can suggest or invent a sound Latin- or
Greek-based word?
rgds Jim
PS Thank you for the contributions so far.
|
787.8 | demi-sec? | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Fri Mar 23 1990 13:12 | 0 |
787.9 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | the phoenix-flowering dark rose | Fri Mar 23 1990 14:42 | 9 |
| demisticity?
blissphemy?
hemiconnubiality?
dispousal?
if her name's Kate - biforKated
-Jody
|
787.10 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Fri Mar 23 1990 14:47 | 12 |
| Hello Jim,
In Latin, "half-life marriage" would translate to something
like:
Medium aetatis nuptiae
Perhaps someone wants to build an English word from that (Bob ?)
How about Mediagenuptial Day ?
Midlifenuptialism ?
roger
|
787.11 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T | Fri Mar 23 1990 14:47 | 6 |
| Latin: bimaritous (bi- = two, -maritus = married)
binubilate (bi- = two, nubere = to marry)
Greek: demithalamious (demi- = half, thalamium = bridal chamber
-- from epithalamium)
-- Cliff
|
787.12 | Thoughts | MARVIN::KNOWLES | intentionally Rive Gauche | Fri Mar 23 1990 15:08 | 18 |
| I like Roger's Mediagenuptial Day, though I'm not sure what the g's
doing. Still, there's nothing wrong with etymologically inappropriate
consonants to bind things together.
Dante used the circuitous (and iambic) `nel mezzo del cammin di
nostra vita' - he was writing in Tuscan, so don't blame me for getting
the spelling wrong - to mean 35 (or was it 40, or 45? - anyway "half
way along the road of our life"). But this isn't really it - you're
talking about something that happened half way along a shorter road.
Gk Hemibiogyneureka? (but that wd really apply to someone who'd
_found_ somebody: `eureka' is the perfect of euriskein - to
find)
Lat. Semivital matrimonials?
b
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787.13 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Fri Mar 23 1990 16:14 | 11 |
| Hemibio- sounds good to me. All we need is to add the
root for marriage (which I can't remember right now).
Mediagenuptial: that's medi-age-nuptial.
"Age" is derived from aetas. In mediaeval French, it meant
life, as in
Vivre entre mes parents le reste de mon �ge (Du Bellay)
Don't know if age ever meant life in English (it should have ! :)
roger
|
787.14 | Wonderful stuff!! | ULYSSE::WADE | | Fri Mar 23 1990 16:46 | 4 |
| Keep at it, my friends.
You have all weekend. :-)
|
787.15 | | ULYSSE::LIRON | | Fri Mar 23 1990 16:52 | 6 |
| Of course, if you admit mixed Latin/Greek roots,
you could boldly go for:
Hemibionuptial Day
roger
|
787.16 | Semibenedict? | SSDEVO::HUGHES | Doin' the Shift-Click Drag .... | Fri Mar 23 1990 19:44 | 0 |
787.17 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Give me a U, give me a T | Fri Mar 23 1990 21:25 | 1 |
| hemidemisemizoobiovitanuptimaritathalamion
|
787.18 | ... semivitanupt, for short | GLIVET::RECKARD | Jon Reckard, 381-0878, ZKO3-2/T63 | Mon Mar 26 1990 14:18 | 1 |
| > hemidemisemizoobiovitanuptimaritathalamion
|
787.19 | Thanks! | ULYSSE::WADE | | Mon Mar 26 1990 18:50 | 12 |
|
Thanks to everbody for the suggestions. They are all
imaginative and it was a difficult choice.
In the end, I decided to use HALF-WIFE due to its
literalness, and SEMIVITANUPT because it is snappy and
will impress most of the people to whom I'm likely to
mention my "condition" - other depressed people in bars,
for example ;-}
Jim
|
787.20 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Mar 26 1990 22:31 | 1 |
| You're welcome.
|
787.21 | a few more bad ideas | UILA::WHORLOW | Venturers do it in the bush | Fri Mar 30 1990 07:00 | 25 |
| G'day,
Has the resolution of this marital problem resulted in any mid-life
crises?
then there was
centre-fold
mid-wifed
mildewed = miled with wed init (in reverse) = milde wed
equilibrium = half of it I was free [loosely taking librium to be a
member of the liberated family]
( or maybe equivalium? )
centaur = half man, half something else
equivocal = half the time I could have a say, half, I couldn't
derek
|
787.22 | Sub-urbane interpretation | JUMBLY::PETERS | Steve Peters, REO x6325 | Fri Mar 30 1990 11:07 | 6 |
| Since you have been single for half your life, and married for half your life,
how about:
Semi detached
Steve
|