Comments by she

Show previous 200 comments...

  • Obs. rare A money-changer (cf. nummulary).

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. n. or adj., A fossil or extant foraminiferan of the genus Nummulites (now sometimes included in the genus Camerina) or a related genus, having a calcareous skeleton typically in the form of a flat spiral resembling a disc, numerous in certain Tertiary strata; of or relating to nummulites; (of a deposit) containing nummulites; nummulitic.

    August 3, 2008

  • A Roman coin of the standard denomination (roughly analogous to the Greek stater); a monetary unit based on this.

    August 3, 2008

  • An animal whose behavior or body parts are used as a way of divining future events.

    August 3, 2008

  • Divination from a name or names, esp. the letters of a personal name; onomancy.

    August 3, 2008

  • Semi-omnipotent (pene- nearly, almost, all but + omnipotent).

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. n., A meal supplied from a college buttery or kitchen, costing a penny.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. rare An alteration of pinkany after piccaninny; sweetheart. Used in the work of Thomas D'Urfey (1676, 1721).

    "Dear Pinkaninny,

    If half a Guiny,

    To love will win ye,

    I lay it here down."

    August 3, 2008

  • A small, narrow, blinking, or peering eye; (affectionately) a dear little eye; darling, sweetheart, pet (cf. pigsney). Rare after 17th century.

    August 3, 2008

  • I certainly didn't expect this to mean what it does! OED says it's from Portuguese pequeno, small — the word is evidently one of those diffused around the Atlantic coasts through the Portuguese-based pidgins associated with trade (and esp. the slave trade) in the 17th century.

    At least we still have pinkaninny, piccalilli, and piccadilly. :(

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. n., one derivate of picric acid.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. n., a hypothetical ion consisting of an amide of tetravalent platinum, now known to be an ammine group occurring in platinum complexes

    August 3, 2008

  • Hist. n., The assembly of the portmen of a borough or town; a court or common council of citizens (cf. portmoot).

    August 3, 2008

  • Somewhat resembling a feather.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. n., a sower of seed; applied allusively to a seminary priest (cf. seedman)

    August 3, 2008

  • A local name in East Anglia, in 12th and 13th c., for an aggregate of ten holdings, containing 120 acres; a carucate.

    August 3, 2008

  • A mineral.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. adj., ringing; resonant (adapt. of L. tinnient-em, pr. pple. of tinnīre to ring, tinkle)

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. One who uses a trim-tram—a shrimp-net having a triangular wooden frame resting on the ground in front of the beam—in shrimping.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. In tunning or storing liquor, a mell (mallet) used to knock in the bung of a tun (cask).

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. adj., unnamed; indescribable (OE. ánemnan to declare)

    August 3, 2008

  • A French poetic movement of the early twentieth century which emphasized the submersion of the poet in group consciousness and was characterized by simple diction, absence of rhyme, and strongly accented rhythms.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. v., to mention (y- + min, an obs. trans. v., 'to remind')

    August 3, 2008

  • Or Monomoy surfboat — a type of surfboat used as a lifeboat by the U.S. Coastguard; named after Monomoy Point, a peninsula in Massachusetts.

    August 3, 2008

  • Obs. adj., sensitive (said of plants; fr. Gr. for 'ashamed, bashful' + -ous). Also æschynomenous.

    August 3, 2008

  • Ooh. It appears gangerh's guesstimation-faculties are twice as capacious as other participants'! (—Intimidating! Though I do still hope I'm around for the next one, no matter who it entails badly losing against! :>)

    August 2, 2008

  • World's teensiest deer!

    August 2, 2008

  • Now with 90% more OED™!

    Also wallydrag, wallidrag, -draggle, -dragle, -tragle, warydraggel, -draggle, etc. (Cf. drag, draggle)

    1808 J. Jamieson, An etymological dictionary of the Scottish language — n., A feeble, ill-grown person or animal; a worthless, slovenly person, esp. a woman.

    "It appears primarily to signify the youngest of a family, who is often the feeblest. It is sometimes used to denote the youngest bird in a nest."

    1826 J. Galt, Last of the Lairds — "It's just like a cuckoo dabbing a wallydraigle out o' the nest."

    1873 W. Alexander, Johnny Gibb — "Yon bit pernicketty wallydraggle!"

    August 2, 2008

  • Oh yes! I have a longstanding love for Cat Power particularly; What Would the Community Think is one of those rare albums I love straight through, but: her first through You Are Free all see a good amount of play around here, and pieces of the Covers record—her "Bathysphere" and "Red Apples" were my (glowing) introduction to Smog.

    I wasn't expecting anyone would ask that. :) Hooray for.. "slowcorist"s? and their appreciators.

    August 2, 2008

  • Of honey bees and waggle-dancing

    Translated from German schwänzeltanz in 1923.

    August 2, 2008

  • Geol., fr. wacke (sandstone-like rock) + porphyry (any igneous rock embedded with crystals).

    August 2, 2008

  • Z is for ZILLAH who drank too much gin

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • Y is for YORICK whose head was knocked in

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • X is for XERXES devoured by mice

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • W is for WINNIE embedded in ice

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • V is for VICTOR squashed under a train

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • U is for UNA who slipped down a drain

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • T is for TITUS who flew into bits

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • S is for SUSAN who perished of fits

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • R is for RHODA consumed by a fire

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • Q is for QUENTIN who sank in a mire

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • P is for PRUE trampled flat in a brawl

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • O is for OLIVE run through with an awl

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • N is for NEVILLE who died of ennui

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • M is for MAUD who was swept out to sea

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • L is for LEO who swallowed some tacks

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • K is for KATE who was struck with an axe

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • J is for JAMES who took lye by mistake

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • I is for IDA who drowned in a lake

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • H is for HECTOR done in by a thug

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • G is for GEORGE smothered under a rug

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • F is for FANNY sucked dry by a leech

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • E is for ERNEST who choked on a peach

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • D is for DESMOND thrown out of a sleigh

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • C is for CLARA who wasted away

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • B is for BASIL assaulted by bears

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    Naughty bears!

    August 2, 2008

  • A is for AMY who fell down the stairs

    - Edward Gorey, The Gashlycrumb Tinies

    August 2, 2008

  • Each of the fourth or hindmost pair of lateral plates in the plastron of a turtle. (Also xiphoplastron; plural xiphiplastra)

    August 2, 2008

  • Obs. n., A fine powder; a speck of dust (fr. classical Latin pulvisculus dust, powder).

    August 1, 2008

  • For the record, this is my least favorite word, but I feel it's been laughing at me from its perch in my profile (you will not prevail!).

    August 1, 2008

  • SHE!! *She* is really Satan!! *deep breath*

    I beg your pardon! :o

    August 1, 2008

  • Home! Finally! *inhales living-spaces*

    Nine hours in a car and I haven't slept, but can't..! Also fandangled my way into a month of OED online. These are not unrelated.

    So much catching-up to do! Oh help.

    August 1, 2008

  • Oh oh: to answer your question, bilby, I liken my mind to a kind of overintricate cuckoo clock?

    July 21, 2008

  • Phone-posting from the car to say that I am in fact gone now (see above)! Shine on, you crazy diamonds! (Christ that took forever to type; I`m getting used to a newfangled QWERTYboard.)

    July 21, 2008

  • Yes, that'd bound to be ridiculous! Though, in the case of non-actions, if it went that way, I guessed people would add universally _____d things rather than "hurr, baseballs :D"

    July 19, 2008

  • That's what I thought. :> (Taking a peek at the masterlist, most of them seemed to do the former instead, so I wanted to check.)

    July 19, 2008

  • I've never stuffied before—do you mean this to be for loved things, or the rest of words/phrases that "love" is a part of?

    July 19, 2008

  • I can't put my finger on why, but this term is just so lovely.

    July 19, 2008

  • I clicked on this word because it looked familiar; am now frightened, wondering what I must have been reading!

    July 19, 2008

  • Also quite silly!

    July 19, 2008

  • And similarly, dweomercraeft is witchcraft.

    July 19, 2008

  • In the way of undecillion, the ascending scale of big, silly -illions:

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (duodecillion, 39 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (tredecillion, 42 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (quattuordecillion, 45 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (quindecillion, 48 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (sexdecillion, 51 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (septendecillion, 54 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (octodecillion, 57 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (novemdecillion, 60 zeros)

    1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 (vigintillion, 63 zeros)

    ...and a centillion, with 303 zeros.

    July 19, 2008

  • Obscene!

    July 19, 2008

  • That looks like a walrus-tree smoking an enormous tree-pipe!

    I've mentally smushed buttsex into one word—surprise buttsex is a particularly quick thing; we've no luxury of pausing for spaces!

    July 19, 2008

  • 1,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000: a big, silly number.

    July 19, 2008

  • Oh? ...Oh.—Oh! Ha!—An uninvited h! "Thruthfully" indeed! Of course. Hellothere.

    Iii wonder where the word for 'words taking that stealthy turn to nonsense-soup as things get more and more sleepy and not-sleeping' went; it'd be useful.

    July 19, 2008

  • One who imports or exports without paying duties; smuggler.

    July 18, 2008

  • Sexual gratification from the act of tickling (Wikipedia: Tickling fetishism).

    I've no idea how anyone manages.

    July 18, 2008

  • Causing a tickling sensation.

    Origin: G. Knismos, 'tickling,' + -gen, 'production' (Online Medical Dictionary)

    July 18, 2008

  • Flamingo.

    July 18, 2008

  • I am in awe.

    July 18, 2008

  • "No—I love that handkerchief and I'm not going to get it all perspiry."

    (Franny and Zooey)

    July 18, 2008

  • Ooh, does this make me a cryptid?

    July 18, 2008

  • Would "graphic novel" solve this?

    July 18, 2008

  • I read "cumbrian facial tick" on the first pass. This is much less perplexing!

    July 18, 2008

  • Well! That was.. endearing.

    July 18, 2008

  • ' "Now one can breathe more easily," said the Knight, putting back his shaggy hair with both hands, and turning his gentle face and large mild eyes to Alice. She thought she had never seen such a strange-looking soldier in all her life. '

    July 18, 2008

  • ' "What impertinence!" said the Pudding. "I wonder how you'd like it, if I were to cut a slice out of you, you creature!"

    It spoke in a thick, suety sort of voice, and Alice hadn't a word to say in reply: she could only sit and look at it and gasp.

    "Make a remark," said the Red Queen: "it's ridiculous to leave all the conversation to the pudding!" '

    July 18, 2008

  • At the end of Through the Looking-Glass, and What Alice Found There:

       A boat beneath a sunny sky,

       Lingering onward dreamily

       In an evening of July—

       Children three that nestle near,

       Eager eye and willing ear,

       Pleased a simple tale to hear—

       Long has paled that sunny sky:

       Echoes fade and memories die.

       Autumn frosts have slain July.

       Still she haunts me, phantomwise,

       Alice moving under skies

       Never seen by waking eyes.

       Children yet, the tale to hear,

       Eager eye and willing ear,

       Lovingly shall nestle near.

       In a Wonderland they lie,

       Dreaming as the days go by,

       Dreaming as the summers die:

       Ever drifting down the stream—

       Lingering in the golden gleam—

       Life, what is it but a dream?

    July 18, 2008

  • 'Alice was too much puzzled to say anything, so after a minute Humpty Dumpty began again. "They've a temper, some of them— particularly verbs, they're the proudest—adjectives you can do anything with, but not verbs—however, I can manage the whole lot of them! Impenetrability! That's what I say!"

    "Would you tell me, please," said Alice "what that means?"

    "Now you talk like a reasonable child," said Humpty Dumpty, looking very much pleased. "I meant by 'impenetrability' that we've had enough of that subject, and it would be just as well if you'd mention what you mean to do next, as I suppose you don't mean to stop here all the rest of your life."

    "That's a great deal to make one word mean," Alice said in a thoughtful tone.

    "When I make a word do a lot of work like that," said Humpty Dumpty, "I always pay it extra."'

    July 18, 2008

  • In Through the Looking-Glass: 'Humpty Dumpty was sitting with his legs crossed, like a Turk, on the top of a high wall—'

    July 18, 2008

  • 'So they walked on together though the wood, Alice with her arms clasped lovingly round the soft neck of the Fawn, till they came out into another open field, and here the Fawn gave a sudden bound into the air, and shook itself free from Alice's arms. "I'm a Fawn!" it cried out in a voice of delight, "and, dear me! you're a human child!" A sudden look of alarm came into its beautiful brown eyes, and in another moment it had darted away at full speed.'

    July 18, 2008

  • '"Crawling at your feet," said the Gnat (Alice drew her feet back in some alarm), "you may observe a Bread-and-Butterfly. Its wings are thin slices of Bread-and-butter, its body is a crust, and its head is a lump of sugar."

    "And what does it live on?"

    "Weak tea with cream in it."

    A new difficulty came into Alice's head. "Supposing it couldn't find any?" she suggested.

    "Then it would die, of course."

    "But that must happen very often," Alice remarked thoughtfully.

    "It always happens," said the Gnat.'

    July 18, 2008

  • '"Look on the branch above your head," said the Gnat, "and there you'll find a snap-dragon-fly. Its body is made of plum-pudding, its wings of holly-leaves, and its head is a raisin burning in brandy."

    "And what does it live on?"

    "Frumenty and mince pie," the Gnat replied; "and it makes its nest in a Christmas box."'

    July 18, 2008

  • ' "Half way up that bush, you'll see a Rocking-horse-fly, if you look. It's made entirely of wood, and gets about by swinging itself from branch to branch."

    "What does it live on?" Alice asked, with great curiosity.

    "Sap and sawdust," said the Gnat. (...)

    Alice looked up at the Rocking-horse-fly with great interest, and made up her mind that it must have been just repainted, it looked so bright and sticky. '

    July 18, 2008

  • An amusing piece of Through the Looking-Glass:

    "What sort of insects do you rejoice in, where you come from?" the Gnat inquired. ("I don't rejoice in insects at all," Alice explained, "because I'm rather afraid of them—")

    July 18, 2008

  • 'In another moment she felt the carriage rise straight up into the air, and in her fright she caught at the thing nearest to her hand, which happened to be the Goat's beard.

       * * *

    But the beard seemed to melt away as she touched it, and she found herself sitting quietly under a tree—while the Gnat (for that was the insect she had been talking to) was balancing itself on a twig just over her head, and fanning her with its wings.'

    July 18, 2008

  • From the last bit of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland:

    'Lastly, she pictured to herself how this same little sister of hers would, in the after-time, be herself a grown woman; and how she would keep, through all her riper years, the simple and loving heart of her childhood: and how she would gather about her other little children, and make THEIR eyes bright and eager with many a strange tale, perhaps even with the dream of Wonderland of long ago: and how she would feel with all their simple sorrows, and find a pleasure in all their simple joys, remembering her own child-life, and the happy summer days.'

    July 18, 2008

  • The Mock Turtle's "Sketching."

    July 18, 2008

  • The Mock Turtle's "Geography."

    July 18, 2008

  • "Painting in Oils" in Mock Turtle-speak.

    July 18, 2008

  • '"They were learning to draw," the Dormouse went on, yawning and rubbing its eyes, for it was getting very sleepy; "and they drew all manner of things—everything that begins with an M—"

    "Why with an M?" said Alice.

    "Why not?" said the March Hare.

    Alice was silent.

    The Dormouse had closed its eyes by this time, and was going off into a doze; but, on being pinched by the Hatter, it woke up again with a little shriek, and went on: "—that begins with an M, such as mouse-traps, and the moon, and memory, and muchness— you know you say things are 'much of a muchness'—did you ever see such a thing as a drawing of a muchness?"'

    July 18, 2008

  • 'The Cat only grinned when it saw Alice. It looked good-natured, she thought: still it had very long claws and a great many teeth, so she felt that it ought to be treated with respect.

    "Cheshire Puss," she began, rather timidly, as she did not at all know whether it would like the name: however, it only grinned a little wider.'

    July 18, 2008

  • 'As there seemed to be no chance of getting her hands up to her head, she tried to get her head down to them, and was delighted to find that her neck would bend about easily in any direction, like a serpent. She had just succeeded in curving it down into a graceful zigzag, and was going to dive in among the leaves, which she found to be nothing but the tops of the trees under which she had been wandering, when a sharp hiss made her draw back in a hurry: a large pigeon had flown into her face, and was beating her violently with its wings.

    "Serpent!" screamed the Pigeon.

    "I'm not a serpent!" said Alice indignantly. "Let me alone!"

    "Serpent, I say again!" repeated the Pigeon, but in a more subdued tone, and added with a kind of sob, "I've tried every way, and nothing seems to suit them!"

    "I haven't the least idea what you're talking about," said Alice.'

    July 18, 2008

  • Lewis Carroll uses it often in dealing with Alice's growing and shrinking:

    "Curiouser and curiouser!" cried Alice (she was so much surprised, that for the moment she quite forgot how to speak good English); "now I'm opening out like the largest telescope that ever was! Good-bye, feet!"

    July 18, 2008

  • 'Down, down, down. There was nothing else to do, so Alice soon began talking again. "Dinah'll miss me very much to-night, I should think!" (Dinah was the cat.) "I hope they'll remember her saucer of milk at tea-time. Dinah my dear! I wish you were down here with me! There are no mice in the air, I'm afraid, but you might catch a bat, and that's very like a mouse, you know. But do cats eat bats, I wonder?" And here Alice began to get rather sleepy, and went on saying to herself, in a dreamy sort of way, "Do cats eat bats? Do cats eat bats?" and sometimes, "Do bats eat cats?" for, you see, as she couldn't answer either question, it didn't much matter which way she put it.'

    July 18, 2008

  • In her Adventures in Wonderland, Alice mixes what would've been a clever use of this word up with 'antipathy,' falling down the rabbit-hole:

    "I wonder if I shall fall right through the earth! How funny it'll seem to come out among the people that walk with their heads downward! The Antipathies, I think—" (she was rather glad there WAS no one listening, this time, as it didn't sound at all the right word) (...)

    July 18, 2008

  • In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: "I wonder if I shall fall right through the earth! How funny it'll seem to come out among the people that walk with their heads downward! The Antipathies, I think—" (she was rather glad there WAS no one listening, this time, as it didn't sound at all the right word) "—but I shall have to ask them what the name of the country is, you know. Please, Ma'am, is this New Zealand or Australia?"

    The word Alice was looking for was antipode.

    July 18, 2008

  • I don't think we see this as a verb applied to sentient things often enough: "—but the Queen was no longer at her side—she had suddenly dwindled down to the size of a little doll, and was now on the table, merrily running round and round after her own shawl(...)"

    July 18, 2008

  • Alice, near wakening in Through the Looking-Glass, in reaction to a newly doll-sized Red Queen:

    At any other time, Alice would have felt surprised at this, but she was far too much excited to be surprised at anything now. "As for you," she repeated, catching hold of the little creature in the very act of jumping over a bottle which had just lighted upon the table, "I'll shake you into a kitten, that I will!"

    July 18, 2008

  • I searched beforehand and found nothing, to my amazement! (Just returned from an appointment; many citations to go. :>)

    July 18, 2008

  • Is that like the mythical penisbone?

    July 18, 2008

  • Wordie's going all 500 Application Error on me when I add a word to a list (of mine, or anyone else's). Listing isn't unsuccessful; it just won't show anything but an error until the page is refreshed. Curious!

    July 18, 2008

  • Alice, in Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: "What else had you to learn?"

    "Well, there was Mystery," the Mock Turtle replied, counting off the subjects on his flappers, "—Mystery, ancient and modern, with Seaography: then Drawling—the Drawling-master was an old conger-eel, that used to come once a week: He taught us Drawling, Stretching, and Fainting in Coils."

    July 18, 2008

  • In Alice's Adventures in Wonderland:

    "I never heard of Uglification," Alice ventured to say. "What is it?"

    The Gryphon lifted up both its paws in surprise. "What! Never heard of uglifying!" it exclaimed. "You know what to beautify is, I suppose?"

    "Yes," said Alice doubtfully: "it means—to—make—anything—prettier."

    "Well, then," the Gryphon went on, "if you don't know what to uglify is, you are a simpleton."

    July 18, 2008

  • The Mock Turtle, on the Gryphon's and his schooling:

    "Reeling and Writhing, of course, to begin with," the Mock Turtle replied; "and then the different branches of Arithmetic— Ambition, Distraction, Uglification, and Derision."

    July 18, 2008

  • "And how funny it'll seem, sending presents to one's own feet! And how odd the directions will look!

         ALICE's RIGHT FOOT, ESQ.

         HEARTH-RUG,

         NEAR THE FENDER,

         (WITH ALICE's LOVE).

    "

    - Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

    July 18, 2008

  • Humpty Dumpty, in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "Well, outgrabing is something between bellowing and whistling, with a kind of sneeze in the middle: however, you'll hear it done, maybe—down in the wood yonder—and when you've once heard it you'll be quite content."

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "Well, a rath is a sort of green pig: but mome I'm not certain about. I think it's short for 'from home'—meaning that they'd lost their way, you know."

    "And what does outgrabe mean?"

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "And then mome raths?» said Alice. "I'm afraid I'm giving you a great deal of trouble."

    «Well, a rath is a sort of green pig: but mome(...)"

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "...And a borogove is a thin, shabby-looking bird with its feathers sticking out all round—something like a live mop."

    "And then mome raths?"...

    July 18, 2008

  • Humpty Dumpty, in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "...Well, then, mimsy is 'flimsy and miserable' (there's another portmanteau for you). And a borogove is..." borogoves'>See borogoves

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "And the wabe is the grass-plot round a sun-dial, I suppose?" said Alice, surprised at her own ingenuity.

    "Of course it is. It's called wabe, you know, because it goes a long way before it, and a long way behind it—"

    "And a long way beyond it on each side," Alice added.

    "Exactly so. Well then, mimsy is..."

    July 18, 2008

  • Humpty Dumpty, in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "To gyre is to go round and round like a gyroscope. To gimble is to make holes like a gimlet."

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "And what's the gyre and to gimble?"

    "To gyre is to go round and round like a gyroscope. To gimble is to make holes like a gimlet."

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Alice in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "Well, toves are something like badgers—they're something like lizards—and they're something like corkscrews."

    "They must be very curious looking creatures."

    "They are that," said Humpty Dumpty: "also they make their nests under sun-dials—also they live on cheese."

    July 18, 2008

  • A conversation with Humpty Dumpty in Through the Looking-Glass:

    "Well, slithy means 'lithe and slimy.' 'Lithe' is the same as 'active.' You see it's like a portmanteau—there are two meanings packed up into one word."

    "I see it now," Alice remarked thoughtfully: "and what are toves?"

    July 18, 2008

  • "You seem very clever at explaining words, Sir," said Alice. "Would you kindly tell me the meaning of the poem called Jabberwocky?"

    "Let's hear it," said Humpty Dumpty. "I can explain all the poems that were ever invented—and a good many that haven't been invented just yet."

    This sounded very hopeful, so Alice repeated the first verse.

    "That's enough to begin with," Humpty Dumpty interrupted: "there are plenty of hard words there. Brillig means four o'clock in the afternoon—the time when you begin broiling things for dinner."

    "That'll do very well," said Alice: and slithy?"

    July 18, 2008

  • Jellyfish-doughnuts?

    July 18, 2008

  • There's a wealth of them on Wikipedia:

    List of military operations by codename

    List of Rainbow Codes

    July 17, 2008

  • Intriguing, qroqqa! Poplollies and Bellibones: A Celebration of Lost Words, where I found welkin, states (This was simplified in the book's glossary to what I posted below): "From the Saxon words wealcan 'to roll,' and wolke 'a cloud.' It is also connected to the German word wolle 'wool,' used to describe the wooly quality of clouds. Shakespeare wrote in A Midsummer Night's Dream,

         The starry welkin cover thee anon

         With drooping fog as black as Alcheron"

    You may very well be right, but it's one author's (informed?) opinion. I don't find myself leaning in either direction in particular.

    July 17, 2008

  • I imagine this is both a noun and an adjective. (I've been through months-long acersecomic spells—my hair is presently nearing my tailbone.)

    July 17, 2008

  • Yonic symbols have to rely on detail more than silhouette, I think. Georgia O'Keefe's work and orchids come to mind.

    July 17, 2008

  • Tappen is Middle English for bunghole-plug! Imagine.

    July 17, 2008

  • But, but fish don't have fingers!

    Unless they're fishfingers in the way chicken makes chickenfingers.

    July 17, 2008

  • "Rain and snow, our engines have been receiving your eager call

    There's Colonel Dirtyfishydishcloth; he'll distract her good

    Don't worry so"

    -Tori Amos, Space Dog

    July 17, 2008

  • Having no specific character or conviction; neither one nor the other.

    July 17, 2008

  • Fish-shaped.

    July 17, 2008

  • The practice of eating or subsisting on fish.

    July 17, 2008

  • One who practices ichthyophagy.

    July 17, 2008

  • See expiscate.

    July 17, 2008

  • To fish out.

    July 17, 2008

  • Series of ascending pools providing a passage for salmon to swim upstream past a dam.

    July 17, 2008

  • Flaked fish baked in a loaf with bread crumbs and various seasonings.

    July 17, 2008

  • One skilled in ichthyotomy.

    July 17, 2008

  • Poisoning caused by the ingestion of fish whose blood contains an ichthyohemotoxin (cf. ichthyosarcotoxism).

    July 17, 2008

  • Poisoning caused by the ingestion of fish whose flesh contains an ichthyosarcotoxin (cf. ichthyohemotoxism).

    July 17, 2008

  • Poison found in the blood of poisonous fishes; causes ichthyohemotoxism.

    July 17, 2008

  • Piscine

    July 16, 2008

  • The anatomy or dissection of fishes.

    July 16, 2008

  • Resembling ichthyolites (fossilized fish).

    July 16, 2008

  • Fossilized dung of fish.

    July 16, 2008

  • A region's indigenous fish.

    July 16, 2008

  • Poisoning from fish (also ichthyoacanthotoxism, ichthyosarcotoxism, ichthyohemotoxism).

    July 16, 2008

  • Ichthyotoxism resulting from a wound inflicted by a venomous fish.

    July 16, 2008

  • Passion for fish!

    July 16, 2008

  • Divination by the heads or the entrails of fishes.

    July 16, 2008

  • Hilarious inexplicable name for an Arctic eelpout.

    July 16, 2008

  • "Other's shame," also called Spanish shame — embarrassment felt on someone else's behalf.

    July 16, 2008

  • A coterie of undesirable people.

    July 16, 2008

  • ..I'm not entirely sure that's worksafe!

    July 16, 2008

  • See chokedamp, blackdamp, afterdamp

    July 16, 2008

  • I'd add pandanus!

    July 16, 2008

  • adj., precious, "dearworth" (obsolete; from Piers Plowman, a 14th century poem by William Langland)

    July 16, 2008

  • Variant of snockered.

    July 16, 2008

  • Reference.com

    July 16, 2008

  • Er, ostentatiously instantaneous? Quality arguable.

    July 16, 2008

  • I hope WWI-era lice were not as big as rabbits. :/

    July 16, 2008

  • Who's got the crack? ('s reckless)

    July 16, 2008

  • Oh dear. This word has rather mischievous potential!

    July 16, 2008

  • Plethora, I'd go with tiresome.

    July 16, 2008

  • I didn't really foresee wanting this, but the ability to block certain words whose comments you'd rather not see on the front page when you're logged in would be dandy.

    July 16, 2008

  • Just when you think you're safe from Harry Potter-related arguments..!

    :<

    July 16, 2008

  • Word on the street is you're looking to get some aptronym.

    July 15, 2008

  • Can't; they're all bandaged. *whistles*

    July 15, 2008

  • Exposition of Hottentot tents. (Playful Dutch word; Hottentotten + tenten + tentoonstelling.)

    July 15, 2008

  • A slit throat.

    July 15, 2008

  • Result of too much listing.

    July 15, 2008

  • Also in all these.

    July 15, 2008

  • That's a shame. :( I hope you got some bouti.

    July 15, 2008

  • No one does this.

    July 15, 2008

  • Well-spotted! I'd missed.

    July 15, 2008

  • I have a ukulele! Please throw ukulele-heavy songs in my direction. (I have Tiny Tim, Beirut's Postcards from Italy etc., Josephine Foster's Little Life..)

    July 15, 2008

  • Ha, yes! Immediate woe at the commercials—'People are going to start using this word!'

    July 15, 2008

  • Waaay out in the water, I saw it swimming.

    July 15, 2008

  • Also French, 'jewel'

    July 15, 2008

  • Djibouti so fine.

    July 15, 2008

  • Aw. Like one of Sthumbleina's?

    July 15, 2008

  • "Trapped in purgatory—a lifeless object, alive

    awaiting reprisal, and death..

    I said, she said..

    death will be their acquisition"

    July 15, 2008

  • "Hello, Mr. Zebra, can I have your sweater?

    'Cause it's cold, cold, cold

    In my hole, hole, hole

    Ratatouille Strychnine, sometimes she's a friend of mine

    With a gigantic whirlpool that will blow your mind

    Hello, Mr. Zebra

    Ran into some confusion with a Mrs. Crocodile

    Furry mussels marching on; she thinks she's Kaiser Wilhelm

    Or a civilised syllabub, to blow your mind

    Figure it out; she's a good-time fella

    She got a little fund to fight for Moneypenny's rights

    Figure it out; she's a good-time fella

    'Too bad the burial was premature,' she said,

    And smilied"

    July 15, 2008

  • "And long ago, she said, 'I must be leaving,

    Ah, but keep my body here to lie upon

    You can move it up and down, and when I'm sleeping

    Run some wire through that rose and wind the swan'"

    July 15, 2008

  •  

    July 15, 2008

  • "She said, 'I know what it's like to be dead

    I know what it is to be said'

    and she's making me feel like I've never been born"

    July 15, 2008

  •  

    July 15, 2008

  • That's the spirit!

    July 15, 2008

  • Ha, sorry! Fresh out of murderous humor (please check back at opening tomorrow).

    July 15, 2008

  • I think they dwell in internet-enabled lighthouses.

    July 15, 2008

  • Yes, it's terrible and I don't agree. But, thoroughgoings! etc.

    July 15, 2008

  • One who is both homedog and homeslice.

    July 15, 2008

  • The sweet smell of friendly flesh!

    July 15, 2008

  • Linking seventy-five pounds of raisins for context. Or lofty date-baskets! Or yes. You'll get the hang of it! (Be the raisins; do not simply have the raisins, grasshoppah.)

    July 15, 2008

  • Augh yes. Do we really need to be reminded of this word? Or any of those in fanfiction? (Yes, I'll shush.)

    July 15, 2008

  • It kind of looks like two highly non-objectionable emoticons all smooshed together; is decidedly adorable! I'll take three.

    July 15, 2008

  • Oh yes please! And several extras.

    July 15, 2008

  • Taximeter cabriolet = taxicab.

    July 15, 2008

  • Damns.

    July 15, 2008

  • Unlucky person who suffers from overall haplessness. (Yiddish)

    Differs from the also-unlucky, but clumsy shlemiel—"A shlemiel is somebody who often spills his soup; a shlemazl is the person the soup lands on."

    July 14, 2008

  • Master.

    July 14, 2008

  • Condolence.

    July 14, 2008

  • Deciduous forest.

    July 14, 2008

  • Punctuation mark.

    July 14, 2008

  • Witch's cauldron.

    July 14, 2008

  • Precious stone.

    July 14, 2008

  • Commander.

    July 14, 2008

  • Protector, guardian.

    July 14, 2008

  • Heart attack.

    July 14, 2008

  • And I would like to volunteer bilby.

    July 14, 2008

  • You forgot flow/wolf! (If your name is Eve, Bob, Hannah, Anna, Ava, Elle, Iggi, Lil, Otto, or Viv Wolf, I've noticed, it forms in reverse the lovely Flow Eve, Bob, Hannah, Anna, Ava, Elle, Iggi, Lil, Otto, or Viv, respectively.)

    sionnach, that was beautiful.

    July 14, 2008

  • Could you catch one and mail him to me, acoustics? For research purposes.

    July 14, 2008

  • "It's all right, she says, it's all right

    Take anything you want from me

    Anything, anything"

    July 14, 2008

  • "Cindy smiles in overcoats

    She says, please stay a while, with ice cream floats and dreams

    and I will fill your heart with boats and bells and beams and candy-appled everythings"

    July 14, 2008

  • "Ran into the henchman that severed Anne Boleyn

    He did it right quickly, a merciful man

    She said, .."

    July 14, 2008

  • Happy 10,000th! (Sheesh, you're old.)

    July 14, 2008

  • Oooh I love that you did this.

    July 14, 2008

  • (obsolete) adj., sportive; ridiculous; wanton. Shares origin of Latin ludere, 'to play' with ludicrous.

    July 13, 2008

  • adj., full of small air bubbles (as wine)

    July 13, 2008

  • No, no, I—they represented the same pronunciation, the same sounds, but were spelled out all nonstandardlike. Nothing to miss.

    July 13, 2008

  • v., to defile; disfigure; make ugly or foul

    July 13, 2008

  • (fatigue)

    July 13, 2008

  • Credited to the illustrious and slightly frightening bilby!

    July 13, 2008

  • Why, it happens to be a painter of sordid subjects.

    July 13, 2008

  • !

    July 13, 2008

  • I'm right in the middle. :3

    July 13, 2008

  • Going the Latin route, it would be fumus (smoke) + trahere (to draw, attract), but I don't know enough to properly piece them together (and fumitractor sounds silly).

    But, off my noggintop—fumibait?

    July 13, 2008

  • In the interest of looking slightly less foolish, I'd like to stress that these were the book's madeupical pronunciations rather than my own!

    July 13, 2008

  • Didn't see this comment earlier, but yes, I'm going back and deleting redundancies (I left them initially to fill the presumed want of on-page definitions).

    July 13, 2008

  • Has dizzying potential for figurative use.

    July 13, 2008

  • :<

    July 13, 2008

  • Oh hello! I'm glad you were glad I was around when I wasn't quite. It's 9:36pm here.

    July 13, 2008

  • How nice and simple (and a teensy bit embarrassing)!

    July 13, 2008

  • (Not to be confused with prickmedaintily)

    July 13, 2008

  • primigravida: a woman in her first pregnancy (gravida I),

    secundigravida: a woman in her second (gravida II),

    tertigravida: a woman in her third (gravida III)

    July 13, 2008

  • No mysteries here! Likely a play on Disney-born twitterpated (Bambi).

    July 12, 2008

  • It took a second to realize this word was not numnums.

    July 12, 2008

  • I guess auburn-brown just can't hang with crazy-cool-sexy-hot-cute-smart-beautiful.

    July 12, 2008

  • Unless you've gotten all tricksy and changed your first and last name in the last week, we are most likely not siblings! But give my compliments to your sister on her word selection. (Is there a linguistic term for using an existing noun as a verb? Hm.)

    July 12, 2008

  • Pale yellow, like a silkworm; silken (from Latin bombycinus).

    July 12, 2008

  • According to the book, jenticulate is the verb form of jentation/jenticulation (which makes sense, as jentacular seems to be the adjective).

    July 12, 2008

  • Beautiful etymological underpinnings: Greek ástron + blêma, "starwound"

    July 12, 2008

  • An instrument for amplifying small sounds of the human body. From Greek words meaning 'voice' and 'within.'

    July 12, 2008

  • Ooh, you wordies and your labyrinthine reference-makings

    July 12, 2008

  • Hey now, the tag started as 'cutest goddamned words in the universe' but it felt funny on the individual wordpages. And yes, it is!

    July 12, 2008

  • Bees?

    July 11, 2008

  • Someone needs a nacket.

    July 11, 2008

  • Wow. "I'm sure finding it hard to wait for cocklight!" (another: twitterlight)

    July 11, 2008

  • I'd be very tempted to turn that into lol, if not for the strong aversion!

    July 11, 2008

  • Certainly!

    July 11, 2008

  • E'er they be grumbly, and e'er they be mumbly..

    July 11, 2008

  • Hmn, it seems unlikely that going down the path of windfucking would really get you anywhere..

    July 11, 2008

  • Ha! Oh dear, resurfaced childhood jingles! Every one is like opening a window to the most useless and impervious room in my mind.

    July 11, 2008

  • Nowhere did we specify the bears were wearing teacup-hats!!

    July 11, 2008

  • Gift given upon the new year.

    July 11, 2008

  • (pronounced yooky) Itchy.

    July 11, 2008

  • See also woodness.

    July 11, 2008

  • Madness; insanity. From Old English wood, 'out of one's mind.'

    In 1374, Chaucer wrote in Troilus, "They call love a woodness or folly."

    July 11, 2008

  • Eeeyeballsapeepsyes; eyes.

    July 11, 2008

  • Envious, covetous person. Originally referred to a species of hawk that feeds on mice and hovers greedily, almost motionless, in the air over its prey. (Chapman used the term to criticize Ben Johnson in the preface to his Iliad, saying, "There is a certain envious wind-sucker that hovers up and down, laboriously ingrossing sic all the air with his luxurious ambition.")

    July 11, 2008

  • I envision a sign, somewhere: 'Home for People who Wheeple'

    July 11, 2008

  • Saxon 'cloud'

    July 11, 2008

  • "Sky with wooly clouds" from Saxon wealcan 'to roll,' wolke 'cloud,' and German wolle 'wool.'

    July 11, 2008

  • A molar (from Old English wang, 'to the side')

    July 11, 2008

  • A worthless, slovenly woman.

    July 11, 2008

  • Highly insulting term used against old, unmarried whores who often posed as widows. "Walking death."

    July 11, 2008

  • A legendary Ganges fish capable of seizing and destroying elephants. (The very picture of piscine badassery.)

    July 11, 2008

  • A term of contempt for a softheaded person (from the velvet that covers the horns of young deer).

    July 11, 2008

  • In the style/manner of. (The example given: upsy-English, 'English-style.')

    July 11, 2008

  • A nosegay of flowers. See tuzzy-muzzy.

    July 11, 2008

  • Having protruding lips or a projecting lower jaw.

    July 11, 2008

  • Tusks.

    July 11, 2008

  • A light-headed, flighty woman. (Similar: featherhead, velvethead)

    July 11, 2008

  • A wholly insignificant person.

    July 11, 2008

  • Distended belly; a glutton

    July 11, 2008

  • Slang for a squinting person.

    July 11, 2008

  • Lazy, dull, sleepy~

    July 11, 2008

  • Unstable, inconstant (from Old English sceotan, 'to run hastily')

    July 11, 2008

  • A wrinkle, furrow.

    July 11, 2008

  • To throb, palpitate.

    July 11, 2008

  • A song in which the notes were written (pricked) down, as opposed to a plain-song, which was not recorded; also harmony (each prick was a note).

    July 11, 2008

  • A dandy; a person of either sex who is finicky about their dress. From one meaning of prick, 'to pin up' (thus, to dress up elaborately).

    July 11, 2008

  • Also dandelions, so named for the diuretic effect (who knew?).

    July 11, 2008

  • To eat with very little appetite.

    July 11, 2008

  • Teeth of a comb.

    July 11, 2008

  • Early spring, when the flowerbuds open.

    July 11, 2008

  • Ornamental claw

    July 11, 2008

  • adj., causing annoyance and vexation; from teen, 'annoyance and vexation.'

    July 11, 2008

  • Armpit! (also oxter)

    July 11, 2008

  • A female umpire or arbitrator.

    July 11, 2008

  • Fresh, delicate, soft (Applied to fruit, vegetables, and foliage—though there's no need to count people out)

    July 11, 2008

  • Perhaps it was in tribute to Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness? (see melancholy, mubblefubbles, blue devils)

    July 11, 2008

  • (See also blue devils, mulligrubs)

    July 11, 2008

  • Affected by juxtaposed feelings of potent happiness and sadness at once; the phenomenon itself; an affected person; things having an anolagous effect (e.g., alcohol).

    (Not to be confused with bittersweet, which implies a blending of less acute emotions that were often predictable)

    July 11, 2008

  • A sore produced by chafing (of what and where remains ambiguous)

    July 11, 2008

  • Tragic. (See Melpomene, Greek muse of tragedy.)

    July 11, 2008

  • Early form of lollipop.

    July 11, 2008

  • Easter Monday in 1800s Lancashire, where it was custom on that day for men to lift up and kiss each woman they met. On Easter Tuesday, women could do likewise for the men. (The custom was stopped due to the disturbances it caused. For shame!)

    July 11, 2008

  • An architectural ornament in the form of a bud or knob.

    July 11, 2008

  • Sweets that make the breath pleasant.

    July 11, 2008

  • A tavern (also kidliwink); possibly the birthplace of the game tidliwinks.

    July 11, 2008

  • A tavern, beer-shop. Also tidliwink.

    July 11, 2008

  • adj., dry, juiceless (Not very sexy.)

    July 11, 2008

  • An embroidered cloth presented by a lady to her knight, who was bound by the code of honor to put it on his helmet to wear for her sake.

    July 11, 2008

  • Pleasing, agreeable.

    July 11, 2008

  • Also a term for pleasantly strong liquor; a mixture of ale or beer, and spirits.

    July 11, 2008

  • A braggart or conceited boor (also huff-muff, huff-snuff, huff-nose).

    July 11, 2008

  • An expression meaning "had I known," used to express regret at making a mistake or missing an opportunity.

    July 11, 2008

  • A glutton.

    July 11, 2008

  • Fingernails

    July 11, 2008

  • Scorched (through overcooking or exposure to flame), producing a singed taste or smell.

    July 11, 2008

  • To sympathize; to feel the same.

    July 11, 2008

  • Silly, featherheaded person.

    July 11, 2008

  • A thing designed to scare babies.

    July 11, 2008

  • The act of painting the face white.

    July 11, 2008

  • Ahem— n., beauty (adj. fairheaded).

    July 11, 2008

  • To bewitch with the eye; or, to ward off the evil eye by spitting over your shoulder.

    July 11, 2008

  • L-shaped!

    July 11, 2008

  • (accent on o) Juggling; the magic arts (witchcraft).

    July 11, 2008

  • Steeply descending; precipitous.

    July 11, 2008

  • Demonic power or skill.

    July 11, 2008

  • A toothpick. From Latin dens, 'tooth' and scalpere, 'to scratch.'

    ..This word makes me very uncomfortable.

    July 11, 2008

  • A room or hall in a theatre in which the audience could stroll and mingle between acts; lobby.

    July 11, 2008

  • An apron (to conceal slovenly underclothes), or an architectural decoration to cover ugliness or deformity.

    July 11, 2008

  • Also, a hut, or small cottage.

    July 11, 2008

  • A derogatory term for a knight who achieved more on the floor of a lady's boudoir than in battle; the Knights of the Carpet, so called to distinguish them from those who served in battle.

    July 11, 2008

  • Greek, 'eyelid'

    July 11, 2008

  • (accent on bleph) A coloring for eyelids. From Greek kallos, 'beauty' and belepharon, 'eyelid.'

    July 11, 2008

  • A lady's tweezerbox or pocketbook. Perhaps originally a misspelling of bauble-buoy, 'a container for baubles.'

    July 11, 2008

  • An unfaithful marriage partner (see bedswerver).

    July 11, 2008

  • To bask in the presence of the sun or a fire

    July 11, 2008

  • Bawdy misbehavior.

    July 11, 2008

  • (accent on syth, pronounced sithe) Something given as compensation for an offense; reparations.

    July 11, 2008

  • An inferior.

    July 11, 2008

  • The only drink available to Adam and Eve: water! Can be extended to disparage watery alcoholic beverages.

    July 11, 2008

  • Numbed, paralyzed, clumsy. From Old English clumsen 'to be stiff, numb'

    July 11, 2008

  • Cakes saturated in wine or liquor, stuck with almonds, and served with custard.

    July 11, 2008

  • A blow to the ear.

    One Tyler Durden in a certain film might've said, "Ow! Christ. Why a whistersnefet, man?"

    July 11, 2008

  • I'd thay ith's a litht worthy of Thylvethter J. Puthycat himthelf.

    July 11, 2008

  • Personally, onomatopoeia became very easy to spell once I imagined it as

    O no, 'mato! Poe-i-a

    (has a hellomoto sort of ring to it; 'mato as in tomato, Poe as in Edgar Allen-)

    July 11, 2008

  • All right, c_b, there's no use pretending your onomatopoeia isn't tappen anymore.

    July 11, 2008

  • As in, "I've gone 75 lbs of raisins!"

    I started using this after noticing a definition of frail: "the weight of a frail (basket) full of fruit, esp. raisins or figs (between 50 and 75 pounds)."

    All the implications of frail (mental, moral, or physical—'fragile, easily destroyed or broken, weak, insubstantial'; slightly offensive slang term for 'girl/woman'), fruit, and basket(case) can be rolled into this expression. Especially well-suited for women who've made themselves crazy (or physically weak) with dieting. Or thin, crazy women in general.

    For variety, when you're feeling particularly spunky, the number can be anywhere from 50 to 75, and 'raisins' is interchanegable with 'figs,' 'dates,' 'fruit,' or any kind of fruit that might be dried and stored in a basket.

    July 11, 2008

  • Also the perfect word for making something like this face.

    edit: bilby! Funny meeting youuu here.

    July 11, 2008

  • I haven't yet, but I think I bumped into a Norwegian.

    If my parents were Netherlanders, my name probably would have been Katelijne. *eelpout*

    July 11, 2008

  • Norwegian meow.

    July 11, 2008

  • Bellybuttons!

    July 11, 2008

  • Nothingnessnes, nonexistences (what?).

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch (grammar), 'subordinate clause'

    July 11, 2008

  • Apologies for the flood of Dutch (although this illustrates perfectly why I love the language).

    edit: How I wish I could answer 'yes!' It's been on my to-do list for a few years.

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'we'

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'she/they'

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'you'

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'myself'

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'yourself'

    July 11, 2008

  • Dutch, 'my'

    July 11, 2008

  • adj., tholeiite-related

    July 11, 2008

  • Fun fact: the 'chorus' of this song and eeny meeny miny moe have the same melody.

    July 11, 2008

  • It never ends!

    July 11, 2008

  • Naturally, I'm crushed.

    edit: Oh, Mercy!

    July 11, 2008

  • Sionnach, I'd like to say that I know exactly what film you were referring to, and if you weren't making any references, I said nothing and have no idea what any of you are talking about.

    July 11, 2008

  • Typing that sort of felt like I was being translated in gibberish against my will.

    July 11, 2008

  • Tappens happen. (Tappen happens?)

    July 11, 2008

  • I'm quite taken with knitandpurl.

    July 11, 2008

  • Come to think of it, our tappen is onomatopoeic—it is the sound they'd happen to make if you stood, say, at the base of the wrong mountain, and they all rained down on your uniquely unfortunate head.

    July 11, 2008

  • Oo, oo: kipskin, scarfskin (nifty term for 'epidermis!'), mutchkin, redskin (offensive, but I've never heard it used derisively. also the name of our local NFL? team), pekin (breed of duck), nankin, calkin, punkin?, capeskin, devikin ('little devil'), takin (boat), unakin? ('unrelated'), boomkin, spillikin, pannikin..

    More -skins: swanskin, moleskin, foxskin, sharkskin, wineskin, cowskin, deerskin, doeskin, goatskin, lambskin, woolskin

    July 11, 2008

  • Or trichobezoar. 'Horking the trichobezoars again!'

    July 11, 2008

  • I have new empathy for bears! Thanks, posting a word on the internet.

    Also, it's amazing how many people Google can find proudly proclaiming his or her last name to be Tappen.

    July 11, 2008

  • I'm allergic to shellfish. :<

    July 11, 2008

  • Mmn, schlocklist sounds like it has some relation to chocolate. (Dontcry, eerie that you'd say that now!)

    July 11, 2008

  • The word to use if you'd like to call someone selfish as cutely as possible.

    July 11, 2008

  • As in, "It's advisable to buy more than one Paperblanks book at a time; you can write in the other while the one you've salivated all over is drying."

    Also, possibly a good term for the result of fruitless writing.

    July 11, 2008

  • Well, it's born of not wanting to make it harder for anyone else to enjoy the site, and if I'm adding words too quickly for anyone to possibly keep up (I like the sharing as much as the list-building), it doesn't really seem like the best way to go about things. But I'd certainly have no problem going to town if there were some way for the people it might bother to control the noise, if they like, and better digest things. (I'm also beginning to think it would be a nice idea to have a little c_b sitting on my shoulder during the day. "You can do it! Go on. They're just playa-hatin'.")

    July 11, 2008

  • I didn't see your comment in that way at all. :) Seems to me that people have just been expounding on the topic, not arguing.

    (Ha! Well, the italics were emphasizing typo-correction.)

    July 11, 2008

  • Oh, I do like pre-1940s schlock! And 1940s schlock (mostly Betty Grable musicals). She was just the product of deciding against using anything I might get tired of and going for the first word I half-wondered may not've been taken. I'm sure there are all sorts of nice little words wandering around with no claimants..

    July 11, 2008

  • /Lazes about in a rockingchair (Shouldn't there be a verb 'to rock in a rockingchair'? I think so.), silently but for the crrrrrick,.. crrrvb,.. crrriick..

    July 11, 2008

  • Thank you for all the warm welcomings and your general garrulousness! Got a new word-book today (Oh yes. Oh dear). It's good to be among fellowfeelers. Unfortunately, I'm again torn between resuming my previous nuts-goings or remaining slightly more reticent.

    Frogapplause—how unusually fun to say!—my desks (..and shelves, tables, and occasionally my bed) are never big enough!

    I feel you, sinnonach, on specific lists being more interesting; my intention was always to eventually pull things from this list into themed lists, but because there are so many words, any one of which could be valuable to someone, I wanted to throw them all out there now, rather than having it wait on organizing them all at my leisure (which always means it will take a very, very long time, as it's a perfect opportunity to luxuriate in fastidiousness—something I enjoy so much, just the thought has me cooing, almost). It makes a nice starting point, anyhow.

    Ooh, also: you (general you) may be interested in the features suggestion I posted.

    July 11, 2008

  • 'It's not she's list that's the issue. It's citations/new words ripping down the front page faster than a drowsy bear can unplug its fart flugelhorn.'

    Hi. I've just choked on my tea.

    July 11, 2008

  • Damn you, -ally reflex!

    July 11, 2008

  • Yes. Embarrassment sounds like someone saying 'embarassment' with a piratey accent.

    July 11, 2008

  • I always have to strain against personal feelings to spell this word correctly. Gauge looks like gouge sounds, and deep inside, I've always wished it were guage, which feels truer to sound and reminds me of things like suede.

    July 11, 2008

  • Why thank you, miss.

    I think it's really one of the most useful self-serving lists to make—I'm digging all the way back to gradeschool (There are words left to add! but I'm pacing myself).. As George Santayana (Google tells me) said, Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it. And now I have this handy reference going.

    July 11, 2008

  • I had a thought, just now, on a way to possibly arm ourselves when navigating the front page—What if we had the (functional rather than social; I'm glad I'm not the only one who thinks "friend"ing usually amounts to fluff) ability to mark "familiar users," that we could see, unsee, or isolate (as a group) when browsing? That is, marking as "familiar" the people you see most often (those repeatedly Wordiest, in particular, and anyone you'd like to keep track of) would let you: temporarily ignore new lists, words, and comments of theirs in recent activity (solving the issue of congestion caused by one person adding hundreds of words in one day! which I am guilty of, but would love to be able to do again without feeling guilty)—leaving only those of all the users not on that list, making it easier to spot things which you might have otherwise missed; or, temporarily view new lists, words, and comments only from "familiar" users (useful for chatching up after you've been browsing with those users filtered out, and a quicker way of getting up-to-date, if you've been away). The logical default would be set to showing everyone's recent activity, "familiar" and not, and those with no interest in using any filters wouldn't have to.

    So yes, filtering. Is this doable—? And appealing? (Seems to me, especially as the site grows, that some sort of filtery feature would work in the interest of general Wordie-sanity.)

    July 11, 2008

  • "Grandgore" just sounds so proud to be syphilis. :D

    July 10, 2008

  • ..Oh, ewww.

    July 10, 2008

  • Oh hufsh Prolagus. Proalgaelollyagus etc. when she hasn't slept. Mints for everyone! And algae is very soft, bilby; you should like it.

    July 10, 2008

  • My sincerest apologies for bringing up tappens (and others' enjoyment in discussing tappens). Tappen. Tappa-tappa tappen..

    While I nodded, nearly napping, suddenly there came a tappen, As of someone gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door.

    "'Tis some visitor," I muttered, "tappen, at my chamber door-- Only this, and nothing more."

    July 10, 2008

  • There's something very cheery about that long line of Biff!s to the right. Selfsame list, but

    Biff!

    Biff!

    Biff!

    Biff!

    Biff!

    ..

    July 10, 2008

  • How sweet of you to find the name of my bane. :<

    Of all the banshees to not yet exist, why'd the ban she banshees have to be all timely and decide to cross the threshold? I'm keeping my eyes peeled! (Do give a heads-up if you hear any wailing.)

    July 10, 2008

  • Oho, please help yourself to my heapings (hopefully, those whichbe-pleasing)!

    July 10, 2008

  • Nullibiquitous is He (Is there a character minimum for usernames here? I wonder if He's even Possible.)

    July 10, 2008

  • The appellation matches the drapes, I'm afraid— Wait. I mean to say, she's a she (one of those), well and truly, through and through-ly. But, it isn't so bad, really! Just predictable.

    July 10, 2008

  • You are a userbase possessed! I think I like this place.

    ..Yes, it took me this long to view my profile.

    July 10, 2008

  • She is, she is (a she. Is me)! Such a sticky nickname (stickinick? ..baskets?) from such a little pronoun.

    July 10, 2008

  • Perfectly, perfectly reasonable, Prolagus. I hadn't noticed all the congestion (head in the tag-clouds?)— It'd be no trouble to start intermittently replacing Wordie with Notepad to calm the flooding; at worst, it might create suspense. Until our next installment..!

    (Perhaps it's She with an Excitable Fondness for List-building! or She Who Prompts Wordie to Say Grammatical ("10 Hours Ago, She Said:") and Ungrammatical ("She's Lists") Things, to the Amusement of Some)

    July 10, 2008

  • Oh yes! Listen to qroqqa. I'm only referencing little well-meaning but indeterminate wordbooks.

    July 10, 2008

  • n., treatment for improving or strengthening the voice (From a Greek word meaning 'one who exercises the voice')

    July 9, 2008

  • Whoops!

    July 9, 2008

  • It seems as if in the early days this was very uncomfortable, as the plethysmograph was described as "a rigid airtight container enclosing the subject entirely except for (the) head and neck."

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., able to be bailed out (From French word meaning 'to warrant')

    July 9, 2008

  • Pronounced ‹plahn·zhoor

    July 9, 2008

  • A test used to prove whether a child was born alive or dead, based on the presence or absence of air in the lungs. (Medico-legal term)

    July 9, 2008

  • See pococurante

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to move the nostrils and upper lip in the manner of a pug dog

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having the qualities of Lenten fare; meager, austere

    July 9, 2008

  • n., crossroads, a place where four ways meet (from French)

    July 9, 2008

  • A native of Arkansas (from the name of the Arkansas Folklore Society?)

    July 9, 2008

  • e.g., "I am très impressed" incorporates relexification of the French "très" into English.

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to remember falsely (Possibly a blend of 'fumble' and 'remember.' Coined by Elan Cole, who suggested it on the radio show The Next Big Thing)

    July 9, 2008

  • Walrus ivory (From Russian words meaning 'fish' and 'tooth')

    July 9, 2008

  • A rocket fired from a balloon, or a balloon carrying a rocket.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., the rosy light of dawn

    July 9, 2008

  • Worship of the stars. Sabians, simply mentioned in the Qu'ran, were thought in the Middle Ages to have been star-worshippers.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., agreement. It seems to come from the phrase 'of the same tale.'

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., able to carry loads or burdens (From a Latin word meaning 'bundle')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., luxuriously effeminate.

    From the name of Sardanapalus, the last kind of Nineveh, who was supposed to have lived in outrageous luxury. (Beseiged by the Medes for two years, his favorite concubine induced him to put himself on a funeral pyre; she set fire to it herself, and it consumed the place along with his entire court. The legend of Sardanapalus cannot be connected with any Assyrian king known through archaeology.)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., the well-being of all (from Sanskrit sarva, 'all' and udaya, 'uplift.') Used by Mohandas Ghandi to mean a new social order without caste, based on nonviolence and service.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., atonement by adequate suffering (On the model of satisfaction; from Latin words for 'enough' and 'suffering')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., pertaining to chess (From an Italian word for chess)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., wicked (From a Latin word with the same meaning; also, scelestious)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., wicked (From a Latin word with the same meaning; also, scelestic)

    This has the benefit of sounding a lot like "celestious" (celestial), 'heavenly,' if you like a touch of polysemy.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., unluckiness (From a Latin word meaning 'left-sided, awkward')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having feet large enough to shelter the whole body when used as an umbrella (From a Greek word meaning 'shadow foot.' The Sciapodes, who had these feet, were supposed to live in Libya.)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., worm-eating

    July 9, 2008

  • An archivist

    July 9, 2008

  • n., continuous writing (obsolete; from a Latin word meaning 'to write')

    July 9, 2008

  • Whoops! Typo'd scriptitation

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., (of lips) half-open. Much, much nicer than agape or slack-jawed.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., an encircling band

    July 9, 2008

  • One who uses the solfege technique of sight-singing, with solfege syllables: do (or ut), re, mi, fa, sol, la, and si (or ti).

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to embroider (From a Latin word meaning 'thread on top')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., someone who tires another person with walking. (According to most young children, this applies to parents. Also good for reluctant hikers to huff at hiking partners.)

    July 9, 2008

  • "All of a sudden" (see sursaut)

    July 9, 2008

  • I love it when words mean exactly what they sound like.

    July 9, 2008

  • Or, as slow as a tortoise.

    July 9, 2008

  • The stuff of which gods are made.

    July 9, 2008

  • ..or a manatee! (It comes from the modern Latin name of a genus that included the manatee and walrus.)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., intimate, affectionate (Tutoyer means 'to use the familiar pronoun tu or thou' or 'to tu or thou someone.')

    July 9, 2008

  • (and swampy, slimy, oozy)

    July 9, 2008

  • See umbratic

    July 9, 2008

  • A description of heaven (not, as it sounds, of urine.)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., turning the heart from evil (From a Latin word meaning 'turner of hearts,' used as an epithet for Venus.)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to go around, circle, make the circuit (From an Old French word meaning 'to turn')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., makeup artist (from French)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a portion of raw flesh, esp. one distributed at the death of a rich man (presumably of an animal, and not of the man. Related to the word viscera)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having a sociable, easy-going, comfort-seeking personality (usually associated with an endomorphic body type)

    Inoffensive term for a fun, fat friend.

    July 9, 2008

  • Correct pronunciation and enunciation, giving every word its correct accent, moderation, and measure. (From a Latin word meaning 'little voice;' vocule is the faint final sound heard when pronouncing certain consonants.)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., suitable for flying (From Latin word meaning 'to fly;' see also: volitorial)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having the power of flight (see also: volacious)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to turn something over and bury something beneath it; to bury something (To whelve over is to overwhelm.)

    July 9, 2008

  • 'Silence!' (Of onomatopoeic origin, related to hush! and hist!)

    July 9, 2008

  • A medical condition in which blood flows from some part of a woman's body at a different place than (but at the same time as, and replacing) her regular menses. Also called vicarious menstruation. From Greek words meaning 'strange' and 'menses.'

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., careless, negligent (To take yeme is to observe or be careful.)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., things caught or taken yesterday

    July 9, 2008

  • Sounds much, much more exciting than what it defines.

    July 9, 2008

  • An exhibition of servant girls for sale

    July 9, 2008

  • Servant who runs before a carriage to clear the road.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., an armed courier (esp. in Turkey)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., bedchamber attendant

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., not existing anywhere (see nullibicity)

    July 9, 2008

  • Is too, is too!

    July 9, 2008

  • Oh, typos.

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., wide-mouthed (From a Latin word meaning 'cheek')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., piece of firewood

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., perverse, willful, or obstinate (Scots; possibly related to cam, 'crooked')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., without stones or grit (Desirable in oysters and spinach)

    July 9, 2008

  • A term used by the Gnostics (from the Greek word for 'dust'), who believed the visible body was made up of two parts: a "subtle element" they called the hylic body, and a "sheath of gross earthly matter" they called the choical body.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., any kind of supernatural perception, including clairvoyance and telepathy (From crypto- and a Greek word meaning 'perception')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., knife-swallowing! (From Latin words meaning 'knife' and 'to devour')

    July 9, 2008

  • An ill-sounding (see also cunctitenent) synonym for omnipotent; all-powerful

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having all things (in the same way cunctipotent means 'all-powerful')

    July 9, 2008

  • Obsolete adj., having a boat-shaped (esp. from above -- i.e., long and narrow) skull

    July 9, 2008

  • The earliest kind of bicycle, named after its inventor, Baron von Drais of Sauerbrun. (He called it a swiftwalker; others called it a dandy-horse)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., someone who kills/injures both friend and foe. From the name of a blustering, bragging character in George Villiers' burlesque play The Rehearsal, who in the last scene is made to enter a battle and kill all the combatants on both sides. (His name might be intended to suggest drawing a can of liquor, as there are references to his drinking capacity in the fourth act.)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., 'to trouble in sleep' and 'to be troubled in sleep' (from Old English)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having rotten spots concealed by healthy wood

    July 9, 2008

  • The name given to an egg-hatching machine invented in 1839 by a W. Bucknell, supposedly the sentence "I evoke life" written as one Greek word. (Later used in the figurative sense for things analogous to an egg-hatching machine.)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., the meaningless imitation of the movements of others (From echo and the Greek word for 'action')

    July 9, 2008

  • That is, 20/20 vision.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., desire, lust

    July 9, 2008

  • Shortened exclamation; "By God's eyelids!"

    July 9, 2008

  • Shortened exclamation; "By God's nails!"

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to cast excrement (Used especially of badgers and foxes)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., shunning the end (Such as at bedtime, or that of a particularly good book)

    July 9, 2008

  • See fistic, fistiana

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to rustle when moving, to flutter

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., deceptive, fictitious, sham (Related to the flam- of flimflam and flamfew and a Latin word meaning 'a bubble, a lie')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a gewgaw, flimflam (from a Latin word meaning 'a bubble, a lie')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., capricious, changeable (From an Old French word meaning 'to bend;' used mostly about people, this is a nice way of saying 'flaky')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., like a flower, flowery (see floscule)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., 'something shaped like a little flower' (flosculous), or 'a flowery speech' (see flosculation). From Latin word meaning 'little flower'

    July 9, 2008

  • n., speaking in a flowery way (see floscule, flosculous)

    July 9, 2008

  • Plural: genizot

    July 9, 2008

  • n., an awkward, silly or foolish person

    July 9, 2008

  • Or, a silly person (gilly-gaupus, gawpus, dotterel)

    July 9, 2008

  • Or, a silly person (gilly-gaupus, gawpus, chrisom)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., full of phlegm or mucus

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., both slimy and venemous, rather than simply gleimous

    July 9, 2008

  • v. phrase, 'to talk smoothly or flatteringly' (From Greek word for 'tongue')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., proud, arrogant; or (of the voice) raised, loud

    July 9, 2008

  • (Frequent misspellers could be called inorthographists.)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., A winter retreat, or home of a hibernating animal (from a Latin word meaning 'wintry').

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a medicine supposed to get rid of all 'morbid humours'

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., tinged with yellow (as is luteolous)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., tinged with yellow (as is icterical)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to make yellow

    July 9, 2008

  • A kind of apraxia in which the sufferer understands a request to perform an action or movement, and still has the physical ability, but is unable to do so when asked. (This might be a good technical name for the common phenomenom of being able to perform astounding feats, except when anyone is watching)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a mistake due to ignorance

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., Attractive, alluring (from Latin illecebra, charm, lure, enticement).

    July 9, 2008

  • Hedgehog (also ilspile, echinus, herisson, hotchi witchu, hurcheon, irchepil, irspile, il/ile, tiggy, irchon/irchin/urchin)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., beardless (From im- plus the Latin barba, 'beard')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., rainy, rain-bringing (From Latin word meaning 'shower')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., Wet with rain.

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., not bruised or pounded; without contusions (Most often used for spices and fruit; hopefully applicable to most people)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., 'making unhappy'

    July 9, 2008

  • One OED citation, from Thomas Love Peacock's novel Crotchet Castle (1831), is this exchange:

    Mr. E: "Sir, you are very facetious at my expense."

    Dr. F: "Sir, you have been very unfacetious, very infecete at mine."

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., shedding astral influence

    July 9, 2008

  • Or, to use makeup (in the sense 'to paint the face, to color artificially'); noun infucation

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., equal to the angels

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to breakfast

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to gobble, make turkey-noises

    n., the cry of a turkey

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a fat person (slang, obsolete)

    July 9, 2008

  • Kalos kai agathos, the singular balance of the good and the beautiful

    July 9, 2008

  • v., bite or nibble

    July 9, 2008

  • Also, pronouncing the letter r as l (or lallation).

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having flexible joints; lithe (from Old English words meaning 'limb' and 'soft')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., graceful, elegant (From an Italian word meaning 'sprightly')

    July 9, 2008

  • Literally, 'deathbringing'

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., on the border (from limitanei/limitatenses, border units in the armies of the late Roman Empire)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., related to loranthaceae, the mistletoe family

    An accurate descriptor for certain kisses!

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who deceives their lord; a traitor (from Old English)

    July 9, 2008

  • See luculent

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., keen-sighted. From a Greek word meaning 'twilight,' from roots meaning 'wolf' and 'light,' which was misunderstood as 'having keen sight, like a wolf.'

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., having well-developed olfactory organs (macro- plus a Greek word meaning 'smell')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., an expert cook; magirist (From a Greek word meaning 'cook;' see also: magirology, magirological)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., an expert cook; magirologist (From a Greek word meaning 'cook;' see also: magirology, magirological)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., the art or science of cooking (From a Greek word meaning 'cook;' see also: magirist/magirologist, magirological)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., skilled in cooking (From a Greek word meaning 'cook;' see: magirology, magirist/magirologist)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to work on one's magnum opus (Used in a letter by Lord Byron: "That is right, keep to your magnum opus—magnoperate away.")

    July 9, 2008

  • Wellll, maresydotes, and momurdotes.. (and little lambs-e'divey)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., in constant motion.

    Used most often in reference to.. the legs of insects :<

    July 9, 2008

  • n., snottiness

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., acquired by fine or forfeit

    July 9, 2008

  • plural n., grimaces

    July 9, 2008

  • Irish interjection meaning 'Nevermind! Leave that alone!' (literally, 'don't meddle with it')

    July 9, 2008

  • or, a rude and impertinent boy (from French words meaning 'the tennis court keeper's boy')

    The two definitions should be easy to keep straight (unless you're a cannibal, in which case there is a pleasant congruence).

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., spotted, freckled

    July 9, 2008

  • n., the condition of having any abnormal deficiency (from the Greek word for 'dwarf;' see nanism)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to cause naufrage (shipwreck). See also naufragous, naufrageous

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., in danger of naufrage (shipwreck). See also: naufragous, naufragate

    July 9, 2008

  • n., nesting or nest-making; nidification

    July 9, 2008

  • n., nesting or nest-making, nidulation (verbs: nidify, nidificate)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., guilt (antonym of innocence)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who stays up late at night; also, a rake or libertine

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., able to nod with an air of great wisdom

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., habitually walking around (that is, obambulating; see obambulate. From a Latin word meaning 'to walk')

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., in the artificial and overly formal style of foreign-language phrase books. From the name of Heinrich Gottfried Ollendorff (1803-1865), a German grammarian and educator.

    Famous examples of such language include: "Unhand me Sir, for my husband, who is an Australian, awaits without." Perhaps the most absurd phrasebook is English as She is Spoke: The new guide of the conversation in Portugeuse and English in two parts (1855), by Pedro Caroline and Hose de Fonseca, which includes this nearly incomprehensible sentence in its introduction: "We expect then, who the little book (for the care what we wrote him, and for her typographical correction) that may be worth the expectation of the studious persons, and especially of the Youth, at which we dedicate him particularly."

    July 9, 2008

  • A rain shelter (from Greek word meaning 'rainshower')

    July 9, 2008

  • A shelter from the wind.

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., expert in the interpretation of dreams

    July 9, 2008

  • n., eater of delicacies, esp. fish; one who opsophagizes

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to eat delicacies, especially fish (From a Greek word of the same meaning, as is the agent noun opsophagist)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., rice-eating!

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a sign or wonder, a portent (From Latin word meaning 'something shown;' see also: ostentiferous)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., characterized by being agreed upon or specified in a contract

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., very pleasant

    July 9, 2008

  • n., severe shock, consternation (From Latin verb meanig 'to upset' -- something that's perculsive gives you a shock.)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., characterized by love of or attention to the hair (Loaned from Greek philo- 'loving' and Latin coma, 'hair')

    July 9, 2008

  • n., player of bumblepuppy (that is, whist)

    July 9, 2008

  • No money.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., someone who accepts money for spiritual things (esp. where considered a sin)

    July 9, 2008

  • Collector of exonumia.

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who drives away smoke (and possibly, smokers)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who habitually fails to take notice

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who complains (esp. frequently)

    July 9, 2008

  • n., someone who says something other than what he or she meant to say

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who paints or draws pictures in which devils appear

    July 9, 2008

  • n., one who is possessed by a demon (or a fanatical enthusiast of something)

    July 9, 2008

  • First used by John Ruskin to criticize modern painting.

    July 9, 2008

  • (pronounced bleev) adv., before long, soon

    July 9, 2008

  • An unusually large secretion of mucus

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to agree, to consent (From an Old Norse word meaning 'to beg')

    July 9, 2008

  • Obsolete: of or about the making of wax models

    July 9, 2008

  • n., seller of small things (see aginate)

    July 9, 2008

  • v., to sell small things

    The OED citation gives the gloss 'he who retaileth,' from 1626. From a Latin word for a part of a scale.

    Aginator would be a nice term for some who use eBay or Etsy.

    July 9, 2008

  • Loss or impairment of the sense of taste (also ageusia)

    Begs for figurative use!

    July 9, 2008

  • Coined by author Simon Winchester; 'the trail of grey water invariably left behind on the floor when someone in gumboots comes into a warm kitchen from the snowy outside world.' (A loose mixture of drip and midden -- the former suggesting wetness and cold, the latter dirt and greyness)

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., fattening (From Latin pinguis, fat)

    July 9, 2008

  • See spumescent

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., honey-sucking (from flowers; used of birds and insects)

    July 9, 2008

  • Also alexipharmic

    July 9, 2008

  • n., a fondness for buying things (Shopping edacity?)

    July 9, 2008

  • Syn. limicoline

    July 9, 2008

  • An adjective meaning both 'thin' (as in weight) and 'lacking in substance' (as in worth), ideal for ambiguous compliments.

    July 9, 2008

  • Oho. Either sense may be right, in certain situations.

    July 9, 2008

  • Literally, 'furious sheep.' Term for an angry person who is usually calm.

    July 9, 2008

  • See theopneustic

    July 9, 2008

  • adj., related to flogging (Unsurprisingly, it comes from a Latin word meaning 'to be beaten.')

    July 9, 2008

  • chained_bear, I'm sure it's voluntary!

    allexperts.com clarifies: "The tappen forms inside the body and plugs the anus during hibernation. A bear does not place moss up its backside, nor does it place a rock there, which was one of my earlier questions. The tappen prevents faecal material leaking out of the bear's body and soiling its home during hibernation. Apart from hygiene, the smell of faeces could attract enemies during a vulnerable period for the bear. The tappen is not produced to stop small animals going up the bear's backside, but its presence helps to prevent it. Whether ants would naturally want to go up a bear's backside is another question!"

    July 9, 2008

  • n., loss of a musical ability

    July 8, 2008

  • An expression of joy by a group of women in Aleppo, consisting of the words "Lillé, Lillé, Lillé" repeated as often as possible in one breath.

    July 8, 2008

  • n., the taking of honey from beehives (From Latin for 'fruit-gathering')

    July 8, 2008

  • n., the fact of being cheaper or of less value (From a Latin root meaning 'to make viler')

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., empty

    William Makepeace Thackeray (1811-1863) uses this word to describe the heart as a "viduous mansion" for rent after the loved one is gone, going on to say that the new tenant finds a portrait of the first love hidden away somewhere within it.

    July 8, 2008

  • n., small and highly decorated nightlight

    July 8, 2008

  • n., a run before a leap

    July 8, 2008

  • See utraquist

    July 8, 2008

  • n., the act of occupying a new place. From Latin word meaning 'where.' (See also: ubity, ubication)

    July 8, 2008

  • n., the condition of being in a certain place. From Latin word meaning 'where.' (See also: ubity, ubiation)

    July 8, 2008

  • n., place. From Latin word meaning 'where.' (See also: ubication, ubiation)

    July 8, 2008

  • One who rules by controlling the press.

    July 8, 2008

  • Twilight (also twitterlight)

    July 8, 2008

  • Twilight (also twitter-light, twatter-light).

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., dizzy from spinning around (Exactly as it sounds!)

    July 8, 2008

  • Dancing; used figuratively to mean 'triumphant, exultant.' (The tripudium was a ritual dance of ancient Rome, done by armed priests. The dance involved three steps - tripudium means 'three feet' - and included banging on shields with rods or spears.)

    July 8, 2008

  • n., pawing, handling, or fingering (especially of people)

    July 8, 2008

  • The plug by which the rectum of a bear is closed during hibernation, composed of pine leaves and things scratched out from ants' nests.

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., requiring much tending/attention

    A neat little word existing perhaps only in Webster's (1847 and 1864) and the Century Dictionary (1891).

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., proud and overbearing (From Latin for 'proud or magnificent,' as is superb)

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., Silk-producing (fr. Latin sēricum, silken + -parus, -bearing).

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., concerned with the recording of shadows, especially the shadow of the sun as a means for telling time (From the Greek for sundial, literally 'shadow-catcher')

    July 8, 2008

  • v., to wander about (From Skamandros, the name of a river in Homer's Iliad -- and synonym to meander, taken from the Menderes/Maiandros, also a river)

    July 8, 2008

  • n., re-entrance

    July 8, 2008

  • Oh, but but.

    The now-defunct Linnean classification pulveratores (Latin pulvereus dusty + -ator, pl) comprised birds so named for their habit of rolling around in the dust to dislodge little bugs stuck in their feathers. Pulveratricious carries 'dust-colored, 'dust-covered,' etc. specifically through meaning 'like birds that roll themselves in dust.'

    I take great pleasure in being able to slip 'bird-like by association' into any one-word description!

    July 8, 2008

  • adj., played by percussion (as an instrument); able to throb or pulse (as a heart)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., posessor (viz. someone who owns something)

    July 7, 2008

  • A tool with a large prong and a cross handle, used in haymaking to push the hay into pooks, or stacks.

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the science of rain-making (From Latin for 'rain,' on the model of agriculture)

    July 7, 2008

  • Also: a shelf for books, small statues, etc. (Latin pluteus was originally 'a light barrier between columns')

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., Liking to wander (from Latin planeticus, wandering).

    July 7, 2008

  • n., fishing!

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., fat (From Latin pinguis; see pinguescence)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the process of becoming fat (From Latin pinguis, fat; see also pinguescent, pinguefying)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., pillowcase (From Old English for 'pillow' and 'cover')

    July 7, 2008

  • Cooked pig's-hoof!

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., fat (Said of a pig well-fed on mast)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., 'of wild swine'

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., 'of swine'

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a particularly capable parent; one who practices paedotrophy (child-raising)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a population in which random mating takes place (Mostly applied to animals, but equally well-suited to any large city or college campus)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., (an obsolete form of) 'oblique-angled'; can be used figuratively to mean 'messy, awkward, questionable'

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., day-to-night ('occuring with a variation that matches night and day,' to do with a nychthemeron)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., Snow-covered (fr. Latin ninguidus).

    July 7, 2008

  • adv., 'nearly, almost'

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the smell of burning fat (or any strong flesh-cooking smell)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., speed or pithiness of speech

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., having only one male for several females

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., merciful (Literally, 'knowing mercy')

    July 7, 2008

  • n., honey-making or bee-keeping (From Greek for 'bee-keeping')

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., tending or likely to wither or fade (From Latin for 'to be faint')

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the study of weight

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the study of the uses of friction

    July 7, 2008

  • n., someone who makes excessive use of the letter i (Originally, the changing of the pronunciation of other Greek vowels to more resemble that of the vowel iota)

    July 7, 2008

  • A slang term for a heavy overcoat trimmed with fur, supposedly from "The Shoreditch Toff," a popular song circa 1868, in which there are the lines "I fancy I'm a toff, From top to toe I really think I looks--Immensikoff." The singer of the song, Arthur Lloyd, wore such an overcoat.

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., leprous

    July 7, 2008

  • 'The disease of laziness'

    July 7, 2008

  • A disease in which the sufferer mimics everything said or done by another, of Siberian origin.

    July 7, 2008

  • The "correct" form of the irregularly formed decumbiture, 'the act of going to bed when sick,' from Latin.

    July 7, 2008

  • n., fire-worshipper

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a sacrifice (to an idol)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., 'one who is hostile to images'

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the domain of the fishes, the fish-world. A lovely nonce-word used in 1853.

    July 7, 2008

  • n., an accomplished horse-dissector

    (From Greek hippo-, 'horse' and -tomy, 'cut')

    July 7, 2008

  • Smashing term for syphilis!

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., without sexual desire

    July 7, 2008

  • n., sadomasochism (being both masochistic and sadistic)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., having the color of a dead or faded leaf (i.e., brown or yellowish-brown); French for 'dead leaf'

    (Also filemot, philemort, phillimot)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., like a stalk (From Latin for 'stalk')

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., straw-like

    From a Latin root meaning 'stalk' (see also festucaceous, 'like a stalk')

    July 7, 2008

  • n., waking-up (From Latin for 'make awake')

    This is the effect an expergefactor has.

    July 7, 2008

  • v., to free from a noose or other entanglement

    July 7, 2008

  • Term of endearment meaning 'dear little bird.'

    July 7, 2008

  • v., to curl the hair (from Latin calamistratus 'curled')

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., speaking with a lisp or stammer (from Latin words meaning 'lisping, stammering' and 'speaking')

    July 7, 2008

  • A Latin word of Plautus for 'the land of drinks'/'the drinkland' (that is, alcoholic drinks)

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a female liar

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a talkative woman

    July 7, 2008

  • n., a female babbler

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., eyewitness, based on personal observation (Usually used in legal contexts, as in autoptic testimony)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., self-produced, made by oneself (From Greek word of the same meaning)

    July 7, 2008

  • v., to go bird-catching! (Also, figuratively, 'to lie in wait for or hunt.') From Latin words meaning 'bird' and 'catch.'

    July 7, 2008

  • n., an attendant or follower (from a Latin word meaning 'to follow after')

    July 7, 2008

  • Synonym for communism; the belief that there should be no private propery. From a Greek word meaning 'nothing of one's own.'

    July 7, 2008

  • n., the inability to pay attention to any one thing, caused by a constant state of distraction.

    July 7, 2008

  • n., concentration on one thing to the exclusion of everything else.

    July 7, 2008

  • A darling term for that little dent at the end of your sternum (hyphenated likely because it might otherwise read heart's poon, which isn't at all the intended image).

    July 7, 2008

  • n., calf (the bodypart, that is.)

    July 7, 2008

  • A worm used as bait in fishing (syn angletwitch)

    July 7, 2008

  • adj., precious (also derworth; obsolete; from Piers Plowman, a 14th century poem by William Langland)

    June 29, 2008

  • n., niece or nephew (gender-neutral)

    Coined by Susan Parker Martin of New York, says Weird and Wonderful Words.

    Beyond useful! (but I'm a little biased—I've been an aunt since I was six years old.)

    June 29, 2008

  • n., pl. -natrices

    a fascinating woman (also fascinatrice)

    June 29, 2008

Show 499 more comments...