Comments by ruzuzu

Show previous 200 comments...

  • R'amen.

    December 5, 2018

  • *curtseys*

    December 5, 2018

  • She probably got catfished.

    December 5, 2018

  • Thanks, bilby. It was you're something of a hotdog, aren't you (as originally seen in one of dontcry's comments over on spaghetti).

    December 4, 2018

  • Also see ha-ha.

    December 4, 2018

  • From the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English:

    "n. One of a breed of fancy frilled pigeons allied to the owls and turbits, having the body white, the shoulders tricolored, and the tail bluish black with a large white spot on each feather."

    December 3, 2018

  • Alloxan was used in the production of the purple dye murexide, discovered by Carl Wilhelm Scheele in 1776. Murexide is the product of the complex in-situ multistep reaction of alloxantin and gaseous ammonia. Murexide results from the condensation of the unisolated intermediate uramil with alloxan, liberated during the course of the reaction.

    Scheele sourced uric acid from human calculi (such as kidney stones) and called the compound lithic acid. William Prout investigated the compound in 1818 and he used boa constrictor excrement with up to 90% ammonium acid urate.

    In the chapter "Nitrogen" of his memoir The Periodic Table, Primo Levi tells of his futile attempt to make alloxan for a cosmetics manufacturer who has read that it can cause permanent reddening of the lips. Levi considers the droppings of pythons as a source for uric acid for making alloxan, but he is turned down by the director of the Turin zoo because the zoo already has lucrative contracts with pharmaceutical companies, so he is obliged to use chickens as his source of uric acid. The synthesis fails, however, "and the alloxan and its resonant name remained a resonant name."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Alloxan&oldid=822802116

    November 30, 2018

  • For more, see alloxan.

    November 30, 2018

  • I find myself at quite a loss

    To decide upon this evening’s sauce.

    What goes with spaghett?

    Is it just mignonette?

    Perhaps I’ll decide by coin toss.

    November 29, 2018

  • Cf. spaghett.

    November 29, 2018

  • This "noodle" is vaguely spaghetty,

    Though my soup should have been alphabetty.

    That cook in the back

    Looks a bit like yak--

    Perhaps this stray hair's from a yeti.

    November 29, 2018

  • I might have a lead on a guy who can loan me a pyrophone for the closing number. It's funny how you can just casually mention the name almost Solveig and people go out of their way.

    November 29, 2018

  • I was at a local coffee shop's self-service station this morning--trying to decide whether to get dark roast, medium roast, or the flavor of the day. I hate having to choose, so I just got a bit of each. The person behind me in line said, "Wait. Is that like a suicide, but with coffee?" I laughed and said, "Yes!"

    I don't remember when I first heard "suicide" as the term for combining all the soda pop options from a fountain machine--it's common enough. But it still kinda weirds me out.

    November 29, 2018

  • Didn't ibex dearie sing "Peel Me A Grape"?

    November 26, 2018

  • There ought. There's afflictions-of-the-realm and lots of old pharmacy terms formerly-used-in-medicine, but I still nominate you to create a more specific one for our amusement.

    November 26, 2018

  • Good one, qms. Yeehaw!

    November 23, 2018

  • Your citations are inspiring. I’ve been lazy about using the blockquote HTML tag—but no more! Thank you for your precision and dedication.

    November 23, 2018

  • Misnegation is an obscure word for a common phenomenon. You won’t find it in dictionaries, but you can probably figure out that it means some kind of ‘incorrect negation’ – not to be confused with double negatives (‘multiple negation’), criticism of which tends to be dubious.

    So what exactly are we talking about here?

    Misnegation is where we say something with negatives in it that don’t add up the way we intend. We lose track of the logic and reverse it inadvertently. For example, I might say that the likelihood of misnegation cannot be understated, when I mean it cannot be overstated – it is, in fact, easily understated.

    https://stancarey.wordpress.com/2018/11/19/misnegation-should-not-be-overestimated-i-mean-underestimated/amp

    November 23, 2018

  • This must be the yea of yea-high. Yeah?

    November 20, 2018

  • Nice! (I found this list as I was searching for yea-high.)

    November 20, 2018

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. The spur of rye; ergot.

    n. The morbid state induced by the excessive ingestion of ergot, as from the use of spurred or ergoted rye as food. Spasmodic and gangrenous forms are distinguished.

    n. A logical inference; a conclusion.

    n. Logical reasoning; ratiocination."

    November 20, 2018

  • See citation on hemimastigote.

    November 17, 2018

  • “Based on the genetic analysis they've done so far, the Dalhousie team has determined that hemimastigotes are unique and different enough from other organisms to form their own "supra-kingdom" — a grouping so big that animals and fungi, which have their own kingdoms, are considered similar enough to be part of the same supra-kingdom.”

    —“Rare microbes lead scientists to discover new branch on the tree of life” https://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/hemimastigotes-supra-kingdom-1.4715823

    November 17, 2018

  • Here’s one: correctly-spelled-words-that-look-like-misspellings-of-other-words

    November 16, 2018

  • “Very early on a weekday, before the sun rose over the town of Aalsmeer, I stepped into Royal FloraHolland, the largest flower auction in the world.

    FloraHolland (royal designates a firm that has been in business for more than 100 years) is a single building so large that the numbers describing it make no sense: It covers 1.3 million square meters, 320 acres, the area of 220 football fields. It is one unfathomably large room, but a gantry stretches across it at the level of a second story, for visitors to walk along without getting in the way of business. Suspended in the middle of the gantry is the auction itself, rooms of traders in bleacher seating, wearing headsets and stabbing keyboards, staring at wall-sized screens of flower lots while electronic clocks tick down.“

    —“Killer Tulips Hiding in Plain Sight” The Atlantic https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2018/11/when-tulips-kill/574489/

    November 16, 2018

  • My new favorite list.

    November 13, 2018

  • Lovely, qms! If I had at least three more sets of tentacle-y appendages, I'd be clapping them all together right now!

    November 13, 2018

  • See citation on lingcod.

    November 12, 2018

  • “Initially, the octopus survey was launched to try to answer a question that staff members got regularly at the Seattle Aquarium: How many giant Pacific octopuses live in the Puget Sound? It turns out it’s not an easy question to answer, since there isn’t a firm population number for giant Pacifics.

    These octopuses normally live about three years. They eat a lot of crustaceans, mollusks, squid, fish and sometimes other species of octopus. They are so big that they only really have to watch out for extremely large fish, such as halibut and lingcod, and some marine mammals. But they hatch from an egg the size of a rice grain, so for more than a year after they’re born, they are at the mercy of a wide array of predators.”

    https://www.citylab.com/environment/2018/11/giant-pacific-octopus-survey-puget-sound-seattle-aquarium/574408/

    November 12, 2018

  • Cf. touchwood.

    November 6, 2018

  • When I was a kid, I used to listen to an album where Jean Ritchie sang "Children's Songs & Games from the Southern Mountains." One of the songs was about a bunch of farmyard animals--a horse that "goes neigh-neigh" and a sheep that "goes baa-baa" and a pig that "goes griffy-gruffy."

    Maybe grumphie and griffy-gruffy aren't related, but I feel a little more at ease about why that pig wasn't just oinking.

    November 6, 2018

  • "Counter-mapping refers to efforts to map "against dominant power structures, to further seemingly progressive goals". The term was coined by Nancy Peluso in 1995 to describe the commissioning of maps by forest users in Kalimantan, Indonesia, as a means of contesting state maps of forest areas that typically undermined indigenous interests. The resultant counter-hegemonic maps had the ability to strengthen forest users' resource claims."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Counter-mapping&oldid=863668724 (footnote references removed)

    November 5, 2018

  • "The equals sign or equality sign (=) is a mathematical symbol used to indicate equality. It was invented in 1557 by Robert Recorde. In an equation, the equals sign is placed between two (or more) expressions that have the same value."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Equals_sign&oldid=865723782

    November 1, 2018

  • "Narayana's cows is an integer sequence created by considering a cow, which begins to have one baby a year, beginning in its fourth year, and all its children do the same."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Narayana_Pandita&oldid=860912535

    October 30, 2018

  • “A hat with three points or horns; a cocked hat having the brim folded upward against the crown on three sides, producing three angles; hence, by popular misapplication, the hat worn by the French gendarmes, which has only two points: usually written as French, tricorne. See cut 13 under hat.”

    — from The Century Dictionary

    October 29, 2018

  • So cool--thanks for sharing this, alexz!

    October 29, 2018

  • Oh, gold star for that one, TankHughes!

    October 29, 2018

  • See citation on inselberg.

    October 29, 2018

  • "An inselberg or monadnock (/məˈnædnɒk/) is an isolated rock hill, knob, ridge, or small mountain that rises abruptly from a gently sloping or virtually level surrounding plain. In southern and south-central Africa, a similar formation of granite is known as a koppie, an Afrikaans word ("little head") from the Dutch word kopje. If the inselberg is dome-shaped and formed from granite or gneiss, it can also be called a bornhardt, though not all bornhardts are inselbergs."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Inselberg&oldid=854724700

    October 29, 2018

  • "Brazil's vast inland cerrado region was regarded as unfit for farming before the 1960s because the soil was too acidic and poor in nutrients, according to Nobel Peace Prize winner Norman Borlaug, an American plant scientist referred to as the father of the Green Revolution. However, from the 1960s, vast quantities of lime (pulverised chalk or limestone) were poured on the soil to reduce acidity. The effort went on and in the late 1990s between 14 million and 16 million tonnes of lime were being spread on Brazilian fields each year. The quantity rose to 25 million tonnes in 2003 and 2004, equalling around five tonnes of lime per hectare. As a result, Brazil has become the world's second biggest soybean exporter and, thanks to the boom in animal feed production, Brazil is now the biggest exporter of beef and poultry in the world."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Agricultural_lime&oldid=854535911

    October 29, 2018

  • tropicopolitan

    October 26, 2018

  • circa?

    October 25, 2018

  • I've heard of kangaroo boxing... is this a marsupial thing?

    October 22, 2018

  • Man! How did I miss this great list? I just stumbled upon it only after looking up morin.

    October 18, 2018

  • See opuscule.

    October 17, 2018

  • I'll add only that puķīte sounds a little better than it looks--that ķ in the middle makes it more like "pooch-eat."

    October 15, 2018

  • Aw, shucks. Thanks, vm. (And it looks like that one has been fixed now.)

    October 15, 2018

  • Thanks! Glad to see you've tossed in a few of your own.

    October 12, 2018

  • Oh, nice! I am ever in awe at your skill with these, qms.

    October 11, 2018

  • Here's a blooming list for our amusement: blooms--2.

    October 11, 2018

  • Has anyone made a list of blooms yet? I'd add Leopold.

    October 9, 2018

  • "Minkowski is perhaps best known for his work in relativity, in which he showed in 1907 that his former student Albert Einstein's special theory of relativity (1905) could be understood geometrically as a theory of four-dimensional space–time, since known as the "Minkowski spacetime"."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hermann_Minkowski&oldid=861259780

    October 5, 2018

  • "Louis Pasteur could rightly be described as the first stereochemist, having observed in 1842 that salts of tartaric acid collected from wine production vessels could rotate plane polarized light, but that salts from other sources did not. This property, the only physical property in which the two types of tartrate salts differed, is due to optical isomerism."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stereochemistry&oldid=858092147

    October 2, 2018

  • I’m reminded of a song my grandmother taught me about the three jolly fisher- fisher- men men men who should have gone to Amster- Amster- sh! sh! sh!

    September 30, 2018

  • Stet.

    September 30, 2018

  • Thanks, qms, but yours are always better.

    I'm beginning to wonder whether your initials stand for Quite Masterful Scop (or some such).

    September 28, 2018

  • Mmm. Tasty lichens.

    September 28, 2018

  • ""We really don't understand what makes the human brain special," said Ed Lein, Ph.D., Investigator at the Allen Institute for Brain Science. "Studying the differences at the level of cells and circuits is a good place to start, and now we have new tools to do just that."

    In a new study published today in the journal Nature Neuroscience, Lein and his colleagues reveal one possible answer to that difficult question. The research team, co-led by Lein and Gábor Tamás, Ph.D., a neuroscientist at the University of Szeged in Szeged, Hungary, has uncovered a new type of human brain cell that has never been seen in mice and other well-studied laboratory animals.

    Tamás and University of Szeged doctoral student Eszter Boldog dubbed these new cells "rosehip neurons" -- to them, the dense bundle each brain cell's axon forms around the cell's center looks just like a rose after it has shed its petals, he said. The newly discovered cells belong to a class of neurons known as inhibitory neurons, which put the brakes on the activity of other neurons in the brain."

    -- https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2018/08/180827180809.htm

    September 27, 2018

  • See citation on idiothetic.

    September 27, 2018

  • "Idiothetic literally means "self-proposition" (Greek derivation), and is used in navigation models (e.g., of a rat in a maze) to describe the use of self-motion cues, rather than allothetic, or external, cues such as landmarks, to determine position and movement."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Idiothetic&oldid=800426728

    September 27, 2018

  • See citation on equation.

    September 27, 2018

  • "The equation of time describes the discrepancy between two kinds of solar time. The word equation is used in the medieval sense of "reconcile a difference". The two times that differ are the apparent solar time, which directly tracks the diurnal motion of the Sun, and mean solar time, which tracks a theoretical mean Sun with noons 24 hours apart."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Equation_of_time&oldid=861068135

    September 27, 2018

  • Oh, fun! I had a copy of Grendel when I was a kid, so I have a sentimental fondness for the monster.

    In his novel take on the plot

    John Gardner's hero was not

    A prince or a poet

    But (wouldn't you know it)

    The beast--who finally gets caught.

    September 27, 2018

  • "Commesso, also referred to as Florentine mosaic, is a method of piecing together cut sections of luminous, narrow gemstones to form works of art."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Commesso&oldid=804026345

    September 26, 2018

  • See https://medievalbooks.nl/2018/09/20/me-myself-and-i/

    September 24, 2018

  • Paldies, vendingmachine! I hadn't heard that one before--though it fits perfectly with bird's milk and blooming fern.

    September 24, 2018

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. A name given by Berzelius to the substance to which the red color of leaves in autumn is due."

    September 18, 2018

  • "'Mangkhut'" (Thai pronunciation: |māŋ.kʰút|) is the Thai name for the mangosteen."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Typhoon_Mangkhut&oldid=860020566

    September 17, 2018

  • Also see comment on pataphysical.

    September 17, 2018

  • "|Paul| McCartney's wife Linda said that he had become interested in avant-garde theatre and had immersed himself in the writings of Alfred Jarry. This influence is reflected in the story and tone of "Maxwell's Silver Hammer", and also explains how McCartney came across Jarry's word "pataphysical", which occurs in the lyrics."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maxwell%27s_Silver_Hammer&oldid=859775445

    See pataphysics.

    September 17, 2018

  • Excellent. You might also like these hogwash and humbug-and-bafflegab lists.

    September 17, 2018

  • Here's a nice bit from The Century:

    "Synonyms Accurate, Correct, Exact, Precise, Nice, careful, particular, true, faithful, strict, painstaking, unerring. Of these words correct is the feeblest; it is barely more than not faulty, as tested by some standard or rule. Accurate implies careful and successful endeavor to be correct: as, an accurate accountant, and, by extension of the meaning, accurate accounts; an accurate likeness. Exact is stronger, carrying the accuracy down to minute details: as, an exact likeness. It is more commonly used of things, while precise is used of persons: as, the exact truth; he is very precise in his ways. Precise may represent an excess of nicety, but exact and accurate rarely do so: as, she is prim and precise. As applied more specifically to the processes and results of thought and investigation, exact means absolutely true; accurate, up to a limited standard of truth; precise, as closely true as the utmost care will secure. Thus, the exact ratio of the circumference to the diameter cannot be stated, but the value 3.14159265 is accurate to eight places of decimals, which is sufficiently precise for the most refined measurements. Nice emphasizes the attention paid to minute and delicate points, often in a disparaging sense: as, he is more nice than wise."

    September 17, 2018

  • Well done, qms!

    September 17, 2018

  • See cloud-cuckoo-land.

    September 17, 2018

  • See cloud cuckoo land.

    September 17, 2018

  • Found another. Check out write--2.

    September 14, 2018

  • Hm... pyrolytic, motor pool, Jonbar hinge, pariah dog and zopilote, contrail, gyrodyne, gum....

    Yup. An ideal list.

    September 14, 2018

  • "Chicken eyeglasses, also known as chickens specs, chicken goggles, generically as pick guards and under other names, were small eyeglasses made for chickens intended to prevent feather pecking and cannibalism. They differ from blinders as they allowed the bird to see forward whereas blinders do not. One variety used rose-colored lenses as the coloring was thought to prevent a chicken wearing them from recognizing blood on other chickens which may increase the tendency for abnormal injurious behavior."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chicken_eyeglasses&oldid=826144795

    September 14, 2018

  • Arrived here after looking up motor. What a fun list!

    September 12, 2018

  • "In the eastern United States, the shafts of mattocks are often fitted with a screw below the head and parallel with it to secure the head from slipping down the shaft, but in the western United States, where tools are more commonly dismantled for transport, this is rarely done. When made to be dismantled, the shaft of a mattock fits into the oval eye of the head, and is fixed by striking the head end of the shaft against a solid surface, such as a tree stump, rock, or firm ground. The head end of the shaft is tapered outwards, and the oval opening of the iron head is similarly tapered so that the head will not fly off when used. The mattock head ought never be raised higher than the user's hands, so that it will not slide down and hit the user's hands."

    --https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Mattock&oldid=855853143

    (I wonder whether lyron's father's mattock was actually from West Virginia.)

    September 10, 2018

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "In a knitting-machine, mechanism which travels on a bar called the slur-bar, and depresses the jack-sinkers in succession, sinking a loop of thread between every pair of needles."

    September 6, 2018

  • "Elizabeth Fulhame (fl. 1794) was a Scottish chemist who invented the concept of catalysis and discovered photoreduction. She describes catalysis as a process at length in her 1794 book An Essay On Combustion with a View to a New Art of Dying and Painting, wherein the Phlogistic and Antiphlogistic Hypotheses are Proved Erroneous. The book relates in painstaking detail her experiments with oxidation-reduction reactions, and the conclusions she draws regarding Phlogiston theory, in which she disagrees with both the Phlogistians and Antiphlogistians."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Elizabeth_Fulhame&oldid=850969064

    September 6, 2018

  • Oh! What an ingenious list.

    September 5, 2018

  • See comment on Billy Eckstine.

    September 5, 2018

  • "Culturally Eckstine was a fashion icon. He was famous for his "Mr. B. Collar"- a high roll collar that formed a "B" over a Windsor-knotted tie. The collars were worn by many a hipster in the late 1940s and early 1950s."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Billy_Eckstine&oldid=852426215

    September 5, 2018

  • Just added shoe-boss.

    September 5, 2018

  • "At age 50, Dexter authored A Pickle for the Knowing Ones or Plain Truth in a Homespun Dress, in which he complained about politicians, the clergy, and his wife. The book contained 8,847 words and 33,864 letters, but without punctuation and seemingly random capitalization. Dexter initially handed his book out for free, but it became popular and was reprinted eight times. In the second edition, Dexter added an extra page which consisted of 13 lines of punctuation marks with the instructions that readers could distribute them as they pleased."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Timothy_Dexter&oldid=851828716

    Also see t.

    September 5, 2018

  • "n. A white clay pipe with the initials T. D. on the bowl. Said to be due to a legacy left by the eccentric “Lord” Timothy Dexter of Newburyport, Mass., in order to perpetuate his name. By extension, T. D. means clay pipe. Dialect Notes, III. iii."

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    September 5, 2018

  • "Catalyst poisoning refers to the partial or total deactivation of a catalyst. Poisoning is caused by chemical compounds. Although usually undesirable, poisoning may be helpful when it results in improved selectivity. For example, Lindlar's catalyst is poisoned so that it selectively catalyzes the reduction of alkynes. On the other hand Lead from leaded gasoline deactivates catalytic converters."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Catalyst_poisoning&oldid=851286480

    September 5, 2018

  • "Chemistry & Physics: A substance that inhibits another substance or a reaction: a catalyst poison."

    -- from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

    September 5, 2018

  • "In natural history, unstable; unfixed; hence, uncertain; unreliable: applied to characters which are not fixed or uniformly present, and therefore are valueless for scientific classification.

    In entomology, tending to become obsolete in one part; fading out: as, antennal scrobes evanescent posteriorly."

    -- Century Dictionary

    September 4, 2018

  • "The black swallow-wort was recently spotted in the Grand Traverse County community of Kingsley, the Traverse City Record-Eagle reported. The vine has heart-shaped leaves and small, dark purple flowers. The plant, which typically grows along roadsides, pastures and gardens, can choke out native vegetation and poison insects and wildlife."

    -- "Monarch butterfly-killing invasive plant found in northern Michigan" https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2018/09/03/monarch-butterfly-black-swallow-wort/1185116002/

    September 4, 2018

  • "A pronic number is a number which is the product of two consecutive integers, that is, a number of the form n(n + 1). The study of these numbers dates back to Aristotle. They are also called oblong numbers, heteromecic numbers, or rectangular numbers; however, the "rectangular number" name has also been applied to the composite numbers."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pronic_number&oldid=850129619

    August 29, 2018

  • Ha! Check out the "reverse dictionary" section for this word.

    August 23, 2018

  • I have a few of these over on my antonomasia list, but this one is better. In fact, I'd be willing to say that rolig is a regular rolig with these (to coin a phrase).

    August 23, 2018

  • Ooh! Thanks, rolig.

    August 23, 2018

  • I was wondering whether the "go" part of this was a clue.

    August 22, 2018

  • hbd, qms!

    August 22, 2018

  • I'm pretty sure I first encountered fewmets in Madeleine L'Engle's book A Wind in the Door.

    August 21, 2018

  • I pressed Random word and got Englishly, but that seemed too on the nose. How's about paleoichnology?

    August 20, 2018

  • "Alfred Thaddeus Crane Pennyworth is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics, most commonly in association with the superhero Batman.

    "Pennyworth is depicted as Bruce Wayne's loyal and tireless butler, housekeeper, legal guardian, best friend, aide-de-camp, and surrogate father figure following the murders of Thomas and Martha Wayne. As a classically trained British actor and an ex-Special Operations Executive operative of honor and ethics with connections within the intelligence community, he has been called "Batman's batman"."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Alfred_Pennyworth&oldid=854935165

    August 16, 2018

  • Stellar work once again, qms!

    August 13, 2018

  • I like that I can look at the Recently Listed Words and tell right away that they'll be on one of your wonderful lists.

    August 13, 2018

  • "In American English, the original word for this seems to have been mantissa (Burks et al.), and this usage remains common in computing and among computer scientists. However, the term significand was introduced by George Forsythe and Cleve Moler in 1967, and the use of mantissa for this purpose is discouraged by the IEEE floating-point standard committee and by some professionals such as William Kahan and Donald Knuth, because it conflicts with the pre-existing use of mantissa for the fractional part of a logarithm (see also common logarithm). For instance, Knuth adopts the third representation 0.12345 × 10+3 in the example above and calls 0.12345 the fraction part of the number; he adds: "it is an abuse of terminology to call the fraction part a mantissa, since this concept has quite a different meaning in connection with logarithms".

    The confusion is because scientific notation and floating-point representation are log-linear, not logarithmic. To multiply two numbers, given their logarithms, one just adds the characteristic (integer part) and the mantissa (fractional part). By contrast, to multiply two floating-point numbers, one adds the exponent (which is logarithmic) and multiplies the significand (which is linear)."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Significand&oldid=850602451 (citations and emphasis removed)

    August 8, 2018

  • The significand (also mantissa or coefficient, sometimes also argument or fraction) is part of a number in scientific notation or a floating-point number, consisting of its significant digits. Depending on the interpretation of the exponent, the significand may represent an integer or a fraction. The word mantissa seems to have been introduced by Arthur Burks in 1946 writing for the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton, although this use of the word is discouraged by the IEEE floating-point standard committee as well as some professionals such as the creator of the standard, William Kahan."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Significand&oldid=850602451

    August 8, 2018

  • I found myself here again after looking up mantissa. Thanks, fbharjo!

    August 8, 2018

  • I didn't know fish had fur.

    August 7, 2018

  • I hope you won't fight me on this--I've added a couple entries.

    August 7, 2018

  • (Note the "n. Poultry feed" and "n. Slang Money" definitions over on scratch.)

    August 7, 2018

  • Cf. chicken scratch.

    August 7, 2018

  • I'd thought "paltry sum of money" too--but I just discovered chicken feed, which seems to be the more common expression.

    August 7, 2018

  • See comment on overline.

    July 27, 2018

  • See citations on radical and overline.

    July 27, 2018

  • "An overline, overscore, or overbar, is a typographical feature of a horizontal line drawn immediately above the text. In mathematical notation, an overline has been used for a long time as a vinculum, a way of showing that certain symbols belong together. The original use in Ancient Greek was to indicate compositions of Greek letters as Greek numerals. In Latin it indicates Roman numerals multiplied by a thousand and it forms medieval abbreviations (sigla)."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Overline&oldid=844031262

    July 27, 2018

  • "In 1637 Descartes was the first to unite the German radical sign √ with the vinculum to create the radical symbol in common use today."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Radical_symbol&oldid=852068667

    July 27, 2018

  • *sings* It's beginning to look a lot like flesh-brush....

    July 25, 2018

  • Honk if you love this list. (*honk!*)

    July 25, 2018

  • I just noticed this definition from the Century: "In book-binding, to paste the end-papers and fly-leaves at the beginning and end of (a volume), before fitting it in its covers."

    July 25, 2018

  • "In 1786, the German scientist Georg Christoph Lichtenberg described the advantages of basing a paper size on an aspect ratio of √2 in a letter to Johann Beckmann. The formats that became ISO paper sizes A2, A3, B3, B4, and B5 were developed in France. They were listed in a 1798 law on taxation of publications that was based in part on page sizes.

    The main advantage of this system is its scaling. Rectangular paper with an aspect ratio of √2 has the unique property that, when cut or folded in half midway between its shorter sides, each half has the same √2 aspect ratio and half the area of the whole sheet before it was divided. Equivalently, if one lays two same-sized sheets paper with an aspect ratio of √2 side-by-side along their longer side, they form a larger rectangle with the aspect ratio of √2 and double the area of each individual sheet."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=ISO_216&oldid=836238841

    July 25, 2018

  • Absolutely.

    July 25, 2018

  • Cf. non-dairy-beverages.

    July 25, 2018

  • Awwww. What a cutie! Okay, fine--I'll foster a list.

    July 25, 2018

  • Does anybody have a list about paper and/or papermaking yet?

    July 25, 2018

  • God bless Myrica.

    July 25, 2018

  • There's fun stuff over on this non-dairy-beverages list, too.

    July 25, 2018

  • This is great! I'd never heard of candlenut milk.

    July 25, 2018

  • So profoundly articulate!

    July 25, 2018

  • “As numbers go, the familiar real numbers — those found on the number line, like 1, π and -83.777 — just get things started. Real numbers can be paired up in a particular way to form “complex numbers,” first studied in 16th-century Italy, that behave like coordinates on a 2-D plane. Adding, subtracting, multiplying and dividing is like translating and rotating positions around the plane. Complex numbers, suitably paired, form 4-D “quaternions,” discovered in 1843 by the Irish mathematician William Rowan Hamilton, who on the spot ecstatically chiseled the formula into Dublin’s Broome Bridge. John Graves, a lawyer friend of Hamilton’s, subsequently showed that pairs of quaternions make octonions: numbers that define coordinates in an abstract 8-D space.”

    — “The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie the Laws of Nature” (https://www.quantamagazine.org/the-octonion-math-that-could-underpin-physics-20180720/)

    July 23, 2018

  • "To make better; improve; alleviate or relieve (hunger, thirst, grief, the needs of a person, etc.)."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    July 16, 2018

  • Consider yourself added to my calendar.

    July 16, 2018

  • See comment on mathematical induction.

    July 16, 2018

  • When I talk with folks who've studied mathematics, they like to tell me how helpful induction is--but I've been confused, because it sounds much more like they're using deduction. Instead I've learned that they're actually talking about mathematical induction.

    I'll just leave this here for the next time I need to remember which is which:

    "For the history of the name "mathematical induction", see

    •Florian Cajori, Origin of the Name "Mathematical Induction" (1918):

    The process of reasoning called "mathematical induction" has had several independent origins. It has been traced back to the Swiss Jakob (James) Bernoulli |Opera, Tomus I, Genevae, MDCCXLIV, p. 282, reprinted from Acta eruditorum, Lips., 1686, p. 360. See also Jakob Bernoulli's Ars conjectandi, 1713, p. 95|, the Frenchmen B.Pascal |OEuvres completes de Blaise Pascal, Vol. 3, Paris, 1866, p. 248| and P.Fermat |Charles S Peirce in the Century Dictionary, Art."Induction," and in the Monist, Vol. 2, 1892, pp. 539, 545; Peirce called mathematical induction the "Fermatian inference"|, and the Italian F.Maurolycus |G.Vacca, Bulletin Am. Math. Soc., Vol. 16, 1909, pp. 70-73|."

    -- https://math.stackexchange.com/questions/1080417/why-is-mathematical-induction-called-mathematical

    July 16, 2018

  • I adore this list!

    July 16, 2018

  • You've outdone yourself once again, qms!

    July 16, 2018

  • "As 17 is a Fermat prime, the regular heptadecagon is a constructible polygon (that is, one that can be constructed using a compass and unmarked straightedge): this was shown by Carl Friedrich Gauss in 1796 at the age of 19."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Heptadecagon&oldid=837458759

    July 12, 2018

  • Ha! The first time I read that, I thought it said "vicious."

    July 3, 2018

  • From the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English:

    "A supposed collection of particles of very subtile matter, endowed with a rapid rotary motion around an axis which was also the axis of a sun or a planet. Descartes attempted to account for the formation of the universe, and the movements of the bodies composing it, by a theory of vortices."

    And from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "In the Cartesian philosophy, a collection of material particles, forming a fluid or ether, endowed with a rapid rotatory motion about an axis, and filling all space, by which Descartes accounted for the motions of the universe. This theory attracted much attention at one time, but is now entirely discredited."

    July 2, 2018

  • I'll second both previous comments.

    July 2, 2018

  • See citation on magma.

    July 2, 2018

  • "According to Bergman and Hausknecht (1996): "There is no generally accepted word for a set with a not necessarily associative binary operation. The word groupoid is used by many universal algebraists, but workers in category theory and related areas object strongly to this usage because they use the same word to mean 'category in which all morphisms are invertible'. The term magma was used by Serre |Lie Algebras and Lie Groups, 1965|." It also appears in Bourbaki's Éléments de mathématique, Algèbre, chapitres 1 à 3, 1970."

    -- From Wikipedia's page for "Magma (algebra)" (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Magma_(algebra)&oldid=848070422)

    July 2, 2018

  • Not what I was expecting.

    June 29, 2018

  • I just found your lovely hollow-land list. Someone had listed seeing, and I was intrigued by the tags.

    June 29, 2018

  • Blast! I nominate you to make the list, bilby.

    June 25, 2018

  • "Heliox generates less airway resistance than air and thereby requires less mechanical energy to ventilate the lungs. "Work of Breathing" (WOB) is reduced. It does this by two mechanisms:

    1.increased tendency to laminar flow;

    2.reduced resistance in turbulent flow."

    -- From Wikipedia's heliox page: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Heliox&oldid=835607282

    June 22, 2018

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "In botany, a name applied by Richard to a second small cotyledon which is found in wheat and some other grasses.

    In embryology, the outer or external blastodermic membrane or layer of cells, forming the ectoderm or epiderm: distinguished at first from hypoblast, then from both hypoblast and mesoblast. See cut under blastocæle."

    June 21, 2018

  • I like your lists.

    June 21, 2018

  • See citation (with a bit about Gauss) on pons asinorum.

    June 8, 2018

  • "While reading Claude Gaspard Bachet de Méziriac's edition of Diophantus' Arithmetica, Pierre de Fermat concluded that a certain equation considered by Diophantus had no solutions, and noted in the margin without elaboration that he had found "a truly marvelous proof of this proposition," now referred to as Fermat's Last Theorem. This led to tremendous advances in number theory, and the study of Diophantine equations ("Diophantine geometry") and of Diophantine approximations remain important areas of mathematical research."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Diophantus&oldid=842662729

    June 7, 2018

  • Cogito ergo can.

    June 5, 2018

  • Aw, shucks. Thanks vm. I love this site and everyone here--and I'm glad you're on the remarkable list, too.

    June 4, 2018

  • "Euler's work touched upon so many fields that he is often the earliest written reference on a given matter. In an effort to avoid naming everything after Euler, some discoveries and theorems are attributed to the first person to have proved them after Euler."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_things_named_after_Leonhard_Euler&oldid=844040346

    June 4, 2018

  • I've been having fun with the "List of things named after Leonhard Euler" page.

    June 4, 2018

  • Define pissfart.

    June 1, 2018

  • Ha--not sure how I missed it. Thank you, bilby!

    May 29, 2018

  • "A significant note, character, sign, token, or indication; a determinative attestation. In logic, to say that a thing has a certain mark is to say that something in particular is true of it. Thus, according to a certain school of metaphysicians, “incognizability is a mark of the Infinite.”"

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    May 22, 2018

  • Any time!

    May 22, 2018

  • That's some etymology.

    May 22, 2018

  • I went to a restaurant yesterday that offered bhendi masala, aloo govi, and baigan vartha.

    May 22, 2018

  • That's the risk (and joy) of open lists (and why open list is my middle name.)

    But, to my shame and horror, I just realized that bilby must have already added foredeck to this list ages ago. I'll still keep searching for fore words, though.

    May 18, 2018

  • I'd forgotten how much I love this list. (I just added foredeck.)

    May 18, 2018

  • Thanks, blby!

    May 18, 2018

  • And fanfare.

    May 17, 2018

  • You're not moved by pathos?

    May 15, 2018

  • "An iron bar bent at right angles at one end, used in the operation of puddling for stirring the melted iron, so as to allow it to be more fully exposed to the action of the air and the lining of the furnace."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    May 14, 2018

  • And I love that this list has rewrite.

    May 14, 2018

  • My new favorite list.

    May 14, 2018

  • *passes out spoons for everyone*

    Do we all have plates? Who still needs fufluns?

    May 14, 2018

  • Brackets around "proto-Wordie und playboy" please--I might have a couple places for it.

    May 14, 2018

  • See semantic satiation.

    May 14, 2018

  • Yes! And/or Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel.

    May 14, 2018

  • Just stopping by to say your prowess with the limericks is astonishing. I am ever in awe.

    May 4, 2018

  • why do you hate freedom

    May 4, 2018

  • Thanks, bilby!

    May 4, 2018

  • How had I never heard of Ebenezer Brewer before? Thank you!!!

    May 3, 2018

  • Each new list you make is my favorite!

    May 3, 2018

  • I think the Moines are allowed to travel where they please.

    May 3, 2018

  • See my-old-kentucky-home; also see word-derby.

    May 2, 2018

  • Also see places-in-oregon by misterbaby.

    May 2, 2018

  • seamount

    May 2, 2018

  • It's something that sounds infinitely more appetizing than a foot-ball.

    April 24, 2018

  • See comments on narrowbody.

    April 19, 2018

  • Brackets around a busybody, please. I have a list for it.

    Also, I looked through nobody's lists, but I didn't see this word there.

    April 19, 2018

  • *presses button politely*

    April 17, 2018

  • Ooh! A delicious food pellet!

    What a great party.

    April 16, 2018

  • *presses button*

    April 16, 2018

  • Is the Italian version called lapotopogigio?

    April 13, 2018

  • Ythanked.

    April 13, 2018

  • See comment on yclept.

    April 13, 2018

  • See comment on yclept.

    April 13, 2018

  • See comment on yclept.

    April 13, 2018

  • If those lamingtons were made with yellowcake uranium, I think I'll just hold out for a ylemon tart.

    April 13, 2018

  • This word reminds me of Elam.

    April 12, 2018

  • Holy water.

    "The first vending machine was also one of his constructions; when a coin was introduced via a slot on the top of the machine, a set amount of holy water was dispensed. This was included in his list of inventions in his book Mechanics and Optics. When the coin was deposited, it fell upon a pan attached to a lever. The lever opened up a valve which let some water flow out. The pan continued to tilt with the weight of the coin until it fell off, at which point a counter-weight would snap the lever back up and turn off the valve."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hero_of_Alexandria&oldid=835926439

    April 12, 2018

  • "In a poem by Ausonius in the 4th century AD, he mentions a stone-cutting saw powered by water. Hero of Alexandria is credited with many such wind and steam powered machines in the 1st century AD, including the Aeolipile and the vending machine, often these machines were associated with worship, such as animated altars and automated temple doors."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Engine&oldid=833084943

    April 12, 2018

  • I think it's chapter 718, but who's counting?

    Edit: No, wait--it's 717. My plaster--1 list is 718.

    April 12, 2018

  • See comment on myrobolan.

    April 6, 2018

  • Nice! You might enjoy john's yiddishkeit list.

    April 4, 2018

  • I adore Fables--and now I adore this list.

    April 4, 2018

  • "Coordination complexes have been known since the beginning of modern chemistry. Early well-known coordination complexes include dyes such as Prussian blue. Their properties were first well understood in the late 1800s, following the 1869 work of Christian Wilhelm Blomstrand."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Coordination_complex&oldid=829385587

    March 30, 2018

  • "In chemistry, a coordination complex consists of a central atom or ion, which is usually metallic and is called the coordination centre, and a surrounding array of bound molecules or ions, that are in turn known as ligands or complexing agents."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Coordination_complex&oldid=829385587

    March 30, 2018

  • Aw--thanks! And welcome to Wordnik!

    March 30, 2018

  • Might I suggest the Latvian Gambit?

    March 29, 2018

  • quibbling

    March 27, 2018

  • Would you consider adding falx?

    March 27, 2018

  • "Tartaric acid may be most immediately recognizable to wine drinkers as the source of "wine diamonds", the small potassium bitartrate crystals that sometimes form spontaneously on the cork or bottom of the bottle. These "tartrates" are harmless, despite sometimes being mistaken for broken glass, and are prevented in many wines through cold stabilization (which is not always preferred since it can change the wine's profile). The tartrates remaining on the inside of aging barrels were at one time a major industrial source of potassium bitartrate."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tartaric_acid&oldid=830080069

    March 27, 2018

  • Cf. raccoonnookkeeper.

    March 26, 2018

  • And if that Rockoon had a nook and a keeper, you could be a Rockoonnookkeeper.

    March 26, 2018

  • "A limit situation (German: Grenzsituation) is any of certain situations in which a human being is said to have differing experiences from those arising from ordinary situations.

    The concept was developed by Karl Jaspers, who considered fright, guilt, finality and suffering as some of the key limit situations arising in everyday life."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Limit_situation&oldid=814921970

    March 21, 2018

  • I have a friend who's reading Plutarch and told me she's been thinking about virtue. We were talking about indulgences and Martin Luther. Then I was reading a Wikipedia article about criticism, which led to critical thinking, then sapere aude, then limit-experience, then limit situation, then antinomianism, and I was right back to faith and good works.

    Saint Kateri Tekakwitha strikes again.

    March 21, 2018

  • What do we think of the Century definition here? Should it actually be under sling? (Cf. sile.)

    March 16, 2018

  • Just arrived here after getting push-pull as a random word. I adore this list.

    March 16, 2018

  • "Fincke was born in Flensburg, Schleswig and died in Copenhagen. His lasting achievement is found in his book Geometria rotundi (1583), in which he introduced the modern names of the trigonometric functions tangent and secant."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Thomas_Fincke&oldid=816128832

    March 16, 2018

  • "A bone in the human body which the Rabbinical writers affirmed to be indestructible, and which is variously said to have been one of the lumbar vertebræ, the sacrum, the coccyx, a sesamoid bone of the great toe, or one of the triquetrous or Wormian bones of the cranium."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    March 16, 2018

  • ““Trojan-horsing” is a term beloved among show creators, who believe that network executives want a dab of originality, but mostly for marketing purposes. When Jenji Kohan explained to NPR why she’d created the prison show “Orange Is the New Black” around the character of Piper, an attractive, upper-middle-class white woman, she said, “Piper was my Trojan horse. You’re not going to go into a network and sell a show on really fascinating tales of black women and Latina women and old women and criminals.””

    — From “Donald Glover Can’t Save You: The creator of “Atlanta” wants TV to tell hard truths. Is the audience ready?” By Tad Friend in The New Yorker (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/03/05/donald-glover-cant-save-you).

    March 11, 2018

  • Spa... lining?

    March 7, 2018

  • From the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English:

    "n. Retirement; -- mostly used in a jocose or burlesque way."

    March 7, 2018

  • decrement

    March 6, 2018

  • sinister

    March 6, 2018

  • I like your lists.

    March 5, 2018

  • "A harlot; a strumpet; a baggage."

    --from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

    March 5, 2018

  • What a great list!

    March 5, 2018

  • See plethora's "words-and-phrases-i-picked-up-from-my-mother" list.

    March 2, 2018

  • Awww. Greetings, Mama Plethora!

    March 2, 2018

  • "The number of twenty-five eels, or the tenth part of a bind, according to the old statute de ponderibus. Also called strike."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    March 2, 2018

  • No seals were harmed in the making of this list.

    March 2, 2018

  • Just arrived here after getting varletess as a random word. What a great list!

    March 2, 2018

  • Not what I was expecting.

    March 1, 2018

  • "In machinery, a gearwheel of which the teeth are so formed that they are acted on and the wheel is made to revolve by a worm or shaft on which a spiral is turned—that is, by an endless screw. See cuts under Hindley's screw (at screw), steam-engine, and odometer."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    March 1, 2018

  • "In grammar, pertaining to or expressing an attribute; used (as a word) in direct description without predication: as, a bad pen, a burning house, a ruined man."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    March 1, 2018

  • And undercut.

    February 28, 2018

  • "An Italian oil-measure, equal in Lucca and Modena to 26⅜ United States (old wine) gallons: but in the Lombardo-Venetian system of 1803 tho coppo or cappo was precisely a deciliter."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    February 27, 2018

  • See comments on squash.

    February 23, 2018

  • I like how different these definitions are:

    "The unfertilized eggs of a female lobster, which turn a reddish color when cooked."

    -- from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

    "The ovaries of a cooked lobster; -- so called from their color."

    -- from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

    "The unimpregnated roe or eggs of the lobster, which when boiled assume the appearance of coral."

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    February 22, 2018

  • Thanks, Bilby Baggins.

    February 22, 2018

  • With a furoshiki?

    February 21, 2018

  • Hottest baseball team yet.

    February 15, 2018

  • How 'bout them Yankees?

    February 15, 2018

  • I just read Peggy Guggenheim's Confessions of an Art Addict, which reminded me of De Quincey's Confessions of an English Opium-Eater, so forgive me if I get stuck in that vein (as it were).

    February 13, 2018

  • (Best to view surreptitiously.)

    February 13, 2018

  • I'd say this is my favorite of your lists so far, but I'd end up having to say that every time you make a new one.

    February 8, 2018

  • Ooh--brackets around "misuse of mustard" please.

    February 8, 2018

  • Arrived here after seeing armamentarium on the list of Recently Loved Words. What a fun list!

    February 5, 2018

  • What a fantastic list!

    February 2, 2018

  • "The issues — which would ultimately claim ten lives — turned out to be the result of a rare phenomenon known as “thunderstorm asthma.” Though still not fully understood, the weather event is thought to occur due to the spread of pollen and mold that gets swept into the high humidity of the clouds, broken into smaller particles, and rained back down. For a person with asthma — whose airways are chronically inflamed — the spread of these particles can set off an attack."

    -- https://undark.org/article/thunderstorm-asthma-australia/

    January 31, 2018

  • See comments on aporrhipsis.

    January 14, 2018

  • Cf. terminal burrowing.

    January 14, 2018

  • Man. That GNU Webster's definition is something I'd have expected from the Century: "The anguish, like gnawing pain, excited by a sense of guilt; compunction of conscience for a crime committed, or for the sins of one's past life."

    January 12, 2018

  • I favorited this list even before it had any entries--but now if I could favorite it again, I would.

    January 12, 2018

  • Brackets around "bilbutt" and "Captain Cranky Bowtie Bilbutt," please. I have a list for them.

    January 12, 2018

  • Ach! How did I miss this? Sionnach, you are the best.

    January 10, 2018

  • brumaire?

    January 10, 2018

  • Nothing ever could.

    January 8, 2018

  • I like your lists.

    January 8, 2018

  • What a fun list!

    January 8, 2018

  • “Richard Bernstein is the medical director of the Comprehensive Stroke Center at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, and delivers his expertise to me in the patient-if-slightly brusque tone to which I am accustomed in every doctor I speak to. On a hunch I asked him if “beauty parlor stroke syndrome” is a real medical term, and he said no — getting one’s hair washed is merely one possibility in a range of options that cause the actual medical condition properly known as “vertebral artery dissection from hyperextension of the neck,” a considerably less grabby, though ultimately scarier name. What seems to happen is that certain movements of or pressures on the neck can result in a flap-like tear in the vertebral artery, which supplies blood to the brain. From there blood enters (and thereby thickens) the arterial wall, which can cause a blood clot, impeding blood flow and potentially causing a stroke.”

    — “Is Beauty Parlor Stroke Syndrome Going to Kill Me?” by Katie Heany (https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2017/03/is-this-going-to-kill-me-beauty-parlor-stroke-syndrome/517851/)

    January 7, 2018

  • I’m so sorry for your loss, rolig. It sounds like she was a delightful friend.

    January 7, 2018

  • See citation on ecosystem.

    January 4, 2018

  • "All around |Walter| Cannon, theorists were thrilling to the idea of self-righting systems, resistant to the buffeting forces of change. The English botanist Arthur Tansley coined the word “ecosystem” in 1935; the maintenance of stability would soon be described as one of the cardinal properties of ecologies. Soon economists were relating homeostasis to self-correcting markets; Norbert Wiener, the mathematician, saw that machines and creatures might be governed by autonomous control systems stabilized by “feedback” loops. Cells, cities, societies, even political institutions—all had the capacity to steady their states through the actions of self-regulated and counterpoised forces."

    -- "My Father’s Body, at Rest and in Motion" by Siddhartha Mukherjee (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/01/08/my-fathers-body-at-rest-and-in-motion)

    January 4, 2018

  • "In the late nineteen-twenties, the physiologist Walter Cannon coined the term “homeostasis”—joining together the Greek homoios (similar) and stasis (stillness). The capacity to sustain internal constancy was an essential feature of an organism, he argued."

    -- "My Father’s Body, at Rest and in Motion" by Siddhartha Mukherjee (https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/01/08/my-fathers-body-at-rest-and-in-motion)

    January 4, 2018

  • "Of course, you might dismiss my suspicions as no more than the vivid imagination of a writer, and that’s certainly possible, because an occupational hazard of reading and writing about crime is spotting possible criminal enterprise everywhere and in everyone. To be a writer is to be curious, or to use Pittsburgh parlance, a nebnose."

    -- "The Suburban Serial Killer Next Door: On the Dark, Imagined Secrets of Pittsburgh" by Rebecca Drake (http://lithub.com/the-suburban-serial-killer-next-door/)

    January 4, 2018

  • assay

    December 29, 2017

  • "|Robert| Proctor had found that the cigarette industry did not want consumers to know the harms of its product, and it spent billions obscuring the facts of the health effects of smoking. This search led him to create a word for the study of deliberate propagation of ignorance: agnotology.

    It comes from agnosis, the neoclassical Greek word for ignorance or ‘not knowing’, and ontology, the branch of metaphysics which deals with the nature of being. Agnotology is the study of wilful acts to spread confusion and deceit, usually to sell a product or win favour."

    -- http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20160105-the-man-who-studies-the-spread-of-ignorance

    December 29, 2017

  • clinquant?

    December 27, 2017

  • moire

    December 26, 2017

  • "Rod Bray of developers Northbridge Properties told Newshub that the culprits were probably trying to cut their own demolition costs by fly-tipping the house.

    "The options are either pay to have it demolished, or you dump it somewhere else and make it someone else's problem," he said, pointing out that it would cost his company over NZ$20,000 ($13,800; £10,300) to remove it."

    -- "Entire house fly-tipped in New Zealand" http://www.bbc.com/news/blogs-news-from-elsewhere-42166058

    November 29, 2017

  • "Earthquake Baroque is a style of Baroque architecture found in the Philippines, which suffered destructive earthquakes during the 17th century and 18th century, where large public buildings, such as churches, were rebuilt in a Baroque style. Similar events led to the Pombaline architecture in Lisbon following the 1755 Lisbon earthquake and Sicilian Baroque in Sicily following the 1693 earthquake."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Earthquake_Baroque&oldid=808426572

    November 13, 2017

  • Wow! What a cool list.

    November 6, 2017

  • Ha!

    November 6, 2017

  • "The exhibition’s title suggests an agonOverlook: Teresita Fernández Confronts Frederic Church at Olana. Fernández admits that’s the intention in a promotional video where she addresses the viewer, relating that she “wanted to create a somewhat confrontational and immersive experience” that would reinsert the “cultural component that’s always erased.”"

    -- https://hyperallergic.com/396690/grappling-with-the-hudson-river-school/

    October 25, 2017

  • "Beginning in the mid-1960s, investigators recognized that many HSPs function as molecular chaperones and thus play a critical role in protein folding, intracellular trafficking of proteins, and coping with proteins denatured by heat and other stresses."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Heat_shock_protein&oldid=797825597

    October 23, 2017

  • See the examples on phene.

    October 18, 2017

  • The usage examples for this suggest something quite different: "The so-called phene, or lammergeier, is fond of its young, provides its food with ease, fetches food to its nest, and is of a kindly disposition. (The History of Animals)"

    October 18, 2017

  • "The physician reading this mysterious letter was no ordinary doctor. He was the Honorable Gustav Scholer, head Coroner for the city of New York, and one of the era’s leading alienists—an arcane term for specialists who studied the mental pathology of those deemed “alienated” from society."

    -- "Peek Inside the Grisly, Salacious Case Files of NYC’s Head Coroner in the Early 1900s"

    by Luke Spencer (http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/peek-inside-the-grisly-salacious-case-files-of-nycs-head-coroner-in-the-early-1900s)

    October 13, 2017

  • I just noticed that this is the only listing of "ointmint" (my new favorite word).

    October 11, 2017

  • What a great list!

    October 11, 2017

  • "Of course, if a piano and a violin play the same high C at the exact same volume, there is still some quality that feels different between the two notes. It turns out that pure tones do not occur naturally, and when a piano or violin produces a high C, the sound wave is made up of a specific combination of different pure tones. The different amplitudes and frequencies have nice relationships with one another, which is why you hear a specific note rather than a mess of clashing noises, but the single pitch you hear does not correspond to a single frequency. The hard-to-define quality of sound that allows you to identify what instrument you’re listening to is determined by the exact combination of pure tones. When different instruments all play at the same time, the various pure tones add together to create the music you hear.

    "So what do pure tones have to do with the groove on a record being able to tell David Bowie and Nina Simone apart? It turns out that any curve can be written in exactly one way as a combination of curves with uniform amplitude and frequency. In other words, the single squiggle captured in the groove of a record player can be written as a combination of pure tones. And there is only one combination that will produce any particular squiggle. The tool that makes this possible comes from mathematics and is called the Fourier transform. Combined with the fact that the sound we experience is determined by the exact combination of pure tones, this bit of mathematics explains how the vinyl record groove can completely determine the music you hear."

    -- "Which Sounds Better, Analog or Digital Music?" by Katrina Morgan (https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/which-sounds-better-analog-or-digital-music/)

    October 11, 2017

  • These are my favorites from the Century:

    "Tipsy."

    "Sober; not tipsy."

    October 10, 2017

  • Aw, thanks, c_b. Anything to further our studies.

    October 10, 2017

  • Would you consider adding set-net?

    October 4, 2017

  • Another book to add to my list! Thanks, c_b.

    October 4, 2017

  • Heck yeah, it's interesting. I've been trying to figure out how to collect and grind my own pigments (mostly for paper marbling on alum-mordanted paper, but it's fun no matter what).

    October 4, 2017

  • "Proteins were recognized as a distinct class of biological molecules in the eighteenth century by Antoine Fourcroy and others, distinguished by the molecules' ability to coagulate or flocculate under treatments with heat or acid. Noted examples at the time included albumin from egg whites, blood serum albumin, fibrin, and wheat gluten.

    "Proteins were first described by the Dutch chemist Gerardus Johannes Mulder and named by the Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius in 1838. Mulder carried out elemental analysis of common proteins and found that nearly all proteins had the same empirical formula, C400H620N100O120P1S1. He came to the erroneous conclusion that they might be composed of a single type of (very large) molecule. The term "protein" to describe these molecules was proposed by Mulder's associate Berzelius; protein is derived from the Greek word πρώτειος (proteios), meaning "primary", "in the lead", or "standing in front", + -in."

    -- from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Protein&oldid=799576822 (footnote citations removed)

    October 3, 2017

  • *favorited* (and also added to my request list at the library)

    October 3, 2017

  • This list makes me happy.

    October 3, 2017

  • Further affiant sayeth naught.

    October 3, 2017

  • These are great, c_b!

    October 2, 2017

  • Would you accept doge and/or doggo?

    October 2, 2017

  • "Linnaeus' remains comprise the type specimen for the species Homo sapiens, following the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature, since the sole specimen he is known to have examined when writing the species description was himself."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Carl_Linnaeus&oldid=801408157

    September 29, 2017

  • Are there any lists of scientific names coined by Linnaeus? (And have I just nominated myself to make one?)

    September 29, 2017

  • See comment on bird's milk.

    September 28, 2017

  • See comment on bird's milk.

    September 28, 2017

  • "The concept of avian milk (Ancient Greek: ὀρνίθων γάλα, ornithon gala) stretches back to ancient Greece. Aristophanes uses "the milk of the birds" in the plays The Birds and The Wasps as a proverbial rarity. The expression is also found in Strabo's Geographica where the island of Samos is described as a blest country to which those who praise it do not hesitate to apply the proverb that "it produces even bird's milk" (φέρει καί ὀρνίθων γάλα). A similar expression lac gallinaceum (Latin for "chicken's milk") was also later used by Petronius (38.1) and Pliny the Elder (Plin. Nat. pr. 24) as a term for a great rarity. The idiom became later common in many languages and appeared in Slavic folk tales. In one such tale the beautiful princess tests the ardor and resourcefulness of her suitor by sending him out into the wilderness to find and bring back the one fantastical luxury she does not have: bird's milk. In the fairy tale Little Hare by Aleksey Remizov (who wrote many imitations of traditional Slavic folk tales) the magic bird Gagana produces milk."

    -- From https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ptasie_mleczko&oldid=781825215 (footnote citations removed)

    September 28, 2017

  • "In salt-making, a fire-brick arch of varying length, placed under the evaporating-pans to temper the heat and so prevent the salt from being burned."

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    September 27, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "A genus of parmeliaceous lichens having a fruticulose or pendulous thallus, and apothecia with a concave disk of a color different from that of the thallus. Evernia Prunastri is used for dyeing, and was formerly used, ground down with starch, for hair-powder."

    September 27, 2017

  • I thought the first rule of linguistics fight club was that we weren't allowed to verb about linguistics fight club.

    September 26, 2017

  • Oh, excellent, qms. Well done!

    September 26, 2017

  • It certainly stands out--I guess I'd never thought about where it comes from before.

    September 18, 2017

  • I like this part from the Century: "In printing, one of a number of pieces of wood or metal, channeled in the center with a groove or gutter, used to separate the pages of type in a form. Also gutter-stick."

    September 18, 2017

  • See comment on byssus.

    September 14, 2017

  • "Sea silk sounds like the stuff of legend. Harvested from rare clams, this thread flashes gold in the sunlight, weighs almost nothing, and comes with a heavy load of misunderstanding, misinterpretation, and misinformation. But the fiber itself is no myth. Its flaxen strands come from Pinna nobilis, or the pen shell, a giant Mediterranean mollusk that measures up to a yard in length. To attach themselves to rocks or the seafloor, some clams secrete proteins that, upon contact with seawater, harden into a silky filament called byssus. The byssus of the pen shell makes sea silk, the world’s rarest thread."

    -- http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/sea-silk-rarest-thread-italy-clams-textiles-fabric

    September 14, 2017

  • *favorited*

    September 11, 2017

  • It's also the name for a kind of boat. See la chalupa.

    September 11, 2017

  • I adore anagrams. Any chance we could convince you to tag each of these with their corresponding place names?

    September 8, 2017

  • Any portmanteau in a stormanteau!

    September 8, 2017

  • "As human settlements expand across the earth’s surface, conflicts with wildlife are increasing. According to a review in the journal Animal Conservation, this represents “one of the most widespread and intractable issues facing |conservationists| today.” Researchers have been paying closer attention to these clashes: The number of scientific articles published annually about human-wildlife conflict (ranging from grain theft by rodents to farmers being trampled by elephants) increased from zero to more than 700 between 1995 and 2015, as indexed by Google Scholar. There have even been calls to coin an entire new discipline for studying the issue: anthrotherology, combining the Greek words for human (anthropos) and wild animal (ther). To understand the anthrotherologist’s dilemma, look to other countries’ parallels, like Japan’s wild hog problem or, closer to home, many national parks’ issues with bears."

    -- "On the Front Lines of South Africa's Baboon Wars" by Kimon de Greef (https://www.outsideonline.com/2231291/frontlines-south-africas-human-vs-baboon-war)

    September 6, 2017

  • Here's where I was looking: https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Polyploid&oldid=798346728

    September 6, 2017

  • See comments on polyploidy.

    September 6, 2017

  • So I was just doing a bit of Wiki-ing and found this: "In addition, polyploidy occurs in some tissues of animals that are otherwise diploid, such as human muscle tissues. This is known as endopolyploidy."

    September 6, 2017

  • Wasn't there a list of plants that have animals in their names? Where was that?

    Edit: I found it! See madmouth's love-across-kingdoms.

    September 6, 2017

  • Ah, here it is! I was looking for this list over on bilby's animal-identity-crisis.

    September 6, 2017

  • See citation on Anderson localization.

    August 30, 2017

  • "In the 1950s, Philip Anderson, a physicist at Bell Laboratories, discovered a strange phenomenon. In some situations where it seems as though waves should advance freely, they just stop — like a tsunami halting in the middle of the ocean.

    Anderson won the 1977 Nobel Prize in physics for his discovery of what is now called Anderson localization, a term that refers to waves that stay in some “local” region rather than propagating the way you’d expect. He studied the phenomenon in the context of electrons moving through impure materials (electrons behave as both particles and waves), but under certain circumstances it can happen with other types of waves as well."

    -- "Mathematicians Tame Rogue Waves, Lighting Up Future of LEDs" by Kevin Hartnett (https://www.quantamagazine.org/mathematicians-tame-rogue-waves-lighting-up-future-of-leds-20170822)

    August 30, 2017

  • Apparently "a slaughterhouse worker who removes the hide from the rear legs of lambs and calves and curries calf carcasses."

    -- https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fist%20cods

    August 29, 2017

  • "The Moon illusion is an optical illusion which causes the Moon to appear larger near the horizon than it does higher up in the sky."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Moon_illusion&oldid=796703035

    August 29, 2017

  • Nice! Hernesheir's got a sheepishness list.

    August 28, 2017

  • Test.

    August 17, 2017

  • See usage example on guaiacol.

    August 17, 2017

  • "The researchers focused on a small amphipathic compound known as guaiacol. This molecule is linked with the smoky taste that develops when malted barley is smoked on peat fires, and is far more common in Scottish whiskies than in American or Irish ones, the researchers said."

    -- https://www.livescience.com/60158-why-whiskey-tastes-good-diluted.html#undefined.uxfs

    August 17, 2017

  • "The biggest limitation to this research may be the definition of swaddling itself. The authors of the study acknowledge one of the “several” limitations to their meta-analysis is the fact that none of the studies they reviewed clearly outlined what constitutes a swaddle. And besides that, as anyone who has tried to swaddle a baby can confirm, good swaddling takes practice. Many parents, for fear of too tightly wrapping their babies, end up swaddling too loosely, which is itself a suffocation hazard. (Some daycare centers in the United States don’t allow swaddling for this reason.)"

    -- https://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2016/05/is-swaddling-safe/482055/

    August 16, 2017

  • "The term "sousveillance", coined by Steve Mann, stems from the contrasting French words sur, meaning "above", and sous, meaning "below", i.e. "surveillance" denotes the "eye-in-the-sky" watching from above, whereas "sousveillance" denotes bringing the camera or other means of observation down to human level, either physically (mounting cameras on people rather than on buildings), or hierarchically (ordinary people doing the watching, rather than higher authorities or architectures doing the watching)."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sousveillance&oldid=788558213

    August 16, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. A place where pies, tarts, etc., are made.

    "n. Viands made of paste, or of which paste constitutes a principal ingredient; particularly, the crust or cover of a pie, tart, or the like."

    August 11, 2017

  • I prefer fufluns.

    August 11, 2017

  • Another great one. Thanks, qms.

    August 11, 2017

  • "In music of the Renaissance and early Baroque eras, a bicinium (pl. bicinia) was a composition for only two parts, especially one for the purpose of teaching counterpoint or singing."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bicinium&oldid=782797821

    August 10, 2017

  • Is it weird that I think those weevils are kinda cute?

    August 9, 2017

  • Compare counternutation.

    August 9, 2017

  • "Nutation and counternutation refer to movement of the sacrum defined by the rotation of the promontory downwards and anteriorly, as with lumbar extension (nutation); or upwards and posteriorly, as with lumbar flexion (counternutation)."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Anatomical_terms_of_motion&oldid=778251662

    August 9, 2017

  • Arcades ambo.

    August 9, 2017

  • Nice one, qms!

    August 9, 2017

  • "Few neuroscientists still believe in an immaterial soul. Yet many follow Descartes in claiming that conscious experience involves awareness of a ‘thinking thing’: the self. There is an emerging consensus that such self-awareness is actually a form of bodily awareness, produced (at least in part) by interoception, our ability to monitor and detect autonomic and visceral processes. For example, the feeling of an elevated heart rate can provide information to the embodied organism that it is in a dangerous or difficult situation."

    -- https://aeon.co/essays/psychedelics-work-by-violating-our-models-of-self-and-the-world

    August 8, 2017

  • See comments on torks, torque, etc.

    August 7, 2017

  • There were a couple of examples over on torked.

    August 7, 2017

  • "As the name suggests, the original function of a millwright was the construction of flour mills, sawmills, paper mills and fulling mills powered by water or wind, mostly of wood with a limited number of metal parts. Since both of these structures originated from antiquity, millwrighting could be considered, arguably, as one of the oldest engineering trades and the forerunner of the modern mechanical engineer.

    In modern usage, a millwright is engaged with the erection of machinery. This includes such tasks as leveling, aligning and installing machinery on foundations or base plates and setting, leveling and aligning electric motors or other power sources such as turbines with the equipment, which millwrights typically connect with some type of coupling."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Millwright&oldid=785197392

    August 4, 2017

  • See comment on viologen.

    August 2, 2017

  • "The name is because this class of compounds is easily reduced to the radical mono cation, which is colored intensely blue.

    Possibly the best-known viologen is paraquat, which is one of the world's most widely used herbicides."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Viologen&oldid=792580672

    August 2, 2017

  • "A bit of calm doesn’t sound so bad, but the sedative dose of bromide is too near bromide’s toxicity level. Plus, bromide can accumulate in our bodies. Back in the 1930s-1950s, overuse of bromide products led to appropriately named medical conditions. Bromide-induced coma was dubbed ‘the bromide sleep’. General bromide toxicity was ‘bromism’. Outside medicine, if you were just a bit of a bore you were insultingly called a ‘bromide’."

    -- From "Brominated vegetable oil" by Raychelle Burks (https://www.chemistryworld.com/podcasts/brominated-vegetable-oil/9527.article)

    See, also: brominated vegetable oil, creaming.

    July 28, 2017

  • See comment on creaming.

    July 28, 2017

  • Short for brominated vegetable oil. See comment on creaming.

    July 28, 2017

  • "Brominated vegetable oil, called BVO for short, is made by adding bromine across the double bonds of certain fatty acids in vegetable oil, usually soybean oil. Like plain vegetable oil, BVO does a good job of dissolving water-insoluble food flavour, fragrance and colouring agents, serving as a carrier for these agents in soft drinks, which are mostly water. Neither plain vegetable oil or BVO is water soluble, but we can make oil/water emulsions, dispersing tiny droplets of flavour-carrying oil throughout a soda solution.

    "But why use BVO when plain ol’ vegetable oil could work? Density. Over time, gravity does its job and the emulsion breaks down, causing the oil and water to separate. If a plain vegetable oil is used, the oil fraction – which contains those all-important flavouring agents – would float to the top. Food scientists call this ‘creaming’."

    -- From "Brominated vegetable oil" by Raychelle Burks (https://www.chemistryworld.com/podcasts/brominated-vegetable-oil/9527.article)

    July 28, 2017

  • What a delightful list!

    July 20, 2017

  • See iPhone.

    July 20, 2017

  • I just arrived here after clicking on lixiviate. What a nice list!

    July 19, 2017

  • See additional definitions on Kali.

    July 19, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. The plant Salsola Kali, the prickly saltwort or glasswort. See alkali and Salsola.

    n. Potash: so called by German chemists. Also kalin.

    n. A carpet with a long pile, as distinguished from the carpets without nap.

    n. The largest in the set of carpets commonly used in a Persian room, filling the center of the room."

    n. For words beginning thus, see cali-."

    July 19, 2017

  • luthien13: Welcome to Wordnik!

    bilby: I totally read that as ADHD.

    July 17, 2017

  • *press*

    July 14, 2017

  • Oh look! A delicious food pellet!

    July 14, 2017

  • I love that bunny salad and drum major salad appear right next to each other on this list.

    July 14, 2017

  • *waits*

    July 13, 2017

  • *sends telepathic button-pushing signal*

    July 13, 2017

  • Ooh! Does anyone have a theremin I can borrow?

    July 13, 2017

  • See citation on pyrethrum.

    July 12, 2017

  • See citation on pyrethrum.

    July 12, 2017

  • From the Century:

    "n. A powdered preparation of pyrethrum, used as an insectifuge. Also called pyrethrum-powder. See insect-powder and buhach.

    n. In pharmacy, the Anacyclus Pyrethrum, or pellitory-of-Spain."

    July 12, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "A young one; a boy, babe, bairn, urchin, chit, chicken, sapling, etc."

    July 11, 2017

  • "On the occasion of receiving his degree in 1536, Ramus allegedly took as his thesis Quaecumque ab Aristotele dicta essent, commentitia esse, which Walter J. Ong paraphrases as follows: 'All the things that Aristotle has said are inconsistent because they are poorly systematized and can be called to mind only by the use of arbitrary mnemonic devices.'"

    -- https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petrus_Ramus

    July 2, 2017

  • See comment on Ars magna.

    July 2, 2017

  • "One of the most significant changes between the original and the second version of the Art was in the visuals used. The early version used 16 figures presented as complex, complementary trees, while the system of the Ars Magna featured only four, including one which combined the other three. This figure, a "Lullian Circle," took the form of a paper machine operated by rotating concentrically arranged circles to combine his symbolic alphabet, which was repeated on each level. These combinations were said to show all possible truth about the subject of inquiry."

    -- https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramon_Llull

    July 2, 2017

  • See comment on Herborn Encyclopaedists.

    July 1, 2017

  • See comment on Herborn Encyclopaedists.

    July 1, 2017

  • "Leibniz’s broader vision of the power of logical calculation was inspired by many thinkers — from the logical works of Aristotle and Ramus to Thomas Hobbes’s proposal to equate reasoning with computation. But Leibniz’s curiosity around the art of combinations per se was sparked by a group called the “Herborn Encyclopaedists” through whom he became acquainted with the works of Ramon Llull, a Majorcan philosopher, logician, and mystical thinker who is thought to have died seven centuries ago this year. Llull’s Ars magna (or “ultimate general art”) from 1308 outlines a form of analysis and argumentation based on working with different permutations of a small number of fundamental attributes."

    -- http://publicdomainreview.org/2016/11/10/let-us-calculate-leibniz-llull-and-computational-imagination/

    July 1, 2017

  • Wikipedia says "the term elephant test refers to situations in which an idea or thing, 'is hard to describe, but instantly recognizable when spotted'."

    See https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Duck_test&oldid=785523971

    June 30, 2017

  • "And sometimes your gut distress isn’t caused by a germ at all. It could be an overdose of fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols, known in public health circles as Fodmaps. These are essentially carbohydrates that, eaten in excess, are not well absorbed in the small intestine and then make their way into your colon to cause all kinds of trouble. They include myriad things we’re encouraged to eat including broccoli, brussels sprouts, radicchio, asparagus, avocados, mushrooms, peaches, whole grains and legumes."

    -- "What to Blame for Your Stomach Bug? Not Always the Last Thing You Ate" (https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/29/well/live/what-to-blame-for-your-stomach-bug-not-always-the-last-thing-you-ate.html)

    June 29, 2017

  • Fun!

    June 29, 2017

  • Exactly--with his aviator glasses and bomber jacket (which he'd have picked up last winter in the "seasonal" section).

    June 28, 2017

  • Stellar list!

    June 28, 2017

  • Fantastic!

    June 27, 2017

  • Or paradelle?

    June 27, 2017

  • Nice one, qms.

    Also, I'm adding this to my hence list.

    June 27, 2017

  • Oh, fun!

    June 27, 2017

  • Alright!

    June 27, 2017

  • Compare zibet.

    June 27, 2017

  • I saw something about that, too--was it about one of the Great Lakes?

    June 26, 2017

  • See citation on pyrosome.

    June 23, 2017

  • "Each pyrosome is made up of individual zooids – small, multicellular organisms – linked together in a tunic to form a tube-like colony that is closed on one end. They are filter feeders and use cilia to draw plankton into their mucous filter."

    -- "Researchers probe explosion of pyrosomes off the Northwest Coast" (https://www.nwfsc.noaa.gov/news/features/pyrosomes/index.cfm)

    June 23, 2017

  • I haven't had enough coffee for a limerick, so I'll default to haiku:

    qms plants seeds

    and encourages us to

    cultivate our own.

    June 23, 2017

  • Why a cocktail? Wouldn't jam make more sense?

    June 22, 2017

  • Chimps and fruit bats are picky.

    When it comes to their lunch, it's sticky.

    Why eat cheese or meat?

    Choose fruits or a beet.

    (But maybe not a durian--they're icky.)

    June 22, 2017

  • I was thinking something more like the university from Rocky and Bullwinkle: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RSVq7X7OPeQ

    June 22, 2017

  • Arrived here after getting liftman as a random word. What a nice list!

    June 21, 2017

  • What's a matta?

    June 21, 2017

  • Your lists are lovely.

    June 21, 2017

  • ""|Hélène| Grimaud doesn't sound like most pianists: she is a rubato artist, a reinventor of phrasings, a taker of chances. "A wrong note that is played out of élan, you hear it differently than one that is played out of fear," she says.""

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=H%C3%A9l%C3%A8ne_Grimaud&oldid=778559561

    June 20, 2017

  • I've added it to my list.

    June 19, 2017

  • This is great!

    June 19, 2017

  • adagio

    June 19, 2017

  • "The pigment replaced the expensive lapis lazuli and was an important topic in the letters exchanged between Johann Leonhard Frisch and the president of the Royal Academy of Sciences, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, between 1708 and 1716."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Prussian_blue&oldid=785238123

    June 16, 2017

  • Would you consider adding bezoars to your list?

    June 15, 2017

  • "Marked with fine lines, as if scratched with a pen or painted with a fine brush; specifically, marked with a series of concentric lines, as every feather of the body-plumage of a dark brahma or a partridge cochin hen."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    June 15, 2017

  • Just got polari as a random word. Is someone trying to send me a message?

    June 15, 2017

  • I just read this in an article about Steve Casner's “Careful: A User’s Guide to Our Injury-Prone Minds,” (at http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/be-careful-your-mind-makes-accidents-inevitable):

    "To an extent, we are accident-prone because we are imaginative. We are determined to use familiar tools in novel ways—we might use a knife handle, say, to break up ice in the freezer, or a screwdriver to pry open a stuck drawer. The problem is that we imagine how things will go right but not how they will go wrong. In psychological terms, we perceive “affordances for action” (the blade of the screwdriver prying off the lid), but not “affordances for harm” (the blade breaking off, flying upward, and stabbing us in the eye). Casner worries that our optimism about our own plans might be an insurmountable part of our evolutionary heritage. Recalling the time he fell off a chair while trying to replace the batteries in his smoke detector—he should have used a ladder—Casner reflects that, in our primate past, it was the climbers who ate."

    June 14, 2017

  • From now on, I'll be saying ptero's name as pterodactickle.

    June 14, 2017

  • This is great, hh. Just arrived here after looking up buffalo nickel.

    June 14, 2017

  • The keeper of the raccoon's nook, of course, is the raccoonnookkeeper, which see.

    June 13, 2017

  • Also see Book Book.

    June 13, 2017

  • And if that grumpy hen has a raccoon keeping track of her finances from another quiet corner, that would be the Book Book chook cook's raccoon nook bookkeeper.

    June 13, 2017

  • "Your car is equipped not with a thermometer but with a thermistor. Thermistors work in a similar manner to thermometers, but rather than using a liquid like mercury, thermistors measure the change in electrical current as a result of heat added or taken away. Thermistors are quite convenient, since they are small, cheap to make and for the most part, accurate."

    -- from "This is why your car thermometer is almost always wrong" by Greg Porter, in the Washington Post (https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/capital-weather-gang/wp/2017/06/12/this-is-why-your-car-thermometer-is-almost-always-wrong/?utm_term=.3c6fc7bbdc39)

    June 13, 2017

  • Um, would you rather have some fufluns? I'm sure we could scare up a few around here somewhere.

    June 9, 2017

  • De-lightful!

    June 8, 2017

  • What--you don't think baby mice wine would go with the head cheese?

    June 8, 2017

  • Haha! I'm a sucker for anything stringy and mucilaginous.

    June 7, 2017

  • "n. A stringy, mucilaginous substance which forms in vinegar during the acetous fermentation, and the presence of which sets up and hastens this kind of fermentation. It is produced by a plant, Mycoderma aceti, the germs of which, like those of the yeast-plant, exist in the atmosphere."

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    June 7, 2017

  • From the examples:

    "Mention of this substance is made in (Proverbs 25: 20) -- "and as vinegar upon nitre" -- and in (Jeremiah 2: 26) The article denoted is not that which we now understand by the term nitre i.e. nitrate of Potassa -- "saltpetre" -- but the nitrum of the Latins and the natron or native carbonate of soda of modern chemistry."

    Smith's Bible Dictionary

    June 7, 2017

  • "n. The fermented wort used by vinegar-makers."

    --from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    June 7, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. Must; specifically, a preparation used for “doctoring” wines of inferior quality: same as doctor, 6."

    June 7, 2017

  • "Four thieves vinegar (also called Marseilles vinegar, Marseilles remedy, prophylactic vinegar, vinegar of the four thieves, camphorated acetic acid, vinaigre des quatre voleurs and acetum quator furum) is a concoction of vinegar (either from red wine, white wine, cider, or distilled white) infused with herbs, spices or garlic that was believed to protect users from the plague. The recipe for this vinegar has almost as many variations as its legend."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Four_thieves_vinegar&oldid=748099207

    June 7, 2017

  • This list could be paired nicely with john's revolting-beverages.

    June 7, 2017

  • I'm glad this is an open list.

    June 6, 2017

  • Oh, you--with your mordant wit. Now I'm even more sure to add this to my mordants list.

    June 2, 2017

  • This seems right up biocon's alley.

    June 2, 2017

  • "The Holdrege series consists of very deep, well drained, moderately permeable soils formed in calcareous loess."

    -- https://soilseries.sc.egov.usda.gov/OSD_Docs/H/HOLDREGE.html

    May 26, 2017

  • Do we not have any lists of soils? I'm fond of the Holdrege series (for obvious reasons).

    May 26, 2017

  • Ah. Nice. I just added it to Prolagus's •-crappie-food list.

    May 26, 2017

  • Epic.

    May 24, 2017

  • Thanks, hh!

    May 24, 2017

  • See citation on side splash.

    May 23, 2017

  • See citation on side splash.

    May 23, 2017

  • "Justin believes that he experienced what’s called a side flash or side splash, in which the lightning ‘splashes’ from something that has been struck – such as a tree or telephone pole – hopscotching to a nearby object or person. Considered the second most common lightning hazard, side splashes inflict 20 to 30 per cent of injuries and fatalities."

    -- https://qz.com/989827/what-happens-to-people-who-are-struck-by-lightning/

    May 23, 2017

  • Oh, reverse dictionary. You're my favorite. (Just don't tell weirdnet.)

    Edit: (Or the Century.)

    May 23, 2017

  • Excellent.

    May 23, 2017

  • Thanks, bilby.

    May 23, 2017

  • My new favorite list! Thanks, kalayzich.

    May 23, 2017

  • I remember many happy childhood hours spent in my small town playing games such as "How Far Does This Crack In The Dirt Go?" or "Can We Knock Down That Icicle With A Snowball?"

    Kids these days don't know what they're missing.

    May 22, 2017

  • I just found oner.

    May 22, 2017

  • Just arrived here again after looking up conker. I still love this list!

    May 22, 2017

  • I had the same thought, seanahan.

    May 22, 2017

  • rectangled

    May 22, 2017

  • See comment on pittacal.

    May 22, 2017

  • "Pittacal was the first synthetic dyestuff to be produced commercially. It was accidentally discovered by German chemist Carl Ludwig Reichenbach in 1832, who was also the discoverer of kerosene, phenol, eupion, paraffin wax and creosote.

    As the history goes, Reichenbach applied creosote to the wooden posts of his home, in order to drive away dogs who urinated on them. The strategy was ineffectual, however, and he noted that the dog's urine reacted with creosote to form an intense dark blue deposit. He named the new substance píttacal (from Greek words tar and beautiful). He later was able to produce pure pittacal by treating beechwood tar with barium oxide and using alumina as a mordant to the dye's fabrics. Although sold commercially as a dyestuff, it did not fare well."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pittacal&oldid=534436190

    May 22, 2017

  • "In the 18th century airwood came to be used by marqueteurs; for most artificial colours they used holly, which takes vegetable dyes very well, but airwood was employed either in its natural off-white state or stained with iron sulphate to produce a range of silver and silver-grey hues. The reason that airwood was preferred to holly for this colour was that it gave a metallic sheen or lustre, while holly dyed by the same process turned a rather dead grey. The use of airwood in this way meant that by the 19th century it was associated specifically with that colour, and at the same time name gradually changed from airwood to harewood."

    -- From Wikipedia's harewood (material) page

    May 22, 2017

  • "Known since ancient times as copperas and as green vitriol, the blue-green heptahydrate is the most common form of this material."

    -- From Wikipedia's Iron(II) sulphate page

    May 22, 2017

  • See citation in comment on harewood.

    May 22, 2017

  • I also love that this list has proofread.

    May 19, 2017

  • Ooh! More excellent band names here.

    May 19, 2017

  • Someone just listed cattle egret on a different list. I clicked on it, made sure it was listed on my cattle list, then showed up over here--only to see my comment from 2012.

    Egrets, I have a few.

    May 19, 2017

  • open list is my middle name.

    May 19, 2017

  • I miss our-john.

    May 19, 2017

  • That's good to hear. I've been looking forward to reading it.

    May 19, 2017

  • So many potential band names here.

    May 19, 2017

  • Oh! Wordsmith? I get those e-mails, too--and I'm a huge fan of the Internet Anagram Server.

    May 19, 2017

  • Oh, fun! Nice list, tristero.

    May 18, 2017

  • schav!

    May 18, 2017

  • I adore sorrels.

    Don't we have some soup lists around here?

    May 18, 2017

  • How'd y'all feel about adding all y'all?

    May 18, 2017

  • Superb.

    May 18, 2017

  • Having just seen the citation on zombee, I'm left wondering whether the prongs should be called ant-lers.

    May 11, 2017

  • One of my favorite qualities about this site is that every potential list is an existing list--but I think it's also true that every list has potential.

    And this is a good one.

    May 10, 2017

  • *favorited*

    (I just got metel as a random word.)

    May 10, 2017

  • Nice! You might find some yoinkworthy entries over on of-arabic-origin.

    May 10, 2017

  • But most of the usage examples and tweets do seem to be typos about education.

    May 10, 2017

  • I have access to the online version of the Oxford English Dictionary, which lists usage examples going back to at least the 1600's. Here are some of the definitions:

    1. "Med. The excretion, expulsion, or removal of something from the body. Obs."

    3.a. "The action of bringing out or developing something from a state of latent, rudimentary, or potential existence; an instance or result of this."

    3.b. "Chem. The action of isolating a substance from a compound or mixture in which it is present; extraction. Now rare."

    4. "The inferring of a principle, conclusion, etc., from premises or available data. Also: a result of this, an inference; cf. educt n. 3." (Which has "That which is inferred or elicited from something; a product or result of inference or development.")

    5. "Mech a. The passage of steam, water, or vapour out of a vessel through a pipe or tube provided for the purpose; spec. (in a steam engine) the exit of steam from the cylinder after it has done its work in propelling the piston; cf. exhaust n. 1a(a) and the note there. Usu. attrib. (see Compounds). Now chiefly hist."

    6. "The bringing about or occasioning of an act, event, emotion, etc. Cf. educe v. 4."

    May 10, 2017

  • Fantastic list! I just arrived here after getting ilicic as a random word.

    May 9, 2017

  • Marvelous. I wish I knew more about Ludolf Bakhuizen.

    May 9, 2017

  • Likewise, qms.

    May 9, 2017

  • See citation on iodine.

    May 9, 2017

  • "Iodine is used in chemistry as an indicator for starch. When starch is mixed with iodine in solution, an intensely dark blue colour develops, representing a starch/iodine complex. Starch is a substance common to most plant cells and so a weak iodine solution will stain starch present in the cells. Iodine is one component in the staining technique known as Gram staining, used in microbiology. Lugol's solution or Lugol's iodine (IKI) is a brown solution that turns black in the presence of starches and can be used as a cell stain, making the cell nuclei more visible. Iodine is also used as a mordant in Gram's staining, it enhances dye to enter through the pore present in the cell wall/membrane."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Staining&oldid=776676067

    May 9, 2017

  • See citation on eosin.

    May 9, 2017

  • "Van Gogh was a fan of the vivid scarlet ‘geranium lake’ pigment derived from the synthetic dye, eosin. Even at the time it was known to fade. He compensated by using it more intensely, but was ultimately unable to hold back the photochemical tide."

    -- https://www.chemistryworld.com/feature/raiders-of-the-lost-pigments/3007237.article

    May 9, 2017

  • From Wikipedia:

    "The mouth of most sea urchins is made up of five calcium carbonate teeth or jaws, with a fleshy, tongue-like structure within. The entire chewing organ is known as Aristotle's lantern . . . , from Aristotle's description in his History of Animals:

    ...the urchin has what we mainly call its head and mouth down below, and a place for the issue of the residuum up above. The urchin has, also, five hollow teeth inside, and in the middle of these teeth a fleshy substance serving the office of a tongue. Next to this comes the esophagus, and then the stomach, divided into five parts, and filled with excretion, all the five parts uniting at the anal vent, where the shell is perforated for an outlet... In reality the mouth-apparatus of the urchin is continuous from one end to the other, but to outward appearance it is not so, but looks like a horn lantern with the panes of horn left out. (Tr. D'Arcy Thompson)

    However, this has recently been proven to be a mistranslation. Aristotle's lantern is actually referring to the whole shape of sea urchins, which look like the ancient lamps of Aristotle's time."

    (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sea_urchin&oldid=776559759)

    May 9, 2017

  • Fantastic, qms.

    May 9, 2017

  • Perfection.

    May 9, 2017

  • "Structural coloration is the production of colour by microscopically structured surfaces fine enough to interfere with visible light, sometimes in combination with pigments. For example, peacock tail feathers are pigmented brown, but their microscopic structure makes them also reflect blue, turquoise, and green light, and they are often iridescent."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Structural_coloration&oldid=776840981

    May 8, 2017

  • "Pollia condensata, colloquially called the marble berry, is a perennial herbaceous plant with stoloniferous stems and shiny, metallic blue, hard, dry, round fruit. It is found in forested regions of Africa. The glossy blue of the berry-like fruit, created by structural coloration, is the most intense of any known biological material."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pollia_condensata&oldid=769696583

    May 8, 2017

  • See citation on water hammer.

    May 8, 2017

  • See citation on water hammer.

    May 8, 2017

  • "Water hammer (or, more generally, fluid hammer) is a pressure surge or wave caused when a fluid (usually a liquid but sometimes also a gas) in motion is forced to stop or change direction suddenly (momentum change). A water hammer commonly occurs when a valve closes suddenly at an end of a pipeline system, and a pressure wave propagates in the pipe. It is also called hydraulic shock."

    -- https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_hammer

    May 8, 2017

  • Oh, cruel bilby! I just went to see whether that's an actual list--but it's not. I hereby nominate you to create it.

    May 6, 2017

  • For its use in old chemistry, see flower.

    May 5, 2017

  • "plural In chem., fine particles of a substance, especially when raised by fire in sublimation, and adhering to the heads of vessels in the form of a powder or mealy deposit: as, the flowers of sulphur."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    May 5, 2017

  • From the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English:

    "A solution of a medicinal substance in water; -- distinguished from tincture and aqua."

    May 4, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "A vagabond who sleeps in straw; hence, one who lives alow, knavish life; a dissolute fellow."

    May 4, 2017

  • I just got silk-winder as a random word.

    May 4, 2017

  • I'm sure there's a way. There are a couple of us wordnik folk over there--I even share curatorship of some boards (including one that's just plinths).

    May 4, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "A logical term considered as capable of being universally predicated of another; usually, one of the five words, or five kinds of predicates, according to the Aristotelian logic, namely genus, species, difference, property, and accident."

    May 3, 2017

  • See citation in comment on hylomorphism.

    May 3, 2017

  • "Hylomorphism (or hylemorphism) is a philosophical theory developed by Aristotle, which conceives being (ousia) as a compound of matter and form.

    The word is a 19th-century term formed from the Greek words ὕλη hyle, "wood, matter" and μορφή, morphē, "form.""

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hylomorphism&oldid=775386104

    May 3, 2017

  • I'm still combing through the archives (as it were) and finding such gems. Long live wordie/nik!

    May 3, 2017

  • Just arrived here after getting phylogeography as a random word. What a fun list! Thanks, mollusque.

    May 3, 2017

  • See passerine.

    May 3, 2017

  • Thanks, vm. I was working on fairy-tales, too. (I'd thought about cross-referencing them with tags, etc., but haven't gotten there yet.)

    May 2, 2017

  • From Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License:

    "n. someone who explores potholes as a hobby"

    May 1, 2017

  • I arrived here again after catching vent-peg as a random word. I adore this list.

    May 1, 2017

  • Nice, vm. I had started a list of a few of these... see aarne-thompson-classification-system-for-folktales.

    May 1, 2017

  • That's fantastic, alexz. I've been amused by how all of this stuff seems to be related--alchemy, chemistry, cooking, pharmacy, &c., but now I'm reminded of an old joke: What do you get for the person who has everything? Penicillin.

    May 1, 2017

  • These are great!

    April 27, 2017

  • In the meantime, would you like to snack on a carrot? I've also got some olives.

    April 27, 2017

  • Hold on--I just went to the store for gum Arabic, but now I've realized I'm all out of spikenard.

    April 27, 2017

  • See comments on confectio damocritis and confectio Damocritis.

    April 27, 2017

  • "Bolus of Mendes (Greek: Βῶλος Bolos; fl. 3rd century BC) was an ancient Greek philosopher, a neo-Pythagorean writer of works of esoterica and medical works, who worked in Ptolemaic Egypt. The Suda, and Eudocia after him, mention a Pythagorean philosopher of Mendes in Egypt, who wrote on marvels, potent remedies, and astronomical phenomena. The Suda, however, also describes a Bolus who was a philosopher of the school of Democritus, who wrote Inquiry, and Medical Art, containing "natural medical remedies from some resources of nature." But, from a passage of Columella, it appears that Bolos of Mendes and the follower of Democritus were one and the same person; and he seems to have lived following the time of Theophrastus, whose work On Plants he appears to have known."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bolus_of_Mendes&oldid=754867544

    April 26, 2017

  • Or Bolus of Mendes.

    *starts muttering again*

    April 26, 2017

  • "Pseudo-Democritus was an unidentified Greek philosopher writing on chemical and alchemical subjects under the pen name "Democritus," probably around 60 AD. He was the second most respected writer on alchemy (after Hermes Trismegistus)."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pseudo-Democritus&oldid=665210781

    April 26, 2017

  • Oh! I wonder whether Damocritis is actually Pseudo-Democritus.

    April 26, 2017

  • The crista-galli part is fun.

    April 26, 2017

  • "Diogenes Laërtius gives two different accounts of his death. In the first account, Chrysippus was seized with dizziness having drunk undiluted wine at a feast, and died soon after. In the second account, he was watching a donkey eat some figs and cried out: "Now give the donkey a drink of pure wine to wash down the figs", whereupon he died in a fit of laughter."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chrysippus&oldid=776089952

    April 26, 2017

  • According to Wikipedia, ekpyrosis is "a Stoic belief in the periodic destruction of the cosmos by a great conflagration every Great Year. The cosmos is then recreated (palingenesis) only to be destroyed again at the end of the new cycle. This form of catastrophe is the opposite of kataklysmos (κατακλυσμός, "inundation"), the destruction of the earth by water," and "the concept of ekpyrosis is attributed to Chrysippus by Plutarch." (See https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ekpyrosis&oldid=765510670.)

    April 26, 2017

  • "The Latvian Gambit or Greco Counter Gambit is a chess opening characterised by the moves:

    1. e4 e5

    2. Nf3 f5?!"

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Latvian_Gambit&oldid=707357277

    April 25, 2017

  • There's always the Latvian Gambit.

    April 25, 2017

  • Compare gravity.

    April 25, 2017

  • "In acoustics, the state of being low in pitch: opposed to acuteness."

    -- from the Century Dictionary

    April 25, 2017

  • How clever!

    April 24, 2017

  • I just added lacuna.

    April 24, 2017

  • Snake-flower (a poem by The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia):

    n. The viper's-bugloss, Echium vulgare.

    n. The greater stitch wort, Alsine Holostea.

    n. The white dead-nettle, Lamium album.

    n. The white campion, Lychnis alba.

    n. The star-flower or American chickweed-wintergreen, Trientalis Americana.

    April 21, 2017

  • Also see sand-box.

    April 20, 2017

  • See sandbox.

    April 20, 2017

  • *favorited*

    April 20, 2017

  • Mount Doom?

    April 19, 2017

  • I like your lists. :-)

    April 19, 2017

  • "Bald’s eyesalve contains wine, garlic, an Allium species (such as leek or onion) and oxgall. The recipe states that, after the ingredients have been mixed together, they must stand in a brass vessel for nine nights before use."

    -- https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/getting-medieval-on-bacteria-ancient-books-may-point-to-new-antibiotics/

    April 19, 2017

  • "In 2015, our team published a pilot study on a 1,000-year old recipe called Bald’s eyesalve from “Bald’s Leechbook,” an Old English medical text. The eyesalve was to be used against a “wen,” which may be translated as a sty, or an infection of the eyelash follicle."

    -- https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/getting-medieval-on-bacteria-ancient-books-may-point-to-new-antibiotics/

    April 19, 2017

  • See anemone or sea anemone.

    April 18, 2017

  • Ha!

    April 18, 2017

  • See mockumentary.

    April 18, 2017

  • "“It’s sort of the unicorn of mollusks,” Margo Haygood, a marine microbiologist at the University of Utah, told The Washington Post.""

    -- https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/speaking-of-science/wp/2017/04/17/scientists-find-giant-elusive-clam-known-as-the-unicorn-of-mollusks

    April 18, 2017

  • Nice list!

    April 17, 2017

  • Oh, funny! You should add it to the words-ending-with--gator list.

    April 17, 2017

  • Fantastic!

    April 14, 2017

  • So much pun-worthy potential here.

    See you later, navigator.

    After while, compass dial.

    April 14, 2017

  • Done! And thanks.

    You know, "open list" is my middle name....

    April 14, 2017

  • Fabulous.

    I'm also fond of graupel.

    April 14, 2017

  • Oh! Fantastic list.

    April 13, 2017

  • I just encountered the word botryoidal and wondered whether there was a corresponding "bunch of grapes" list--and of course there was. Thank you, biocon. You've restored my faith in humanity (once again).

    April 13, 2017

  • "A 2006 study has produced evidence that chrysocolla may be a microscopic mixture of the copper hydroxide mineral spertiniite, amorphous silica and water."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Chrysocolla&oldid=773322642

    April 13, 2017

  • See comment on geoporphyrin.

    April 13, 2017

  • "A geoporphyrin, also known as a petroporphyrin, is a porphyrin of geologic origin. They can occur in crude oil, oil shale, coal, or sedimentary rocks. Abelsonite is possibly the only geoporphyrin mineral, as it is rare for porphyrins to occur in isolation and form crystals."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Porphyrin&oldid=765734325

    April 13, 2017

  • From Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Fowler%27s_solution&oldid=765885803):

    "Thomas Fowler of Stafford, England, proposed the solution in 1786 as a substitute for a patent medicine, "tasteless ague drop". From 1845, Fowler's solution was a leukemia treatment.

    At 1905, inorganic arsenicals, like Fowler's solution, saw diminished use as attention turned to organic arsenicals, starting with Atoxyl. Still, into the late 1950s, Fowler's solution—also termed liquor potassii arenitis, Kali arsenicosum, or Kali arseniatum—was prescribed in the United States for a wide range of diseases, including malaria, chorea, and syphilis."

    April 12, 2017

  • "It is asserted that the spelling of "ghost" with the silent letter h was adopted by Caxton due to the influence of Flemish spelling habits."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=William_Caxton&oldid=773251278

    April 7, 2017

  • "Oxalic acid is rubbed onto completed marble sculptures to seal the surface and introduce a shine."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Oxalic_acid&oldid=768237770

    April 7, 2017

  • See citation in comment on rheopexy.

    April 7, 2017

  • "An incorrect example often used to demonstrate rheopecty is cornstarch mixed with water, which resembles a very viscous, white fluid. It is a cheap and simple demonstrator, which can be picked up by hand as a near-solid, but flows easily when not under pressure. However, cornstarch in water is actually a dilatant fluid, since it does not show the time-dependent, shear-induced change required in order to be labeled rheopectic. These terms are often and easily confused since the terms are rarely used; a true rheopectic fluid would when shaken be liquid at first, becoming thicker as shaking continued."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rheopecty&oldid=772633926

    April 7, 2017

  • I did consider it, but the thought of it made me sad.

    April 7, 2017

  • "Traditional papers were often highly polished with beeswax and an application of 50% beeswax/50% white spirit on the papers before use is recommended. This enhances the colour as well making them more durable."

    -- http://www.payhembury.com/Payhembury_Marbled_Papers/History_of_Marbling.html

    April 6, 2017

  • "In the southern United States, a low spot, as near the mouth of a river, where the soil under the matted surface has been washed away, or has been so exhausted that nothing will grow on it. See bay-gall."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    April 6, 2017

  • "A method of painting in which the colors are mixed with any binding medium soluble in water, such as yolk of egg and an equal quantity of water, yolk and white of egg beaten together and mixed with an equal quantity of milk, fig-tree sap, vinegar, wine, ox-gall, etc."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    Compare tempera.

    April 6, 2017

  • addition

    April 5, 2017

  • Great list!

    April 5, 2017

  • I've always heard that if you're well loved, you'll have many nicknames. These are variations on the wonder that is PossibleUnderscore.

    April 5, 2017

  • pootrievherd?

    shetrievle?

    reheroodle?

    shepootriever?

    April 4, 2017

  • Ooh! Nice. I'm going to be yoinking a bunch of these for my list of rats.

    April 4, 2017

  • expiration date?

    April 3, 2017

  • Great to see you, p'underscore!

    April 3, 2017

  • See allex.

    March 30, 2017

  • Also see pinkie.

    March 29, 2017

  • "n. The innermost of the five digits which normally compose the hind foot of air-breathing vertebrates; in man, the great toe. See cut under foot."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    March 29, 2017

  • Ah. *Favorited*

    March 28, 2017

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. An artificer whose occupation is to make locks."

    March 28, 2017

  • "The term adiaphane seems to be Stephen's own. Neither the Greek αδιαφανὲς nor the Latin adiaphana is to be found in his sources. The obvious meaning of adiaphane is the opaque or opacity, which is what adiaphane means in French. (Stephen, and Joyce, read Aristotle in Paris. See 026.04 ff.) Four lines below, however, Stephen refers to the darkness as it. In Aristotle's text, darkness (σκότος) is defined as the privation of light. See also Stephen's description of darkness on the next page as the black adiaphane."

    -- https://en.wikibooks.org/w/index.php?title=Annotations_to_James_Joyce%27s_Ulysses/Proteus/037&oldid=3092141

    March 27, 2017

  • Paldies!

    March 22, 2017

  • Thanks. :-)

    March 22, 2017

  • We thank you.

    March 21, 2017

  • Brackets around "nom-nom urinal," please. I have a tag for it.

    March 20, 2017

  • Ooh! A doughnut party!

    March 17, 2017

  • Fantastic.

    March 16, 2017

  • Great list!

    March 15, 2017

  • I can't believe I hadn't seen this list before. It's stellar!

    March 14, 2017

  • I'm thinking of starting in on it again.

    March 14, 2017

  • Is it bad that my first thought upon reading this thread was to wonder whether dingo urine would render those muesli bars non-vegan?

    March 14, 2017

  • Are you trying to butter me up? 'Cause it's totally working.

    March 14, 2017

  • Oh, here it is. I'll add zombie ant so I can find it next time.

    March 6, 2017

  • I'd swear there was a list of these somewhere. I tried looking up zombie ant, but didn't get very far. I also tried looking through my mr--wilsons-cabinet-of-wonder list, but again, no dice.

    March 6, 2017

  • Oh, qms! I've been trying to come up with one about nightshades, but I just don't think I can do anything with belladonna and love apples without trying to bring in pupils (the apple of one's eye? throwing rotten tomatoes?), and it's just not coming together. I bow before your prowess.

    March 3, 2017

  • Huh. I'd never noticed the connections between pupil, pupa, and puppy before.

    February 27, 2017

  • Anyone have a recipe?

    February 27, 2017

  • Fine. I'll make some more.

    February 27, 2017

  • Lol. I've heard that gullible isn't in Funk & Wagnalls.

    February 27, 2017

  • Is anyone going to eat that last fuflun?

    February 23, 2017

  • Oh, fun! It doesn't surprise me that something might be missing from the Scrabble dictionaries. Traditionally, the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary pulled from just "five in-print collegiate dictionaries, namely The Random House College Dictionary (1968), The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (1969), Webster's New World Dictionary (1970), Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (1973) and Funk & Wagnalls (1973)" (quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Official_Scrabble_Players_Dictionary&oldid=698206686).

    So I looked up undine on an online version of the OED (subscription only, sadly). At the bottom of the entry, it has a "Draft additions 1993" section which has information about undinal--it references the 1891 Century Dictionary definition--which brings us right back to the Century definition here on this Wordnik page.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm just going to wander off to look up confectio Damocritis again.

    February 23, 2017

  • I'm always in the market for overhead projector bulbs, too.

    February 21, 2017

  • kishon

    February 17, 2017

  • Lovely! You might find a few yoink-worthy things over on the-glassworks list.

    February 17, 2017

  • Ah, qms. Another delight. Thank you.

    February 17, 2017

  • Oh, sheet. It is a truth universally acknowledged that every potential list is an existing list.

    I made it to worksheet before I realized the sheet list I'd just created already exists here!

    February 16, 2017

  • My new favorite list! Thank you.

    February 16, 2017

  • Cf. Byronic.

    February 15, 2017

  • As you wish both, too!

    February 15, 2017

  • "A potato cannon (sometimes known as a spud gun, not to be confused with a toy of the same name) is a pipe-based cannon which uses air pressure (pneumatic), or combustion of a flammable gas (aerosol, propane, etc.), to launch projectiles at high speeds. They are built to fire chunks of potato, as a hobby, or to fire other sorts of projectiles, for practical use. Projectiles or failing guns can be dangerous and result in life-threatening injuries, including cranial fractures, enucleation, and blindness if a person is hit."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Potato_cannon&oldid=762925678

    February 13, 2017

  • See potato cannon.

    Also see spud gun.

    February 13, 2017

  • cf. potato gun

    February 13, 2017

  • Fabulous, qms.

    February 13, 2017

  • "Written by one Robert Draper to a Mr. Bilby, the shopping list includes pewter spoons, a frying pan, and “greenfish,” which is now known as unsalted cod. It also asks Mr. Bilby to send a “fireshovel” and “lights” to Copt Hall, which is 36 miles away on the other side of London."

    -- "384-Year-Old Shopping List Discovered Under Floorboards In Historic English Home" By Michael Gardiner (http://all-that-is-interesting.com/shopping-list-discovered)

    February 7, 2017

  • I wish this were a valid Scrabble word.

    February 6, 2017

  • I just arrived here after getting deadlight as a random word and wondering who had added it to this list.

    Bilby, I salute you.

    February 6, 2017

  • There might be some interesting options over on 2-4-letter-words, too.

    February 6, 2017

  • Oh, fun! Some of these would make perfect •-knuckle-tattoos.

    February 6, 2017

  • "The word “jawn” is unlike any other English word. In fact, according to the experts that I spoke to, it’s unlike any other word in any other language. It is an all-purpose noun, a stand-in for inanimate objects, abstract concepts, events, places, individual people, and groups of people. It is a completely acceptable statement in Philadelphia to ask someone to “remember to bring that jawn to the jawn.”"

    -- Atlas Obscura: "The Enduring Mystery Of 'Jawn', Philadelphia's All-Purpose Noun" by Dan Nosowitz (http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-enduring-mystery-of-jawn-philadelphias-allpurpose-noun)

    February 6, 2017

  • This is great! You might find some yoink-worthy words over on mollusque's umbrellas-and-parasols list.

    February 2, 2017

  • "Video: Man comes to aid of Omaha squirrel with cereal bowl on its head," by Courtney Brummer-Clark / World-Herald (Link: http://www.omaha.com/news/goodnews/video-man-comes-to-aid-of-omaha-squirrel-with-cereal/article_f67f469a-e89b-11e6-bbce-175094219752.html)

    February 1, 2017

  • "nu: multipurpose interjection often analogous to "well?" or "so?" (Yiddish נו nu, perhaps akin to Russian ну (nu) or German na='well'(OED)"

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_English_words_of_Yiddish_origin&oldid=762317723

    February 1, 2017

  • For an example sentence, see formic acid.

    February 1, 2017

  • From the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English:

    "adj. a colorless, mobile liquid, HCO.OH, of a sharp, acid taste, occurring naturally in ants, nettles, pine needles, etc., and produced artifically in many ways, as by the oxidation of methyl alcohol, by the reduction of carbonic acid or the destructive distillation of oxalic acid. It is the first member of the fatty acids in the paraffin series, and is homologous with acetic acid."

    February 1, 2017

  • I adore this list!

    February 1, 2017

  • "In mining, iron frames or standards carrying the pillow-blocks of pit-head pulleys. Also maidens."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    February 1, 2017

  • Good one, qms!

    January 27, 2017

  • That's a good one. I'll ask over on the lost-for-word list.

    January 25, 2017

  • Just saw this from AnnePern's profile page:

    "Hi All,

    A friend is looking for a word that means to make something a sin, akin to "medicalize."

    Any suggestions?

    Thanks!

    Anne"

    January 25, 2017

  • "The Florida Highway Patrol confirmed the substance was black liquor — a waste product in the paper manufacturing process — in a news release early Monday morning."

    -- "International Paper explosion: US 29, Muscogee Road open" by Emma Kennedy, Pensacola News Journal (http://www.pnj.com/story/news/local/cantonment/2017/01/23/authorities-clean-up-international-paper-explosion-site/96952852/)

    January 24, 2017

  • Love it.

    January 20, 2017

  • oribi

    January 20, 2017

  • from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. A genus of nemertean worms, to which different limits have been given."

    January 20, 2017

  • "|Paul| Burrell said that he had approached a Catholic priest about a private marriage between Diana and the heart surgeon Dr Hasnat Khan, and he rubbished rumours that Diana was about to announce her engagement to Dodi Fayed."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paul_Burrell&oldid=758769644

    January 20, 2017

  • *favorited*

    January 20, 2017

  • I misread this as banana and "coffee" until just now.

    Do we have any coffee lists? *wanders off in search of kopi luwak"

    January 20, 2017

  • "No Title of Nobility shall be granted by the United States: And no Person holding any Office of Profit or Trust under them, shall, without the Consent of the Congress, accept of any present, Emolument, Office, or Title, of any kind whatever, from any King, Prince, or foreign State."

    -- U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 8. (https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/constitution-transcript)

    January 12, 2017

  • ""Vexilloid" is a term used tenuously to describe vexillary (flag-like) objects used by countries, organizations, or individuals as a form of representation other than flags. Whitney Smith coined the term in 1958, defining it as:

    "An object which functions as a flag but differs from it in some respect, usually appearance. Vexilloids are characteristic of traditional societies and often consist of a staff with an emblem, such as a carved animal, at the top."

    "Vexilloid" can be used in a broader sense of any banner (vexillary object) which is not a flag (that is, taking only Smith's first sentence into account). Thus it includes vexilla, banderoles, pennons, streamers, standards, and gonfalons."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Vexilloid&oldid=756849272

    January 8, 2017

  • *favorited*

    January 6, 2017

  • You might enjoy the butter-beans-and-snaps list.

    January 6, 2017

  • "What is swill milk? The New York Times described it as a “filthy, bluish substance milked from cows tied up in crowded stables adjoining city distilleries and fed the hot alcoholic mash left from making whiskey. This too was doctored—with plaster of Paris to take away the blueness, starch, and eggs to thicken it and molasses to give it the buttercup hue of honest Orange County milk.” Back when people were drinking the stuff, reported the Times, it probably killed as many as 8,000 children a year."

    -- From CityLab's "The Sanitary Nightmare of Hell's Kitchen in 1860s New York" by John Metcalfe, Dec 27, 2016 (http://www.citylab.com/work/2016/12/swill-milk-fat-boilers-and-other-smelly-delights-of-1860s-new-york/511673/)

    January 4, 2017

  • See citation in comment on swill milk.

    January 4, 2017

  • I like weirdnet's "'as the ox ploughs.'" Wouldn't that be a terrific soap opera?

    January 4, 2017

  • Greetings! I have a potential typo to report in your citation over on the Georg Elser page (it's in the last sentence).

    January 4, 2017

  • "In ceramics, a painting in a lighter enamel over a darker one which forms the ground: as, a white flower in surcharge on a buff ground."

    --Century Dictionary

    January 3, 2017

  • Should this be attobarn? (see atto-)

    January 3, 2017

  • Ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, ring, pisang-a-phone!

    December 29, 2016

  • See example in citation at potassium ferricyanide.

    December 27, 2016

  • "The compound has widespread use in blueprint drawing and in photography (Cyanotype process). Several photographic print toning processes involve the use of potassium ferricyanide. Potassium ferricyanide is used as an oxidizing agent to remove silver from negatives and positives, a process called dot etching. In color photography, potassium ferricyanide is used to reduce the size of color dots without reducing their number, as a kind of manual color correction. It is also used in black-and-white photography with sodium thiosulfate (hypo) to reduce the density of a negative or gelatin silver print where the mixture is known as Farmer's reducer; this can help offset problems from overexposure of the negative, or brighten the highlights in the print."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Potassium_ferricyanide&oldid=756059556

    December 27, 2016

  • "During a tidal disruption, the extreme gravitational forces of a supermassive black hole “spaghettifies” and rips apart a star when it wanders too close."

    -- http://gizmodo.com/brightest-supernova-ever-seen-was-actually-something-mu-1789996116

    See spaghettification.

    December 12, 2016

  • Thanks, vm. I especially liked the Nebraska reference in the article you linked to--and I had no idea the trademark for Dumpster had expired in 2008. Cool!

    December 9, 2016

  • Oh, fun. I added a couple--if they're not what you had in mind, I can find new homes for them.

    December 8, 2016

  • See citation in comment on dumpster fire.

    December 8, 2016

  • "The word “dumpster” sounds so perfectly suited to its purpose that it hardly seems necessary to question its origins. But that would be a mistake, because the real story is even more linguistically charming. The dumpster broke onto the scene in 1936, part of a brand-new patented trash-collection system that introduced the basic concept of the modern garbage truck, with containers that could be mechanically lifted and emptied into the vehicle from above. The system, invented by future mayor of Knoxville, Tennessee, George Dempster, took its creator’s name, and the Dempster-Dumpster was born.

    “Dumpster,” the word we use today, emerged from the fortuitous marriage of “dump” and “Dempster.” Though Dempster trademarked the brand name “Dumpster,” the term has been so thoroughly applied as a generic noun that the Associated Press now directs that it be styled in lowercase. No one, after all, would choose to write “trash bin” when “dumpster” would do better.

    Had this sanitation system not been engineered by a man with such a punny name (Dempster-Dumpster), would “dumpster fire” as an insult have ever taken off?"

    -- "Where Did ‘Dumpster Fire’ Come From? Where Is It Rolling?" by Claire Fallon. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/dumpster-fire-slang-history_us_576474d4e4b015db1bc97923)

    December 8, 2016

  • My misreading of rickroll. See Morzouksnick.

    December 6, 2016

  • Oh, hello.

    The community page was showing that someone recently adopted rickroll--which I, perhaps intentionally, misread as nickroll.

    December 6, 2016

  • "The dangerous bend or caution symbol ☡ (U+2621 ☡ CAUTION SIGN) was created by the Nicolas Bourbaki group of mathematicians and appears in the margins of mathematics books written by the group. It resembles a road sign that indicates a "dangerous bend" in the road ahead, and is used to mark passages tricky on a first reading or with an especially difficult argument."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bourbaki_dangerous_bend_symbol&oldid=744753148

    December 6, 2016

  • Also see comments on spaghetti alla bolognese.

    December 6, 2016

  • Also see spaghetti bolognese.

    December 6, 2016

  • "Spaghetti bolognese translates, roughly, to “spaghetti from Bologna.” But if you try to take this particular flavor train back where it supposedly comes from, forget it—you’ll be turned straight around. The British broadcaster and politician Michael Portillo found this out the hard way when he took a camera crew to the city seeking the dish. “Oh my gosh, no,” says the first young woman he encounters in the footage. She makes an X with her arms, as though warding off a great evil. ”Absolutamente no. No no no no.”"

    -- http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/why-are-people-seeing-red-over-spaghetti-bolognese

    December 6, 2016

  • "You don’t hear about a lot of meatball backlash. But many Italians clearly see the spaghettification of bolognese, specifically, as a dire wrong. Their attempts to right it have ranged from organized, high-level efforts to, more recently, a kind of Internet comment trench warfare. In 1982, Bologna’s chamber of commerce officially notarized what they consider to be the authentic recipe, which contains beef skirt, pancetta, celery, carrot, onion, a little tomato, wine, and milk."

    -- http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/why-are-people-seeing-red-over-spaghetti-bolognese

    December 6, 2016

  • "According to the book State Names, Flags, Seals, Songs, Birds, Flowers, and Other Symbols by George Earlie Shankle (New York: H.W. Wilson Company, 1941):

    “The sobriquet, the Nutmeg State, is applied to Connecticut because its early inhabitants had the reputation of being so ingenious and shrewd that they were able to make and sell wooden nutmegs. Sam Slick (Judge Halliburton) seems to be the originator of this story. Some claim that wooden nutmegs were actually sold, but they do not give either the time or the place.”

    Yankee peddlers from Connecticut sold nutmegs, and an alternative story is that:

    “Unknowing buyers may have failed to grate nutmegs, thinking they had to be cracked like a walnut. Nutmegs are wood, and bounce when struck. If southern customers did not grate them, they may very well have accused the Yankees of selling useless “wooden” nutmegs, unaware that they wear down to a pungent powder to season pies and breads.” Elizabeth Abbe, Librarian, the Connecticut Historical Society; Connecticut Magazine, April 1980."

    -- http://ctstatelibrary.org/CT-nicknames

    December 6, 2016

  • For a list about Connecticut, see the-land-of-steady-habits.

    December 6, 2016

  • This is such fun, c_b.

    November 28, 2016

  • Who knew?

    November 28, 2016

  • Lol. I just got tumescence, so....

    November 17, 2016

  • Oh funny--another badger word is cete. I wonder whether there are any others (I'd like to collect the whole set).

    November 14, 2016

  • Also see Roy G. Biv.

    November 14, 2016

  • I was picturing someone in a boat on a river--waving at people on the banks.

    November 7, 2016

  • "While this experiment isn’t on the quantum scale, it does help to demonstrate the way quantum-scale particles may operate according to the pilot wave theory. And for any lay people who’ve struggled with grasping why things are so strange on the quantum scale according to the standard interpretation, this pilot wave theory—proposed by Louis de Broglie in 1927—provides a far more palatable framework for understanding quantum mechanics."

    -- http://nerdist.com/pilot-wave-theory-video-will-make-you-totally-rethink-quantum-mechanics/

    November 4, 2016

  • This is great! I arrived here after looking up cuirass from the lobster definitions.

    October 17, 2016

  • Hi! I'm wondering whether we're related--I'm definitely a member of the bunchoflists family.

    October 17, 2016

  • "According to Merriam-Webster, “lepo-” — that’s as in “what’s a lepo?” — topped the list of search terms queried over the course of the 90-minute" presidential debate.

    -- http://nymag.com/selectall/2016/10/a-lot-of-people-looked-up-the-word-lepo-during-the-debate.html

    See Aleppo.

    October 11, 2016

  • I finally watched Barbarella the other night. It gave me a completely new understanding of David Lynch's Dune.

    October 6, 2016

  • Cf. avidity.

    September 21, 2016

  • "In physical chemistry, a constant by means of which can be expressed the distribution of a base between two acids each sufficient to neutralize the whole of the base, or conversely; that is, the relative energy with which the acids tend to seize their shares of base: a term employed to avoid the use of the word affinity."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    September 21, 2016

  • "A rabaska or Maître canoe (French: canot de maître, after Louis Maitre, an artisan from Trois-Rivières who made them) was originally a large canoe made of tree bark, used by the Algonquin people."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rabaska&oldid=726470799

    September 8, 2016

  • I'm not sure what the rest of my dream was about this morning, but this was the last line before my alarm woke me.

    September 7, 2016

  • This is great!

    September 7, 2016

  • I had someone play vomito on me at a charity tournament once. That one definitely evokes some memories.

    September 6, 2016

  • Fun! I'd suggest adding Bird's custard powder, but only because it's an essential ingredient in Nanaimo bars (which you've already cleverly listed).

    September 6, 2016

  • "Capable of being extended or shut up like a spy-glass; having joints or sections which slide one within another; especially, in machinery, constructed of concentric tubes, either stationary, as in the telescopic boiler, or movable, as in the telescopic chimney of a war-vessel, which may be lowered out of sight in action, or in the telescopic jack, a screw-jack in which the lifting head is raised by the action of two screws having reversed threads, one working within the other, and both sinking or telescoping within the base—an arrangement by which greater power is obtained."

    -- Century Dictionary

    September 2, 2016

  • See Century Dictionary definition on whitling.

    September 2, 2016

  • See citation on size.

    September 2, 2016

  • "Another method of marbling more familiar to Europeans and Americans is made on the surface of a viscous mucilage, known as size or sizing in English. This method is commonly referred to as "Turkish" marbling and is called ebru in Turkish, although ethnic Turkic peoples were not the only practitioners of the art, as Persian Tajiks and people of Indian origin also made these papers. The term "Turkish" was most likely used as a reference to the fact that many Europeans first encountered the art in Istanbul."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Paper_marbling&oldid=736004595

    September 2, 2016

  • I'm also fond of listing words related to cattle. :-)

    But mostly it's because I've been learning how to marble paper. Synthetic ox gall is a surfactant used to create "blank" spaces in the paint floating on the size. I'm forever adding too much and ruining my designs.

    September 2, 2016

  • I like the x because it reminds me of Malcolm X, famous Nebraskan.

    August 31, 2016

  • Aw, thanks, vm.

    You know, it's funny--I've been thinking a lot about synthetic ox gall lately.

    August 31, 2016

  • Fun! I just arrived here from the lateritic page.

    August 30, 2016

  • *wanders in*

    Ooh! Is that umbrage? I'll take some--is it vegetarian?

    *dives for cover*

    August 30, 2016

  • Ha!

    August 15, 2016

  • :(

    August 10, 2016

  • I love the synonyms from the Century: "Size, Magnitude, Bulk, Volume. Size is the general word for things large or small. In ordinary discourse magnitude applies to large things; but it is also an exact word, and is much used in science: as, a star of the fourth magnitude. Bulk suggests noticeable size, especially size rounding out into unwieldiness. Volume is a rather indefinite word, arising from the idea of rolling a thing up till it attains size, though with no especial suggestion of shape. We speak of the magnitude of a calamity or of a fortune, the bulk of a bale of cotton or of an elephant, the volume of smoke or of an avalanche."

    August 10, 2016

  • I arrived here with hopes of adding plimsolls, but they're already on the list!

    July 28, 2016

  • "A "lasagna cell" is accidentally produced when salty moist food such as lasagna is stored in a steel baking pan and is covered with aluminum foil. After a few hours the foil develops small holes where it touches the lasagna, and the food surface becomes covered with small spots composed of corroded aluminum.

    In this example, the salty food (lasagna) is the electrolyte, the aluminum foil is the anode, and the steel pan is the cathode. If the aluminum foil only touches the electrolyte in small areas, the galvanic corrosion is concentrated, and corrosion can occur fairly rapidly."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Galvanic_corrosion&oldid=727505499

    July 28, 2016

  • Aw. RIP, Tito. :-(

    July 1, 2016

  • The random word feature showed me conatus, which brought me here. Then, a few clicks later, it showed me continent. I'm sensing a theme.

    June 27, 2016

  • Also see fire-basket.

    June 27, 2016

  • So, wait. It was a fight?

    Well, kinda--but with limericks.

    Limericks?

    Yeah, and it was super polite.

    --the very next conversation I'm going to have about why I adore this site

    June 27, 2016

  • Tamarind-flavored candy. See pelon pelo rico for tweeted usage examples.

    June 15, 2016

  • Awwww! Thanks, qms!

    June 13, 2016

  • You wrang?

    June 13, 2016

  • Ooh! I like this! But wait--where's that "cod's-head" business from? I have a list for it.

    June 7, 2016

  • Excellent!

    May 25, 2016

  • gibe?

    May 24, 2016

  • "The head, hook, or comb of the malleolus or lateral tooth of the mastax of a wheel-animalcule." --Century Dictionary

    May 24, 2016

  • Yum! Thanks.

    May 17, 2016

  • In Rex Parker's blog about solving crossword puzzles, he complains about a puzzle where 1A "Natick" and 1D "NC Wyeth" share a letter: "I am going to honor this puzzle by naming a crossword constructing principle after one of its elements. I call it: The NATICK Principle. And here it is: If you include a proper noun in your grid that you cannot reasonably expect more than 1/4 of the solving public to have heard of, you must cross that noun with reasonably common words and phrases or very common names." -- http://rexwordpuzzle.blogspot.com/2008/07/sunday-jul-6-2008-brendan-emmett.html

    April 6, 2016

  • Found this list again because Random Word led me to crossruff.

    April 4, 2016

  • Thanks, vm! I'm always on the lookout for them (and my missing socks).

    April 4, 2016

  • "The St. Augustine Monster is one of the earliest examples of a globster—a delightful term referring to an unidentified animal mass that washes up on a beach and results in cryptozoologists speculating about sea monsters. This particular—and particularly large—carcass was discovered by a couple of young boys playing on Anastasia Island, Florida in November 1896. The boys assumed it was a whale, but Dr. De Witt Webb, the founder of the St. Augustine Historical Society and Institute of Science, concluded that it was the remains of a giant octopus and sent photos and a specimen to the Smithsonian labeled as such. Over the next century-plus, various tests claimed to “prove” at one time or another that it was a whale or an octopus, depending on which test was run. Finally, in 2004, it was conclusively proven that the St. Augustine Monster was a whale all along—just like the two boys who discovered it had thought."

    -- http://mentalfloss.com/article/76883/11-weird-things-have-washed-ashore

    April 4, 2016

  • Related to the missing link, no doubt. Thousands of monkeys at thousands of keyboards would be likely to generate bunches of 404's, amirite?

    April 4, 2016

  • I hear you about editing from a phone--but don't give up, MaryW! I enjoy your citations.

    April 4, 2016

  • I'll have my people talk to their people.

    April 4, 2016

  • Wait. I thought you were the manager/Svengali.

    April 1, 2016

  • This works on so many levels. Thanks, qroqqa!

    April 1, 2016

  • I nominate qroqqa to make that list for us!

    March 31, 2016

  • I can't decide which would be a better name for a band: Sad Wallpapers or spam redacted.

    March 31, 2016

  • Thanks, vm!

    March 29, 2016

  • Thank you, bilby. Yes.

    And add away, Alexz!

    March 29, 2016

  • "Pendulum Music (For Microphones, Amplifiers Speakers and Performers) is the name of a work by Steve Reich, involving suspended microphones and speakers, creating phasing feedback tones. The piece was composed in August 1968 and revised in May 1973, and is an example of process music."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Pendulum_Music&oldid=686787841

    March 22, 2016

  • I might have gotten around to Poe Dameron, though.

    March 15, 2016

  • My first thought was poet, my second thought was Edgar Allen, and my third thought was the po-po. I never would have gotten to Poe's law. Thanks again, qms.

    March 15, 2016

  • Thanks, qms!

    March 14, 2016

  • I like this definition from the Century: "The manner or style of execution of an engraver: as, a soft burin; a brilliant burin."

    March 14, 2016

  • Actually, I think being puzzled by a puzzle counts as being buffled.

    March 14, 2016

  • Cf. buffle.

    March 14, 2016

  • See how I was baffled over on Sarg.

    March 14, 2016

  • I'm working on a crossword puzzle where one of the clues is "Sarg plaything." The answer is "marionette," but I can't figure out why.

    March 14, 2016

  • That's fantastic! Thanks, vm--I hadn't heard of Old Baldy.

    February 29, 2016

  • "With the skift of snow, temperatures on Thursday are expected to hold in the low 40s."

    -- http://journalstar.com/news/local/a-skift-of-snow-degrees-on-the-horizon/article_1837a68e-45a0-509d-bc4a-ac770281a1bd.html

    February 25, 2016

  • Ach. I forgot what mine was.

    February 23, 2016

  • Cheers!

    *takes a sip*

    February 22, 2016

  • Not that I know of, vm. When I was a kid we used to have big yellow and black hand-painted signs that said "POSTED NO HUNTING" but they never seemed to do much good.

    February 22, 2016

  • I love this. Thanks, vm!

    February 19, 2016

  • This reminds me of our spammer friends.

    February 19, 2016

  • Another interesting name for a band!

    February 19, 2016

  • Comments are a good way to start a conversation--welcome to Wordnik!

    February 19, 2016

  • I've also had chia pudding. It was okay.

    February 19, 2016

  • Generally I'm not a big fan of mucilaginous foods, but I like do like chia--especially when it's in kombucha.

    February 17, 2016

  • Would this be too obvious as a name for a band?

    February 17, 2016

  • Sorry, bilby. I don't know how to crochet. I'm surprised vanderpink couldn't help you out--doesn't she knit pantsuits out of tiger hair or something?

    February 17, 2016

  • Cf. jobbery.

    February 12, 2016

  • Gee! Thanks, mister!

    February 12, 2016

  • Sorry! I know: Better to be seen than heard....

    *scuffs shoe on floor*

    February 11, 2016

  • *stomps in*

    Old enough to know better!

    *stomps out*

    February 10, 2016

  • I like this list!

    February 10, 2016

  • How are we tagging these, again?

    February 10, 2016

  • Oh! I wanna go! I promise I won't disclose the location of your secret lair... again....

    February 10, 2016

  • "Having a conical or rounded projection or protuberance, like a boss."

    -- from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English

    January 27, 2016

  • "n. A hood or front-piece made of silk shirred upon whalebones, worn over the front of a bonnet as a protection from sun or wind. Such hoods were in fashion about 1850. Compare ugly, n."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    January 27, 2016

  • "Vaudeville actress Aida Overton Walker refused to act in the mammy stereotype, though became known for performing the cakewalk with her husband, a dance originally designed to mock slave owners’ gaudy dance moves and later used as a tool to mock black dancers.

    Dora Dean, another black actress of the time, similarly rejected minstrel stereotypes. She performed the cakewalk with her husband and helped influence public views that black women were as elegant as their white peers, evidenced in her professional nickname “The Black Venus.” Both women, though restricted by racist laws and an unfair social order, were able to earn and control assets that were essentially barred from them in other facets of society."

    -- http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/the-heavily-judged-female-entertainers-who-crushed-stereotypes-in-the-old-west

    January 27, 2016

  • It's actually more of a fuflun run.

    January 27, 2016

  • The Oxford Dictionary of Word Histories tells me "The tack associated with horse-riding was originally dialect in the general sense 'apparatus, equipment' and is a contraction of tackle. The current sense (as in tack room) dates from the 1920s."

    January 26, 2016

  • "In saddlery, a long handle fitted at one end with a knob and at the other with a branch for receiving a small circular tool: used for ornamenting leather."

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    January 26, 2016

  • Just added skin-wool. Yeesh.

    January 26, 2016

  • Here's one for the heraldry lists.

    January 26, 2016

  • List of fictional colors.

    January 20, 2016

  • Oh, fun! Great list.

    January 19, 2016

  • This is great. I might yoink some of these for my against-nature list--thanks!

    January 19, 2016

  • This is my new favorite list.

    January 12, 2016

  • Hm. Could it be endive?

    January 12, 2016

  • "They had viewed, through widely different lenses, the amazing and disturbing and exhilarating American scene, Mencken aiming his binoculars and his bung starter at those well-known and badly battered objects of his eloquent scorn and ridicule, the booboisie, the Bible belt, the professor doctors, the lunatics of the political arena, and the imbeciles infesting literature; while Ross, fascinated by many things that would have bored Mencken, took in the panorama and personalities of New York City and finally the whole American spectacle, interested in everything from a swizzle stick he picked up one day ("There's a story in this damn thing") to the slight swaying of the Empire State Building in a stiff gale."

    --From The Years With Ross by James Thurber

    January 9, 2016

  • "The 65-acre quarry, once the source of a water treatment product called marl, shut down amid the 2007 recession."

    --from http://www.mentalfloss.com/article/73306/new-jersey-fossil-haven-might-reveal-what-killed-dinosaurs

    January 6, 2016

  • See skipvia's comment on plump.

    January 6, 2016

  • Is this why we can't have nice things?

    January 6, 2016

  • "Go softly! hold! stop! not so fast!"

    -- from The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    December 22, 2015

  • Just in time for the holidays--a turducken cover to match your tea cosy and beer koozie.

    December 22, 2015

  • Thanks, vm!

    *drains*

    December 21, 2015

  • Oh, fun!

    December 21, 2015

  • "The sniffing position has been recommended as optimal for patient intubation and airway management. Historically, the definition of this position is credited to an Irish-born anesthetist, Sir Ivan Magill, who described it as “sniffing the morning air” or “draining a pint of beer.”"

    -- from "Airway Management And Patient Positioning: A Clinical Perspective" by Davide Cattano, MD, PHD, and Laura Cavallone, MD. (http://www.anesthesiologynews.com/download/Positioning_ANGAM12_WM.pdf)

    December 20, 2015

  • "I coined a term a while ago, privelobliviousness, to try to describe the way that being the advantaged one, the represented one, often means being the one who doesn’t need to be aware and, often, isn’t."

    -- "MEN EXPLAIN LOLITA TO ME

    REBECCA SOLNIT: ART MAKES THE WORLD, AND IT CAN BREAK US" December 17, 2015, by Rebecca Solnit.(http://lithub.com/men-explain-lolita-to-me/)

    December 20, 2015

  • Ooh! I'm yoinking this for my waves-and-waveforms list.

    December 15, 2015

  • "Pentaour (Pentaur, Pentewere), the Egyptian scribe, is the least known of the major historic figures on the outside of Nebraska's capitol. An unknown court poet of the 13th-century-B.C. pharaoh, Ramses II, composed a poem celebrating his pharaoh's exploits at the battle of Kadesh in Syria. A copy on papyrus was made of this epic-like poem by the scribe, Pentaour. Early scholars mistakenly thought Pentaour was the author and he still often receives credit. This poem, when coupled with reliefs on various surviving Egyptian temple walls, makes the battle of Kadesh the first battle in history which can be studied for its maneuvers and strategy. History, the record of man's experience, although viewed and interpreted anew through the eyes of each generation, provides both guidance for, and understanding of, the present. On the capitol the scribe Pentaour stands holding the tools of his craft: pen, papyrus and ink pot."

    -- From http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/1981-3-Capitol_Sculpture.pdf

    December 10, 2015

  • "Your half-brother from the same mother. A term used in old legal documents or other discussions of inheritance and succession. Half-siblings of the same mother are "uterine" and of the same father are "consanguine.""

    -- http://mentalfloss.com/article/54486/11-little-known-words-specific-family-members/

    December 10, 2015

  • "Child of your paternal uncle. Also, a child of your own brother. It hasn't gotten a lot of use in the past few centuries, but it was once convenient to have a term for this relationship because it factored into royal succession considerations. The first citation for it in the OED, from 1538, reads, "Efter his patruell deid withoutin contradictioun he wes king.""

    -- http://mentalfloss.com/article/54486/11-little-known-words-specific-family-members/

    December 10, 2015

  • I just found a few more words from this site: http://mentalfloss.com/article/54486/11-little-known-words-specific-family-members/

    December 10, 2015

  • I saw a melopink sunset last night. It was beautiful.

    December 10, 2015

  • The visuals for this are almost as interesting as the related words.

    December 3, 2015

  • Delightful as always, fbharjo.

    December 3, 2015

  • See citation on Markov chain.

    December 3, 2015

  • "A Markov chain (discrete-time Markov chain or DTMC), named after Andrey Markov, is a random process that undergoes transitions from one state to another on a state space. It must possess a property that is usually characterized as "memorylessness": the probability distribution of the next state depends only on the current state and not on the sequence of events that preceded it. This specific kind of "memorylessness" is called the Markov property. Markov chains have many applications as statistical models of real-world processes."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Markov_chain&oldid=693268836

    December 3, 2015

  • So cool! Thank you.

    December 2, 2015

  • "A group of researchers at the University of Alberta have developed what may be the first mathematical theory of humor, all thanks to a funny-sounding nonsense word: snunkoople.

    Psychology professor Chris Westbury was studying people with aphasia, a disorder affecting language comprehension, when he noticed something strange. Subjects were asked to read strings of letters and identify whether they were real words. After a while, Westbury noticed subjects seemed to laugh at certain nonsense words—snunkoople in particular."

    -- http://www.mentalfloss.com/article/71851/researchers-have-developed-mathematical-method-identifying-certain-kinds-humor

    December 2, 2015

  • I'm in.

    November 23, 2015

  • Aw. Thanks, theanadroid--this is a fun list!

    November 23, 2015

  • Your wish, my command, &c.

    November 17, 2015

  • Maybe. I think my friend settled on outright, which seemed appropriate to whatever the context was.

    November 17, 2015

  • Hmm--synthesis has promise.

    November 17, 2015

  • Me too.

    November 17, 2015

  • Hello, snack. Nice to meet you!

    November 17, 2015

  • Probably. But somehow they don't seem parallel--not that words have to be all matchy-matchy to be antonyms.

    November 17, 2015

  • "The phrase OODA loop refers to the decision cycle of observe, orient, decide, and act, developed by military strategist and USAF Colonel John Boyd. Boyd applied the concept to the combat operations process, often at the strategic level in military operations. It is now also often applied to understand commercial operations and learning processes. The approach favors agility over raw power in dealing with human opponents in any endeavor."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=OODA_loop&oldid=682717349

    November 17, 2015

  • Ooh! A tasty food pellet!

    November 17, 2015

  • Great. Now I'm hungry.

    November 16, 2015

  • Is there a good single-word antonym for this? Maybe wholesale? (Asking for a friend.)

    November 16, 2015

  • "Ballas or shot bort is a term used in the diamond industry to refer to shards of non-gem-grade/quality diamonds. It comprises small diamond crystals that are concentrically arranged in rough spherical stones with a fibrous texture. Ballas is hard, tough, and difficult to cleave. It is mostly found in Brazil and South Africa."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ballas&oldid=573450822

    November 16, 2015

  • Ooh! I have no idea, but now I really want to know too--there's great potential for some poem with a sea-bear in it.

    November 13, 2015

  • See citation on kaolin.

    November 12, 2015

  • "Porcelain is traditionally made from two essential ingredients: kaolin, also called china clay, a silicate mineral that gives porcelain its plasticity, its structure; and petunse, or pottery stone, which lends the ceramic its translucency and hardness. Kaolin is the more essential ingredient—a potter’s clay is meant to exist, like his glazes, in variations—and it takes its name from a mountain in Jingdezhen, China, where porcelain was first created, more than a thousand years ago, called Gaoling, which means “high ridge.” The name was recorded incorrectly by a Jesuit priest, Pere d’Entrecolles, in the early eighteenth century, in his letters home describing the Chinese technique."

    -- http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-european-obsession-with-porcelain

    November 12, 2015

  • *brings out the tray full of fancy fufluns*

    November 10, 2015

  • Ooh! Look! A delicious phood pellet!

    November 10, 2015

  • *press*

    November 10, 2015

  • Did you say phood pellet? I wonder what would happen if I were to press that button.

    November 10, 2015

  • *press*

    November 10, 2015

  • Brackets around "phuphlun" please. I have a list for it.

    November 10, 2015

  • "So what to make of the current state of these medieval buildings-as-museums? Certainly, good preservation practices will ensure a long life for the aged stones. But there is also a sense in which the medieval buildings have been deadened by their modern lives as display pieces. Old material given life through new use, called spolia, is, after all, very medieval. The altar at Sant-Miquel-de-Cuixà, the very heart of the religious life of the monastery, was itself made of part of a Roman column. Reuse did not erase the old meaning, it augmented the new one, though of course that column did not mean the same thing to a medieval person as to a Roman, nor the library wall the same thing as a medieval one. Even now, many San Franciscans shared memories of crawling over the medieval stones in their park as children, of the blocks as meeting places and landmarks. On the other hand, maybe the distinction between the museumified version of these places and their "freer" state is not so different, since New Yorkers were equally eager to share memories of their childhood trips to The Cloisters."

    -- http://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/in-the-early-1900s-dozens-of-centuriesold-european-buildings-came-to-america-where-is-medieval-america-now

    November 10, 2015

  • Ha!

    November 6, 2015

  • "The term bateria means “drum kit” in Portuguese and Spanish. In Brazil, the word is also used for a form of Brazilian samba band, the percussion band or rhythm section of a Samba School. It might also mean battery.

    Baterias are also used to accompany the Brazilian martial art, capoeira."

    -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bateria

    November 5, 2015

  • See high-toned.

    November 3, 2015

  • Pearls of wisdom. Thanks, qms!

    November 3, 2015

  • Ha!

    November 3, 2015

  • Wait--I thought it was turtles all the way down. Mind? Blown.

    November 3, 2015

  • Bilby Ranch Lake Conservation Area Parking Permit Inspector Station.

    November 2, 2015

  • I've never been the the Bilby Ranch Lake Conservation Area, but I imagine that it's close to a place called Hidden Valley.

    November 2, 2015

  • "One: as, the tae half or the tither (the one half or the other)."

    --from the Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia

    November 1, 2015

  • "Something done according to Cocker was done properly, according to established rules or what was considered to be correct.

    The etymological story starts in 1678, when John Hawkins published the manuscript of a book which Edward Cocker had left at his death two years earlier. Cocker had been the master of a grammar school in Southwark, across the Thames from the City of London, and Hawkins was his successor in the post. (It has been claimed that the book was actually by Hawkins, trading on Cocker’s name, but the current view is that Cocker really had written it.) The book, after the fashion of the time, had an expansive title — Cocker’s Arithmetick: Being a Plain and familiar Method suitable to the meanest Capacity for the full understanding of that Incomparable Art, as it is now taught by the ablest School-masters in City and Country."

    From World Wide Words (http://www.worldwidewords.org/qa/qa-acc1.htm)

    October 29, 2015

  • Or firepower?

    October 29, 2015

  • Haha! Well, I suppose rock 'n roll and moldy mayhem are inextricably linked. We could always start a new genre.

    October 29, 2015

  • Wanna start a band? I had one going over on almost Solveig for a while.

    October 28, 2015

  • Here I am visiting this list again. It was the word latericumbent that brought me here again, but I'm also pleased to see milk sickness.

    October 28, 2015

  • These are great, TankHughes! I'm a fan of dendrochronology and Carolingian minuscule, too.

    October 28, 2015

  • Oh! How nice! We haven't had a hilarious misunderstanding for ages.

    October 28, 2015

  • Fun! I was excited to think that the four ancient elements might show up--there's fire-cock and air-cock. Unfortunately, even though watercock exists, it is a bird. And we would have to fudge a bit with sludge-cock for earth (though I am obviously game if you are).

    October 28, 2015

  • There should be a list of hats that remind us of bilby. I'd add this and trilby.

    October 28, 2015

  • From The Century Dictionary and Cyclopedia:

    "n. A small protuberance. See the quotation, and hump, n.; 2."

    October 27, 2015

  • Just ran across turbinal and wondered whether you'd listed it yet. You had, of course.

    October 27, 2015

  • See bettabilitarianism.

    October 27, 2015

  • See comment on bettabilitarianism.

    October 27, 2015

  • On page 217 of my copy of The Metaphysical Club by Louis Menand there's a bit about Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr., Charles Sanders Peirce, and Chauncey Wright that describes bettabilitarianism: "Holmes eventually lost sympathy with the views of his friend William James, which he thought too hopeful and anthropocentric. He never had much interest in Peirce; he thought Peirce's genius "overrated." But he continued to admire Wright, and years later cited him as the inspiration for what he liked to call his philosophy of "bettabilitarianism." "Chauncey Wright|,| a nearly forgotten philosopher of real merit, taught me when young that I must not say necessary about the universe, that we don't know whether anything is necessary or not," he wrote to Frederick Pollock in 1929, when he was in his eighties. "So that I describe myself as a bettabilitarian. I believe that we can bet on the behavior of the universe in its contract with us. We bet we can know what it will be. That leaves a loophole for free will--in the miraculous sense--the creation of a new atom of force, although I don't in the least believe in it.""

    October 27, 2015

  • See the list pretentious-words-i-have-used-or-hope-to-use-when-discussing-operas for dontcry's comment.

    October 23, 2015

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