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940.1 | Superior's Person Book of Words - ISBN 0-87923-556-X | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Dirhinous, bimanal ectomorph | Wed Jan 15 1992 15:06 | 61 |
| The Superior Person's Book of Words
Peter Bowler
Godine
This book is a masterpiece. Basically, Bowler is a word collector, who has
obviously been collecting words for a very long time -- in the most unusual
places, and with a very sharp eye.
He has some real gems. Did you know that insolation means getting a sun tan,
oniomania is an irrestible urge to buy things, a ranarium is a frog farm, a
charientism is an elegantly veiled insult (the book is full of them). To top
things off, though, Bowler is *very* funny -- with an amazingly dry wit.
Here are some good examples:
MERKIN n. A pubic wig for women, or, to quote Grose's Dictionary
of the vulgar tongue, "counterfeit hair for women's privy parts."
Do not ask the author to explain this. The lexicographer's duty
is only to record. To others remains it to remark, with Ambrose
Bierce, "Can such things be?"
PROCERITY n. Tallness, height. "I think you showed great procerity
out there, darling," you say proudly to your gangling teenager after
she has done her bit in the ballet class's end-of-term performance."
FORMICATE v. To swarm like ants. "Principal, I thought you ought
to know -- the Seventh Grade is formicating all over the quadrangle."
Sort of like Dr. Johnson on drugs.
I had so much fun with the book that I sent my sweetie a mail message using
some of Bowler's words. Here's what I came up with (with the translation
following):
By my halidom, I think you're a saporous bellibone. I want to engage in
subderisorious persiflage with you, not to mention ante-jentacular (heck,
post-jentacular, or post-prandial, or pre-prandial) paraphilemia -- after I
decorticate you, of course. Even though your genual nodosity is gelogenic, you
still give me aprosexia, make me vecordious, turn me into a regular gongoozler.
Forgive my battolgy, but I think you're vulpine, unfungible, with nefandous
muliebrity. I jactate about you often. I want to nidificate with you (in
front of the fire?). You give me nympholepsy! I want to kiss your opisthenar,
to the point of palinoia! Please don't think I'm too ultracrepidarian, but
there is no succedaneum for you. Forgive my sermocination, my little pigsney,
but I think you're the most sapid yanker I've ever known! And I mean every
word of that!
Wow! You're sweet, sexy, and fascinating. I want to engage in friendly
teasing with you, not to mention making love before breakfast (or after
breakfast, or after dinner, or before dinner) -- after I take off all your
clothes, of course. Even though your knobby knees are kind of funny, you still
make me mad, goofy -- I can't think of anything but you. Forgive me for
repeating myself, but I think you're a fox, there's nobody like you, you are
quite a gal! I boast about you often. I want to cuddle with you (in front of
the fire?). I desire you all the time. I dream about kissing the back of your
hand -- it's almost an obsession with me. I hope I don't sound like I'm going
overboard, but there's nobody like you. Forgive my going on like this, my
dear, but you're the most fascinating woman I've ever known. And I mean every
word of that!
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940.2 | | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Unintelligiblets | Wed Jan 15 1992 15:20 | 5 |
| This sounds like an ideal text for "Fictionary," my family's favorite
game (Next in line: "Pictionary."). Great pointer -- my family and I
have worn out "Mrs. Byrne's Dictionary" -- no more lodes to mine there.
But Bowler sounds like a whole new vein! Thanks!!! I'm off to
_Borders_ Bookstore in Framingham MA to order my copy... whooppee!! :-)
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940.3 | Where? | UNTADH::HORTON | Death by Weissbier | Thu Jan 16 1992 02:09 | 9 |
|
This book sounds like a sesquipedalian's wet dream.
Would it be possible to state the ISBN number and/or where to get
it from outside of the US of A?
1,001 thanks
Steve
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940.4 | Ivor Brown | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Thu Jan 16 1992 05:06 | 9 |
| An early form of Bowler was a man called Ivor Brown. He published two
books in the thirties (or maybe before, but my copies are printed
according on wartime paper). The first was called A Word in Your Ear
and the second was called - I think - Another Word. They're both
fairly short (I wouldn't be surprised if someone had done a reprint
with both in one volume), both worth having. I don't believe they're
in print any more, but if you see a copy secondhand snap it up.
b
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940.5 | | MICKY::SIMPSON | | Thu Jan 16 1992 05:13 | 3 |
|
I'd like to recommend "Dirk Gentlys Holistic Detective Agency" by the
author Douglas Adams. He wrote the Hitch Hikers Guide to the Galaxy.
|
940.6 | | GOOEY::RUST | | Thu Jan 16 1992 07:03 | 5 |
| See also 37.7 and other replies, for comments about Gordon's "The
Transitive Vampire" and "The Well-Tempered Sentence," both heartily
recommended...
-b
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940.7 | Anguished English | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Dirhinous, bimanal ectomorph | Thu Jan 16 1992 13:24 | 59 |
| Anguished English
Richard Lederer
Wyrick
ISBN 0-941711-04-8
I'm sure this has probably got its own note devoted to it, but I had to put it
in. It's undoubtedly my favorite lexy book (and Lederer is one of my favorite
authors -- I wish he'd give me a comission).
My guess is that a good 10% of the stuff in JOYOFLEX originally came from
Lederer. Do you remember the famous translation gaffes ("Is forbitten to steal
towels please ..."), insurance claim whoppers ("Coming home, I drove into the
wrong house and collided with a tree I didn't have."), ad howlers ("Lost: small
apricot poodle. Reward. Neutered. Like one of the family.")?
There's lots more, including Berraisms, student errors, court bloopers,
newspaper errors, wacky headlines, malapropisms, and misspellings. Here are
some of my favorites:
A history of the world taken from errors in student essays,
starting with Egyptian hydraulics and ending with the Arch-
Duck's assignation. My favorite part was the Elizabethan era:
Queen Elizabeth was the "Virgin Queen." As
queen, she was a success. When Elizabeth
exposed herself before her troops, they all
shouted "hurrah." Then her navy went and
defeated the Spanish Armadillo.
A court transcription involving a child:
Q. And lastly, Gary, all your responses must
be oral. O.K.?
A. Oral.
Q. How old are you?
A. Oral.
An unintentionally funny headline:
BRITISH LEFT WAFFLES ON FALKLAND ISLANDS
A mixed metaphor from Capitol Hill:
Mr. Speaker, I smell a rat; I see him forming
in the air and darkening in the sky, but I'll
nip him in the bud.
On the menu of a Polish hotel:
Salad a firm's own make; limpid red beet soup
with cheesy dumplings in the form of a finger;
roasted duck let loose; beef rashers beaten
up in the country people's fashion.
I've got two copies of this book -- one at work and one at home. This is one
of maybe 3 books in the world that get me literally falling on the floor. I
have never picked it up without laughing out loud. If you don't already have
it -- highly recommended!
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940.8 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Jan 16 1992 14:24 | 17 |
| G'day,
I quite like
Language in a modern World - Simeon Potter, Penguin Books, 1906, with
revisions to 1971. As a general intro to linguistics/grammar/language
its quite a readable book.
I saw a book entitled 'The Cunning Linguist' a while back, but I think
it was a muder mystery novel....
derek
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940.9 | re .1 Thanks, ::ANDERSON! :-) | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Proud to be in a Merkin | Fri Jan 17 1992 06:46 | 5 |
| ... I think I'll use this p_n exactly once more, in SoapBox; but they
probably won't know what it means! :-)
(-: o'course, I can't actually figger out what it means in the above
context, but did I let _that_ little detail (oh er) stop me? like NOT :-)
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940.10 | | POWDML::COHEN_R | | Fri Jan 17 1992 13:47 | 5 |
|
I've always been partial to Willard Espy's Almanac of Words At
Play and its sequel.
Ralph
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940.11 | rathole | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Mon Jan 20 1992 13:39 | 22 |
| G'day,
At the risk of causing a ratholisation ;-) for a moment.....
presumably the need for a merkin is to satisfy the requirements of
James Bond in one of his films....
(dubious comment follows...)
She: Do you like me as a blonde? (she had been a brunettte some
moments before)
Bond: As long as collar and cuff match....
derek
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940.12 | | MICKY::SIMPSON | | Thu Jan 23 1992 01:16 | 6 |
|
Typical bleeding Aus that. When the we here are trying to be literery
and clever and all that, our down-under friend mentions muff!!
"If it's not about beer and some Sheila having it away with a roo, then
I aint going to read it".
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940.13 | The taste buds are on the top of your tongue... | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Thu Jan 23 1992 21:16 | 24 |
| G'day,
And the derivation of sheila for a female is interesting too.... ;-)
I suspect you are becoming mixed up with the cartoon built for export
consumption entitled "Dot and the Kagaroo" (but for the record it was
a mother roo.... not a boomer. (Wallaby darn'd)
and the only ale mentioned in it is Adam's...
and I was not the first to mention such things... if one were to read
back a few notes, you would find some other reference you know...
And Oz has generated some reasonable books too...
A fortunate life - W Facey
The UBD Sydney street directory
to name but two...
derek
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940.14 | How to be PC | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Bonne noyade! | Tue Aug 04 1992 11:28 | 106 |
| The Official Politically Correct
Dictionary and Handbook
Henry Beard and Christopher Cerf
Villard Books
ISBN 0-679-74113-5
$10
A very clever processed tree carcass devoted to that good old chestnut,
political correctness. Though the book veers off into the P.J.
O'Rourke - hey wait a minute, that's not so funny - truly gross and
insensitive - Republican style humor, there's plenty of laughs without
the authors ever really having to force it. And in addition to
attacking PC, they also attack BS (bureaucratially suitable) language,
so there is some balance. They also don't see themselves as the
saviors of Western civilization as do some PC baiters.
Anyway, the book has some real gems (mostly real, not made-up), like
the following:
o Lazybones -- person of torpor
o "That's not an 'error' -- that's a 'differently fielded'
grounder!" said the batchild to the ballchild as the shortstop
bobbled the ball.
o Canine-American -- a dog who resides in the United States
o Boring -- charm-free, differently interesting
o Todd's favorite movie was "The Good, the Bad, and the
Cosmetically Different."
o Housewife -- domestic incarceration survivor, unpaid sex worker,
domestic artist
o "A companion animal capable of providing personal transport,
a companion animal capable of providing personal transport, my
monarchy for a companion animal capable of providing personal
transport!"
o Femstruate -- to discharge the femses
o Fatso -- person of size
o Gingerbread person, person of ginger (The second one is my own
creation. See? It's easy and fun! Try it yourself!)
o Shoplifter -- nontraditional shopper
o Meat -- processed animal carcasses
o "He's 'temporarily metabolically abled,'" enthused Dr.
Frankenstein!
o Dirty old man -- sexually focused chronologically gifted
individual
o Indian pudding -- indigenous pudding
o "Strips of flesh cut from the slaughtered carcasses of cruelly
exploited nohuman animals of the pig family and two nonhuman animal
products stolen from poultry, over easy!" shouted the waitron at
the Biocentric Diner.
o Eskimo pie -- indigenous Alaskan pie
o Honey -- stolen nohuman animal sweetener
o Late -- in the early stages of finalization
o Death -- failure to fulfill one's wellness potential, diagnostic
misadventure of high magnitude, negative patient care outcome
o Kill -- neutralize, alter the health of, render nonviable
o Lie -- Categorical inaccuracy, counterfactual proposition,
inoperative statement, strategic inexactitude, strategic
misrepresentation
o Bombing -- air support, armed reconnaisance, servicing of a
target, visitation of a site, terrain alteration
o Unemployed -- indefinitely idled, involuntarily leisured, in an
orderly transition between career changes, nonrenewed
o Firing -- rightsizing, career-change opportunity, career
alternative enhancement program, decruit, downsizing, streamlining,
restructuring, staff resource management, negative employee retention,
outplacement, reduction activities
Thought you'd enjoy those last two!
There's only one place where the book goes wrong. They've got a section
where they don't just attacks words, but ideas. The words (usually) speak
for themselves, but the ideas stand up pretty well to their (obviously)
ideological attack. Also, the book has both a PC-to-English and
English-to-PC section, as well as the same for BS, both of which add almost
no new material.
-- Cliff (member of the mutant albino genetic recessive global
minority and tree murderer)
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