T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
991.1 | | LINGO::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Thu Jul 16 1992 07:18 | 9 |
| Strictly speaking, `infinite glue' is a gem from the arcane language of TeX -
borrowed by the VAX DOCUMENT wallahs from Donald Knuth (and maybe Knuth
himself borrowed the phrase from some mathematical context, though I doubt it).
Does `absolute zero' qualify? It's what you can't make anything any colder than,
but I'm sure someone could come up with a more obscure definition (involving
Boyle and Kelvin) if obscurity is a sine qua non.
b
|
991.2 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Thu Jul 16 1992 07:58 | 5 |
| The definition of absolute zero is the temperature at which all atomic
activity ceases. Meaning, of course, that a DP transaction can be
interrupted...
-dick
|
991.3 | Proud flesh *hurts* | VMSMKT::KENAH | Seeking the Philosopher's Stone | Thu Jul 16 1992 13:01 | 9 |
| Proud flesh isn't a kind of scar -- It's a protubance of tissue
without a tendency to heal or scarify. Sometimes it heals by itself;
other times it needs to be cauterized.
I've occasionally had proud flesh in conjunction with hangnails;
it's the little bit of *very* tender tissue that sticks up
next to the nail.
andrew
|
991.4 | sets | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | | Thu Jul 16 1992 13:21 | 14 |
|
Cliff,
I don't know if you'll like this one, but how about
"almost everywhere"? It's a mathematical term, having
to do with set theory. Rather obscure, me thinks.
If you want a definition, I can get you one, as it's not
available in just any old dictionary. It's one of those
that one has to read over a few times, sort of like the
definition of "gerundive" for me.
Diane
|
991.5 | ops, forgot one | SHALOT::ANDERSON | The glass is half empty | Thu Jul 16 1992 15:16 | 1 |
| Flowering spurge -- it's a flower
|
991.6 | From German? | TRUCKS::WINWOOD | Life has surface noise too | Tue Jul 21 1992 11:06 | 5 |
| I believe 'Zucker' is the German for Sugar, hence a fattie
due to a predeliction for it?
Calvin
|
991.7 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | But this one goes to 11 | Wed Jul 22 1992 06:43 | 1 |
| No, he's the guy who discovered it. Nice try though.
|
991.8 | | JGODCL::APETERS | Nasser for Precedent! | Mon Aug 24 1992 07:21 | 8 |
|
How about...
Infinite Improbability
from the Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy (by Douglas Adams).
Andr� ;^)
|
991.9 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Keep on keepin' on... | Mon Aug 24 1992 07:34 | 4 |
| I recently saw a road sign in New Zealand that I really liked;
it would probably make a good name for a band, or a CD title:
Deceptive Bends
|
991.10 | See you soon, NZ! | VNABRW::OSLANSKY_W | LAK�L Z'M�N W-�TH L'KH�L-H�FETS | Mon Aug 24 1992 08:12 | 9 |
| New Zild, oh yeah ... I really learned to like road signs like these:
CONCEALED - usually a hidden junction with a secondary road
STOCK - [from "life stock":] expect a herd of sheep ...
METAL - has nothing to do with Hard Rock, it just means
a gravel surface (aka UNSEALED)
Walter "Call Me Kiwi" Oslansky :-)
|
991.11 | | CALS::THACKERAY | | Mon Aug 24 1992 09:11 | 18 |
| Re .9:
Strange you should say that. There was an album by 10cc named exactly
that, "Deceptive Bends"!
Ray
PS. It's like that signpost in the north of London "Hatfield and the
North".
Or for the person who cited Douglas Adams earlier, that member of the
rock band in the restuarant at the end of the universe, whose name came
from an estate agent in North London, "Hotblack Desiato". But
then,Douglas Adams is wonderful at taking names of signs and making
them work for a living. Read "The meaning of Liff" for a lark.
Hey, that's a hell of a string of interconnections with music as the
theme!
|
991.12 | | STARCH::HAGERMAN | Flames to /dev/null | Mon Aug 24 1992 09:21 | 1 |
| "Slippery when wet." -- G. Bush re W. Clinton.
|
991.13 | Confidential Shredding | LINGO::KNOWLES | Spelling chequers are knot the hole answer | Fri Sep 11 1992 07:47 | 4 |
| I've been walking by this one for years without a second glance, but it's
suddenly struck me as in some way notable - could be an album title too.
b
|
991.14 | Foot Odor Baby | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Let my people go! | Mon Sep 14 1992 06:52 | 2 |
| The title of one of the clips on America's Funniest Home
Videos last night.
|
991.15 | ...and who started calling 'em 'buns', anyway? | VALKYR::RUST | | Mon Sep 14 1992 11:02 | 10 |
| Dunno if this qualifies, but it certainly caught my attention. There's
a new exercise video for tightening up the, er, I think it would be the
gluteus maximus (glutei?). Anyhow, it's got the catchy title, "Buns of
Steel"...
Certainly doesn't sound like something _I'd_ want, either for a Really
Close Friend (no fun to fondle) or for myself (downright painful to sit
on!).
-b
|
991.16 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | Bushies do it for FREE! | Mon Sep 14 1992 16:20 | 9 |
| G'day,
Driving along, a quick missread and a sticky situation...
CONGEALED DRIVEWAYS seem so hard to turn into, and as for the
intrinsic difficulties of dealing with DANCER AHEAD.....
derek
|
991.17 | Exactly the wrong word... | LJSRV2::KALIKOW | Brother, can youse paradigm? | Mon Dec 05 1994 05:36 | 16 |
| This morning as I was listening to National Public Radio on my way to
work, there was a piece about the current controversy surrounding the
proposal for a new US Postage stamp, part of a 50th-anniversary-
commemmorative series about WWII. It features a depiction of the
mushroom cloud over Hiroshima/Nagasaki with the caption "Atomic bombs
hasten war's end". Naturally this has caused a significant flap in
Japanese-American relations. According to NPR, one Hiroshima
anti-nuclear organization, which had been asked by the Smisthonian
Institution to supply museum exhibit materials on the effects of the
bombs on the city's inhabitants -- such as scorched school lunchboxes
and partially-burned school uniforms -- upon hearing news of the
proposed stamp, became incensed.
I nearly drove off the road...
|
991.18 | Pay for a tax cut | NETCAD::ROLKE | Disguise the limit. | Thu Dec 15 1994 13:02 | 1 |
| ... National Public Radio and politics provide an endless supply. -C
|