Comments by hernesheir

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  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Will prepare the application". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand meaning "Will not prepare the application of". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906. Compare apehood.

    January 20, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: railroad telegraph shorthand for "Has not made application".

    January 20, 2013

  • A word that pricks the long ears of certain Wordnik marsupials. I expect bilby to pop in any second. In the meantime, the word was used in railroad telegraphs to signify "Appearances are doubtful". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • Term once used in railroad telegraph communications to mean "Does not answer". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • anserine

    January 20, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand meaning "has been answered". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Is any further amount necessary? --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • This is a racist slur term exposing the half-wit who repeats it. The Wordnik lister excepted.

    January 20, 2013

  • I apologize for flooding the Comments feed with repetitive citations from the Standard Cipher Code.

    January 20, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Can it be altered?" --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 20, 2013

  • I sent telegrams when I lived in Mexico. I was chargedbytheword, so I sentmanymessages composed of longwords. The cipher book cited here mentions efficiency and secrecy as well. I suppose those secrets ranged from corporate strategies to the protection of presidents, payrolls, and Pinkerton men.

    January 20, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand notation for "Everything can be satisfactorily arranged". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • See the list Wine Tasters' Notes to see examples of some of these terms in use.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Telegraphers' shorthand notation meaning "advise what arrangement you make".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Has any arrangement(s) been made? --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' notation meaning "When may we expect an answer?" --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Unable to give definite answer".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand meaning "If we have no answer by". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Railroad telegraphers' shorthand notation for "Cannot reduce the amount".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand meaning "Amount is not correct". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Telegraphers' shorthand for "amount in question is"...

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand notation meaning "What is the total amount of debit? --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "What is correct amount?" --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Railroad telegraphers' notation meaning "You must alter".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand notation meaning "should not be allowed". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Railway telegraphers' shorthand meaning "Has not been allowed (to)".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' notation meaning "Will you allow? --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: Railroad telegraphers' notation meaning "What will you allow (for)?"

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand notation meaning "Can you make an allowance on account of?" --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "car equipped with air brake".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand meaning "will make no agreement". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: telegraphers' shorthand for "No agreement probable (unless)".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Agreement cannot be cancelled". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: telegraphers' shorthand for "usual terms of agreement".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "likely to reach an agreement. --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: telegraphers' shorthand for "Insist on the adoption of the agreement as advised".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Every party to agreement should sign and acknowledge before a notary public". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "are willing to agree". --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Andrew Loog Oldham

    January 19, 2013

  • Jagger/Richards = The Glimmer Twins

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906: telegraphers' shorthand for "Why did you not agree?"

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "What are terms of agreement?" --US Railway Association, Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906: telegraphers' shorthand for "Is a special agreement necessary?".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Do they agree to?". --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906; railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Your agent has not settled".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Would like the following agents to meet me (at) (on)". --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code; telegraphers' shorthand for "Make transfer of agency at".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Have wired general freight agent". --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906; telegraphers' shorthand for "agent's balance sheet shows large balance; investigate and report".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "May we appoint agent for you?. --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906; telegraphers' shorthand for "advice(s) from _____ not satisfactory".

    January 19, 2013

  • Having a conspicuous tongue. The rock band Kiss leaps to mind.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Will advise you promptly of any change". --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906; telegraph shorthand for "Advise us what to do".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraph shorthand for "advise what can be done" --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "Do you think it advisable (to)?" --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "Have you acted under legal advice?". --1906 US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code; telegraph shorthand for "Shall we change the advertisement?".

    January 19, 2013

  • Very economical railroad telegraph shorthand for "Advertising 1000-mile tickets, great care should be used in phraseology, in order that no exceptions can be taken by our competitors". --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code; telegraph shorthand for "will take advantage of".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "willing to make advance on terms offered. --1906 US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, telegraph shorthand for "goods are in demand and price will advance">.

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraph shorthand for "advance on cost and charges. --US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, 1906.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code used in telegraphic communications to mean "The action you have taken is not approved".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "action taken is not satisfactory" --1906 US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, shorthand for telegraph communications and meaning "action deferred until further notice".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railway telegraphers' shorthand for "take immediate action and advise". --1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code meaning "action taken is satisfactory".

    January 19, 2013

  • Railroad telegraphers' shorthand for "What will be the expense of action?" --1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code shorthand meaning "Have you begun action?"

    January 19, 2013

  • Shorthand for "you can deliver here following freight to relieve accumulation". --1906 US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code meaning "your account is debited with".

    January 19, 2013

  • I find it amusing that the term abstinent was used in telegraphic communications as shorthand for "will not be able to accommodate". --1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code. Of course, "to accommodate" in these communications meant to find lodgings or seats on a train for the agent(s) or person(s) referred to.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, shorthand for "expect you to accomodate".

    January 19, 2013

  • Shorthand code for the phrase "accident reported to our No. _____ was caused by". --1906 US Railway Association. Standard Cipher Code.

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, shorthand for "Would advise you not to accept".

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code meaning "do not accept until all conditions are satisfactory".

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code for the phrase "your modified conditions acceptable".

    January 19, 2013

  • 1906 US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code, shorthand for "subject to immediate acceptance".

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code for "As soon as accepted".

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Assn. Standard Cipher Code meaning "When will we receive abstracts of freight _____ for month of _____?"

    January 19, 2013

  • US Railway Association Standard Cipher Code for "Will you accept?"

    January 19, 2013

  • Added to The Glassworks list for ruzuzu.

    January 19, 2013

  • Wow cool bilby! Thanks.

    January 17, 2013

  • “And be that semeliminal salmon solemonly angled, ingate and outgate.” --Finnegans Wake

    January 17, 2013

  • “And be that semeliminal salmon solemonly angled, ingate and outgate.” --Finnegans Wake

    January 17, 2013

  • 5°F at 9:00 this a.m. I could sure use a stere or two of cordwood just now.

    January 17, 2013

  • I appreciate your contributions, ry.

    January 17, 2013

  • For example; nanopastrami; nanoclub; nanocheeseburger.

    January 17, 2013

  • Thanks, bilby.

    January 17, 2013

  • A disease of sheep, in which the intestines are distended with air, or rather affected with a violent inflammation. It occurs immediately after shearing. --from the definitions.

    January 17, 2013

  • Exposed to the wind; open to the breeze.

    January 17, 2013

  • What do you make of the definition, bilby?

    January 17, 2013

  • Yes non-scrabble is not a valid Scrabble word.

    January 17, 2013

  • You said it, Man.

    January 17, 2013

  • "His mouthfull of ecstasy (for Shing–Yung-Thing in Shina from Yoruyume across the Timor Sea), herepong (maladventure!) shot pinging up through the errorooth of his wisdom (who thought him a Fonar all, feastking of shellies by googling Lovvey, regally freytherem, eagelly plumed, and wasbut gumboil owrithy prods wretched some horsery megee plods coffin acid odarkery pluds dense floppens mugurdy) as thought it had been zawhen intwo." --Finnegans Wake

    January 17, 2013

  • It's a bird.

    January 17, 2013

  • It's a bird.

    January 17, 2013

  • It's a bird.

    January 17, 2013

  • Mac: "I shall return."

    Arnie: I'll be back."

    January 17, 2013

  • It's a tree.

    January 17, 2013

  • A bottle used for the same purpose as a drift-cask (which see).

    January 16, 2013

  • It's not a fish. Or a bottle.

    January 16, 2013

  • It's a tree. Delabechea Lindl., as a genus name, is currently recognized as a synonym of Brachychiton Schott & Endl. of the family Malvaceae. Some systematists place this genus in the Sterculiaceae.

    January 16, 2013

  • Among pilots: No flying within 24 hours of consuming alcohol.

    January 16, 2013

  • n. obsolete A kind of brown loaf.

    Not sure if this is a loaded word of a more specific type.

    January 16, 2013

  • Nice find, ruzuzu!

    January 16, 2013

  • Hey! Read that definition yesterday while looking at glass terms!

    January 16, 2013

  • Hode: Lord, please fantasticate this meal of which we are about to partake.

    Clevis: Hank, You know you caint fantasticate grits any more than they already are.

    January 16, 2013

  • Almost a collective. A sphincter of oddities in ein ampulla of kaltes Vater.

    January 16, 2013

  • In heraldry, a black band, supposed to represent the knightly belt, charged with the arms of the defunct, and painted on the wall of a church or chapel at the time of the funeral. This variety of the funeral achievement was formerly considered a mark of very high dignity. It is now nearly abandoned.

    January 16, 2013

  • Never mind the fork. Stick an antiguggler in it.

    January 16, 2013

  • I like how this word (though I'd spell it differently) appears with uncomeatable in the same sentence. Both are candidates for yarb's lists of human traits.

    January 16, 2013

  • sap sucker - My Dad's favorite euphemism.

    January 15, 2013

  • ...one of the small bubbles which form in imperfectly fused glass, and which, when the glass is worked, assume elongated or ovoid forms, resembling the shapes of some seeds.

    January 15, 2013

  • Interesting tidbits from the definitions:

    To cover with a thin layer, as objects of glass with glass of a different color.

    To expand, as blown glass, into a disk.

    A preparation of capsicum, burnt sugar, etc., used for coloring brandy and rum, and giving them a factitious strength.

    A language, created by a repressed minority to maintain cultural identity, that cannot be understood by the ruling class; for example, Ebonics.

    January 15, 2013

  • The receptacle into which glass is ladled from the pots to be poured on the table in making plate-glass, or in casting glass; a cuvette.

    January 15, 2013

  • It's a fish.

    January 15, 2013

  • It's a fish.

    January 15, 2013

  • milen

    January 15, 2013

  • bitnoben

    January 15, 2013

  • In heraldry, a bearing representing a high decorative salt-cellar, intended to resemble those used in the middle ages.

    January 15, 2013

  • n. The act of imposing a fin�. --from the definitions.

    January 15, 2013

  • Another coinc - this one the British fourpence or groat.

    January 15, 2013

  • n. Stool; excrement; fecal matter. Wouldn't last long on

    n. The floor of a glass-furnace.

    January 15, 2013

  • A blown cylinder of glass which is afterward flattened out to make a sheet. --from the definitions.

    January 15, 2013

  • The list 2300°F also contains glassmaking terms.

    January 15, 2013

  • coincwash

    January 15, 2013

  • scumbaggery?

    January 15, 2013

  • One for the listers of coinc and currencies.

    (next day edit: Was going to correct typo to coins, but laughingly decided to leave it coinc).

    January 15, 2013

  • chickpea

    January 15, 2013

  • "The walls of the bungalow, previously described, are topped by an overhanging roof covered with spruce shingles, which have been dipped in oil to produce a rich, warm color, and are laid wide to the weather." --from "A Craftsman Bunglaow: Craftsman House Series of 1905, Number III", in The Craftsman, Gustav Stickley, Editor, 7:336. 1905.

    "The slates themselves may be 2" or more in thickness at the eaves, and as wide as 42" anywhere on the roof proper, and still produce a pleasing appearance, granting that the slate is not laid so wide to the weather that the roof is thrown out of scale to the building it is protecting." --House and Garden, 32:33, 1917.

    See also the 1919 quotation from Dwellers in Arcady in the examples under building-paper.

    January 15, 2013

  • Brave deeds accomplished with the use of iron implements or weapons.

    January 14, 2013

  • In my area, now called bull trout, just to further confuse the name of this threatened species of char. Last winter I caught and released a big one while fishing for steelhead in Idaho's Salmon River.

    January 14, 2013

  • I've been hunting these for years with no success.

    January 14, 2013

  • At one time I called one of those folks my major professor, ruzuzu. Perhaps amnesioplagiarist. But see cryptomnesia and it's examples.

    January 14, 2013

  • "A guy extending from the end of a gaff to the ship's rail on each side, and serving to steady the gaff." --from the definitions. How'd the poor guy get to the end of the gaff in the first place?

    January 14, 2013

  • One for the pigment listers. Yoinked to the list In the Colorhouse.

    January 14, 2013

  • A chlorocarbonate lead mineral. phosgenite.

    January 14, 2013

  • Same context: once-fine ex-girlfriend

    January 14, 2013

  • Thanks for wastel, ry!

    January 14, 2013

  • Never to be confused with animism.

    January 14, 2013

  • Glad you picked up on the Leibniz connection so quickly, ruzuzu.

    January 14, 2013

  • goropism

    January 14, 2013

  • goropism

    January 14, 2013

  • Goropism, coined by Leibniz. Also Goropianism, after the dutch armchair linguist Johannes Goropius Becanus (1519-1572), who posited that the Brabantic language spoken in the vicinity of Antwerp was the original language from which all others evolved.

    January 14, 2013

  • Perhaps ruzuzu might consider this word for her sugar list.

    January 12, 2013

  • soot-black

    January 12, 2013

  • Nice visuals for this valid Scrabble word, especially that of the dog crossing the fallen stone plinth skybridge.

    January 12, 2013

  • Pass the cocoa please.

    January 12, 2013

  • tumtum?

    January 12, 2013

  • Just the food words. I don't need combs, brushes, or favors.

    January 12, 2013

  • Ethnobotanist: "What do you use this plant for?"

    Informant: "To bind with."

    January 12, 2013

  • It's a tree, Palmer.

    January 12, 2013

  • Sorry, can't hear you over the shouting.

    January 12, 2013

  • A Hessian, bare and bootless in the mathematics dodge.

    January 12, 2013

  • See definition at wronskian...a Pole.

    January 12, 2013

  • Ha. Great one, bilby!

    January 12, 2013

  • Why yes, it is a metal protruberance. A Schrade Uncle Henry pocket knife, of middling size. Now Uncle Henry belongs on another list I can think of.

    January 11, 2013

  • The wearer of which being the Pope. Piscatory Ring, Annulus Piscatoris, Anello Piscatorio.

    January 11, 2013

  • In some or many cases, an understatement for sure.

    The etymology provided illustrates how dumb and undiscerning computers have remained.

    January 11, 2013

  • I'd like to find other attested words containing the string *wdw.

    January 11, 2013

  • One for ruzuzu's wort list.

    January 11, 2013

  • *mbcl crumbcloth

    January 11, 2013

  • One for ruzuzu's worty list.

    January 11, 2013

  • See crepitation rale.

    January 11, 2013

  • One for the berry listers.

    January 11, 2013

  • Chopping a pogonion makes the eyes water.

    January 10, 2013

  • Because it's January.

    January 10, 2013

  • It's a tree.

    January 10, 2013

  • You're correct to guess this names a certain bird.

    January 10, 2013

  • See the definition of daric, an ancient Persian coin.

    January 10, 2013

  • ...lavaret (which see).

    January 10, 2013

  • oat of allegiance. Haha bilby. Am not aware of gluten-free varieties. I should, given the *celiacs* in my sphere.

    January 10, 2013

  • It's not a fish.

    January 10, 2013

  • It's a tree. With nice visuals. And birds in.

    January 9, 2013

  • To impregnate with mustard...

    January 9, 2013

  • ecchymosis

    January 9, 2013

  • Like the example says.

    January 9, 2013

  • See, spyglass is not a telescope-word.

    January 9, 2013

  • A sporting game like ski-joring, but on water, from a canoe.

    January 9, 2013

  • A tilt-up or tip-up used in ice-fishing.

    January 9, 2013

  • Welcome to the Wordnik community! Next to the search bar (where you can look up words) is your screen name. Click on your name to go to your dashboard, create a list, etc. You can add any word you look up to any of your lists or to a new list you can name and create from that word's page.

    January 9, 2013

  • See first comment under S.P.Q.R.ish.

    January 9, 2013

  • I like the way megafundum and microchasm play off one another in the example sentence from Finnegans Wake. A bit of method to his madness.

    January 9, 2013

  • A quotation from Finnegans Wake seems to me a collaboration between Wordniks bilby and fbharjo: "Go in for scribenery with the satiety of arthurs in S.P.Q.R.ish and inform to the old sniggering publicking press and its nation of sheepcopers about the whole plighty troth between them, ma-lady of milady made melodi of malodi, she, the lalage of lyon — esses, and him, her knave arrant. To Wildrose La Gilligan from Croppy Crowhore."

    January 9, 2013

  • gooseberry

    January 9, 2013

  • *thbl - frothblower

    January 9, 2013

  • See warrandice.

    January 9, 2013

  • It's a fish.

    January 9, 2013

  • It's a wattle. Tree, that is.

    January 9, 2013

  • Same context: codpiece, ornithopter, hovercar.

    January 9, 2013

  • Dude, seriously. You didn't mean rat tattoo?

    January 9, 2013

  • From the definitions: "Either of two plants reputed to cure felons:"... (which see)

    January 9, 2013

  • It's an arrow.

    January 9, 2013

  • While this term has to do with spirituous liquors, neither tequila nor punchbowl is involved.

    January 9, 2013

  • The only North American turtle whose native range extends from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

    January 8, 2013

  • My nascent list of turtle terms.

    The fine list of tortoises and turtles by kalayzich is well-worth a visit.

    January 8, 2013

  • It's a turtle.

    January 8, 2013

  • From the Dutch word for turtle, schildpad.

    January 8, 2013

  • Local names for The Central American or Mesoamerican river turtle (Dermatemys mawii) include hickatee or, perhaps owing to its cream-colored plastron, tortuga blanca.

    January 8, 2013

  • The head of this extinct turtle measured up to a meter long.

    January 8, 2013

  • An evocative name, to me.

    January 8, 2013

  • So far, no novelist, gamer, or subdivision developer has ever found this place.

    January 8, 2013

  • ...is not a valid Scrabble word.

    January 8, 2013

  • Feeling flisky? Dissipate that pent-up nervous energy by contributing a few words to this list.

    January 8, 2013

  • cf. space-hunger

    January 8, 2013

  • A young eel.

    January 8, 2013

  • The large fruit contains a viscid pulp which is used as gum in bookbinding, and in place of tar for covering the seams of boats.

    January 7, 2013

  • Great visuals for the term hoppings, just added to the list English Customs.

    January 7, 2013

  • The Veni Sancte Spiritus composed by Robert I, King of France. One of the more popular hymns of the Middle Ages. Sung for the mass at Whitsuntide.

    January 7, 2013

  • Twelve different letters among its 25. One short of half the alphabet.

    January 7, 2013

  • A term for you, mollusque.

    January 7, 2013

  • Great of you to notice the heraldry sense, ruzuzu. New one for me.

    January 7, 2013

  • The alphabet.

    January 7, 2013

  • In its presence a phrenologist's fingers to go all nervous and twitchy.

    January 7, 2013

  • , which see.

    January 7, 2013

  • From the definitions: n. One who or that which wabbles. Specifically—

    Annoyingly incomplete, as is the example provided.

    January 7, 2013

  • The CD&C definition given here is missing the promised quotation. The inferred passage, "I peep'd in at a loose lansket", appears in the play The Woman's Prize, or The Tamer Tamed written by John Fletcher in reply to Shakespeare's Taming of the Shrew.

    January 7, 2013

  • Truly, "writ in water".

    January 7, 2013

  • What got left off the syllabus in safe food-handling class.

    January 7, 2013

  • Leishman: The King has no clothes. Ziff: What King?

    January 7, 2013

  • "Then from the starving cagework city a horde of jerkined dwarfs, my people, with flayers’ knives, running, scaling, hacking in green blubbery whalemeat.” --Ulysses

    January 7, 2013

  • SPQR, watermark and rubric all added in their turn. Thanks lads!

    Now that the leitmotif and rubric have been suggested by the terms already on the list, I'll open it for public additions.

    January 7, 2013

  • Wonderful bilby. Thanks for sharing the link.

    January 7, 2013

  • I tend to meander while I malsker.

    January 6, 2013

  • "In virtue of original sin man's deiformity is, in fact, deformed but, even in the virtue of the consideration of original sin, man's situation is still one in which he must further deform himself as an image of God or accept his further deiformity through the powers of grace." John P. Dourley. Paul Tillich and Bonaventure: An Evaluation of Tillich's Claim to Stand in the Augustinian-Franciscan Tradition. 1975, p. 145.

    January 6, 2013

  • See buzz-wig.

    January 6, 2013

  • "Having a large bottom, as a wig of the kind formerly in common fashionable use." --from the definitions.

    January 6, 2013

  • A kind of wig covering only a portion of the head. --from the definitions.

    January 6, 2013

  • Scented wig powder. Bay rum for me please.

    January 6, 2013

  • See Black Rod.

    January 6, 2013

  • Thanks for DOC, bilby.

    January 6, 2013

  • The lacemaking school in Bruges.

    January 6, 2013

  • One must wonder who holds the world record.

    January 5, 2013

  • Because the burst of nasals hard up against the esses are fun to say.

    January 5, 2013

  • appellation d'origine contrôlée

    January 5, 2013

  • I'm looking for other terms that contain the string *gyg.

    January 5, 2013

  • This just in, on the last tide:

    Don't swim against the tide, or with sharks. Don't spit into the wind and do try to keep your head above water. Keep an even keel. Time and tide wait for no man, and women aren't too keen on it either. Your ship probably has come in already. A spare rudder and/or paddle are recommended.

    They are ill discoverers that think there is no land, when they see nothing but sea --Sir Francis Bacon

    All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full. --King Solomon

    The boisterous sea of liberty is never without a wave. --Thomas Jefferson

    There is nothing quite so good as burial at sea. It is simple, tidy, and not very incriminating. --Alfred Hitchcock

    January 5, 2013

  • Stand back!

    January 5, 2013

  • I met Sinkey Boone at a sea turtle conference in Florida in the late 1980's. Brash and white-haired, somewhat Hemingwayesque. I came to dislike him because he used to drunk-dial my then girlfriend, a wildlife sculptor who'd exhibited at that and other conferences he attended.

    January 5, 2013

  • Gallia est omnis divisa in partes tres

    January 5, 2013

  • A poem bearing the title Gentleman Jim appeared in newspapers and quaint anthologies in the late 1800's and early 1900's.

    January 4, 2013

  • See definition at quantum spin liquid.

    January 4, 2013

  • ...of which the definition gives us the lovely phrase "small magnetic moments".

    January 4, 2013

  • One runs across the occasional word that bears the old Wordie tag ghosted. troglodyke being one such word.

    January 4, 2013

  • --from the examples: British, colloquial A special constable. --Like those portrayed by Monty Python.

    January 4, 2013

  • "I, who am not conversant in Indian terms, understand something a little analogous to a fine paid upon the renewal of a lease, such as is paid in this or any other European country." -- Speech of the Rt. Hon. C.J. Fox, 7 June 1790, in Speeches of the Managers and Counsel in the Trial of Warren Hastings, Vol. 2, E.A. Bond, ed. London. Longman, Green, Longman & Roberts, p. 356.

    January 4, 2013

  • What a hair shirt feels like.

    January 4, 2013

  • To flee a sasquatch.

    January 3, 2013

  • A triple octave. In a musical scale 3x8=22. Try it on your piano.

    January 3, 2013

  • *rshr - undershrieve and a sometime synonym, undershrub.

    January 3, 2013

  • Yoinked to my Silk list. Thanks!

    January 3, 2013

  • Nice list!

    January 3, 2013

  • 5345.4 bogomips is a nice round number.

    January 3, 2013

  • It's a bird.

    January 3, 2013

  • An inkhorn word meant to mean behaving foolishly.

    January 3, 2013

  • (usually refreshing)

    January 2, 2013

  • Did anyone think to tell India about this?

    January 2, 2013

  • An adverb easier written than cleanly spoken.

    January 2, 2013

  • A counterbuff may sometimes result in a shiner.

    January 2, 2013

  • May your kettles always be furless.

    January 2, 2013

  • An immaculate adjective you don't meet every day.

    January 2, 2013

  • I too am an adjective you don't meet every day.

    January 2, 2013

  • Theodocia

    January 2, 2013

  • A small part of me wants to label this magical thinking.

    January 2, 2013

  • A 13-km barrier of Opuntia cactus planted by Cuba in 1961 to prevent its citizens from escaping/defecting onto the Guantanamo Bay U.S. Naval Base.

    January 2, 2013

  • A Christmas drink popular in the British Virgin Islands, defined by the

    Caribbean Dictionary / Wiwords as a "drink made from prickly pear steeped in rum, sweetened with sugar, and buried for many days."

    January 2, 2013

  • Nahautl term for the fruit of a species of Opuntia.

    January 2, 2013

  • "...her nude cuba stockings were salmospotspeckled,..." --Finnegans Wake

    January 2, 2013

  • n. nautical, rfdef This word needs a definition. Please help out and add a definition, then remove the text }. --from the definitions. It's been reported to Feedbag.

    January 2, 2013

  • ruzuzu I cereus-ly am not aware of any cactus lists.

    January 2, 2013

  • I'm imagining ruzuzu leaving the sporting goods store in her new gumboots.... and this line from The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night shoehorns it's way in: "...preceded by her eunuchs and serving women and clad in the gear her father had given her." (which see, in the examples given for in espalier.)

    January 2, 2013

  • "And after that she wove a gar-land for her hair. She pleated it. She plaited it. Of meadowgrass and riverflags, the bulrush and waterweed, and of fallen griefs of weeping willow." --Finnegans Wake

    As oddball and off-wall as Joyce waxes in his writings, here he is beautifully, simply, poetic.

    January 2, 2013

  • Ah bilby, I see you added Puss-in. Sabotage!

    January 2, 2013

  • Sometimes, it's a tree, but almost never a duricrust.

    January 2, 2013

  • *tchw - stitchwort

    January 2, 2013

  • A closed drainage basin that permits no outflow into bodies of water external to it. Üüreg Lake in western Mongolia lies within an endorheic basin. This lake also bears mention here because its name contains adjacent umlauts.

    January 2, 2013

  • The Matterhorn, for one.

    January 2, 2013

  • An outwash plain formed of glacial sediments at a glacier's terminus. Icelandic.

    January 2, 2013

  • A fabric for New Years Day.

    January 2, 2013

  • Rhymes with satinet.

    January 2, 2013

  • But is he a friend of the bilby?

    January 2, 2013

  • *rtsf - heartsfoot

    January 1, 2013

  • One wonders whether an antiabecedarian brims with joy when mojibake abound.

    January 1, 2013

  • "And call a spate a spate." --Finnegans Wake

    January 1, 2013

  • "A coneywink after the bunting fell." --Finnegans Wake

    January 1, 2013

  • *wmpr - bowmpriss.

    My arbitrary rule.

    January 1, 2013

  • "But where was Himself, the timoneer?" --Finnegans Wake

    January 1, 2013

  • This term belongs on cactus and Nahautl lists. Oye! ruzuzu!

    January 1, 2013

  • A local fish broth from the (Lago de) Patzcuaro region of Michoacán.

    January 1, 2013

  • Wonderful list! It's smack-dab where it should be.

    January 1, 2013

  • Good place for an eremite.

    January 1, 2013

  • In Fashion Photography, the difference between a model's true anatomy and the airbrushed version of same.

    January 1, 2013

  • "Shaped like a cupped guitar pick", he imagined to himself.

    January 1, 2013

  • Cf. clbuttic mistake, and especially the examples given for clbuttic, which see, ruzuzu.

    January 1, 2013

  • Credible; worthy of being believed.

    December 31, 2012

  • Undeserved grace.

    December 31, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day.

    December 31, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day.

    December 31, 2012

  • (our adversaries) "speak things portentous and unintelligible".

    December 31, 2012

  • Hey, I just ran across this term yesterday, with its dog and detent, while exploring latch and its kindred.

    December 31, 2012

  • kamik

    December 30, 2012

  • It's a tree.

    December 29, 2012

  • One for the listers of names of the winds of the world.

    December 29, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 29, 2012

  • ...hence, fiercely hungry.

    December 29, 2012

  • It escalated into The Milagro Beanfield War.

    December 29, 2012

  • "Used only in the imperative, in the exclamatory phrase levant me, a mild imprecation much like blow me!" --from the definitions.

    December 29, 2012

  • What's in your wallet?

    December 29, 2012

  • It's a tree.

    December 29, 2012

  • I just looked up flesh unwound. There aren't any visual aids there either.

    December 29, 2012

  • I believe cow-warming originated in the Highlands of Scotland.

    December 29, 2012

  • No relation to gossypol.

    December 29, 2012

  • Neat that you got to see a gibbon, bilby. My invocation of the British historian was an attempt at paronomasia.

    December 29, 2012

  • A type of primate, according to Gibbon.

    December 28, 2012

  • He strummed the feline "with feeling", using a cat-hairpin as a plectrum.

    December 28, 2012

  • One for the sponge spicule terminology list.

    December 28, 2012

  • Pass the cow to this end of the table, please.

    December 28, 2012

  • No relation to hogwash.

    December 28, 2012

  • Everything has a(nother) name.

    December 28, 2012

  • "Upturned lower jaw of a male salmon at the end of its life as it returns to fresh water to spawn." --from the definitions.

    December 28, 2012

  • A device for measuring the degree of anger brought on by depriving someone of chocolate? No. A chocolate temper meter measures the temperature of chocolate during the tempering/crystallization stage of production.

    December 27, 2012

  • "To refine the flavour and texture of chocolate by warming and grinding, either in a traditional concher, or between rollers." --from the definitions.

    December 27, 2012

  • Golly.

    December 27, 2012

  • Another one for the tree and shrub listers.

    December 27, 2012

  • When all else fails, they suggest a dose of Bromo-Seltzer?

    December 27, 2012

  • Even water can be an important regulome entity.

    December 27, 2012

  • And ititi in the middle of it all.

    December 27, 2012

  • It's a tree. Ostensibly.

    December 27, 2012

  • The CD&C definition for meteorite is one of the longest single definitions I've seen at Wordnik. This is where the "and Cyclopedia" part of the lexicon's title asserts itself.

    December 27, 2012

  • One wonders if carrots are ever contained therein.

    December 27, 2012

  • Thanks for the Fomalhaut clarification, ry. I should probably remove the less "formal" of the two names from the list. And thanks for the additions to the list!

    December 27, 2012

  • Formalhaut is not a star. That would mean it is not a class A star then? Don't tell Formalhaut b (which orbits it), or the dwarf star TW Piscis Austrini, its binary traveling partner. Educate me.

    December 27, 2012

  • It's a boat.

    December 26, 2012

  • *ghtgl - nightglass

    December 26, 2012

  • chicken liver

    December 26, 2012

  • A Matryoshka doll inside a big Fabergé egg inside a snow globe.

    December 26, 2012

  • a church-mouse inside a flaming piano in the bucket of a cocked trebuchet.

    December 26, 2012

  • Collectively speaking, a rabble of rousers.

    December 26, 2012

  • And tucking the pinion of a piñon-bird into his hatband, he wandered the slow hills collecting pine nuts.

    December 26, 2012

  • Not my new favorite word, but it is fun to say when the monstrance comes 'round.

    Cf. expositorium, ostensorium.

    December 26, 2012

  • Sharply pointed at each end, and thicker in the middle. If you say so.

    December 26, 2012

  • Sonny's Mazurka is a very popular Irish session tune.

    December 25, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 25, 2012

  • multeity

    December 25, 2012

  • Three vees appear in the first six letters of this term.

    December 25, 2012

  • All this cablish has been a windfall for the small-time firewood sellers.

    December 25, 2012

  • Did someone say pie? Anymore I don't hear so well.

    December 25, 2012

  • To me, dracontine is not so draconian a term as draconian.

    December 23, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 23, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 23, 2012

  • threnody

    December 23, 2012

  • A unique salt and pepper for the gourmand or gourmet, featuring piment d'Espelette.

    December 22, 2012

  • Maybe you've seen Redmond salt at the grocer's. In the little valley community of Redmond UT there is a big red mound of a hill. Beneath the red mound, which is pierced to its red heart by a haul road, lies salt. Ancient sea salt that is mined and milled for the table.

    December 22, 2012

  • No matter how you care to spin it

    A London moment runs rings 'round a New York minute.

    December 22, 2012

  • There you go again.

    December 22, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 22, 2012

  • It's large, and handsome.

    December 22, 2012

  • Common name of the panicoid grass Cenchrus biflorus.

    December 21, 2012

  • Species of the genus Beckmannia are commonly called sloughgrass.

    December 21, 2012

  • I don't recognize *hnny or *nnyc as four-consonant strings because the wye functions as a vowel as it generally tends to do within longer strings of consonants. My arbitrary rule.

    December 21, 2012

  • *ghgr - sloughgrass

    December 21, 2012

  • Various species of the grass genus Austrodanthonia are known as wallaby-grass.

    December 21, 2012

  • The end of the world will be remembered by means of a cosmic cellotaph.

    December 21, 2012

  • Transparency International's map is interesting.

    December 21, 2012

  • Great catch, bilby!

    December 21, 2012

  • One for the listers of fermented drinks.

    December 21, 2012

  • *rdgr - yardgrass, cordgrass.

    December 21, 2012

  • *tchn - natchnee, et al.

    December 21, 2012

  • Another one for the liquor-listers.

    December 21, 2012

  • Liquor listers: Cf. baijiu.

    December 21, 2012

  • One for the spirituous drinks listers. This one from Uganda featuring fermented bananas and sorghum.

    December 21, 2012

  • One from Burundi for the spirituous drinks listers.

    December 21, 2012

  • Another one for the spirituous drink listers.

    December 21, 2012

  • *hnsh - johnshore

    December 21, 2012

  • Thanks bilby and dclose73 for your visits and additions.

    December 21, 2012

  • A grass, Paspalum scrobiculatum, said to render the milk of cows that feed upon it narcotic and drastic. --from the definitions.

    December 21, 2012

  • *nchl - trenchless, et al.

    December 20, 2012

  • *rchl - torchless, et al.

    December 20, 2012

  • Cf. henotheistic.

    "The symbols of Mithraism offer significant traits which are associated with those sun-cults which have a kathenotheistic approach to the god." --Sukumari Bhattacharji,The Indian Theogony: A Comparative Study of Indian Mythology from the Vedas to the Puraṇas. 1970. p.222.

    December 20, 2012

  • A prison workhouse for female convicts transported to the penal colonies of Australia. Female factories were located in NSW, Queensland, and Van Diemen's Land.

    December 20, 2012

  • ghee

    December 20, 2012

  • It's a.k.a. The Nutmeg State.

    December 20, 2012

  • *lltr - falltrank, illtreat.

    December 20, 2012

  • Great visuals.

    December 20, 2012

  • I like this list. I also like the miniscule spider on the upper left shelf of the shield at the upper right corner of the 1$ bill.

    December 20, 2012

  • "Oh no, here he comes again with his shovel and barrow."

    "Yeah, I know. I'm thinking of giving him a pellet stove for his birthday."

    December 20, 2012

  • Lived and worked there one whole summer.

    December 20, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    December 20, 2012

  • A person with a crude superabundance of midnight oil to burn.

    December 20, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    December 20, 2012

  • ...and hoisting the giant pearly shell to his ear, he heard the echoes of Poseidon's polyphloisbic pronouncements.

    December 20, 2012

  • One who dabbles, poorly, in philology.

    December 20, 2012

  • Do tell.

    December 19, 2012

  • One for The Organism Orchestra list.

    December 19, 2012

  • One for the Wordnik coin and money listers.

    December 19, 2012

  • One for the Wordnik coin and money listers.

    December 19, 2012

  • Never met one.

    December 19, 2012

  • ...from the definition of macédoine, which see.

    December 19, 2012

  • Have a super-sparkly day.

    December 19, 2012

  • It's a bush.

    December 19, 2012

  • Cf. albino.

    December 19, 2012

  • The coloring matter of red cabbage. It is largely used in the coloring of bogus wines. --from the definitions.

    December 19, 2012

  • Oh dear. I don't think frogapplause will like this term at all.

    December 19, 2012

  • quaquaquaqua

    December 19, 2012

  • It's a porpoise. No, really.

    December 19, 2012

  • Gotta get off this bogie train, man.

    December 18, 2012

  • The word may have been spelled as it sounded to the transcriber. I suggest reviewing the spoken record before speculating further. Perhaps the *comb* part was pronounced as in the words combined, combinatorial, etc.

    December 18, 2012

  • "An artificial cavity made in the teeth of horses that have outgrown their natural mark, to disguise their age." --from the definitions.

    December 17, 2012

  • A new pair for my Less the Initial, Still the Same list.

    December 17, 2012

  • By poison or by witchcraft. Take your pick.

    December 17, 2012

  • Also known as myzocytosis or cellular vampirism. A form of feeding by means of a feeding tube called a coinoid with which predatory cellular organism pierces the cell wall and membrane of another organism and sucks out the cytoplasm.

    December 17, 2012

  • The Handbook of Heraldry, John Edward Cussans, Chatto and Windus, 1882, p. 69.

    December 16, 2012

  • *rthsp - birthspot

    December 16, 2012

  • I hope ESPN finds out whether or not he's a red-publican.

    As for comball, perhaps "a word as cunningly hidden in its maze of confused drapery as a fieldmouse in a nest of coloured ribbons" --Finnegans Wake

    December 15, 2012

  • Look me up sometime.

    December 15, 2012

  • Great idea for a list!

    December 13, 2012

  • James Joyce fecit.

    "...ere the hour of the twattering of bards in the #twitterlitter between Druidia and the Deepsleep Sea..." --Finnegans Wake

    December 12, 2012

  • *ckspr -thickspread

    December 12, 2012

  • *cksp - lickspigot, et al.

    December 12, 2012

  • Look! Another locksmith list! Wordnik is now your one-stop go-to site for up-to-date picklock lists!

    December 12, 2012

  • “If after years upon years of delving in ditches dark one tubthumper more than others, Kinihoun or Kahanan, giardarner or mear measenmanonger, has got up for the darnall same pur-pose of reassuring us with all the barbar of the Carrageehouse that our great ascendant was properly speaking three syllables less than his own surname (yes, yes, less!)" --Finnegans Wake

    December 12, 2012

  • John Edwin Cussans. The Handbook of Heraldry. 1882. p. 71.

    December 11, 2012

  • Hello, word. Define yourself.

    December 11, 2012

  • In heraldry, the arrangement of various coats-of-arms on one shield to depict the several matches and alliances of a family. Latin cumulatio armorum.

    December 11, 2012

  • HaHa Mr. Prolagus, and nice to see your usename!

    December 11, 2012

  • Cf. marcassin.

    December 11, 2012

  • Here piggy piggy.

    December 11, 2012

  • French muscat and an ancient heraldry symbol. What a combination.

    December 8, 2012

  • In heraldry, an element extending itself to all points of the escutcheon.

    December 8, 2012

  • A term used by the ancient heralds to denote a charge that exceeds its normal length.

    December 8, 2012

  • An axe with a long handle and long broad blade.

    December 8, 2012

  • In heraldry, denoting a line attached to the collar of a blazoned animal; or noting that the exposed lining of a cloak or other garment is of a different tincture.

    December 8, 2012

  • The flock of definitions herein contains references to sheep.

    December 8, 2012

  • hush money

    December 8, 2012

  • Like snowplow and dough-trough, the two elements of the word flood-wood are eye-rhymes. Pronounced, they don't rhyme.

    December 8, 2012

  • Ahem!

    December 8, 2012

  • Who knew?

    December 7, 2012

  • Buttons that are gimped remain attached longer than those that aren't. I've resorted to using unwaxed dental floss for gimping in a pinch.

    December 7, 2012

  • In heraldry, also blazoned indented per long.

    December 7, 2012

  • Rhymes with bittern.

    December 7, 2012

  • I get this way sometimes.

    December 7, 2012

  • See comments under flimp.

    December 7, 2012

  • "To take a man's watch is to flimp him, it can only be done in a crowd, one gets behind him and pushes him in the back, while the other in front is robbing him." --Brandon, 1839. Poverty, Mendicity and Crime.

    December 7, 2012

  • spammer

    December 7, 2012

  • "Whoever desires to fatten and strengthen...let him refrain from high-seasoned hodge-podge, French magma, and fish flibrigo" London Magazine XXXI, 612/2, 1762.

    December 7, 2012

  • A scarecrow. Also flay-crake. Yorkshire dialect.

    December 7, 2012

  • Clumsy, as are many coinages from the business world.

    December 7, 2012

  • Seven-syllable English words such as this one are collected here. As for a term for words in this bloated class, I prefer the pedestrian mouthful in casual speech.

    December 7, 2012

  • Berry convincing dialog, bilby!

    December 7, 2012

  • In heraldry, the exact reverse of engrailed.

    December 7, 2012

  • In heraldry, a bugle-horn.

    December 7, 2012

  • In heraldry, used to describe a chevron and fesse that are placed higher than ordinary.

    December 7, 2012

  • Same as gyronwise.

    December 7, 2012

  • An old heraldry term used when the paws or claws of an animal, or the hands of a person, hold or grasp any thing.

    December 7, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day.

    December 6, 2012

  • A random blow or kick (Scots).

    December 6, 2012

  • A rather unflattering verb.

    December 6, 2012

  • "...like an arrow-fledge, he darts, and, softly lighting, perches by her side." --The Birds of Scotland with Other Poems by James Grahame. Philadelphia, S.F. Bradford, I:10, 1807.

    December 6, 2012

  • "In hell-black night endur'd," -- Shakespeare, King Lear, 1605.

    December 6, 2012

  • A hamlet or small village. - "On this River of the Maine where the Townes and pleasant Flects lie by the water ... Their Dorpes and Flects walled about." --R. Monro His Expedition with the Worthy Scots Regiment. London. 1637. II:89.

    In heraldry, short form of flected.

    December 6, 2012

  • A sudden storm or squall accompanied by lightning and thunder.

    December 6, 2012

  • "Storms, commonly called Michaelmas flawers, at that time of the year make sailing...dangerous." --Stackhouse, New History of the Holy Bible..., 1767, VI:417, note.

    "We have upon our Coast in England a Michaelmas flaw, that seldom fails." John Josselyn, An Account of the Voyages to New England, 1674, p.54.

    December 6, 2012

  • Rhymes with tankard, my Dear.

    December 6, 2012

  • "As the winter advances, grenat or claret has become more and more the favorite - it is rich, gay, and generally becoming." --Peterson's Magazine, February 1879.

    December 6, 2012

  • "Visiting-dress: The dress is of grasshopper-green fine cloth." --Young Ladies' Journal, April 1895.

    December 6, 2012

  • "Bonnet, of gendarme blue satin, brim and curtain in plush to match." --Sylvia's Home Journal, January 1879.

    "(which, strictly speaking, is a bluish green) such as appears in the "eye" or ring of a peacock feather." --Silk Goods of America, 1880.

    December 6, 2012

  • "The Countess Spencer wore garter blue velvet." --London and Paris Ladies' Magazine of Fashion, June 1882.

    December 6, 2012

  • "a deep yellow Colour." --Glossographia Anglicana Nova, 1707.

    "or fulvous, of a yellowish, dusky colour, Lion tawny." --English Dict., 1717.

    December 5, 2012

  • "This was the name at first given to the red coloring matter derived from aniline, ... although it was a very beautiful color, the more superior color called magenta, ... has completely driven it from the market." --Dictionary of Dyeing and Calico Printing, 1869.

    December 5, 2012

  • "A beautiful bright blue; it is adapted for ladies' drapery - rather too powerful for pearly tints or flesh." --Ladies' Manual of Art, 1890.

    December 5, 2012

  • "I saw her hand: she has a leathern hand, a freestone-color'd hand; I verily did think that her old gloves were on, but 'twas her hands;" Shakespeare, As You Like It, 1599.

    December 5, 2012

  • Geology and chemistry speak of hexagonal close packing and cubic close packing of atoms or ions in crystalline structures. Abbreviated "hcp" and "ccp".

    December 5, 2012

  • "Other red tints are registered on the shade calendar as "Roi", "Pivoine", and "Francois Premier."" --Arthur's Home Magazine, 62:685, 1892.

    December 5, 2012

  • Arthur's Home Magazine, 62:865, 1892.

    December 5, 2012

  • "...is said to be made of the lees of wine from which the tartar has been washed, by burning, in the manner of ivory black. ... fine Frankfort black, though almost confined to copperplate printing, is one of the best black pigments we possess, being of a fine neutral colour, next in intensity to lamp-black, and more powerful than that of ivory. Chromatography, 1835.

    December 5, 2012

  • "Another color recently popularized is the "crushed strawberry", the fraise color which French milliners introduced last year." Littel's Living Age, Oct. 20, 1883.

    December 5, 2012

  • Found under the heading "The Names of Colours Given by The Silk Dyers" in Commonplace Book of Benjamin Franklin (1650-1727), The Colonial Society of Massachusetts, Transactions, 1906, Vol 10, p. 221.

    December 5, 2012

  • "By mixing heliotrope and a red a light reddish shade has been obtained which is known as "floxine"; this may be a new shade but it is uncertain whether it will meet with much favor." --Arthur's Home Magazine, 1892.

    December 4, 2012

  • Flame-colored; red.

    "the flammid Carbuncle, purple Amethyst." --W. Folkingham, 1610, Art of Survey, i, iii, 5.

    December 4, 2012

  • Flouncing; boisterous.

    December 4, 2012

  • A flooded river, a mountain torrent, or the dry bed left by it.

    December 4, 2012

  • osprey

    December 4, 2012

  • *rstm - firstmost

    December 3, 2012

  • That which may be bought or sold for a fip, which see.

    December 2, 2012

  • Who knew?

    December 2, 2012

  • Just found and added finchbacked, 'zuzu.

    December 2, 2012

  • E.S. Dana named this mineral after A.N. Fillow, upon whose land the mineral occurred.

    December 2, 2012

  • Florio, 1598: "filiselle, a kind of coarse silke, which we call filosetta or flouret silke.

    December 2, 2012

  • One for the listers of architectural elements.

    December 2, 2012

  • Nonce word derived from Eccl. I, fid-es implicita. The word is used adjectively, e.g., "fidimplicitary coxcombs" in Blackwood's Magazine 1:470, 1817 and elsewhere.

    December 1, 2012

  • A tobacco pipe lighter.

    December 1, 2012

  • A surveyor of farms and freehold lands.

    November 30, 2012

  • fetch-light

    November 30, 2012

  • Inspiring fear, awesome, dreadful..

    Wary, timorous, full of fear, cautious out of fear of offending.

    November 30, 2012

  • *ldsp, feldspathose, et al.

    November 29, 2012

  • I prefer those made of cashmere or merino wool.

    November 29, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    November 28, 2012

  • One for the fruit and berry listers.

    November 28, 2012

  • "Pray Phoebus, I prove favoursome in her fair eyes." --Ben Johnson, Cynthia's Revels, iv, iii, written in 1599.

    November 28, 2012

  • A fawning parasite, a sycophant, a toady; one who robs or swindles under the guise of friendship.

    Also recorded as fawneguest and fawn-guest.

    November 28, 2012

  • One for the horse and/or color listers.

    November 28, 2012

  • Relating to that which makes, or the making of, a honeycomb.

    Cf. faviform; L. favus.

    November 28, 2012

  • Tending to favor; favorable.

    From L. fautivus, from L. favere, to favor.

    November 28, 2012

  • Cf. Fr. fatraille, trash, trumpery, things of no value.

    November 28, 2012

  • A Roman sacrament of marriage, of sorts.

    November 27, 2012

  • Relating to ichthyoallyeinotoxism, hallucinogenic fish poisoning.

    November 27, 2012

  • An old British term for one who undertakes the charge of children for a fixed sum.

    November 27, 2012

  • Powdered, as with cosmetics.

    "Our effeminate farined gallants." --John Evelyn's Sylva, 1776, p.230.

    November 27, 2012

  • One for those who list varieties of fabric.

    November 27, 2012

  • John Watson, The Medical Profession in Ancient Times, New York Academy of Medicine, Baker and Godwin, 1856, p.178.

    November 27, 2012

  • It's a coin.

    November 27, 2012

  • It's a coin.

    November 27, 2012

  • Pertaining to or belonging to servants.

    November 27, 2012

  • Cf. phalanstery

    November 27, 2012

  • Tawdry; gaudy; garish; cheap.

    November 26, 2012

  • Rare and obsolete adjective meaning falcate or crooked.

    November 26, 2012

  • Pleasure; delight.

    November 26, 2012

  • Pleasantly witty or humorous.

    November 26, 2012

  • I still like this word. Alot.

    November 25, 2012

  • Cf. amygdaloid, amygdaloidal

    November 25, 2012

  • Also sirdab.

    November 24, 2012

  • cierge

    November 24, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    November 22, 2012

  • Interesting.

    November 22, 2012

  • It was during his second stay on Ternate that Alfred Russell Wallace first experienced an earthquake. The world of books is full of such trivia.

    The Malay Archipelago, Vol. II.

    November 21, 2012

  • dammar gum

    November 20, 2012

  • In heraldry, same as sepurture.

    November 20, 2012

  • In heraldry, endorsed is sometimes used.

    November 20, 2012

  • I encountered a Beet Dump Rd. in my peregrinations in SW Idaho this past summer.

    November 20, 2012

  • Of seven ounces; of seven parts of a whole.

    November 20, 2012

  • An adjective for the Wordnik listers of island terms.

    November 20, 2012

  • peculator

    November 20, 2012

  • Not continuously.

    November 20, 2012

  • Not quite "every which way".

    November 20, 2012

  • From Seplasia, the name of a street in Capua where perfumers sold their wares. Recorded from the 1650's.

    November 20, 2012

  • Half a fortnight.

    November 19, 2012

  • For the hat listers.

    November 19, 2012

  • One for the listers of weaponry.

    November 19, 2012

  • One for Wordnik's listers of musical terms.

    November 19, 2012

  • Pertaining to or connected with the Academy of Della Crusca in Florence; or referring to the Dellacruscan Society of Literature, a name given to a group of English writers residing in Florence in the late 18th century.

    November 18, 2012

  • In mathematics, the duplication of a cube.

    A deputation from Athens was sent to inquire of the oracle of Delos how the plague might be stopped. The reply was that the plague would cease when the cubical altar of Apollo was doubled.

    November 18, 2012

  • This is a sneaky and clever adjective.

    November 18, 2012

  • Fufluna - in Etruscan.

    November 18, 2012

  • In heraldry, furnished with steps. Also degraded.

    November 18, 2012

  • Glad everything is wonderful, but we're quite averse to spam here.

    November 17, 2012

  • See indehiscent for the correct spelling, where it is variously defined.

    November 17, 2012

  • An adjective you don't meet every day.

    November 16, 2012

  • The search string *some returns unwholesome, foursome, acrosome, episome, gaysome, and many additional words appropriate for this list.

    November 16, 2012

  • selenic

    November 16, 2012

  • Relating to the number nineteen. decenoval.

    November 15, 2012

  • decenovary

    November 15, 2012

  • dearworthly - *rthl

    November 15, 2012

  • *rthf, mirthful et al.

    November 15, 2012

  • Sadly, the adverb dernly is used ever so very infrequently.

    dearnly

    November 15, 2012

  • An old British term for the elder plant, Sambucus.

    November 15, 2012

  • "The deadly-handed Clifford slew my steed." --Shakespeare, Henry VI.

    November 15, 2012

  • An interesting if not uncommon adjective containing a pair of hyphenated opposites, defined by the 1883 Encyclopaedic Dictionary as "without spirit or animation; dull, spiritless". Cf. semianimate, semianimous.

    November 15, 2012

  • "The old, feeble, and day-wearied sun". --Shakespeare, King John.

    November 15, 2012

  • You could start by searching the string *tar*.

    November 14, 2012

  • There are some nice visuals associated with this term.

    November 14, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    November 14, 2012

  • Hyphenated as day-woman, which see, by Shakespeare in Love's Labour's Lost.

    November 14, 2012

  • A noun you don't meet every day.

    Example sentences use this term adjectivally.

    November 14, 2012

  • archer-fish, dart-snake?

    November 14, 2012

  • A conserve of fresh damsons pressed to the consistency of cheese.

    November 14, 2012

  • A silk damask containing gold or silver flowers in the fabric.

    November 14, 2012

  • A has-to-do-with-cattle word for ruzuzu.

    November 14, 2012

  • Great list, reminiscent (to me) of the Bird Fish and Organism Orchestra lists.

    November 13, 2012

  • The Dagger was a low tavern in Holborn mentioned by Ben Johnson and others. It's fare was presumably dirt-cheap and nasty.

    November 10, 2012

  • I'm tickled that bilby lives a day ahead of me. 11/9/12 = 11/10/12. Time zone maths.

    November 9, 2012

  • Some might consider cyphonism a form of torture.

    November 9, 2012

  • If you say so, Century Dictionary.

    November 9, 2012

  • In heraldry, a swan bearing a ducal crown around its neck. A gold chain is fixed to the crown and is swept back over the bird's back.

    November 9, 2012

  • cyanine

    November 9, 2012

  • Normally, this term has nothing to do with bluenose, unless the latter becomes cyanotic due to acrocyanosis.

    November 9, 2012

  • A short tobacco-pipe.

    November 9, 2012

  • The Encyclopaedic Dictionary, Vol II. Pt. II, 1883, p. 632.

    November 9, 2012

  • Shakespeare wasn't too hasty to use this word in Henry V.

    November 9, 2012

  • granular, full of grains.

    November 9, 2012

  • churlish, niggardly

    November 9, 2012

  • Goes under the bed, with a lid please, after one has gone.

    November 9, 2012

  • It's a bird-bird.

    November 9, 2012

  • Who knew?

    November 9, 2012

  • Cf. shemagh.

    November 8, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    November 6, 2012

  • The Encyclopaedic Dictionary, Vol II, Pt. II; 1883, p. 600.

    November 6, 2012

  • One wonders what it tastes like...

    November 6, 2012

  • An adjective you don't meet every day.

    November 4, 2012

  • One for the Wordnik hat-listers.

    November 4, 2012

  • One who buys up as much as possible of any commodity, so that the speculative sellers of it when the time comes to deliver are unable to fulfill their engagements, except by buying of the cornerman at his own price, and are thus driven into a corner. - The Encyclopaedic Dictionary, Vol II Pt. II, p.495; Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co., 1883.

    November 3, 2012

  • Straight to my heraldry terms list! Thanks, ruzuzu.

    November 3, 2012

  • Also called a flue-hammer.

    October 31, 2012

  • Cf. alienist.

    Visuals for this term are amusing, albeit incorrect.

    October 31, 2012

  • Perhaps because puttanesca is a sauce others have not included this term in their lists of pasta varieties.

    October 30, 2012

  • Cf. consectaneous.

    October 30, 2012

  • I can't adequately nor melodiously sing the praises of this fine adverb.

    October 30, 2012

  • Possessing a long, pipefish-like nose.

    October 30, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    October 30, 2012

  • One for the Wordnik coin and currency listers.

    October 30, 2012

  • confabular

    October 29, 2012

  • The consumption of condensed beer rendered Mort decidedly confabular.

    October 29, 2012

  • conducive

    October 29, 2012

  • A British patent for condensed beer was taken out by P. E. Lockwood in 1875.

    October 29, 2012

  • I will henceforth call the ʬ bilabial percussive symbol a williwaw, which elsewise denotes a blast of cold air that races down the mountains to the sea.

    October 29, 2012

  • Cf. concrement.

    October 29, 2012

  • Its a noun. Cf. concreture.

    October 29, 2012

  • concinnous

    October 29, 2012

  • Cf. concinnate.

    October 29, 2012

  • From the Encyclopaedic Dictionary, Vol II, Pt. II, p. 534. Cassell, Petter, Galpin & Co. 1883.

    October 29, 2012

  • The Mikado ate his sword.

    October 26, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day, even among cowboys.

    October 26, 2012

  • crescentic

    October 26, 2012

  • Interesting that the string -ulti- appears twice in this non-reduplicative term.

    The Wordnik definition provided is evidently a mismatch.

    October 25, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    October 25, 2012

  • Uses of complicate in its adjectival senses are infrequent.

    October 25, 2012

  • Unpleasant, when applied to one's nose, or suspended about one's neck.

    October 25, 2012

  • Not a valid Scrabble word.

    October 25, 2012

  • Great find, reesetee!

    October 25, 2012

  • hypocrateriform

    October 25, 2012

  • Shaped like a salver. hypocraterimorphous

    October 25, 2012

  • Cf. bone-spirit.

    October 24, 2012

  • Add this to your Halloween fare.

    October 24, 2012

  • A disorderly person.

    October 22, 2012

  • See, bangstraw, a contemptuous term for one who threshes grain.

    October 22, 2012

  • hell-gad

    October 22, 2012

  • A form of spear or goad used for catching eels. Also hell-stang. Lincolnshire.

    October 22, 2012

  • Cf. pinder.

    October 22, 2012

  • Cf. hawbuck

    October 22, 2012

  • Also hawbaw in the Lincolnshire dialect.

    October 22, 2012

  • An idle, dissolute man or boy. Lincolnshire dialect.

    October 22, 2012

  • An eel-trap made of wicker-work.

    October 22, 2012

  • A foolish stupid person. Lincolnshire dialect.

    October 22, 2012

  • *xtwh, betwixtwhiles.

    October 22, 2012

  • Lincolnshire dialect. A dressed sheepskin.

    October 22, 2012

  • This term posesses five consecutive consonants. The preceeding link lists 5-consonant strings I've encountered.

    This list contains words with 5 consecutive consonants.

    October 19, 2012

  • A nickname for one who threshes with a flail. Lincolnshire dialect, as recorded by Edward Peacock, 1877, A glossary of words used in the wapentakes of Manley and Corringham, Lincolnshire. London, The English Dialect Society, p.14.

    October 19, 2012

  • An infrequently encountered adjective I'm not all that keen to internalize.

    October 17, 2012

  • Oh, that's a good one, Erin.

    October 17, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day.

    October 17, 2012

  • "As for feelings of guilt, well, she's about as compunct as a cowbird who lays her eggs in anothers' nest."

    September 10, 2012

  • I'm a seldomly used adjective.

    September 10, 2012

  • anchoritic

    September 9, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    September 9, 2012

  • extraovular

    July 27, 2012

  • @thtownse, marky: Just added the previously unlisted mesmerical to my more recent adjectives list "More Adjectival Arcana". All terms on my list were added one by one.

    July 27, 2012

  • I'm an adverb you don't meet every day.

    July 3, 2012

  • This adjective is being bandied about by certain political spokespersons with increasing frequency these past few days.

    July 2, 2012

  • Contrast with unthinking.

    June 30, 2012

  • *rchch, archchaplain.

    June 30, 2012

  • *rchc, archconservative, et al.

    June 30, 2012

  • The fogcoat goes on a road during resurfacing, after the chipseal is applied.

    June 30, 2012

  • fais do-do, a Cajun hootenanny.

    June 30, 2012

  • It's an adjective. prelatical, prelatial

    June 28, 2012

  • I'm an adjective you don't meet every day.

    June 28, 2012

  • "...the gentle and benevolent mediocrity of church-maintanance, the ignoble hucksterage of piddling tithes?" - Charles Symmons, The Prose Works of John Milton: With a Life of the Author, Vol. 1, 1806, p. 56.

    June 28, 2012

  • Great list!

    June 28, 2012

  • reshore

    June 21, 2012

  • A word I've seen and heard floating around the punditscape.

    reshoring

    June 21, 2012

  • Seems like I remember the fly guys at IU Bloomington talking about a "son killer" gene when I haunted the place.

    June 1, 2012

  • Thanks for the interesting article, ruzuzu!

    May 5, 2012

  • My personal preference would be to exclude high-hat from this list of single words.

    May 5, 2012

  • You might find some more terms In The Collieries.

    May 5, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    May 3, 2012

  • Thanks ruzuzu, for adding eel-mother to my list of things eel!

    May 3, 2012

  • I'm a word you don't meet every day.

    May 3, 2012

  • "Because the Sacred Canons," as he says, "forbid living eremitically without rule, without vows, and without profession." - Camaldolese Extraordinary: The Life, Doctrine and Rule of Blessed Paul Giustiniani. 2003.

    May 3, 2012

  • eremitic

    May 3, 2012

  • Now that this word is listed I can go back to watching my shows.

    April 10, 2012

  • Do the folks of Chester use a pizzastun, one wonders.

    April 10, 2012

  • A rare 5-consonant string in English: *chthr - see synechthry. I'm looking for other examples.

    March 16, 2012

  • The terms kame and eskar are bona fide periglacial geology and geomorphology terms.

    March 16, 2012

  • A nice Scots term for those who don't feel so pretentious as to say portmanteau.

    March 15, 2012

  • Another one of those seven-syllable paleontology terms.

    March 14, 2012

  • Shaped like a nummulite; that is, shaped like a coin or button.

    March 14, 2012

  • kaiserschwarz

    March 13, 2012

  • Fun to say.

    March 13, 2012

  • Here's an adjective you don't meet every day.

    March 13, 2012

  • A langosta ceiling would go well with a prawn-like marble mantlepiece.

    March 13, 2012

  • I hope your day is free of clutterment, and beset with pastries and other dainties.

    March 13, 2012

  • I believe chelp is Yorkshire dialect for talk, speech. Uttered somewhat throatily and incoherently if BBC comedies are to be believed.

    February 29, 2012

  • This word is both adjective and adverb.

    Cf. gradely.

    February 29, 2012

  • In most cases this should be tossed, though gently.

    February 29, 2012

  • I still like this fine adjective.

    February 29, 2012

  • It's a hellgrammite.

    February 29, 2012

  • A 2-wheeled horse-drawn carriage of the Philippines. Also written qalesa.

    February 29, 2012

  • Here's an adjective you don't meet every day.

    January 12, 2012

  • See the extract.

    So we are instructed in the definitions given.

    January 12, 2012

  • Thanks for this, ruzuzu!

    January 12, 2012

  • See the definition for hirsutocinereous.

    January 12, 2012

  • Soda, a pop to some.

    January 11, 2012

  • The postapoptotic part comes afterwards.

    January 11, 2012

  • A term for Wordnik's listers of fabrics.

    January 10, 2012

  • It's a goat.

    Wiki this.

    January 10, 2012

  • It's a bird. Wait, it's a goat.

    January 10, 2012

  • The tiny balls that form on one's woolens with wear are pilulous, if not trifling. Use a fabric shaver or de-piller if you must.

    January 10, 2012

  • The etymology gives the origin of the word, rather than the uses to which sabots were put to. Clomping around in wooden boots would require the wearer to invest in a pair of hard-wearing sashoons, no?

    January 10, 2012

  • The plant burdock, clide, or clive.

    See Clive for a definition of clive.

    January 10, 2012

  • Cf. pig-hole.

    January 10, 2012

  • See definition at christcross-row.

    January 10, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    January 10, 2012

  • That hot oven is absolutely torrefying.

    January 9, 2012

  • “In two of the cases described in the study, the children's toilet seat dermatitis had been caused by their school's use of harsh chemical cleaners, containing ingredients such as didecyl dimethyl ammonium chloride and alkyl dimethyl benzyl ammonium chloride, which have previously been documented to cause severe skin irritation.” --from the Wordnik examples for didecyl.

    January 9, 2012

  • Compared to the names of many other organic molecules, this one is rather short.

    January 9, 2012

  • "Originally found in putrefying cadavers", the definition states. Now where is it found?

    January 9, 2012

  • "...obtained from the urine of chickens after feeding them with benzoic acid."

    Now whatcha gonna do with it?

    January 9, 2012

  • I like the example provided by Wordnik.

    January 9, 2012

  • I've been enjoying the odd and unexpected fish names, and anything biological and paleontological. Welcome.

    January 9, 2012

  • See definitions at Lin.

    January 9, 2012

  • This term contains the last three letters of the alphabet.

    January 9, 2012

  • This substance is by no means a cure-all.

    January 9, 2012

  • I would never had known cajuputene was obtained by cohobation. Thank you, CD&C!

    January 9, 2012

  • Well I don't smell anything.

    January 9, 2012

  • Spelling phellandrene with an "f" makes this chemical name one gamers and fantasy writers should co-opt as a name for some imaginary race from some imaginary place. Oh - just noticed that Felandra is already out there.

    January 9, 2012

  • We exist in a chemical soup of our own making.

    January 9, 2012

  • Cf. Spanish grillar, "to contentedly whistle and chirp while cooking meats over a grate, outdoors".

    ;>}

    January 9, 2012

  • I used to tape litmus strips to my kites as a kid. Sometimes they'd come back blue.

    January 9, 2012

  • You act like you been huffin' light-stuff, Man.

    January 9, 2012

  • See definition at immedial.

    January 9, 2012

  • See definition at lanacyl.

    January 9, 2012

  • Turns red if it's in a blue state, and blue if it's in a red state, without regard to politics.

    January 9, 2012

  • See the definition at french tub.

    January 9, 2012

  • Cf. ferine.

    January 8, 2012

  • It's like a cape, for a horse.

    footcloth

    January 8, 2012

  • pitpit

    January 8, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    January 8, 2012

  • Perhaps halching belongs here? I like the reference to the spinning-mule, and the usage of cop in the ball-of-yarn and top-of-something senses.

    January 8, 2012

  • One wonders how many improvised mantinadas resemble the familiar

    "I've never seen a purple cow, I never hope to see one.

    But I can tell you one thing now, I'd rather see than be one.

    January 8, 2012

  • This word has twenty letters, as do these.

    January 8, 2012

  • "pantooleologism" = averring that any tool is the right tool for the job.

    January 8, 2012

  • Considering the whole enchilada, nine yards, or shebang, like a Frenchman.

    January 8, 2012

  • That said, little-endian and bi-endian are additional states of endianness. I looked it up.

    January 8, 2012

  • The string *xsc appears to be uncommon in English.

    Click on the string to see some words so far indexed by Wordnik.

    January 8, 2012

  • Why you little speck of #/$!

    January 8, 2012

  • harper, harpress

    The former term is an English occupational surname.

    January 8, 2012

  • I've known a few harpresses. They all seemed a little bit strange to me.

    January 8, 2012

  • That quantity of spirits that evaporates during the barrel-aging process. As barrels of whiskey are aged in multistory warehouses, those on the upper shelf or floor closest the roof get warmest during the summer. The temperature fluctuations cause more evaporation and more interaction of the whiskey with the barrel than those below experience. This whiskey is finer than the rest, it's the top shelf liquor.

    January 8, 2012

  • Quelle fromage, fbharjo? None other than that book by Jean-André Roquet about cheese painting -- L'Art nouveau de la peinture en fromage, ou en ramequin, inventée pour suivre le louable projet de trouver graduellement des façons de peindre inférieures à celles qui existent. Marolles, 1755.

    It was a satire attempting to deride Jean-Jacques Bachelier's soft-wax encaustic painting technique.

    January 7, 2012

  • *favorited*

    January 6, 2012

  • To paraphrase Scarecrow from The Wizard of Oz film, "Beautiful! What a nadverb!"

    January 6, 2012

  • The comment by ruzuzu got me thinking of petrology, and that the mineral fabric of rocks is commonly anisotropic. Then Wordnik's very useful reverse dictionary gave me bianisotropy, which led me to bianisotropic.

    January 6, 2012

  • By the definitions, one might also call an "ill-tempered, infirm eccentric" a crank crank crank.

    January 6, 2012

  • Oh dear.

    January 6, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    jenny-wren

    January 6, 2012

  • Hamlet told the players "Nor do not saw the air too much with your hand, thus,", but he wasn't speaking of a jacking-motion, No, not at all.

    January 6, 2012

  • I would have never guessed.

    January 6, 2012

  • Jean Valjean's edacity gave him the audacity to steal bread for his sister's children.

    January 6, 2012

  • Receiving phone and internet service as a "package deal". The two services sleep in the same bed but don't take their clothes off.

    January 6, 2012

  • It's a grass. Cf. couch grass.

    January 6, 2012

  • This word doesn't mean "possessing horse-sense", but it does concern horses.

    January 6, 2012

  • I like the idea. I think this occasionally about some of the rock 'n' roll guitar solos I hear - pure showmanship sans music.

    January 6, 2012

  • "Lifelessness, dullness", versus "a vivifying influence". This word at once implies and means it's near opposite.

    January 6, 2012

  • Merriam-Webster gives the etymology of mattamore as

    French matamore, from Arabic maṭmūrah something buried or hidden.

    January 6, 2012

  • It's a turtle.

    January 6, 2012

  • One encounters all types in a printing-house. The bruised and condemned are consigned to the hell-box.

    January 6, 2012

  • An adjective you don't meet every day.

    January 6, 2012

  • It's a tree.

    January 6, 2012

  • The recent New York Times article featuring Wordnik has alerted a wave of SEI spammers to a new venue to post their website address in the form of List names and comments on their usernames. Wordnik does admit, on its Community storefront, to over 80,000 Wordniks. If just one of us bought Ugg(ly) boots or went to a treatment center in Alaska or Alabama, the world would be a better place, right?

    January 6, 2012

  • When I see fly-half I think of the 1971 western film Red Sun, in which the samurai played by Toshirō Mifune suddenly halves a buzzing pesky mosquito with his sword.

    January 6, 2012

  • The proposition that an infinite monkey hitting computer keys at random would, eventually, reproduce all the lists and all the words found at Wordnik, if given an infinite amount of time. What's time to a monkey?

    January 6, 2012

  • Nice visuals.

    January 5, 2012

  • One of the woods traditionally used to make fishing rods.

    January 5, 2012

  • Good one, ruzuzu, or is it Voldemort?

    January 5, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    January 5, 2012

  • It's a bird.

    January 5, 2012

  • Who knows how to plait a hair-sieve these days?

    January 5, 2012

  • This day one plays a monarch, the next a private person; here one acts a tyrant, on the morrow an exile; a parasite this man to-night, to-morrow a precisian; and so of divers others. --An Excellent Actor, from Character Writings of the Seventeenth Century, 1891, p. 87.

    January 5, 2012

  • Essentially, surgically cutting or dividing soft tissue by tightening a loop of silk thread around it. Sort of like paring cheese with a wire.

    January 5, 2012

  • Pertaining to things the sericulturalist concerns himself with.

    January 5, 2012

  • Producing silk.

    January 5, 2012

  • kin - A primitive Chinese instrument of the cittern kind, with from five to twenty-five silken strings CD&C.

    January 5, 2012

  • Here's an adjective one doesn't meet every day, unless one is working in the collections at the Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle in Paris, or other institutions with extensive beetle collections.

    L. trama, weft; LL sericeous, silken.

    January 5, 2012

  • A type of satin, for the Wordniks who list fabric names. With stripes!

    January 5, 2012

  • Starve a cold....

    January 5, 2012

  • I encountered claim-notices all the time in the open badlands south of Price, Utah. They consisted of a stout piece of rebar hammered into the ground with the notice folded and stuffed into a plastic pill jar that was itself wired to the bar.

    The Cretaceous Morrison Formation there had rich deposits of dinosaur bone and fossil wood that lapidarists and rock-hounds combed the countryside for. The porous sandstone stream deposits also were where uranium minerals collected in quantity. I never determined whether the claims were for the fossils or the uranium, and I never did anything to get myself shot at.

    January 4, 2012

  • Fine list!

    January 4, 2012

  • Closest I've come is a plank with 4 different strands stapled to it, each duly labeled. I see them all the time in antique shops. Or maybe it's the same plank seen over and over in the same shop as I revisit in search of things I collect.

    January 4, 2012

  • Glad to see Bubbles over on your clown list. I wish Wordnik could inform us just how many clowns named Bubbles there are out there scaring children at present. The talking iPhone 4S is of no use on this question; I asked it.

    January 4, 2012

  • *...put's Rubik's cube on the "easy-to-solve-has-web-cheats" shelf with the 2 bent nails puzzle and it's friends.*

    January 4, 2012

  • The ivory-billed woodpecker produced a nasal "hant", "kint", or "kent" likened by Alexander Wilson to the sound of a toy tin trumpet, and by Audubon to a clarinet. Kint was a local nickname for the bird.

    January 4, 2012

  • A unfolding frankincense smoke-curl revealed to me that libanomancy is not yet found on any of the divination or -mancy lists.

    January 4, 2012

  • A gentleman ought keep a muckender and handkercher to hand so one's expectorations don't countermand one's trousers and shirtfront, or those of his companions.

    January 4, 2012

  • I can see it in your eye.

    How'd you lose the other one by the way?

    January 4, 2012

  • Not to be confused with grippingly.

    January 4, 2012

  • Cf. definitions of bratchet. One wonders if that word figures in the uncertain etymology of brat.

    January 4, 2012

  • For stuffing your shoon so your calves don't chafe.

    January 4, 2012

  • You're welcome, yarb. Cheers!

    January 4, 2012

  • Say it. Spit it right out for all to hear.

    January 4, 2012

  • The nonic beer glass provided in the image below is spot on!

    January 4, 2012

  • A type of fabric.

    January 4, 2012

  • A fig leaf, for one.

    January 4, 2012

  • January 4th: Felicitations, Louis Braille and Isaac Newton.

    January 4, 2012

  • It's a boat.

    January 4, 2012

  • Otherwise known as a CT scanner.

    January 4, 2012

  • The culinary uses of this word are interesting.

    January 4, 2012

  • Neither this word nor any its definition is a term used in heraldry, so far as I can determine.

    (I'm joking).

    January 4, 2012

  • Maybe Beetlejuice and Ftumch were busy.

    On Ftumch, Wikipedia says "The premise of his appearance is that if anyone utters his name then he shall appear, yet he doesn't appear very often because 'Ftumch' is such an unusual name. He is heard to say 'No-one ever says Ftumch. Why couldn't I be called William?'"

    January 4, 2012

  • A crown-like structure in the milkweed flower, internal to and protruding above the corolla, formed from fleshy appendages of the adnate stamens or staminodes. The elements of the coronet are, among the many species, variously boat-shaped and horned.

    See visuals at Asclepias. In the example with red-orange and yellow flowers, the red-orange structures are the petals, the yellow the coronet.

    January 4, 2012

  • A knitting needle or needle used in net-making.

    "I have frequently seen them netting with a very coarse needle filled with twine, and using their thumb, to form the stitch, instead of a netting-pin." --The English Review, Vol. 13, 1850. p. 216.

    January 4, 2012

  • This juicy word belies or conceals it true meaning.

    January 4, 2012

  • Cf. German Zwerg, dwarf.

    January 4, 2012

  • The mineralogists were right, about the shite.

    See also metabrushite.

    January 4, 2012

  • When the invalid is climbing may-hill, it is best to have plenty of breadberry to hand.

    January 4, 2012

  • Example sentence at May-hill.

    January 4, 2012

  • A sort of Tibetan beefalo.

    January 4, 2012

  • A shield-bearer, hypaspist, escudero, scutifer, armiger.

    January 4, 2012

  • Scots. catechize.

    January 4, 2012

  • Well, janglingly comes close.

    January 4, 2012

  • I'll tip this hat to someone's list.

    January 4, 2012

  • One doesn't immediately think "pear", does one?

    January 4, 2012

  • A heraldry term.

    enhanced

    January 4, 2012

  • Beat you to it, zuzu!

    January 3, 2012

  • Another one of those things never for sale on craigslist.

    Oh! Time for a new list.

    January 3, 2012

  • b(ar)1 + girl. --from the Etymologies.

    January 3, 2012

  • That's some definition!

    January 3, 2012

  • Then he threw the bloody instrument of murder into the foul water that had collected in a old shode-pit.

    January 3, 2012

  • A boat, but not a banana boat.

    January 3, 2012

  • Then we got all modern with our false etymologies and called them carryalls.

    January 3, 2012

  • Neither gold nor silver can save you, you nidering nithing.

    January 3, 2012

  • cork-brained

    January 3, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    rudd

    January 3, 2012

  • Calgon, uppercase, is a trademarked, registered name/brand. See here.

    January 3, 2012

  • ...divisa in partes tres, as Julius Caesar put it in the opening sentence of De Bella Gallica, as every young scholar used to know.

    January 3, 2012

  • See May-hill in context in the example from Samuel Johnson here, but see the CD&C definition of the term over at may-hill.

    January 3, 2012

  • A cast of hawks - two hawks simultaneously released by a falconer, presumably after a brace of partridges.

    January 3, 2012

  • Welcome crafiqkhan

    --To find a word you can't think of, enter a synonym into the search box, hit return, then check the list of similar words provided.

    --If you're looking for a definition and other information for a word, enter word into the search box and hit return.

    --If your searched word returns no definition, check your spelling of it, and try any alternative spellings you can think of or find. Many a definition lurks behind an alternate spelling, or, in the case of proper (capitalized, upper case) nouns and adjectives, behind a lower case rendering. Some words that weren't listed in the dictionaries indexed by Wordnik may not have a definition listed yet.

    January 3, 2012

  • Apparently, home invasions also occurred in the days people lived in hames. Nothing changes, an' a' that.

    January 3, 2012

  • One example sentence suggests cirio is a cactus. This is incorrect. Neither of the desert species cited in the definition are in the cactus family.

    January 3, 2012

  • One must search long for a dictionary entry containing the phrase "fat gas-producers", as does the one for this word.

    January 3, 2012

  • A fine example of fimbriate flower petals is found in the visuals for the snake cucumber entry, which see.

    January 3, 2012

  • Still, I'd like to see a porcupine-machine go head-to-head with an electric pig.

    January 3, 2012

  • Good one, WordNet.

    January 3, 2012

  • Ha! Good one herbdoctor.

    January 3, 2012

  • It's not a fish.

    strangle, smother

    January 3, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 3, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Also called the sabre carp.

    January 3, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, and it happens to be one type used to make bouillabaisse.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, a member of the Organism Orchestra.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Certain species of the family Pempheridae are called bullseyes.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • Very nice, yarb. Thanks for this word. I'm tempted to read this book, one which you've mentioned before here.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, Gazza minuta.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    These fish, of family Scatophagidae, eat algae and feces.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Members of the family Plesiopidae are known as roundheads, longfins, or spiny basslets.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    The largest species of ronquil, Bathymaster signatus.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Members of the family Melamphaidae are called ridgeheads.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, not a porpentine.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish also known as the sergeant major.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    A species of the genus Cheilodactylus, which name contains all the vowels and the wye, once.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish. The Maori name for the morwong.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish that hums loud enough to be heard by humans.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish of the rice paddies in Japan.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Unofficially, the national fish of Pakistan. British anglers in India called them the Indian salmon.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, a.k.a. parore.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    luvar, louvar

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish. Also luvar, luvaro.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, but it's also a bird; it's a nickname for the woodcock.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Not many words contain the string *gch.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, not part of a shoe.

    Achirus lineatus

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    You might have unknowingly eaten one in your McDonald's filet-o-fish sandwich.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • The visuals for this term return your gaze.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    These inhabitants of cold northeastern Pacific tide pools and gravel bars may burrow 25 down feet into the substrate, according to Wikipedia.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    From the etymology given for cisco: Canadian French ciscoette, from Ojibwa bemidewiskawed, "the (fish) with oily skin".

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • Yep - it's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Guanine extracted from the scales is used in the manufacture of artificial pearls.

    January 2, 2012

  • Funny name for a beetle grub, the cockchafer larva.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • The milkfish, an important food fish in southeast Asia and some islands of the Pacific. Milkfish have been farmed in the Philippines and elsewhere for at least 8 centuries.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    See Chanos chanos.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    年魚 --"year fish" is another name, since its life spans but one year.

    January 2, 2012

  • I repeat, it's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    From the Canadian French word crapet. The fish names crappie, croppie and crappé all derive from this term.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Also kivy.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish, a bird, or a stupa. You pick.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    A shark also known by the name smooth-hound.

    January 2, 2012

  • Juvenile bronze whaler shark meat produces "good biltong" -- Coastal Fishes of Southern Africa, p. 57, by Phillip C. and Elaine Heemstra.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish; and a member of the Organism Orchestra.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish; Centroberyx spinosus.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 2, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish, but is it also a nematognath?

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Cf. shanny, bully

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    Nice visuals, except for the last image, a paloma, which is a bird.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish, but it's also but the name is also applied to the echinoid called a sand dollar.

    January 1, 2012

  • It's a fish. A science fiction fish.

    January 1, 2012

  • See comments at endian.

    January 1, 2012

  • You wouldn't. Would you?

    December 31, 2011

  • Type of fabric, for those who keep track of such things.

    December 31, 2011

  • The pawnbroking mockprudish landgravess, who was not forthcoming about her naphtholism, chided her landscapist for his workshyness.

    All highlighted words have the same pattern of vowels and consonants, and are tagged cvccccvcvcc.

    December 31, 2011

  • Nice visuals.

    December 31, 2011

  • n. The cardinal number equal to 1024.

    n. Chiefly British The cardinal number equal to 1042.

    A trillion trillion: 1 followed by 24 zeros, 1024.

    A billion quintillion: 1 followed by 42 zeros, 1042.

    (OCR errors in the definitions)

    Nothing adds up for me lately.

    December 31, 2011

  • The word leachate comes to mind, but is quickly overtaken by the childrens' song:

    Here we go looby loo

    Here we go looby light

    Here we go looby loo

    All on a Saturday night

    You put your right foot in...

    December 31, 2011

  • Perhaps a word of interest to those who list dyes and dyestuffs.

    December 31, 2011

  • All five vowels, once each, in this genus name for a seaweed (a brown alga) in the family Dictyotaceae.

    December 31, 2011

  • Since you asked, yes, there is indeed a papaloi too.

    December 31, 2011

  • A name for a ewer. Cf. hawksbill.

    December 31, 2011

  • A ewer of very large size. Cf. loggerhead, a name of a type of inkstand.

    December 31, 2011

  • A name for a form of pewter inkstand.

    December 31, 2011

  • Welcome bkenn! The term is defined at bimah. Always check alternative spellings - definitions are frequently hiding among them.

    December 31, 2011

  • See chapnut.

    December 31, 2011

  • The terms chapnut, and chapnet, were specified in the official list of the Pewterers' Company (Britain) records for 1612-1613 as a vessel weighing 6 or so to the pound. These terms are applied to a type of salt-cellar, and the term vessel itself was a hypernym for pewterware in general.

    Cf. French choppineaux or chaupineaux, synonyms for the burette later called a cruet, also fashioned in the past from pewter.

    December 31, 2011

  • "The heart case of Richard Coeur de Leon was found at Rouen in 1838, and that of Charles V in 1862, and one has been found at Holbrook in Suffolk. All these these seem to have been made of pewter." -- H. J. L. J. Massé, The Pewter Collector - A Guide to English Pewter with some Reference to Foreign Work, 1921, p 117.

    December 31, 2011

  • "The heart case of Richard Coeur de Leon was found at Rouen in 1838, and that of Charles V in 1862, and one has been found at Holbrook in Suffolk. All these these seem to have been made of pewter." -- H. J. L. J. Massé, The Pewter Collector - A Guide to English Pewter with some Reference to Foreign Work, 1921, p 117.

    December 31, 2011

  • A old term from Wiltshire, England, also written thirdendale or thriddendale, for a pot that holds about 3 pints of liquid.

    December 30, 2011

  • toymaker

    December 30, 2011

  • Sometimes used to mean porringer.

    December 30, 2011

  • The larger varieties of pewter wares. British pewterers called themselves sadware-men.

    December 30, 2011

  • scullery

    December 30, 2011

  • Same context: rôle, contretemps, vasectomy.

    December 30, 2011

  • Maybe bilbous should mean bilby-like.

    December 30, 2011

  • 12 platters, 12 plates, 12 dishes, all pewter.

    See this list.

    December 30, 2011

  • Cf. scorper.

    December 30, 2011

  • A hiss and a nayword.

    December 30, 2011

  • Un célèbre, no doubt.

    December 30, 2011

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