Expand Your Vocabulary

xoxoxoBruce • Aug 9, 2015 9:14 pm
21 Interesting Words From David Foster Wallace's Vocabulary List

1. aerobe—organism requiring oxygen to live

2. afterclap—unexpected, often unpleasant sequel to a matter that had been considered closed

3. anaclisis—psychological dependence on others; “anaclitic”

4.apophasis—allusion to something by denying that it will be mentioned

5. bistre—yellowish-brown color

6. catadromous—living in freshwater but migrating to sea to breed

7. ecotone—transitional zone between communities containing the characteristic species of each

8. euphuism—ornate, allusive, overpoetic prose style

9. gloze—minimize or underplay… “gloze” the embarrassing part

10. muntin—strip of wood or metal that separates & holds various panes in a window, like a window w/ four individual panes
arranged in a big rectangle, etc.

11. nidifugous—leaving the nest shortly after hatching

12. ocherous—moderate orange yellow

13. ordurous—dungish or shitty

14. patelliphobia—fear of bowls, cups, basins, and tubs

15. peritrichous—having a band of cilia around the mouth as certain protozoans

16. privity—secret, special knowledge between two or more people; (adj.) privitive

17. serrate—having or forming a row of sharp little teethy things

18. tarantism—disorder where you have uncontrollable need to dance

19. tardive (adj.)—having symptoms that develop slowly or appear long after inception

20. tenesmus—urgent but ineffectual attempt to pee or shit

21. valetudinarian—sickly, weak, morbidly health-conscious person
monster • Aug 9, 2015 9:47 pm
Mephitic --- foul smelling
Gravdigr • Aug 9, 2015 10:24 pm
Smegma
monster • Aug 9, 2015 10:32 pm
who here does not already have that in their vocab?

smeghead ;)

[YOUTUBE]RXKlC8ph7mM[/YOUTUBE]
sexobon • Aug 9, 2015 10:37 pm
xoxoxoBruce;935869 wrote:
2. afterclap—unexpected, often unpleasant sequel to a matter that had been considered closed
Till now I thought afterclap was a euphemism for condom. :D
Sundae • Aug 9, 2015 11:08 pm
I knew three of the words on the list (do I win a prize?)

I'd also forgotten how much I fancy Arnold Judas Rimmer (you can take the prize back now).
Lamplighter • Aug 10, 2015 12:59 am
I think most every one of those words has an alternate definition....

For example:

14. patelliphobia—fear of bowls, cups, basins, and tubs
No, it's the fear of knee caps, and certain Italian bicycles

,
lumberjim • Aug 10, 2015 5:20 pm
No, Lamp, It's the fear of Indian Customers. My salesmen all have it, so I know.
Gravdigr • Aug 23, 2015 6:04 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Aug 24, 2015 10:54 pm
A few times each decade, the number of acceptable Scrabble words grows. Some sixty-five hundred new words—“lolz,” “shizzle,” and “blech” among them—will officially enter one of the two major competitive Scrabble lexicons on September 1st of this year. The grumbling that results when a word list lengthens is not so much about the inclusion of obscene or offensive words—though a cleaned-up list was controversially published in 1996, after someone protested the inclusion of “jew” as a verb. Instead, it is more about the growing divide between two Scrabble communities: North America and everywhere else…

What difference does it make in scrabble, when you lay down J+E+W, whether you think it's a noun or a verb? :confused:
sexobon • Aug 25, 2015 12:41 am
If you think it's a verb, you may be able to use more letters by laying down present participle jewing or simple past and past participle jewed.
xoxoxoBruce • Aug 25, 2015 1:49 am
Ah, good point. :thumb:
Gravdigr • Aug 27, 2015 6:34 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Aug 27, 2015 7:36 pm
These aren't legit... yet.
BigV • Aug 27, 2015 10:59 pm
dunnage

1 -- the language used when a group of friends are insulting one another in a friendly way.

2 -- the weight of the packing material in a freight shipment.

3 -- the boards used to raise a load off the ground to permit forklift blades to fit underneath.

answer: [COLOR="White"] #3[/COLOR]
Gravdigr • Aug 28, 2015 1:19 pm
Yay me!
fargon • Aug 28, 2015 1:33 pm
BigV;937310 wrote:
dunnage

1 -- the language used when a group of friends are insulting one another in a friendly way.

2 -- the weight of the packing material in a freight shipment.

3 -- the boards used to raise a load off the ground to permit forklift blades to fit underneath.

answer: [COLOR="White"] #3[/COLOR]


The lumber used to secure and pad cargo on a conveyance.
Gravdigr • Aug 28, 2015 1:52 pm
We called that 'cribbing'.
Gravdigr • Sep 8, 2015 3:51 pm
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I get a daily 'Word of the Day' email from Dictionary.com, that's why mines are snips.
Gravdigr • Sep 11, 2015 5:00 pm
That should read "I get a daily 'Word of the Day' email from thefreedictionary.com, that's why mines are snips."

Sorry for any confusion.
Gravdigr • Oct 4, 2015 11:35 am
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Gravdigr • Oct 8, 2015 4:01 pm
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Lamplighter • Oct 9, 2015 11:21 am
.
.
You might also like:
Sundae • Oct 9, 2015 11:51 am
anal-excitement-what?

This post alone means I won't be able to access this thread when I'm back home loggong on from the library :lol:
Carruthers • Oct 9, 2015 1:07 pm
Don't look for anything that requires analysis, either.
Gravdigr • Oct 9, 2015 4:22 pm
Lamplighter;941387 wrote:
.
.
You might also like:


so what the fuck does it mean?
Lamplighter • Oct 9, 2015 5:52 pm
It might depend on how you see it... as here
Sundae read it one way. But it could also read as:

an[COLOR="Silver"]-[/COLOR]alexithymia
adroit in experiencing, expressing, and describing emotional responses.

Once again I've posted something that
- if you have to explain it, it's not funny :sniff:
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 9, 2015 10:32 pm
Sundae;941396 wrote:
anal-excitement-what?

This post alone means I won't be able to access this thread when I'm back home loggong on from the library :lol:


No, it's anal exit or some shit. ;)
Gravdigr • Oct 22, 2015 5:23 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Oct 22, 2015 7:13 pm
USA USA USA ;)
Gravdigr • Oct 23, 2015 3:43 pm
I soooo want to pronounce that as "cockistocracy".
fargon • Oct 23, 2015 5:40 pm
What Bruce said.
Gravdigr • Oct 27, 2015 6:38 pm
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lumberjim • Oct 27, 2015 6:41 pm
I think i just have a NORMAL fear of being buried alive. Which is to say, that's about the worst way I could think of to die. I can't breathe right now.
Gravdigr • Nov 2, 2015 5:25 pm
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That last one was just for you Pennsylvaniacs!
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 10, 2015 4:45 pm
1.wend
You rarely see a “wend” without a “way.” You can wend your way through a crowd or down a hill, but no one wends to bed or to school. However, there was a time when English speakers would wend to all kinds of places. “Wend” was just another word for “go” in Old English. The past tense of “wend” was “went” and the past tense of “go” was “gaed.” People used both until the 15th century, when “go” became the preferred verb, except in the past tense where “went” hung on, leaving us with an outrageously irregular verb.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, boogie.[/COLOR]

2.deserts
The “desert” from the phrase “just deserts” is not the dry and sandy kind, nor the sweet post-dinner kind. It comes from an Old French word for “deserve,” and it was used in English from the 13th century to mean “that which is deserved.” When you get your just deserts, you get your due. In some cases, that may mean you also get dessert, a word that comes from a later French borrowing.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, pay-backs or karma.[/COLOR]

3.eke
If we see “eke” at all these days, it’s when we “eke out” a living, but it comes from an old verb meaning to add, supplement, or grow. It’s the same word that gave us “eke-name” for “additional name,” which later, through misanalysis of “an eke-name” became “nickname.”
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, hustle.[/COLOR]

4.sleight
“Sleight of hand” is one tricky phrase. “Sleight” is often miswritten as “slight” and for good reason. Not only does the expression convey an image of light, nimble fingers, which fits well with the smallness implied by “slight,” but an alternate expression for the concept is “legerdemain,” from the French léger de main,“ literally, "light of hand.” “Sleight” comes from a different source, a Middle English word meaning “cunning” or “trickery.” It’s a wily little word that lives up to its name.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, trick.[/COLOR]

5.roughshod
Nowadays we see this word in the expression “to run/ride roughshod” over somebody or something, meaning to tyrannize or treat harshly. It came about as a way to describe the 17th century version of snow tires. A “rough-shod” horse had its shoes attached with protruding nail heads in order to get a better grip on slippery roads. It was great for keeping the horse on its feet, but not so great for anyone the horse might step on.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced wit, gimme your lunch money.[/COLOR]

6.fro
The “fro” in “to and fro” is a fossilized remnant of a Northern English or Scottish way of pronouncing “from.” It was also part of other expressions that didn’t stick around, like “fro and till,” “to do fro” (to remove), and “of or fro” (for or against).
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, GTFO.[/COLOR]

7.hue
The “hue” of “hue and cry,” the expression for the noisy clamor of a crowd, is not the same “hue” as the term we use for color. The color one comes from the Old English word híew, for “appearance.” This hue comes from the Old French hu or heu, which was basically an onomatopoeia, like “hoot.”
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, bass line[/COLOR].

8.lurch
When you leave someone “in the lurch,” you leave them in a jam, in a difficult position. But while getting left in the lurch may leave you staggering around and feeling off-balance, the “lurch” in this expression has a different origin than the staggery one. The balance-related lurch comes from nautical vocabulary, while the lurch you get left in comes from an old French backgammon-style game called lourche. Lurch became a general term for the situation of beating your opponent by a huge score. By extension it came to stand for the state of getting the better of someone or cheating them.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, gotcha sucker.[/COLOR]

9.umbrage
“Umbrage” comes from the Old French ombrage (shade, shadow), and it was once used to talk about actual shade from the sun. It took on various figurative meanings having to do with doubt and suspicion or the giving and taking of offense. To give umbrage was to offend someone, to “throw shade.” However, these days when we see the term “umbrage” at all, it is more likely to be because someone is taking, rather than giving it.
[COLOR="royalblue"]Replaced with, come at me bro.[/COLOR]

10.shrift
We might not know what a shrift is anymore, but we know we don’t want to get a short one. “Shrift” was a word for a confession, something it seems we might want to keep short, or a penance imposed by a priest, something we would definitely want to keep short. But the phrase “short shrift” came from the practice of allowing a little time for the condemned to make a confession before being executed. So in that context, shorter was not better.
[COLOR="RoyalBlue"]Replaced with, ain't nobody got time for dat.[/COLOR]
xoxoxoBruce • Nov 15, 2015 3:19 am
This is a difficult training exercise for your expanded vocabulary.
sexobon • Nov 15, 2015 4:16 am
An [post=578035]oldie[/post] but goodie.
Gravdigr • Nov 15, 2015 2:42 pm
And, still, they don't know whether to use a question mark, or a period.
Gravdigr • Nov 28, 2015 5:57 pm
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Gravdigr • Dec 4, 2015 12:13 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Dec 4, 2015 2:03 pm
I'll be foudroyanted if that becomes commonly used. :lol:
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 6, 2015 10:42 pm
A couple of these surprised me.

Data is a plural count noun not, standardly speaking, a mass noun.
Correct: "This datum supports the theory, but many of the other data refute it."

Disinterested means unbiasedand does not mean uninterested.
Correct: "The dispute should be resolved by a disinterested judge." / Why are you so uninterested in my story?

Enormity means extreme evil and does not mean enormousness.
Correct: The enormity of the terrorist bombing brought bystanders to tears. / The enormousness of the homework assignment required several hours of work.

Flounder means to flop around ineffectually and does not mean to founder or to sink to the bottom.
Correct: "The indecisive chairman floundered." / "The headstrong chairman foundered."

Fulsome means unctuous or excessively or insincerely complimentary and does not mean full or copious.
Correct: She didn't believe his fulsome love letter. / The bass guitar had a full sound.

Homogeneous is pronounced as homo-genius and "homogenous" is not a word but a corruption of homogenized.
Correct: The population was not homogeneous; it was a melting pot.

Hung means suspended and does not mean suspended from the neck until dead.
Correct: I hung the picture on my wall. / The prisoner was hanged.

Ironic means uncannily incongruent and does not mean inconvenientor unfortunate.
Correct: "It was ironic that I forgot my textbook on human memory." / It was unfortunate that I forgot my textbook the night before the quiz.

Irregardless is not a word but a portmanteau of regardless and irrespective.
Correct: Regardless of how you feel, it's objectively the wrong decision. / Everyone gets a vote, irrespective of their position.

Nonplussed means stunned, bewildered and does not mean bored, unimpressed.
Correct: "The market crash left the experts nonplussed." / "His market pitch left the investors unimpressed."

Practicable means easily put into practice and does not mean practical.
Correct: His French was practicable in his job, which required frequent trips to Paris./ Learning French before taking the job was a practical decision.
[COLOR="Blue"](my spellcheck refuses to accept practical, insisting on practicable, almost had me convinced I was wrong)[/COLOR]

Protagonist means active character and does not mean proponent.
Correct: "Vito Corleone was the protagonist in 'The Godfather.' " / He is a proponent of solar energy.

Refute means to prove to be false and does not mean to allege to be false, to try to refute.
Correct: His work refuted the theory that the Earth was flat.

Reticent means shy, restrained and does not mean reluctant.
Correct: He was too reticent to ask her out. / "When rain threatens, fans are reluctant to buy tickets to the ballgame."

Urban legend means an intriguing and widely circulated but false story and does not mean someone who is legendary in a city.
Correct: "Alligators in the sewers is an urban legend." / Al Capone was a legendary gangster in Chicago.

To lie (intransitive: lies, lay, has lain) means to recline; to lay (transitive: lays, laid, has laid) means to set down; to lie (intransitive: lies, lied, has lied) means to fib.
Correct: He lies on the couch all day. / He lays a book upon the table. / He lies about what he does.
Gravdigr • Dec 7, 2015 5:57 pm
xoxoxoBruce;947648 wrote:
Hung means suspended and does not mean suspended from the neck until dead.
Correct: I hung the picture on my wall. / The prisoner was hanged.


What if the prisoner had a big dick?
DanaC • Dec 7, 2015 6:03 pm
Then he was a well-hung, hanged prisoner.
Gravdigr • Dec 7, 2015 6:11 pm
So, "hung by the neck" means there's a big dick in ya throat?:D

[size=1]Not that there's anything wrong with that...[/size]



I wasn't born well-hung, but, maybe I'll die well-hanged.
Scriveyn • Dec 9, 2015 9:30 am
Gravdigr;947210 wrote:
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foudroyant


From French coup de foudre = stroke of thunder/lightning

xoxoxoBruce;944991 wrote:
1.wend
You rarely see a “wend” without a “way.” You can wend your way through a crowd or down a hill, but no one wends to bed or to school. However, there was a time when English speakers would wend to all kinds of places. ...


Reminds me of the opening verses of the Canterbury Tales (see lines 16 & 21 below)

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DanaC • Dec 11, 2015 1:33 am
I used to know the opening 20 lines or so of the Prologue by heart. Love the way it sounds when spoken aloud.

When you read english from that period, it is so like german. I love it. That's what got me interested in the german language, in fact.
Sundae • Dec 11, 2015 6:13 am
Re hung/ hanged. I've noticed that "hung" is more prevalent, probably even correct, in American-English.
It's therefore becoming more common here - probably because we don't hang people any more, so there is less reason to use the term.

I always use the correct (traditional) hanged, and have been picked up on it before. People think it sounds wrong, like referring to a group as a singular entity ("The party was shown round the castle.")

I'm by no means a grammarian, and I do speak and write in the vernacular. It's just interesting how language bends and flexes over time. One generation's slang is another generation's standard.
DanaC • Dec 11, 2015 1:57 pm
I think 'hung drawn and quartered' probably plays a part in that too.

the hung/hanged thing is one of those thuings I sort of know, but then forget about until reminded again.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 13, 2015 1:24 pm
Hung sounds naturally right to those of us who are.













So they tell me. :o
Gravdigr • Dec 17, 2015 5:05 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Dec 17, 2015 5:30 pm
WTF? Is that clishmaclaver or dishmadaver?
fargon • Dec 17, 2015 6:06 pm
Just like it says, gossip; idle or foolish talk.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 22, 2015 7:39 pm
Some of these words would be useful if anyone knew what you're talking about, but having to explain the word every time you use it is hardly a shortcut.
Gravdigr • Dec 24, 2015 10:49 am
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monster • Dec 26, 2015 4:37 pm
Hebe got me Mrs. Byrne's Dictionary of unusual, obscure and preposterous words. IT'S AWESOME!!!!!!!
monster • Dec 26, 2015 4:38 pm
Quidnunc is one of our favorites so far. A gossip/nosy parker.

And I get to feel all special 'cause I already know some of them :D
Gravdigr • Feb 23, 2016 5:30 pm
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fargon • Feb 23, 2016 7:17 pm
I stopped getting Word of the Day, some time ago. Why do you get it, and I don't? I demand an investigation.
Gravdigr • Feb 24, 2016 3:22 pm
Go here, and sign up. Again.

There's a small link to the right of the word of the day, under the definition.
fargon • Feb 24, 2016 10:37 pm
I did.
Gravdigr • Feb 29, 2016 1:09 pm
Happy Bissextus Urrbody!!!

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Gravdigr • Apr 18, 2016 4:47 pm
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Gravdigr • Apr 25, 2016 4:44 pm
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BigV • Apr 27, 2016 3:29 pm
I have one of those, except it's not a vintage Beemer, like the one in the picture.
glatt • Apr 27, 2016 3:59 pm
We have one too. My wife spotted it up on the lift this afternoon, presumably getting the exhaust system welded.

We made the perhaps foolish decision to put $3k into a $1.5k car yesterday. Love that car and want to get another 100k miles out of it. I took it in with a 16 item repair list, and they added two items to my list. It's OK though, we talked it over and took about 6 items off my list of 16.
xoxoxoBruce • Apr 27, 2016 5:00 pm
Quite often it's the right decision to spend money on them. It's not whether to spend $3k on a 1.5k car, it's whether to spend $3k on this car or $20k on another car.
glatt • Apr 27, 2016 5:22 pm
It was time to do the timing belt. That's a big one and is making a statement. So you might as well do some other needed things.
BigV • Apr 28, 2016 9:17 am
Timing belt... That's one of those things that you can't function without, and is cheaper to fix before it breaks. And where it lives in a lot of engines makes the replacement of others stuff "in the neighborhood" much cheaper than if you had to make a special trip for just that part. They are often equally old..
glatt • Apr 28, 2016 9:46 am
Yeah. The timing belt, or "are you feeling lucky, punk?"

We maybe could have gotten 5 more years out of it, or maybe 5 more days. 20 year old car with 125k miles. But having to call a tow truck from god knows where by the side of some road when the engine suddenly dies and won't start up again regardless of how much I crank it would suck. And then towing it to some unknown rip-off shop and having it be kind of urgent to get it fixed in a hurry. Maybe having to rent a car to get home. Buy a hotel room for a couple days while they do the work. Ugh. I feel like they have made movies about this kind of scenario. And then I meet the wife of some powerful business man in the one bar in the little desert town where I broke down, and after having an affair with her, everyone wants to kill me. But I can't leave because my car is still in the damn shop.

Much better to do it now.
BigV • Apr 28, 2016 10:37 am
I'll say this for you, glatt. You do not lack imagination.

I like that about you.
Gravdigr • Apr 28, 2016 3:23 pm
glatt;958631 wrote:
And then I meet the wife of some powerful business man in the one bar in the little desert town where I broke down, and after having an affair with her, everyone wants to kill me. But I can't leave because my car is still in the damn shop.


U Turn!!

Quirky flick, man, quirky flick.
xoxoxoBruce • Apr 28, 2016 3:33 pm
glatt is really Sean Penn? :eek:
Gravdigr • May 24, 2016 2:38 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Jun 9, 2016 4:15 am
Succussion
Gravdigr • Jun 9, 2016 1:52 pm
(sə-kŭsh′ən)

1. The act or process of shaking violently, especially as a method of diagnosis to detect the presence of fluid and air in a body cavity.

WTF??


from The Free Dictionary
Gravdigr • Jun 9, 2016 1:58 pm
:3_eyes:

[YOUTUBE]lAXmtOYbi8c[/YOUTUBE]

Turns out I was being succussed all my life...Who'd a thunk it?
Gravdigr • Jun 11, 2016 2:29 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Jun 14, 2016 12:43 am
Face it, you can't beat the classics, cool is always cool. :haha:
DanaC • Jun 14, 2016 11:43 am
That's bollocks. Wicked was in use in the 80s. And I'm pretty sure awesome was in use earlier than that shows.
Gravdigr • Jun 14, 2016 11:51 am
Well, that list is just bogus.

Possum-on-a-gumbush ain't on there anywhere.

And neither is bogus.:neutral:
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 14, 2016 8:41 pm
DanaC;962308 wrote:
That's bollocks. Wicked was in use in the 80s. And I'm pretty sure awesome was in use earlier than that shows.


They aren't showing when you used it, they're showing when it was cool to use it. :p:
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 19, 2016 10:58 pm
Some handy words for things you've felt but couldn't describe for lack of a word.

1- Amae: Japanese word, “leaning on another person’s goodwill,” deep trust that allows a relationship to flourish.
2- L’appel du vide: French term for, “the call of the void,” an unnerving, shaky sensation of not being able to trust one’s own instincts.”
3- Awumbuk: From the Baining people of Papua New Guinea, “emptiness after visitors depart.”
4- Brabant: The fun of pushing someone’s buttons, to see how much you can tease them until they snap.
5- Depaysement: Being a stranger in a strange land that’s equal parts exhilarating and disorienting.
6- Ilinx: A French word for “the ‘strange excitement’ of wanton destruction.
7- Kaukokaipuu: The Finnish recognize the emotion of a feeling of homesickness for a place you’ve never visited.
8- Malu: The Dusun Baguk people of Indonesia know, “the sudden experience of feeling constricted, inferior and awkward around people of higher status.”
9- Pronoia: a kind of paranoiac in reverse. You suspect people of plotting to make you happy.” The “strange, creeping feeling that everyone’s out to help you.”
10- Torschlusspanik: From German, torschlusspanik means “gate-closing panic,” a word to summarize that fretful sensation of time running out.
xoxoxoBruce • Jun 23, 2016 2:28 pm
Manner born vs Manor born...
Gravdigr • Aug 2, 2016 9:10 am
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Happy Monkey • Aug 6, 2016 4:17 pm
So that's what the pirates are saying.
Gravdigr • Jan 3, 2017 3:55 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Mar 2, 2017 10:35 pm
pernicity
n. swiftness, quickness, agility

discoverture
n. the state of not having a husband

supersalient
adj. leaping upon

desponsate
adj. married
DanaC • Mar 5, 2017 10:53 am
discoverture
n. the state of not having a husband


And its opposite: coverture - the legal status of married women.

It means covered by their husband - her debts are his debts, her legal identity is his legal identity.
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 5, 2017 11:43 am
DanaC;983519 wrote:
And its opposite: coverture - the legal status of married women.

It means [COLOR="Red"]smothered[/COLOR] by their husband - her debts are his debts, her legal identity is his legal identity.

FIFY ;)
DanaC • Mar 5, 2017 11:56 am
I don't get it
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 5, 2017 12:29 pm
That's because you aren't married. You don't have to be worried about being smothered, controlled, dominated. ;)
DanaC • Mar 5, 2017 12:48 pm
I still don't get this:

[COLOR="Red"]s[/COLOR]


or this - which is what I see when I capture the writing:

And it
It by t
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 5, 2017 4:15 pm
??? You don't see, "It means smothered by their husband - her debts are his debts, her legal identity is his legal identity". ???
DanaC • Mar 5, 2017 4:20 pm
Nope - Just a red 's' and then if I highlight the text I see 'And it
It by t'


Very strange.
xoxoxoBruce • Mar 5, 2017 8:27 pm
Do Do Do Do Do Do Do Do
There is nothing wrong with your screen.
Do not attempt to adjust the picture.
We are controlling transmission.
For the next hour, sit quietly and we will
control all that you see and hear.
You are about to participate in a great adventure.
You are about to experience the awe and mystery
which reaches from the inner mind to – The Outer Limits. :haha:
xoxoxoBruce • Apr 3, 2017 8:44 pm
How are we supposed to read for comprehension anything that's not contemporary? And if it's an updated old manuscript, how do we know that guy/gal knew what they were doing?
Gravdigr • Jul 6, 2017 6:30 pm
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lumberjim • Jul 6, 2017 7:22 pm
Seems cromulent
Gravdigr • Jul 16, 2017 2:15 am
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Gravdigr • Oct 28, 2017 3:43 pm
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sexobon • Oct 28, 2017 4:45 pm
Chicken guisard.

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sexobon • Dec 9, 2017 6:30 pm
I occasionally use the word "irregardless" when I'm being facetious. I may have to stop doing that as it seems the word actually means serious business:

[SIZE="4"]This Is What “Irregardless” Really Means (It’s a Real Word!)[/SIZE]

... Even though 74 percent of respondents in a Grammarly poll were convinced 'irregardless' is not a word, it actually does show up in the dictionary.

It’s easy to see why 'irregardless' became so cringe-worthy. If 'ir-' means 'not' and 'regardless' means 'of no regard,' then shouldn’t it mean 'not of no regard?' That doesn’t make much sense, and it’s certainly not how people use it. ...

... According to Merriam-Webster’s (and American Heritage and Oxford dictionaries), 'irregardless' is just a non-standard version of 'regardless.' No, it didn’t just enter the dictionary because too many people started quoting Mean Girls, either. Merriam-Webster dates its first known use back to 1795.

According to Merriam-Webster, the word was part of certain American dialects in the early 20th century, likely as a combination of 'irrespective' and 'regardless'—not as the opposite of either. 'The point of ‘irregardless’ is to shut down a conversation,' Merriam-Webster lexicographer Kory Stamper tells Business Insider. 'It has a specific use in particular dialects.' ...

Don’t just start sprinkling 'irregardless' into your conversations though. Oxford still says it’s considered incorrect in standard English, and Stamper agrees you’re better off sticking with 'regardless.' 'If you use ‘irregardless,’ people will think you’re uneducated,' she says. Wouldn’t want that! ...

[BOLD MINE]
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 9, 2017 10:35 pm
It still ain't no good English. Saying it's ok in certain dialects is tearing this country apart. :crone:
sexobon • Dec 9, 2017 10:49 pm
Irregardless, it stays in the dictionary.

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sexobon • Dec 9, 2017 11:48 pm
Here's the full explanation for those who not only want to be edjumacated; but, can also handle the truth:

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xoxoxoBruce • Dec 10, 2017 6:12 am
Bullshit, English is rain, it does it’s work all over the land in words. The river is draining the excess rain, the river is a sewer. The river doesn’t change the rain, the rain changes the river.
sexobon • Dec 10, 2017 11:49 am
Yet you started that post with vulgar slang instead of conveying your sentiment in an educated language. It seems that nonstandard English found in dialects is a step up from vulgar slang which would be unredeemable if rain; because, rain only falls down, it doesn't go up. Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations (IDIC) — beauty, growth, progress — all result from the union of the unlike. Always remember and never forget that bit of wisdom from the '60s. That way the river, the rain, can all become water under the bridge, irregardless.
xoxoxoBruce • Dec 10, 2017 2:45 pm
Vulgar? What The Fuck?
Gravdigr • Feb 1, 2018 4:13 pm
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xoxoxoBruce • Feb 3, 2018 10:54 pm
It's a curse, I tells ya, a curse...
DanaC • Feb 5, 2018 5:44 pm
Brilliant
Gravdigr • Feb 8, 2018 3:36 pm
Spoonerism much?