Comments by slumry

Show previous 200 comments...

  • doggone it, what's that word that means one spelling of two different words, usually with different etymologies. . .that's what coma seems to be.

    June 10, 2015

  • owie. . .

    June 10, 2015

  • Perhaps (archaic)

    June 5, 2015

  • Perchance an eggcorn of penchant?

    June 5, 2015

  • Oh, dear...taking a moment to remember Ajax the little green tree frog who took a ride on the rollers of a wringer washer. Once.

    June 3, 2015

  • see backhanded

    June 2, 2015

  • Oh my Cod! Today we have the word gubbings.

    June 2, 2015

  • Ah, a heavy defeat! And it rhymes with drubbing.

    June 2, 2015

  • Anatoly Liberman argues persuasively that "grace widow" should be dismissed as folk etymology. He has a interesting discussion of the history of the term grass widow at http://blog.oup.com/2009/02/grasswidows/

    June 2, 2015

  • foxes and wolves apparently spyhop also: aavvhttp://dictionary.reference.com/browse/spyhop

    June 1, 2015

  • A fun list. Lloyd habitually said forth and back, without irony or intent to provoke. Carolyn, nevertheless, was annoyed on the grounds that it was not idiomatic. Lloyd countered that it was more logical. One could hardly go back before first going forth. Carolyn ultimately attributed it to Lloyd's status as the son of Swedish immigrants. So riddle me this: is there a Swedish idiom equivalent to forth and back?

    May 31, 2015

  • A tenement building that is (was, I suppose) designed in the shape of a dumbbell. One example of the adjectival use of dumbbell.

    May 31, 2015

  • For one account of this term, see http://dictionary.babylon.com/winkle-hawk/, which says winkle-hawk derives from a word for a carpenter's square. Thus, perhaps, suggests a three-corned tear.

    May 31, 2015

  • Ah!

    May 31, 2015

  • oxymoron?

    May 30, 2015

  • a quarter see two bits

    May 30, 2015

  • This is what some "manly men" call it when they do small chores around home.

    May 30, 2015

  • I can't resist thinking something like: "I hiked a muddy trail and now my shoes are all begunked."  Folk etymology.

    May 30, 2015

  • And I am always disappointed when I recall what potlicker is. I always feel the word should refer to something so delicious that the pot was licked clean.

    May 30, 2015

  • cattywampus

    May 30, 2015

  • See: http://www.worldwidewords.org/weirdwords/ww-ado1.htm for a discussion of the historical rhetorical-training practice that later came to be called adoxography. Put's me in mind of a book I am reading, "How to Talk About Books You Haven't Read," by Pierre Bayard. The tongue-in-cheek thesis is that you are better equipped to discuss a book if you have not read it.

    May 29, 2015

  • Used as a verb: "We could short-sight this." Meaning, apparently, that we could implement a short-sighted remedy.

    May 29, 2015

  • from pot liquor

    May 29, 2015

  • a person who constantly monitors his online reputation

    May 28, 2015

  • a person who ruminates endlessly

    May 28, 2015

  • See my foot.

    May 21, 2015

  • See also Getting to Know Jack and jack-of-all-trades

    May 21, 2015

  • Appalachian folk tales, an oral tradition.

    May 20, 2015

  • This is a fun one, fbharjo! What about Jack Sprat, Jack tales, jack tar and the beloved Jack in the Beanstalk

    May 20, 2015

  • Don't know where this old one belongs: "Gotta getta gocart if you're gonna getta girl."

    May 19, 2015

  • In some societies, a taboo against using the name of someone who recently died.

    May 19, 2015

  • Carolyn says, "Lloyd says he is a rough diamond, but I say he is just rough."

    May 19, 2015

  • graverobbers,body snatchers

    May 19, 2015

  • the halt, the lame, and the blind

    May 19, 2015

  • see one, do one, teach one

    May 19, 2015

  • For example, when you have to clean up quickly before unexpected company, you may give the house a lick and a promise.

    May 19, 2015

  • Thanks,ruzuzu. I had fun recalling all of those delicate wild lilies,

    May 18, 2015

  • Bicyclists with helmets, according to some wags.

    May 16, 2015

  • A new term to me. Apparently it is a row of bicycles for sharing. Seattle has such a program

    May 16, 2015

  • So a filibusterer is akin to a freebooter (pirate). It makes sense, actually.

    May 15, 2015

  • You have come to the right place, msmith. Do you fancy any particular sort of words?

    May 15, 2015

  • See etymologist

    May 15, 2015

  • a portmanteau word

    May 14, 2015

  • The Chinook dictionary that I rely on most is:

    Chinook: A History and Dictionary by Edward Harper Thomas, first published in 1935. The author defines skookum as follows:

    "Strong, powerful, potent. Originally a ghost, evil spirit, or demon.

    This is one of the best known, most widely used and significant words in the Jargon. Its adoption by people of the Northwest has made it a regional English word...In fact, it is so common on the Pacific Coast as to have almost lost its Indian significance."

    May 14, 2015

  • If you are from the northwestern US, or from British Columbia, you might say skookum.

    May 14, 2015

  • Those eccentric girls have some very peculiar names.

    May 13, 2015

  • A fine Mothers' day word!

    May 10, 2015

  • syncope

    May 10, 2015

  • typo for neurotypical?

    May 9, 2015

  • In contradistinction to transformational grammar

    May 9, 2015

  • eggcorn.  See for all intents and purposes

    May 9, 2015

  • That book has got to go...but wait, I might read it some day.

    May 9, 2015

  • A noun? If so, I guess it would be a thrashing of buttocks.

    May 9, 2015

  • Also "undergraduate degree."  If an undergraduate is a student who has not yet earned a degree, what is an undergraduate degree?

    May 9, 2015

  • my mother's term for flatulence, God rest her barely post-Victorian soul.

    May 8, 2015

  • I agree, TankHughes--that unutterable phrase is truly an amomination.

    May 8, 2015

  • Oh no, not sticker! My precocious niece, when she was very small, naïve to country living, and a brand new talker corrected me when I told her she would get stickers in her feet if she went outside barefoot. She said, "Do you mean thorns?"

    May 8, 2015

  • not to be confused with a compound word.

    May 8, 2015

  • I nominate commentate.

    May 8, 2015

  • As you live alone in the bee-loud glade, you may while away your hours deflecting the dread honeyguide

    May 8, 2015

  • What about the honeyguide? That bird sounds to me like a procurer.

    May 8, 2015

  • An instance of nerdview, I think.

    May 7, 2015

  • A coinage of the linguists at languagelog The state of mind of people who use jargon of their trade, oblivious to the fact that the people to whom they speak do not share that jargon. It seems to be a failure of Theory of Mind.

    May 7, 2015

  • That is wonderful, qms!

    May 7, 2015

  • going to and fro.

    May 7, 2015

  • Oh, what has become of the subjunctive?

    May 7, 2015

  • See antimacassar

    May 6, 2015

  • It is so odd that all of the examples shown refer to the word as misconstrued. Does this misconstruction constitute an eggcorn?

    May 6, 2015

  • Hm...after a full 5 minutes thought, I am of the opinion that a Camaydian, if there is such a person, would be a Caymanian expat living in Canada. It is a matter of emphasis. Caymadian emphasizes the Cayman element; Camaydian would highlight Canada.

    May 6, 2015

  • Should be capitalized. Habakkuk is a book in the compilation variously called the Old Testament or the Hebrew Bible, if you are speaking from a Christian POV, or simply the Bible if you are Jewish. Habakkuk was one of the twelve minor prophets.

    May 6, 2015

  • To out potlatch someone is to create an imbalance in a relationship by giving gifts that are more extravagant or more numerous than the gifts you receive.

    May 6, 2015

  • Ha! Usually no gift giving is involved.

    May 6, 2015

  • A communal meal where everyone contributes a dish. See also potluck and carry-in.

    May 6, 2015

  • Communal meals that are usually called potlucks in this region are, I am told, called carry-ins in Indiana.

    May 6, 2015

  • A Canadian expat living in the Cayman Islands. Seen on a T shirt.

    May 6, 2015

  • Several of these are not BC specific. "Skookum," for example, was in locally common parlance where I grew up in the Chehalis river valley. It comes from the Chehalis people. There is a Skookumchuck River that flows the Chehalis.

    May 6, 2015

  • Right. It seems to have come into English as "mowich." Google that and you will find several west coast place names--notably Mowich Lake in Mt. Rainier national park.

    May 6, 2015

  • Well...a coatee is a certain style of jacket; a frog is an ornamental sort of fastener for the front of a coat...

    May 6, 2015

  • Thanks, Wordnik, for providing examples if no definition. Mowich is from the Chinook Jargon and means deer, or venison.

    May 6, 2015

  • megayachts owned by the superrich?

    May 5, 2015

  • Or silly feet--ped=feet+ridiculous

    August 13, 2007

  • I have always heard both pronounced the same way, with a short i, rhyming with chivvy.

    August 12, 2007

  • Apparently you can still buy carbon paper; if I rummaged enough, I probably would find some at home.

    August 12, 2007

  • I am also a long time fan of Lakoff.

    August 12, 2007

  • You sound as if you have more intimate knowledge of this than you would like.

    August 12, 2007

  • Welcome, Infostyx! I also became an instant addict--I am enjoying your list. Oroboros is right--that delete function seems to be broken.

    August 12, 2007

  • Teach your grandmother to suck eggs.

    August 12, 2007

  • What? Never made a carbon copy? What?

    August 12, 2007

  • Looks like you have been reading George Lakoff, O.

    August 11, 2007

  • In contrast to eulogistic.

    August 11, 2007

  • I think I first read about phylacteries in Chaim Potok's novels. So many books, so little time!

    August 10, 2007

  • He said he did not need to eat blueberries because he wears his seatbelt. That is what he said. *groan here*

    August 10, 2007

  • Oh, Reesetee, you mean I really do have voices in my head, too? In that case, I also wonder why I can't get them all to agree with each other.

    I think I will opt to simply enjoy the illusion.

    August 10, 2007

  • It was a memorable conversation, U.

    And R--I feel sure you will fill your suitcase with plenty of Canadianisms!

    August 9, 2007

  • *Green with envy*

    August 9, 2007

  • It happens. Old abandoned cameras, that sort of thing. :)

    August 9, 2007

  • I like it!

    August 9, 2007

  • I like this word! When very old Kodak film is developed, the pictures are all purplish--a phenomenon I saw demonstrated this week. Our 20 year old selves all all empurpled.

    August 9, 2007

  • I agree, with you, U (amazing, I know). These idiosyncratic lists are fun. I also like to frustrate myself by looking at the inscrutable lists where it is hard to see what the lister was getting at.

    August 9, 2007

  • Okay, I am getting separation anxiety now. I will miss you two voices in my head next week. (Dear S calls all of you my imaginary friends). U, give your regards to Granny Smith. R, do you to care to give us any hint of your vacation plans?

    August 9, 2007

  • Any particular writing's of Wilber's that you can cite on that subject?

    August 9, 2007

  • Are you sure? It may be very lonely!

    August 9, 2007

  • Well, he should care--if you are a part of him, he would be diminished by your absence. Says Judge Slumry. So there.

    August 9, 2007

  • And just wait until I start in on the word fancy!

    August 9, 2007

  • Oooh, I hadn't thought of that!

    August 9, 2007

  • Invective and spleen and treason too? Wow! Am I a Wordie heretic? Will I be burned on a pyre?

    I will join with my conbrethren and found the Savesave sect.

    August 9, 2007

  • This is a great list, and enlightening. I am going to add umpty-umpth to my words, because I particulary like it as an ordinal.

    I like infinity minus one a lot too, U. It reminds me of the old joke about the natural history museum docent. Asked how old a particular fossil was, he said "Two million and twenty one years." As explanation for such a precise number, he explained that when he started working there 21 years ago, it was two million years old.

    August 9, 2007

  • It always amuses me--it was a favorite of my mother's, usually used semi-humorously.

    August 9, 2007

  • That is interesting. As I recall, one of Freud's translators more or less coined this word as a translation of a German word that means someting like "to occupy" If a person cathects something, he or she invests emotional energy in it and makes it his own. Bruno Bettelheim wrote a book about what he regarded as the mis-translation of Freud's writing.

    August 9, 2007

  • Stuff and nonsense! Eyewash! Save is a perfectly fine preposition, having evolved in parallel with the other sense of save. It does mean except.

    As for having cofusingly contranymic meanings, that is just balderdash. It may be a near-contranym, but in practice it would take a real dunderhead to fail to understand the two meanings.

    August 9, 2007

  • Rosa rugosa has wringkly leaves

    August 8, 2007

  • Used as an expression of disbelief; poppycock

    August 8, 2007

  • "We sailed for America, and there made certain preparations. This took but little time. Two members of my family elected to go with me. Also a carbuncle. The dictionary says a carbuncle is a kind of jewel. Humor is out of place in a dictionary."

    Mark Twain, Following the Equator, Chapter 1, page 1

    August 8, 2007

  • Thank you for this Poetrie, Reesettee!

    August 7, 2007

  • As a noun, celestial refers to a heavenly being, a god or angel.

    August 7, 2007

  • the doctrine of transmigration of souls into another body

    August 7, 2007

  • That's what the sign on the peaches at the grocery store said.

    August 6, 2007

  • deranged

    August 6, 2007

  • Bad mitten! Bad mitten! Go to your room, mitten!

    August 4, 2007

  • There are some words I just can't pass up; this is one.

    August 4, 2007

  • This word makes me blush--then I remember: food--it is food they are talking about.

    August 4, 2007

  • Aw gee. . .I am glad you did that. I love Edward Lear. I was trying to recall if it was the honey or the money that was wrapped up in the five pound note. It sounds like it was both!

    August 3, 2007

  • Oh, I must add mercurochrome to my evocative smells list! And speaking of stains, this made me think of gentian violet.

    August 3, 2007

  • a bit of a stretch, maybe, but what about under a bushel?

    August 3, 2007

  • Thanks--that was fun to do--and I had to do it, because you had planted an earworm! :)

    August 3, 2007

  • sieve? And I just learned that a pink is a small sailing vessel

    August 3, 2007

  • Poetrie: The Jumblies

    Inspired by Reesetee's Out to Sea list

    August 3, 2007

  • I second that--nice list; I like the Lyle Lovett quote. In fact, I think I will stop listening to this disturbing news about the nation's infrastructure and listen to some Lyle Lovett.

    August 2, 2007

  • Why, to make mercurial ointment, of course: "In the old formula for making mercurial ointment, the quicksilver is merely directed to be rubbed with the axunge and suet until it be killed, which is nearly impossible. . ."

    from The Edinborugh Medical and Surgical Journal, 1805

    August 2, 2007

  • full of whims; whimsical

    August 2, 2007

  • a Japanese textile art

    August 2, 2007

  • Japanese braid making

    August 2, 2007

  • Probably an echoic for hitting

    August 2, 2007

  • a cup or glass filled to the brim

    August 2, 2007

  • surpassingly

    August 2, 2007

  • Formed by apocope from pudding. Used to refer to dessert in general. "What's for pud?

    August 1, 2007

  • The extinct animal was a mastodon, not a mastadon.

    August 1, 2007

  • Sounds like if you tried to walk on it, it would be a slip 'n slide!

    August 1, 2007

  • a club moss

    August 1, 2007

  • reverberation

    August 1, 2007

  • a preposition that means in regard to or concerning

    August 1, 2007

  • Cedar shakes look similar to cedar shingles; however, the shakes are split rather than sawn.

    August 1, 2007

  • Alas, I have offended. I am undone!

    August 1, 2007

  • a sluggard

    August 1, 2007

  • a factotum

    August 1, 2007

  • Wordie, scrambled

    August 1, 2007

  • Or we could go the other directions and call ourselves Wordors.

    August 1, 2007

  • Yup, less-than-skillful painting at that.

    August 1, 2007

  • After the eponymous President Hoover--a collection of shacks and huts at the edge of the city where unemployed people lived in the 1930s

    August 1, 2007

  • Just a step removed--summed up flippantly by "I don't know and I don't care."

    August 1, 2007

  • verb: to clean with a vacuum cleaner

    August 1, 2007

  • Ah yes, glad to remember this one.

    August 1, 2007

  • A Canadian expat who lives in the Cayman Islands. (in jest, of course) Seen on a T shirt worn by an American who would like to pass for Caymadian.

    August 1, 2007

  • It is real--from OED--funny, huh?

    August 1, 2007

  • OED says: "One who sells; a seller; sometimes in restricted sense, a street-seller."

    I have seen it used only in the restricted sense, such as the "food venders" at fairs.

    August 1, 2007

  • OED says: "late Anglo-French; earlier vendour from the French vendeur. One who disposes of a thing by sale; a seller." Cf. vender

    August 1, 2007

  • the act of vending; sale

    August 1, 2007

  • a diminutive dwarf

    August 1, 2007

  • accompaniments or ingredients for food

    August 1, 2007

  • intransitive verb: to be dark and threatening; also lour. noun: an angry or threatening look

    August 1, 2007

  • Hyoscyamus niger

    August 1, 2007

  • Atropa belladonna

    August 1, 2007

  • It is what allows a dandelion or thistle seed to sail through the air.

    August 1, 2007

  • Results of a medical test where, "a penlight shone in the mouth reveals a brain so small that the whole head lights up." Doctor humor, or so I hear. ;-) Some days I feel pumpkin positive.

    August 1, 2007

  • bullfighter; also toreadors, a style of pants worn by women in the 1950s

    August 1, 2007

  • life as seen through rose-tinted glasses

    August 1, 2007

  • hurdy gurdy

    August 1, 2007

  • dried leaves of jimson weed

    August 1, 2007

  • a name for jimson weed and other plants

    August 1, 2007

  • datura stramonium

    August 1, 2007

  • also daturine

    August 1, 2007

  • a poisonous alkaloid, also called atropine

    August 1, 2007

  • a genus of small trees in the rose family

    August 1, 2007

  • several species of crataegus are called hawthorn

    August 1, 2007

  • datura stramonium; also the fruit of the hawthorn

    August 1, 2007

  • datura, jimson weed, stinkweed or thorn apple; a poisonous tropical plant

    August 1, 2007

  • atropa belladonna, most commonly known as belladonna or deadly nightshade

    August 1, 2007

  • a small fishing boat; also walleye

    August 1, 2007

  • walleye

    August 1, 2007

  • walleyed pike, dory

    August 1, 2007

  • custard

    August 1, 2007

  • custard

    August 1, 2007

  • Mmm...custard. Dang, I should make some custard.

    August 1, 2007

  • a donothing; a slacker

    July 31, 2007

  • Thanks--you are right, these words represent wonderful memories.

    July 30, 2007

  • Maybe I could gut most of the rooms in my house and install bookshelves and reading nooks--oh wait, my SO would have an opinion, too. Rats!

    July 30, 2007

  • You are so right, R. I am trying to figure out where to put all my books as it is--but dictionaries, and especially OED, are sacred, aren't they? :)

    July 30, 2007

  • Jen and Reesettee, thank you--you are right. Marji was a good friend whopassed away last March from melanoma. I was felt moved to list some Marji words last week; the word compote triggered the list! Funny, the power of words. :)

    July 30, 2007

  • I agree, gerwitz--it is so much easier to use the on-line sources. My OED is the two volume set with magnifying glass; it is a major productionfor me to use it. I would love to be able to use the on-line OED but there is no way I could justify the expense for my current purposes.

    July 30, 2007

  • Actually, whyever is in the OED. And whyever shouldn't it be?

    July 30, 2007

  • Scottish--slowly enlivening after waking. A word I need!

    July 30, 2007

  • obsolete--having many paths

    July 30, 2007

  • Funny, I had the opposite reaction: "Aha, makes sense to me."

    July 29, 2007

  • also shivaree, which is phonetic

    July 29, 2007

  • Beware the etymological fallacy.

    July 28, 2007

  • This was a very disturbing bit of information in today's news, wasn't it?

    July 27, 2007

  • Sigh. Yes, an unavoidable bit of reality, isn't it:)

    July 27, 2007

  • I would imagine that we will need to figure out a time that is good for all of us, since we all have commitments and are in different time zones.

    July 27, 2007

  • Then they would need to take a second look, wouldn't they? I remember a perhaps-apocryphal story aout a crusade against the word niggardly. There is enough genuinely racist speech to object to; we don't need to imagine it where it does not exist.

    July 27, 2007

  • As the newcomer, I defer to the rest of you.

    July 27, 2007

  • Hey, U--good to see you.

    July 27, 2007

  • unselfish love or mouth wide open

    July 26, 2007

  • walking

    July 26, 2007

  • I can empathize!

    July 26, 2007

  • To select the best portion; cherry pick

    July 26, 2007

  • an informal conversation, especially for the purpose of problem solving; short for confabulation. Let's have a confab!

    July 26, 2007

  • Me too!

    July 26, 2007

  • carbohydrates

    July 26, 2007

  • snicker

    July 26, 2007

  • National Public Radio, of course

    July 26, 2007

  • Ah yes, that phenomenon, she blushed, recalling the upwelling of giggles at her own wedding, which was fortunately a tiny wedding.

    July 26, 2007

  • Thanks, R.

    July 26, 2007

  • I wondered about what pigs had to to with it too! Of course that was what attracted me to the word. The truth turned out to be interesting also.

    July 26, 2007

  • household management Greek root of economics

    July 26, 2007

  • I have decided maybe I like tonocation; now what is the liguistics term for dropping a middle syllable, in this case lo?

    July 26, 2007

  • I know a Swedish woman who pronounces it that way. It is actually charming. :)

    July 26, 2007

  • As in salmon's imperative

    July 26, 2007

  • Thanks, palooka, this is a word well worth pilfering.

    Now, I wonder what word this could spawn to describe the process of looking for a cell phone by dialing its number.

    July 26, 2007

  • I like the word too. I think I will tuck it away in a drawer--it might make a good Christmas present. I hope I don't forget where I put it!

    July 26, 2007

  • Yes, my mother always warned me to avoid sacrilege. Chastened.

    July 26, 2007

  • I wonder if the job requires stagged pants.

    July 26, 2007

  • A funny image, R. . .I wonder what the priest's motivation in swinging censors would be. . .would such swinging punish the censor or the congregants? "Church was grim today. I was censor-whipped."

    July 26, 2007

  • Indeed. But don't tell him I told you so! :)

    July 26, 2007

  • I've seen many references to individual words and reflected on how common the phenomenon is. I will have to dig to find the lists. However, as always, reality intrudes. ;-)

    July 26, 2007

  • Dear S always says chestfallen. We need a list of words that are comically mispronounced, whether accidentally or on purpose.

    July 26, 2007

  • Nice. So it's a bird, not a farmer's lunch. I devoutly hope it is not a farmer's lunch. :(

    July 26, 2007

  • R, you inspire me to give this link to the full poem: http://poetry.poetryx.com/poems/5194

    I often think of lines from the poem, especially

    "Ale man, ale's the stuff to drink

    For fellows whom it hurts to think."

    Victuals is a classic case of a word that a reader would be likely to mispronounce!

    July 26, 2007

  • Last stanza of "Terrence, this is Stupid Stuff" by A. E. Housman

    There was a king reigned in the East:

    There, when kings will sit to feast,

    They get their fill before they think

    With poisoned meat and poisoned drink.

    He gathered all that sprang to birth

    From the many-venomed earth;

    First a little, thence to more,

    He sampled all her killing store;

    And easy, smiling, seasoned sound,

    Sate the king when healths went round.

    They put arsenic in his meat

    And stared aghast to watch him eat;

    They poured strychnine in his cup

    And shook to see him drink it up:

    They shook, they stared as white’s their shirt:

    Them it was their poison hurt.

    —I tell the tale that I heard told.

    Mithridates, he died old.

    July 26, 2007

  • Fortunately for me I don't expect to be asked to pronounce it anytime soon!

    July 26, 2007

  • Not at all! I changed to hypocorism, but forgot to eliminate all traces of my presence here. Somehow pet name loses something in this deal.

    July 26, 2007

  • Funny word, no? "She had to go to the dressing room to complete her diphthongization. Fortunately she emerged wearing a towel."

    July 26, 2007

  • a pet name

    July 26, 2007

  • altering an unfamiliar word to make it more familiar

    July 26, 2007

  • An adverb with a chiefly connecting function; a conjunctive adverb

    July 26, 2007

  • use of a word to refer to only part of its normal meaning

    July 26, 2007

  • To add a diphthongal quality to what was formerly a pure vowel

    July 26, 2007

  • I swear, every time I read about cencers, they are being swung by the priest.

    July 26, 2007

  • Fried chicken was served at a large family gathering. Little Georgie was offered a piece of chicken: breast or drumstick? He would only reply, "Must have been a mamma chicken." Repeatedly. Insistently. Louder each time. Never lived that down!

    July 26, 2007

  • an acronymn coined by whathisniame; also a fuddy-duddy (bacformation)

    July 25, 2007

  • Something that produces crumbs or something that is covered with crumbs; something that is of poor quality; a bus used to transfer workers to a job site. Wish I knew how the last meaning evolved (I could speculate, but would like to find some actual evidence. ;-)

    July 25, 2007

  • Thanks! I know sometimes I get a bit carried away, and I am mindful of that *reality* thing. I love chatting with you Wordies!

    July 25, 2007

  • What one is to one's brother?

    July 25, 2007

  • Cute comment about VIers, R. I almost missed it. Somehow I am doubtful . . .

    July 25, 2007

  • U, U are a silly billy! (and I don't care what your name is, I will call you Silly Billy Smith.

    Listen up: Uniters is not a good idea.

    July 25, 2007

  • Me too, R. This word is a keeper! Thanks, Muamor.

    July 25, 2007

  • Cat (or kitty) A word I learned from and Eric Bogle song

    July 25, 2007

  • wotsit

    July 25, 2007

  • doohickey

    July 25, 2007

  • thingamajig

    July 25, 2007

  • whatchamacallit

    July 25, 2007

  • Is it like a whatsit?

    July 25, 2007

  • I'll see what I can do!

    July 25, 2007

  • I wondered about douban also. Turns out two of the people who recently listed douban also listed China. description of douban here: http://www.sinosplice.com/life/archives/2005/12/13/douban

    Now I understand why the appearance of these words surprised me--they are outside of my usual frame of reference.

    July 25, 2007

  • That's funny, Cranewang. ;-)

    July 25, 2007

  • Welcome! I hope you enjoy it here.

    July 25, 2007

  • a pattern of several colors

    July 25, 2007

  • Noun. A very sociable, agreeable person--a friend to everyone.

    July 25, 2007

  • Speaking of mythical, my second grade teacher regaled us with stories about Abe the Caveman. I assumed he was a historical figure, like Abraham Lincoln. (Now I don't believe in Abrahan Lincoln. ;-)

    July 25, 2007

  • Please tell Granny Smith hello for me. :)

    July 25, 2007

  • You mean three syllables like: "I don't biv uh wack!" (that was a joke, by the way--could not resist a little word play)

    July 25, 2007

  • a cover for a sleeping bag that is sometimes used by backpackers and hikers instead of a tent, or for emergencies. (short for bivouac, of course)

    July 25, 2007

  • This word makes me laugh.

    July 25, 2007

  • Have to think about that--my idea of the south is mostly as told in southern literature, which is of course full of riches. I have had very little reason to spend time in the south, so the region is still a little *unreal* to me.

    July 25, 2007

  • Happily! Do you have a fax number?

    Really, I like to make apple pie (except when the crust will not hold together)

    July 25, 2007

  • conciliatory

    July 25, 2007

  • Poor horse!

    July 25, 2007

  • Quite different than meritorious

    July 25, 2007

  • Or this wonderful song:

    http://www.etni.org.il/music/marveloustoy.htm

    (and an appropriate website for usall.)

    July 25, 2007

  • Well, it is an informal word, useful in some spoken contexts, but not in formal writing. Context is everything!

    And then there was Shakespeare, but what did he know? ;-)

    July 25, 2007

  • Probably if I had asked to have the sandwiches cut on the diagonal, my wish would have been granted, barring memory lapses! ;-)

    July 25, 2007

  • Not exactly opposite--I think joey refers to babyhood rather than gender. I wonder if a baby female kangaroo is a joey too.

    July 25, 2007

  • The female of some animals--Jenny Wren insisted on coming in our house one winter, no matter how many times she was put out. Honest. (Also my grandmother's name--my grandfather-to-be dipped her red braids in the inkwell, I am told)

    July 24, 2007

  • I never learned to do french braids. Nor did my mother. In second grade, my idea of a perfect life was french braids, sandwiches cut diagonally rather than straight across, and snowball cakes in my lunch. Alas, these things were cruelly withheld from me. Sob.

    July 24, 2007

  • Or seated duffs. Better get off mine soon!

    July 24, 2007

  • Uh oh!

    July 24, 2007

  • So right you are. . .in this case wealthy is an old apple variety (which is in the dictionary.) That is, it is an apple variety until someone points out one of the other meanings of the word! It amazes me, too, that we have not even come close to naming all the lexemes used in the English language

    July 24, 2007

  • If I buy any marzipan, I will have to hide it with the Eskimo Pies. ;-)

    July 24, 2007

  • Well, words do come to me in the middle of the night and at all other times (think houseful of sticky notes). However, I am naming my stash lists in some sort of rough sequence. Since I called the last one as soon as I finish this chapter, I decided to call this one is it morning yet?.

    July 24, 2007

  • Nice word. Like some other weapons, it sounds deceptively ridiculous. To wit, blunderbuss.

    July 24, 2007

  • I remember bit o'honey bars (once you bit into one, you could not move your teeth) Do not know bit o'heaven. Just as well, I am sure.

    But I do have a weakness for marzipan anything.

    July 24, 2007

  • I say he should watch where he puts his dang mailbox.

    July 24, 2007

  • So, so sad! :(

    July 24, 2007

  • It is sad when trees go. . .I just visited the Sequoia tree in what was once my mother's yard. It was a tiny thing when my brother gave it to her oh those many years ago. They are not native here, nor do people commonly plant them for ornamentals.

    July 24, 2007

  • How funny!

    July 24, 2007

  • Chinook jargon for berries

    July 24, 2007

  • Oh, yes; must add olallie to my Chinook Jargon list! Thanks.

    so that must make olallieberry beri-beri. ;-) Really, I am very impressed with your list!

    July 24, 2007

  • Rude mailboxes! Why didn't they get out of the way?

    July 24, 2007

  • Cute, jen.

    July 24, 2007

  • I love crabapple trees, beautiful pink crabapples, and crabapple jelly (crabapple and quince is a nice combination, too). Thanks!

    July 24, 2007

  • Good list idea! For his own amusement, my father grafted a tomato onto a potato and told his nephew that it was a new hybrid. Mean daddy. ;-)

    July 24, 2007

  • The earliest apple to bear in these parts. Green ones were good for lobbing at siblings, as was the fruit of old man in the ground. According to my memory, I was the lobee, but I know how unreliable that kind of memory is!

    July 24, 2007

  • A close relative of Wordie-famous Useful/less/ness, and, secondarily, an apple variety.

    July 24, 2007

  • Yup, yup, those are all good ones.

    July 24, 2007

  • also a small seed (short for pippin, I believe). Or a bit of rootstock from which a new plant can be grown.

    July 24, 2007

  • one of the pippins

    July 24, 2007

  • yes!

    July 24, 2007

  • U, think of the scorn that would be heaped upon us if we were to call ourselves that. Leave bad enough alone!

    July 24, 2007

  • Speaking of childhood misunderstandings. . .

    I grew up in the Chehalis Valley in western Washington. To the north were the black hills (no not THE black hills). My brother pointed to the hills and told me Alaska was beyond those hills. I always assumed that if I could walk over the hills, I would be in Alaska. I did not get out a lot in those days!

    July 24, 2007

  • Not shameful, you were just missing the good stuff!

    July 24, 2007

  • Funny R (well, not really haha funny). I must have been about 10 when I read something about "a girl with scabs on her knees." It was the first time I considered that there was anything unusual about scabs on the knees. Of course it didn't help that the only time we were allowed to wear pants to school was if it was really, really cold (here that means under 25 degrees F!) Even when we did wear pants, we wore dresses over them. How quaint that seems now!

    July 24, 2007

  • Currently my favorite winter apple for eating out-of-hand. It seems to store very well.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thanks, Trivet. Those are good. I should get back to this list! I think you have prompted me to do so. This is a topic that is very dear to my heart for sentimental as well as culinary reasons.

    And U, I love the great old-fashiond McIntosh apple. However, I am a PC user (which reminds me, U, I responded to the other thread we had going, but lost it when the system went kerflooey. I will redo it.)

    July 24, 2007

  • Ooh, let's see deep under the frozen blueberries slumry stashes Eskimo Pies so that the other slumry does not know they are there. Would it be wrong? Would it be too much sleight of hand or trickery?

    July 24, 2007

  • Good--maybe I should have left it for comic effect! Let's see, what does this picture look like?

    July 24, 2007

  • I love to hear both the laughing gulls and the red-winged blackbirds. One says beach to me, the other spring.

    And there is chickadee-dee-dee whose presence says winter, even though they are here other times.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thanks trivet! You remind me of another job--rigging slinger

    July 24, 2007

  • stagged-off pants have the hems cut off, usually for safety. This allows the pants to rip rather than trapping the wearer in a dangerous situation.

    July 24, 2007

  • Yes, I think you are right. To make a fine, but important, distinction, though: This sort of language has a different connotation when used for a drink than when used for an unchosen risk. People in dangerous occupations tend to have a healthy respect for risks of the job. That is why they avoid creating widowmakers, wear stagged pants, and do not wear wrist watches.

    Risk taking for sport or purely to demonstrate macho is gratuitous. I would reserve tough-guy culture for those sorts of things. I used to scuba dive. There is an unhealthy strand of tough-guy culture in that sport.

    As for PC, what a howler that logger should be considered more PC than lumberjack. It is a regional difference, of course. The irony is that a logger would regard the latter term as too prettied-up; effete; citified. In their own region, of course, lumberjacks would have quite a different opinion.

    July 24, 2007

  • In loggers' jargon, a tree positioned so that it might fall on a man. I cringe to think of this.

    July 24, 2007

  • Oh, I am so glad you remember that one! I was thinking the same thing about the teacher's motivation! I did have second thoughts because it is not a playground game, but in our wet climate, we spent a lot of recesses in the classroom.

    July 24, 2007

  • Ah, high school. . .it is fortunate that we mature, isn't it? These are the kinds of memories that tend to make us blush in retrospect.

    July 24, 2007

  • Theology: a divinely conferred gift or power

    July 24, 2007

  • I did mean to say also I agree with you than American is a misleading description, although it seems to be deeply rooted now!

    July 24, 2007

  • one's own counsel i.e., keep one's thoughts to oneself.

    July 24, 2007

  • an easy target

    July 24, 2007

  • Only if we want to make ourselves sitting ducks. ;-)

    July 24, 2007

  • cat's cradle?

    July 24, 2007

  • Did you play seven up? It was another inside game that involved closing your eyes and putting your head on the desk. I seem to remember that the player who was "it" went around the room and tagged seven people. . .beyond that, it is a little fuzzy.

    July 24, 2007

  • You are right--I am sure there are variations according to region and era, although it is amazing how enduring some of them are--Red Rover, for instance. It would be fun to know where that name came from, but I think it has been around a long time. Thanks again for doing this list.

    July 24, 2007

  • to the right or to the left, depending on where you are

    July 24, 2007

  • Good list--I love it. When it rained, we sometimes played dodgeball in the multipurpose room. And one form of jump rope was red hot pepper.

    July 24, 2007

  • company, a distance, going, trying, frozen (frequent instruction on food packages), ahold or a grip,

    July 24, 2007

  • Makes you kind of want to give up food, isn't it. I think I must counterbalance this by starting the food list I have been thinking about!

    July 24, 2007

  • Your experience is a good example, u.

    July 24, 2007

  • And in practice, the term is used to denote a certain kind of inner conflict: If I feel that a situation compels me to do a thing, and that thing is contrary to my self image, I will experience cognitive dissonance.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thant's funny, u. The experience is so common.

    July 24, 2007

  • I am glad you like this one--I was quite enchanted after seeing some related contemporary art at the University of Washington's Natural History Museum. I was fascinated to read about spindle whorls in early cultures also.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thanks for highlighting this word, R. I must put it on my key it out list (which I need to work on--it is far from complete). But I have been having too much fun! ;-)

    July 24, 2007

  • I have always found this a useful concept, too, although I almost never say it out loud (perhaps that is because it is usually an internal event.) One of the phrases I retained from an long ago ed psych class, I believe.

    July 24, 2007

  • Thanks R. I should be more careful! :)

    July 24, 2007

  • in Japan, a cushion for sitting or kneeling on the floor

    July 24, 2007

  • A Japanese dyeing technique

    July 24, 2007

  • stylish

    July 24, 2007

  • fashionable

    July 24, 2007

  • A kind of paper made in Japan

    July 24, 2007

  • Japanese deepfried fish and vegetables

    July 24, 2007

  • also called poster paint

    July 24, 2007

  • an analgesic for mild pain, but not for inflammation

    July 24, 2007

  • To sting with, or as if with, nettles.

    July 24, 2007

  • An example and definition here: http://www.civilization.ca/tresors/treasure/228eng.html

    July 24, 2007

  • a material applied to the surfact of porous material such as cloth or paper to fill the pores

    July 24, 2007

  • excellent

    July 24, 2007

  • Nice to *see* you, Meeralee. I learned tenebrous from you today. When I saw the word, I immediately thought of Christian Holy Week Tenebrae services. I had never known where the wordTenebrae came from. Reading the definition of tenebrous, it now makes sense.

    I keep meaning to make a list for the words that I just don't seem to "get," no matter how many times I look them up.

    July 23, 2007

  • Indeed! One opinion is that their name came from a Russian word meaning "to squeak!"

    July 23, 2007

  • Oh, people must have been keeping watch for Jen that night! :)

    July 23, 2007

  • From American Heritage Dictionary:

    1. The misapplication of a word or phrase, as the use of blatant to mean "flagrant."

    2. The use of a strained figure of speech, such as a mixed metaphor.

    July 23, 2007

  • New Year's eve

    July 23, 2007

  • A flower without petals is apetalous.

    July 23, 2007

  • A descriptor of mud: We walked through boot-sucking mud all the way to Shi-Shi beach. Really.

    July 23, 2007

  • Clever! I like it.

    July 23, 2007

  • A smaller than life-size ceremonial mask.

    July 23, 2007

  • given to joking

    July 23, 2007

  • I like this!

    July 23, 2007

  • It is a humorous term for Scandinavian; it is probably just as well that the dictionaries don't dignify it by defining it. ;-) I rarely use the word, and when I do it is in the spirit of self-mockery

    July 22, 2007

  • agriculture; farming

    July 22, 2007

  • a farm (also Patrons of Husbandry, an organization of farmers)

    July 22, 2007

  • causing fatigue or boredom

    July 22, 2007

  • also dryly

    July 22, 2007

  • I like this word in the sense of unpretentious, but it is easily misunderstood.

    July 22, 2007

  • A paperlike product, impervious to moisture, made of viscose; originally a trademark. Also cellophane tape.

    (makes me think of tinfoil) ;-) Tinfoil just sounds homier than the correct aluminum foil.

    July 22, 2007

  • That softens it! ;-)

    July 21, 2007

  • In the 1970s or 80s it was a certain kind of haircut; one I never liked because it was too . . .shaggy. ;-)

    July 21, 2007

  • Hi K&P,

    I have been enjoying your list, and particulaly like your username. Good to see you around!

    July 21, 2007

  • c.1455, from L. debentur "there are due," said to have been the first word in formal certificates of indebtedness.

    July 21, 2007

  • Frequently, a term for a Scandahoovian.

    July 21, 2007

  • Usage: "Ya, you betcha!" (Scandahoovian), of which I am half.

    July 21, 2007

  • Among other things:

    A protected name under which a wine may be sold, indicating that the grapes used are of a specific kind from a specific district.

    July 21, 2007

  • Thinking of Plato's World of Forms See:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forms

    July 21, 2007

  • That which hops, or:

    5. a funnel-shaped chamber or bin in which loose material, as grain or coal, is stored temporarily, being filled through the top and dispensed through the bottom.

    July 21, 2007

  • See description of hopper crystals here:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hopper_crystal

    I just like the image. . .the crystals resemble a hopper

    July 21, 2007

  • Bail? Bail!

    Nice

    July 21, 2007

  • adjective

    cunning and sly; "the pawky rich old lady who incessantly scores off her parasitical descendants"- Punch

    July 21, 2007

  • kestrel

    July 21, 2007

  • Handle of a kettle or pail. You could make a blackberry bucket by attacting a wire bail to a three pound coffee can. But these days you probably wouldn't.

    July 21, 2007

  • to avoid giving a direct answer

    July 21, 2007

  • Line of descent as traced through women on the maternal side of the family.

    July 21, 2007

  • useful for tracking matrilineage

    July 21, 2007

  • No, No, No. All blonds may apply--I was just checking. Actually, teasing. I plan to do my blonde v. blond comment soon. Stay tuned. ;-)

    But at least you are not in the toupee pitch league! I know men who would kill for hair of any color.

    July 21, 2007

  • having properties of both chaos and order (I had to dig for a definition) :)

    July 21, 2007

  • You too? On your head? Or in your cupboard?

    July 20, 2007

  • a word that looks like its meaning, in my opinion

    July 20, 2007

  • "to be too confident of your own intelligence in a way that annoys other people," is the definition I found. I think it carries the further connotation of undermining oneself by trying too hard to be clever or smart.

    "Too clever for your own good" is better.

    July 20, 2007

  • You are right, this one is more fun as an ink blot test!

    Gotta get my galleass moving!

    July 20, 2007

  • No batting skills required--it was a great consolation for those of us who could neither throw nor hit a ball accurately.

    July 20, 2007

  • Websters also mentions bully. I like that, because to my ear, this word sounds like an insult, or term of ridicule, especially if the second syllable is emphasized.

    Oh, that lilylivered spaDASsin.

    July 20, 2007

  • I love the book search feature too. In fact, I have been meaning to thank John for separating it out for us. Thanks John!!

    July 20, 2007

  • More about skybald here: http://books.google.com/books?id=FckRAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA196&dq=skybald

    Thanks for another fine word, R.

    July 20, 2007

  • With piebald, pieintheskybyeandbyebald? "Someday I will have hair again, I just know it." Plays toupee pitch baseball.

    July 20, 2007

  • Probably it was Mrs. Hall's invention. As I recall, the desks were bases and players moved around the bases as they spelled words correctly. Pretty simple. We were pretty simple! ;-)

    July 20, 2007

  • Hello and welcome!

    Five good adjectives to redeem one *bad* noun. Not bad. You should have fun here!

    July 20, 2007

  • Well, it is true: I have visited a few golf courses, and even *hit* some balls once.

    In third grade, we played spelling-bee baseball when it rained. It was the only time I ever was chosen first for any sports team!

    July 20, 2007

  • Children might be listening! ;-)

    July 20, 2007

  • Golf links are green, but I do not golf. Perplexing.

    July 20, 2007

  • The Naughty Preposition

    --Morris Bishop

    I lately lost a preposition:

    It hid, I thought, beneath my chair.

    And angrily I cried: "Perdition!

    Up from out of in under there!

    Correctness is my vade mecum,

    And straggling phrases I abhor;

    And yet I wondered: "What should he come

    Up from out of in under for?"

    July 20, 2007

  • to occupy oneself in a liesurely or inneffective manner

    July 20, 2007

  • Variant of putter. Also one who makes pots. And presumably one who potsplants. And. . .

    July 20, 2007

  • Green. . .am I the only one who sees the green ones?

    July 20, 2007

  • Jen, I suspect that was a definition, not a personal statement. Perhaps it needed quotation marks. I thought it was a neat summation of the term. ;-) It sort of alludes to "Like flickr, but without the photos," which makes me laugh every time.

    July 20, 2007

Show 200 more comments...