Comments by yarb

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  • Citation on quad system.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on quad system.

    March 26, 2012

  • In her New York apartment at one time she had set up a huge quad system and more or less lived inside it, eating dietetic sandwiches and drinking fake frosty slime drinks made out of nothing. Listening forty-eight hours at a stretch to disc after disc by the Purple People Strings, which he abominated.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on featherplastic.

    March 26, 2012

  • ...Ruth still had beautiful black hair, all coiled in an upsweep at the back of her head. Featherplastic eyelashes, brilliant purple streaks across her cheek, as if she had been seared by psychedelic tiger claws.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • ...a first-rate cocktail lounge. The kind many women go to, with a three-man combo playing fob jazzy, preferably blacks. Well dressed.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • On the screen McNulty's rumpled hyped-up features appeared.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on pleasure-nodule.

    March 26, 2012

  • ..."you," he said chokingly, "are a reflex machine that diddles itself endlessly like a rat in an experiment. You're wired into the pleasure nodule of your brain and you push the switch five thousand times an hour every day of your life when you're not sleeping. It's a mystery to me why you bother to sleep; why not diddle yourself a full twenty-four hours a day?"

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on fetish.

    March 26, 2012

  • Whenever she had been heavily fetishing and/or drugging she crashed her in his main office.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • "What was it this time?" he demanded. "Termaline?"

    "No." Her speech, of course, came out slurred. "Hexophenophrine hydrolsulphate. Uncut. Subcutaneous. She opened her great pale eyes, stared at him with rebellious displeasure.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • ...at the coffee machine, a female officer drinking from a Dixie cup.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • With his rank key he opened the building's express descent sphincter, dropped rapidly by chute to his own level, fourteen. Where he had worked most of his adult life.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Large tears slid down her cheeks and dropped, bloblike, onto her blouse.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • "He's just one of those little green turtles... not a land tortoise or anything. Have you ever watched the way they snap at food, at a fly floating on their water? It's very small but it's awful. One second the fly's there and the next, glunk. It's inside the turtle."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on infinity ceiling.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on infinity ceiling.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on infinity ceiling.

    March 26, 2012

  • I have a floating house in Malibu, he thought, with eight bedrooms, six rotating baths and a four-dimensional living room with an infinity ceiling.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • She held up her right arm, pointing to a section of her sleeve. "I've got a gray pol-ident tab, there; it shows up under their macrolens. So I don't get picked up by mistake."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on thungly.

    March 26, 2012

  • ...the man, gripped by four thungly pols, disappeared into a parked van-quibble, ominously gray and black: police colors.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Once, years ago, when the Reynolds syndicate had tried to buy into the show, he had learned to use - and had carried - a gun: a Barber's Hoop with a range of two miles with no loss of peak trajectory until the final thousand feet.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on freeber.

    March 26, 2012

  • He had no more quinques. So, at this point, he gave up. That was a stupid thing to say, he realized, that about the phone lines. That would make anybody hang up. I strangled myself in my own word web, right down the old freeber. Straight down the middle. Beautifully flat at both ends, too. Like a great artificial anus.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • "She's probably sicced the pols and nats both on me."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on brig.

    March 26, 2012

  • She peered, one eyebrow cocked. "You're young but not too young. You're good-looking. Your voice is commanding and you have no reluctance about brigging me like this. You're exactly what a twerp fan would look like, sound like, act like. Okay; are you satisfied?"

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on prive-pol.

    March 26, 2012

  • Citation on prive-pol.

    March 26, 2012

  • "I won't meet you at Altrocci's or anywhere. Keep out of my life or I'll have my prive-pols deball you and-"

    "You have one private pol," Jason interrupted. "He's sixty-two years old and his name is Fred. Originally he was a sharpshooter with the Orange County Minutemen; used to pick off student jeters at Cal State Fullerton. He was good then, but he's nothing to worry about now."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • He found a public phone booth, entered, shut the door against the noise of traffic, and dropped a gold quinque into the slot.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • "When you blep away," he said abruptly, trying to catch her off guard, "how do you do it?"

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 26, 2012

  • "You get a lot of bills," he said, "for a girl living in a one-room schmalch."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • Citation on crampedly.

    March 24, 2012

  • He prowled, crampedly, about the room, examining a book here, a cassette tape, a micromag.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • ...Kathy had a single room with a hot-compart in which to fix one-person meals.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • ...the clerk drove his old-time quibble slowly and noisily down the street...

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • Citation on Callisto cuddle sponge.

    March 24, 2012

  • It happened too fast. He backed away out of instinct, but too slowly and too late. The gelatinlike Callisto cuddle sponge with its fifty feeding tubes clung to him, anchored itself to his chest. Already he felt the feeding tubes dig into him, into his chest.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • Like all sixes she had enormous recuperative ability. It had been carefully built into each one of them.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • Citation on pol.

    March 24, 2012

  • He knew that at one time she had been illegally married to a student commune leader, and that for one year she had lived in the rabbit warrens of Columbia University, along with all the smelly, bearded students kept subsurface lifelong by the pols and the nats. The police and the national guard, who ringed every campus, keeping the students from creeping across to society like so many black rats swarming out of a leaky ship.

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • "He glanced at her, then studied her. Volumes of red hair, pale skin with a few freckles, a strong roman nose. Deep-set huge violet eyes. She was right; she didn't show her age. Of course she never tapped into the phone-grid transex network, as he did. But in point of fact he did so very little. So he was not hooked, and there had not been, in his case, brain damage or premature ageing."

    - P.K. Dick, Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said.

    March 24, 2012

  • Well, I'd guess it means the structure that surrounds the chimney itself in a living room. Made of brick or stone and usually tapering toward the ceiling. At least this makes sense of the citation, and I don't know any other term for that thing.

    March 24, 2012

  • You're welcome.

    March 23, 2012

  • I'm infatuated right down to your boogers. I'm completely besnotted.

    March 23, 2012

  • Hi Louises - I'm really enjoying your excellent citations from The Last Werewolf. Perhaps you should gather them together in a dedicated list? If you don't, then I might! Keep them coming.

    March 23, 2012

  • See afghanistanbananastan.

    March 21, 2012

  • Brackets required: Afghanistan Banana Town.

    March 21, 2012

  • A truly magisterial summation by mollusque.

    March 21, 2012

  • "Most people could weather a fortnight of unpaid work; but once you start talking about three or six months, you basically have to be living with your parents, they have to live in the same city – usually London for the desirable posts – and they have to be able to support you. So pretty soon the point arrives when there's a middle-class stranglehold on the jobs that people want to do – notably in politics, the media and the third sector."

    - Zoe Williams, Ripping off young interns is routine, but it's still wrong, guardian.co.uk, 20/03/12.

    March 21, 2012

  • There used to be a TV advert for Nabob coffee with a cheesy jingle which went "It's a Nabob coffee morning..." implying that people do love the smell of Nabob in the morning.

    March 21, 2012

  • What an awesome first comment!

    March 21, 2012

  • Cry havoc and let slip the cherry blossom.

    March 20, 2012

  • 'Vancouver's iconic cherry blossom festival could also be hit by a lagging spring.

    "The really early cherries flower normally, but the ones that would normally come out, say the first of April, come out a week or two later," Justice said. "And everything gets pushed back.

    "That creates havoc because the cherry blossom festival is essentially the month of April."'

    - Spring brings more cold, snow and rain, Vancouversun.com, 20-03-12.

    March 20, 2012

  • Oh, Century! Most romantic of lexicons.

    March 14, 2012

  • Joking aside, Griza, you have already entered this wonderful word on Wordnik. Thank you and congratulations.

    March 14, 2012

  • Or perhaps you have a particularly impressive potato and you want to enter it in a competition?

    March 14, 2012

  • How to enter a potato? I'll let someone else google that for you.

    March 14, 2012

  • Mnemonic for the colours of the rainbow, superior alternative to Roy G. Biv (after some modifications to the names of the colours).

    March 14, 2012

  • Wait, isn't umber a colour? So we could have Umber, GA.

    Come to think of it there is also the word umbra, the dark part of a shadow. So Umbra, G.E. is also a possibility.

    March 14, 2012

  • I was thinking of "emu grab" but yours is better.

    March 14, 2012

  • It would be easier to just rename the colours so they are more easily mnemonicable. For example, instead of red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet we could have unphor, mogal, brove, rosp, acetin, gliese and eltic.

    March 14, 2012

  • Although I suppose for bigrovy to gain acceptance would require some rearrangement of the visible spectrum.

    March 14, 2012

  • bigrovy would be much more fun and just as coherent.

    March 14, 2012

  • Ha, yes. I can only add to this list by not adding to it.

    March 14, 2012

  • Probably the stupidest mnemonic in common use.

    March 14, 2012

  • russet, ruddy, rubicund, rufous, erubescent?

    March 12, 2012

  • I can confirm that I have not been pelted with any bananas lately - at least not any of a ruddy hue.

    March 12, 2012

  • To sleep, porching to dream?

    March 12, 2012

  • The first photo looks kind of like the end-times (which like all good things, I'm sure will begin in Nebraksa).

    March 12, 2012

  • I find that concept rather iffacle to imagine, fbh.

    March 12, 2012

  • Wee Willie Winkie? Rip van Winkle? Winken, Blinken and Nod? Or Wee Willie Rip van Winken Bliken and Nod?

    March 12, 2012

  • I'm celebrating with a steak and kidney pie.

    March 9, 2012

  • ...but only 50 minutes for Holmes.

    March 8, 2012

  • Happened to me this morning in the shower with the word blame.

    February 29, 2012

  • Insects have six feet and are sometimes screechy.

    February 29, 2012

  • No! That's quite charming if true! Well spotted.

    February 29, 2012

  • the great unwashed?

    February 27, 2012

  • It means "travelling", or "in transit". If one is "on the road" then one is away from home, on a journey, staying in hotels, pensions, inns, auberges, hostelries, taverns, roadhouses, motels, lodges, bothies, B&B's, encampments, caravansaries &c.

    February 24, 2012

  • *initiates wardrobe malfunction sequence*

    February 6, 2012

  • Ideas for spam-related children's clothing welcomed (or anything else spam-related)

    February 3, 2012

  • Come on deinonynchus, I want to know the word for the condition of having seventeen lungs.

    February 3, 2012

  • British. Execrable.

    February 3, 2012

  • You are pisspoor even for a spammer.

    February 3, 2012

  • Where was I on Feb 15th, 2007?!

    February 3, 2012

  • Two spleen, or not two spleen?

    February 3, 2012

  • Comma gain, ruzuzu?

    February 2, 2012

  • Or, to arrange several things into a list.

    February 1, 2012

  • Interesting, brian. What you say about hork, I would say defines bork.

    February 1, 2012

  • Me too!

    January 31, 2012

  • Look at its ickle pwetty taga toes!

    January 30, 2012

  • That vague "in some places" paired with the precise "formerly 4¾ cubic yards" is classic Century!

    January 30, 2012

  • Madent may be wet, but it will never be moist.

    January 29, 2012

  • Where can I get one?!

    January 29, 2012

  • Alert! These pills make your penis smaller, not bigger, and one side-effect is inflammation of the node.

    January 29, 2012

  • A caff is a dilapidated British eatery serving English breakfasts, tea and coffee, and sandwiches and maybe a few other unwholesome things for lunch. It is quite distinct from a cafe, in that in the former all the chairs will be of normal height - no stools - and all the colours will be matt. All the tables are wipe-clean, all the condiment-bottles are sticky and all the staff are stuck, gesturing impotently, and so are you.

    January 28, 2012

  • I'm not saying you need to get multilingual here - far from it, in fact - but I think pulquería deserves a spot.

    You could also add caff, which is different from a cafe.

    January 28, 2012

  • Dam troll!

    January 27, 2012

  • "The nauseogenic properties of a patterned rug that reputedly caused motion-sickness-like symptoms in those who viewed it was the topic of this study."

    - discoblog, 26-1-12

    January 27, 2012

  • I ran across nauseogenic here and immediately went looking for a version with one less 'e'.

    January 27, 2012

  • nausogenic gets plenty of hits, though perhaps you'd consider it a misspelling of nauseogenic.

    January 27, 2012

  • Makes me think of the spawn of shell-fish; specifically, the spawn of the oyster; also, a young oyster, or young oysters collectively, up to about the time of their becoming set, or fixed to some support. And a gaiter or legging.

    January 26, 2012

  • I agree, very cool.

    January 26, 2012

  • I think it's dialectical, isn't it? Depends where you're from.

    I suppose it could be spreading by analogy with hit, fit and quit.

    January 26, 2012

  • I'm sure I've noticed it in London, too.

    January 25, 2012

  • That's uncanny. How could it know that I habitually lunch on fresh drupes and schizocarps of a Tuesday?

    January 24, 2012

  • Hi Norm. When I lived in the UK I also noticed this usage in the situations you describe, especially in the Northern part of the country. In fact I picked it up and used it myself sometimes when working behind a bar. My sense is that it's used specifically by younger males when addressing older men; especially, as you point out, by a younger man providing a product or service, or doing a courtesy, to an older one.

    January 24, 2012

  • I asked the Wordnik oracle/random word feature to describe itself in one word and it came up with... genie! So it must be real.

    January 24, 2012

  • Insanity.

    January 22, 2012

  • Well, someone made it up.

    January 22, 2012

  • A wardrobe essential for the interstellar gigolo.

    January 22, 2012

  • "But if witlings should be inclined to attack this account, let them have the candour to quote what I have offered in my defence."

    - Boswell, in Life of Johnson

    January 21, 2012

  • For what it's worth, I still think there should be a redirect to the correctly-cased version of a word, with disambiguation for genuine discrepancies.

    January 21, 2012

  • It's because the comment-engine of Wordnik comes from what was once a separate site, called Wordie, and devoted more to the social side of words than the technical side. Wordie was quite rudimentary (in the best possible way) and didn't distinguish upper from lower case. So many words which should have an upper case element are replete with old comments on their lower case form.

    January 21, 2012

  • See comments on barometz.

    January 21, 2012

  • You're right, R: P is a dwarf planet these days. As it happens, I'm currently very interested in dwarf planets, plutoids and trans-Neptunian objects, the Kuiper belt, scattered disc and Oort cloud and all that kind of stuff.

    January 20, 2012

  • Known to his pals as moschops.

    January 20, 2012

  • Personally I think it's easier to just remember the names of the planets than to remember MVEMJSUNP.

    January 20, 2012

  • *hork*

    January 20, 2012

  • Ha ha. Wordnet is the Beavis and Butthead of internet lexicons.

    January 20, 2012

  • I don't have issues with popes, licking, or monsters, but I find the pope lick monster profoundly disturbing.

    January 20, 2012

  • One of my favourites is the pope lick monster.

    January 19, 2012

  • I love these highly specific lists.

    January 19, 2012

  • Sounds like a cool kind of footwear. Like winklepicker.

    January 19, 2012

  • I'd say ludicrous and laughable have moved closer to parity with ridiculous since the Century's disquisition. I've also noticed that ludicrous (along with the other synonyms discussed here) is often used to mean unbelievable or incredible - to describe a feat of athletic skill, for example, or a long shift of work, or anything generally impressive.

    January 19, 2012

  • The ngram data is (as so often) interesting. Before about 1880 there is nothing but a whole lot of mockery of justice. But then comes the rise of the travesty of justice, usurping mockery of justice around 1910 and now more than twice as common.

    Of the other options offered by the Century, only parody of justice has any support in the corpus, and is at best a minority choice.

    January 19, 2012

  • Looking at the examples, and especially the tweets, it seems that when people use travesty in the sense of "disaster" or "disgusting state of affairs" they often do so as a short form of the stock expression travesty of justice. E.g.

    “It is too depressing by far to know that Justin Beiber has more hits on Youtube for his version of Somebody to Love than Queen. A travesty” - @jactherat

    “If Brighton win this it will be a travesty. Wrexham have been superb.” - @lawrenceVB

    “However, the big travesty is that if you live in Manhattan delivery is free – you live in the Bronx and the sale is no sale at all.” - Wine prices - beating the spread online and in-store | Dr Vino's wine blog

    I also suspect there to be some confusion with tragedy.

    January 18, 2012

  • The ngram data bears you out, ptero. I share your dejection; this is a such a pleasant, well-seeming word.

    January 18, 2012

  • I think it was pig-Latin.

    January 17, 2012

  • Re: chub-on. It seems to be more often used to describe a slight affection or penchant for something than an actual state of semi-arousal. I quite like it actually.

    January 16, 2012

  • See smellfungus.

    January 15, 2012

  • I believe "to have a chub-on" means to have an incipient erection, jenn.

    January 15, 2012

  • We found a third of them, in the end.

    January 14, 2012

  • Poignant.

    January 14, 2012

  • Get out of that rock, you bloody endolith!

    January 14, 2012

  • When I think of you, I think cu<3'ltivated and thoroughly pleasa'nt.

    January 13, 2012

  • Hi! I hope your Friday 13th was <3' not in the least bit' unlucky.

    January 13, 2012

  • Perhaps I'm <3' not' as smart as I think I am.

    January 13, 2012

  • Hmm.

    January 13, 2012

  • Dear ruzuzu,

    You are <3' the opposite of' a terrible bore.

    Yours with no <3' thing but' fondness,

    Yarb.

    January 13, 2012

  • The cat came back!

    January 13, 2012

  • Penny for your thoughts.

    January 13, 2012

  • Good one! I think it would be just as funny, though, to see the "not a" words which Wordnik does have definitions for.

    January 13, 2012

  • Right-o, I'll fire away then.

    January 12, 2012

  • See also egg on.

    January 12, 2012

  • Whoops, I added a duplicate Moses scene. Sorry about that.

    January 12, 2012

  • Well dominatrix is still common, and I've come across interlocutrix and executrix and I think editrix in old books, but I take your point. I'm a big fan of this suffix.

    January 12, 2012

  • "There’s a Skaverbacked Gritchen

    who lives in my kitchen

    and makes his home under the sink.

    And he lives upon Gipes

    that crawl out of the pipes

    and he takes only Postum to drink."

    - Shel Silverstein, There's a Gritchen in my Kitchen

    January 12, 2012

  • I've come across the singular, I think, probably in books. But I suppose the reason for the preponderance of the plural would be that cloves come whole, not typically ground or as tiny seeds. Just as you 'd say "bay leaves" instead of "bay leaf" when describing the plant generally. On the other hand we say "star anise", not "stars anise", don't we?

    January 11, 2012

  • Your younger readers will note the omission of Peppa Pig.

    January 9, 2012

  • This would be the classic British "wanker" gesture: like the "OK" gesture but rotated so the "O" is horizontal and then moved up and down by the wrist. The sort of motion Polonius might make behind the arras while Hamlet rants.

    January 6, 2012

  • It has a name?!

    January 6, 2012

  • Quaint? In my experience it's the standard (in polite conversation).

    January 6, 2012

  • Marvellous!

    January 6, 2012

  • I think of rugby. You win.

    January 6, 2012

  • I'd just throw up a craigslist ad. I bet there are more long-haired anchovy lovers in your town than you think. I'd offer my own hair - I'm due to have my ears lowered - but the quantity would only suffice for a thimble-sized sieve, and thus for a ramekin's worth of the fishy elixir.

    January 5, 2012

  • Then you should make one of those, too. You must know somebody who needs a haircut. Offer to let them have some of the anchovy sauce if they donate their locks.

    January 5, 2012

  • That sounds horrible. You should make it, ruzuzu.

    January 5, 2012

  • Thanks for pointing this out, h. Really the only acceptable type of glass for bitter.

    January 4, 2012

  • “and your brain juices are rising in your skull bowl to form a tsunami that is drowning your actual brain” @Kibasaur

    - from the tweets

    January 4, 2012

  • I wonder what the etymology of the -rob/-roob bit is?

    January 4, 2012

  • Wow - authoritative.

    January 3, 2012

  • If I read this in a text I'd assume it was a synonym for latrine.

    January 3, 2012

  • Why is May a trying month for invalids?

    January 3, 2012

  • Ha ha. Did the inspector pronounce it to rhyme with rummage?

    January 3, 2012

  • Roughly the noise I uttered upon seeing it.

    January 3, 2012

  • It's quite a difficult novel to read and I'm not sure if I will read more by Spackman. He has a special talent for dialogue, reproducing all the filler, dislocations and verbal tics of real speech - sort of like Don DeLillo but Spackman's characters have an extra layer of fanciness in their vocabulary. He is fun to read, just not that engaging; not at all gripping. Something to read four or five pages at a time perhaps.

    January 3, 2012

  • Came here to say "cool word!" only to find my comment from three and a half years ago.

    January 3, 2012

  • 'Here however his lawyer worked his weighty way through the uproar and started holding these dockets up against the cabin wall for him to sign one after another, affably bawling his full-phrased enucleation of each in turn into his ear...'

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • 'And it might have been the Thirties all over again, his cabin jammed, flowers everywhere and the most agreeable urban din, Victoria's man eeling his way through the hubbub with the champagne...'

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • 'He said in an attempt at a lighter tone, "Now Melissa the plain apodeictic fact is nobody is very sensible," but she paid no attention to this truth...'

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • Citation on impluvium.

    January 2, 2012

  • "...a snapshot of loquat trees and a dirty impluvium."

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • "...she nuzzled and cooed and femalized at him in general."

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • "...did she suppose at his age he'd be so insensible, or her own word 'irresponsible' dammit, as to disseize a perfectly decent boy, no matter how hulking, of a girl he-"

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • "He at once replied that while he couldn't say he recalled all this in, uh, quite such unerring detail, still, if a lifetime's delight in the mere look, the mere tournure, of women, in the posed and lovely portraits they always somehow made him half-think they were-"

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • '"Only then you began grumbling about their tenue, these girls', Bermuda shorts and so on, you said where had all the baroque charm gone?'"

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • Citation on frust.

    January 2, 2012

  • "'...the day we had lunch champêtre deep in that wonderful grove of beeches stretching on and on and on, by that half-ruined Doric folly with its frusts and columns.'"

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    January 2, 2012

  • "With Strickland the sexual appetite took a very small place. It was unimportant. It was irksome. His soul aimed elsewhither."

    - Somerset Maugham, The Moon and Sixpence

    December 30, 2011

  • Ronnie Barker and Ronnie Corbett

    December 29, 2011

  • Citation (sense of fool, dupe) on nubbing cheat.

    December 23, 2011

  • 'Here,' said he, taking some dice out of his pocket, 'here's the stuff. Here are the implements; here are the little doctors which cure the distempers of the purse. Follow but my counsel, and I will show you a way to empty the pocket of a queer cull without any danger of the nubbing cheat.'"

    "Nubbing cheat!" cries Partridge: "pray, sir, what is that?"

    "Why that, sir," says the stranger, "is a cant phrase for the gallows; for as gamesters differ little from highwaymen in their morals, so do they very much resemble them in their language.

    - Fielding, Tom Jones, VIII. xii.

    December 23, 2011

  • Mooooo!

    December 23, 2011

  • Did you mean satchel of shire?

    December 23, 2011

  • Excellent, thanks H. It struck me as appropriate for the season (though I guess not really suited to the decking of halls).

    December 22, 2011

  • "...honourable established people who wanted a gleaming properly laid table and good food well served and some delicious creature or other to have dinner with on a fine early-summer evening as the lights came on in the baldachin of dusk and the nightfall murmur of traffic died slowly away uptown along the Avenue..."

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    December 22, 2011

  • "Nicholas instantly resumed, demanding of Mrs. Barclay with amazed innocence other women other women must she be like a pervicacious angel think that because he loved her with every beat of his heart, love and had loved, as she herself well remembered and in this house should remember best of all..."

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    December 22, 2011

  • "...also his lawyer up from Philadelphia with his bulging briefcase, the sheer tax-maneuvering his wife's behaviour had now got him into! his own cursing yeoman forebears hadn't been amerced with a blacker set of reliefs and merchets, church-scot and plough-arms and smoke-farthings and hearthpenny on Holy Thursday, and nowadays who could he tallage in return?"

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    December 22, 2011

  • What plant does Spackman mean by this? Google is no help.

    December 22, 2011

  • "In the meadows, in the flash and dazzle of the morning, his fat black cattle grazed through the jingleweed, his white guineas ran huddling."

    - W.M. Spackman, An Armful of Warm Girl

    December 22, 2011

  • "In some ways, it appears, the balladist wasn't a bad guy ... aside from an uncontrollable oestrus he turned out to have for neighbourhood-grocers' wives, and one or two low incidents in consequence, Mike had no trouble with him whatever..."

    - W.M. Spackman, Heyday

    December 22, 2011

  • "...and why question in 1932 (or how*?) the credo trained into us of economic propraetorships inevitably to come, the steady steak-fed beating of the Big Board heart, and naturally at the last the opulent, the eupatrid retirement?"

    - W.M. Spackman, Heyday

    *the text has "or how?" but I think "or now" makes asmuch/more sense given the publication date.

    December 22, 2011

  • "...all around us, under the orderly bucolic antiphonies of drunken argument, I could hear swelling wild, swift, and ominous the pibroch of hysteria."

    - W.M. Spackman, Heyday

    December 22, 2011

  • Having said that, I almost never watch TV. Or, for that matter, spend time "on the street".

    December 22, 2011

  • I share rolig's astonishment; I've never once noticed the "sh" pronunciation. If it's so widespread you'd think I'd have heard it on TV, if not on the street.

    December 21, 2011

  • Lost: one cat.

    December 20, 2011

  • What a beast this list is!

    December 20, 2011

  • Would you say this is a happy list, ruzuzu?

    December 20, 2011

  • I tear up at the scattering of Donny's ashes.

    December 16, 2011

  • I bet the older gentleman was Mark Twain.

    edit: or Jean-Luc Picard.

    December 16, 2011

  • Duly tagged.

    December 16, 2011

  • Now I know how the Luddites felt. I mean it's neat that you can just list a link to a Wordnik search string and Bob's your uncle, but I mourn the loss of human agency. I lament the passing of the human touch in list-making. The days when an actual flesh-and-blood person had to go to Onelook and create their own search string, then type each word into the list. Or at least write a program to do all this.

    December 15, 2011

  • Ha ha! *tries vainly to think of more Greek letters that could come before "-stachio"*

    December 15, 2011

  • Time for a list of sausages, I think. God I love sausages.

    December 15, 2011

  • This stuff sounds delicious.

    December 15, 2011

  • Kongratulations.

    December 15, 2011

  • That sentence is equally true when preceded by the words "Calling your opponent..."

    December 15, 2011

  • Surely that would be ioff?

    December 9, 2011

  • Not an onion.

    December 9, 2011

  • We are the knights who say "articulatio genus".

    December 9, 2011

  • The theme of the dream is that Ruzuzu has announced that she will be leaving the site, not immediately, but soon - her last day will be in a couple of weeks. Wordie (I'm pretty sure it was -ie, not -nik) is a physical space, roughly mapped onto the hillside neighbourhood where I live. Ruzuzu's "house" / presence on Wordie is at the top of the hill. I make my way by bike through slush and gloom to attend her farewell party.

    Ruzuzu's space is a smallish bungalow, decorated haphazardly but not without discernment. Everyone is there, milling around with drinks, even long-gone names like Kewpid and Colleen. The atmosphere is cordial, bordering on fun, but with overtones of a wake. Chained_Bear has a baby with her which is passed around merrily. It says "poop!" while Bilby changes its diaper.

    Ruzuzu has made a long list of content for us to create on Wordie after she has gone. One example is 'a page to commemorate Charles Sanders Peirce's upbraiding of Mark Twain at a congressional hearing for his improper pronunciation of deliquesce' (except in the dream, a full-page account of the event is given). I read the list and wonder how she can expect us to create all of this, then realise it doesn't matter because she has already created it in the form of the list.

    But I am desperately sad that Ruzuzu is leaving. I implore her to stay, but to no end; things are intractably thus (that's what she says, quoting my favourite poet). Finding myself alone, I break down and sob desolately; I feel completely abandoned. Ruzuzu comes over and consoles me by saying that I can take one item from her house to remember her by. I look around and see nothing that could compensate for the loss of her. Bilby chooses a translucent, ruby-red desktop calculator, shot through with veins of amber. Later, I am persuaded to take a tripodal "postcard-holder" - three spindly wire legs with a crocodile clip at the top for clamping a postcard - on condition that she sends me a postcard from wherever she is bound.

    December 8, 2011

  • Is there a list or a place somewhere for discussion of Wordie/nik-related dreams? I had a zinger last night.

    December 8, 2011

  • You should probably check another 1,000 examples, just to be sure.

    December 7, 2011

  • "There had been school days like this when teachers sent questions thudding on some dream. And you sat mumchance."

    - J.P. Donleavy, Franz F

    December 7, 2011

  • See who has favourited a given word or list (possibly with opt-out on profile screen).

    December 6, 2011

  • I.e. from a given list, I want to take these particular dozen words, and move, or copy, them, to another list. I just tick those which apply and hit "move" (or "copy"), then chose the target list. You could allow copying from other people's lists, too. The same for multiple deletions.

    December 6, 2011

  • Ouch, a stinging critique.

    December 6, 2011

  • Very interesting comment, especially that last sentence. You're dead right that the crunchiness of toast - including the sound of the crunch - is an integral part of the experience of eating it. The same applies to the crunching, cracking sound of biting into an apple. This is amplified when you listen to a horse, with its outsized chompers, eating an apple - the whole thing pretty much explodes at once.

    November 30, 2011

  • *snigger*

    November 30, 2011

  • See new new interface.

    November 30, 2011

  • It's almost almost almost Solveig.

    November 30, 2011

  • Neither vuncular nor its opposite. That to which the concept of vuncularity does not apply.

    November 29, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    November 28, 2011

  • Edinburgh.

    November 26, 2011

  • "A few white mammal-bellied clouds dandered like plutocrats across the blue floor of the sky, and the reeky old city and many sorts of town and village and farmland were below me, and bleak hills edging the borders behind me, and the blue mountains edging the highlands in front, and the firth between them widening with islands and ships to the sea."

    - Looking down on Auld Reekie, in 1982, Janine by Alasdair Gray

    November 26, 2011

  • "...those Stalinist crimes imputed to you by your most ardent admirers and which the intelligently decent have NEVER been able to thole."

    - Alasdair gray, 1982, Janine.

    November 26, 2011

  • ... or nostalgic for the era of galvanism.

    November 20, 2011

  • Traditionally played by adults? What? So traditionally, adults play this game but kids don't? But right now it's different? Whaddaya mean by "traditionally" here?

    November 20, 2011

  • "They are transvestite hermaphrodites representing absolutely nothing."

    - surely this is a reason to use semicolons?

    November 18, 2011

  • Jealousy can have that meaning, but I think it's most often used synonymously with envy. But it's a nice distinction.

    I'm a fan of the word envy. It's all scrunched-up and spiteful-sounding.

    November 18, 2011

  • They banned it, but it still hasn't falun out of fashion.

    November 16, 2011

  • In China, their serving is announced by the faluns-gong.

    November 16, 2011

  • I think that must be a Wordie Pro feature, my friend.

    November 14, 2011

  • Thanks sionnach. Panel and poem both very much in the spirit of Alf.

    November 11, 2011

  • Shoofly? Don't bother me.

    November 11, 2011

  • Sounds exactly like "A Room with a View".

    Give me the Bash Street Kids any day. Or Alf Tupper, Tough of the Track.

    November 10, 2011

  • *commences bacchanalia*

    November 10, 2011

  • Pedantry aside, I believe Wee Willie Winkie and Wynken are in fact the same individual. In his nonage he was given to running through the town, and this incipient wanderlust found an adult outlet in the storied fishing expedition with Blynken and Nod.

    November 10, 2011

  • Did you mean Wynken, Blynken, and Nod?

    November 10, 2011

  • *press*

    November 10, 2011

  • *press*

    November 10, 2011

  • He's the poet who guided Dante through the undervorld.

    November 10, 2011

  • Oh look! A tasty food pellet.

    November 10, 2011

  • *presses*

    November 10, 2011

  • A crude mix of uppers and downers (amphetamines, opiates, caffeine etc) formerly used by professional cyclists as a performance enhancer. Fell out of use with the introduction of basic drug testing.

    November 8, 2011

  • It is evident!

    November 8, 2011

  • Lord Kelvin and Hermann von Helmholtz: one person, or two?

    November 8, 2011

  • I did.

    November 8, 2011

  • Bleurgh.

    November 8, 2011

  • I suppose I've had the odd tooth-loss dream, but no, they're no fun; evidently I'm as anxious about potential penury as the rest of us.

    HH, I think an evening of old-time fiddle and banjo music in Indiana is an excellent idea for the inaugural global Wordie con.

    November 8, 2011

  • Mine seem to be about relief and oblivion... I usually wake up feeling relaxed.

    November 7, 2011

  • I have a lot of tsunami dreams, perhaps because of my obsessive earthquake monitoring via the USGS global alert feed.

    November 7, 2011

  • Note to file: swaddling has never been my objective. Sionnach's calumniations lack objectivity. This page is an object lesson in objectionableness.

    November 3, 2011

  • Sionnach, I hereby appoint you as the object of my derision.

    November 3, 2011

  • I find that epithet objectionable, but have no objection to it.

    November 3, 2011

  • Just who does he think he is?

    November 3, 2011

  • Yes, and I also object to people on the internet who object to my objections, but not to the objections themselves.

    November 3, 2011

  • I'd prefer a tongue, in my earworm.

    November 3, 2011

  • What the Bamiyan Buddhas made me realise is, I don't really object to blowing up statues, but I do very much object to the kind of people who want to blow them up.

    November 3, 2011

  • I worship St. Gertrude of Nivelles, patron saint of mice, so it is a word after all.

    November 2, 2011

  • I think you'll need a bigger unit to measure what was lost during the gong-show of a transition to this new interface.

    November 2, 2011

  • It's a game.

    October 31, 2011

  • And of course, "Yarb" is a dog in Gogol's "Dead Souls". Like most dogs, Yarb is four-footed.

    October 31, 2011

  • Name them.

    October 29, 2011

  • Me too. Listing Capitalized words seems somehow wrong... undemocratic.

    What the hell. Crypto-fascist!

    October 29, 2011

  • Breakfast of champignons!

    October 29, 2011

  • Great idea, hh! I'm surprised nobody thought of that before.

    October 27, 2011

  • Also, 3rd person singular of the verb 'to supertrong'. 'Ghibbs habitually superstrong the system'.

    October 25, 2011

  • Ophelia pain, ruzuzu.

    October 25, 2011

  • Ha ha! The funny thing is, it sort of works with both "ate" and "are" (but I'm no economist).

    October 25, 2011

  • Wordplayer: so why are there no square drums?

    October 22, 2011

  • If a gunslinger unslings a gun,

    what does an unslinger do to have fun?

    Does he unholster his gun super-quickly

    or does he insert it therein with a sickly

    grin and a word of appeasement?

    And for his easement,

    what's there to bolster a

    pseudo-upholsterer,

    the last of his cover being blown?

    October 22, 2011

  • A land on the margins of Middle Earth, ruled by Centaurs.

    October 22, 2011

  • The conga is a sophisticated art form!

    October 21, 2011

  • Conger is tasty. I like to eat it with congee.

    October 21, 2011

  • I like how in the first visual, the phrases are in the order you'll need them.

    October 20, 2011

  • She doesn't look Belgian to me, in any case.

    What is that thing? She looks like she's about to hurl it at a politician.

    October 20, 2011

  • I will confess to a having a fetish for Belgians.

    October 20, 2011

  • This vile word incentses me.

    October 16, 2011

  • I've been working my way through this guy's Youtube videos. They really are works of art. I love the refrain of "my tongue... back of my throat...".

    For relevance, I link to the Bhut Jolokia or ghost chile, but my favourite so far is the Dorset Naga.

    October 16, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    October 15, 2011

  • You're lucky I like the taste of SPAM, dude!

    October 15, 2011

  • Black Cat, yeah! A frightening word.

    October 15, 2011

  • One of my favourite books, "Holiday Tales Christmas in the Adirondacks".

    - "Yis, the yarb be good fur a woman when things go crosswise, and the box'll be a great help to her many and many a night, beyend doubt."

    October 12, 2011

  • "'Twas rolig! And the slithey toves..."

    October 12, 2011

  • That is a sorry pun, bilby. And I laughed at it, mohr's the pity.

    October 12, 2011

  • I have assembled a cutup, but I'm not sure the writing gains anything. Sometimes a plain list is the best medium for poetry.

    October 11, 2011

  • This list is pure poetry. Magnificent ludic stuff. Actually it's something I've thought about before, but I can't improve on your selections.

    October 11, 2011

  • *lies down on railway tracks*

    October 11, 2011

  • I suppose it's so-named because it makes children easily portable by wheelbarrow.

    October 11, 2011

  • Wednesday night Jazzercise with Duns Scotus.

    October 11, 2011

  • Boxercise classes with Simone de Beauvoir.

    October 11, 2011

  • I do not recall writing those comments. Sionnach, it hasn't arrived yet! It's being shipped from the UK I think. Can't wait to get stuck into a mess of arboreal erotica.

    October 11, 2011

  • I also see ent - so I am going now to have intercourse with trees, I'm going into the vast forests of this province. My stride is such that in two days I will be out of Moot distance, and for those of you who don't know what that means - it was a Beta version called the "Tree". - I am surrounded by the bloody things but soon it will just be one vast plain full of escapists and associated Apple ghouls.

    October 9, 2011

  • I also noticed the words ass, urge and gen - and the backword us, which seem to explain everything, When the great middle-class revolt occurs, this page will be the Rosetta Stone. Or do I mean the Golden Bough? Yes, the latter. Sorry Rosetta Stone!

    October 9, 2011

  • See also the wildly popular pseudolist, one who engages in this old-time hobby.

    October 9, 2011

  • And then she gafe you the shofe?

    October 6, 2011

  • I'd rather be among Old Ones than Great Old Ones.

    October 5, 2011

  • To yodel pretentiously.

    October 4, 2011

  • Is a pseudolist one who pseudols?

    October 4, 2011

  • Frightening stuff!

    October 4, 2011

  • whelks?!

    October 3, 2011

  • I believe this is a Canadian post-rock band.

    October 3, 2011

  • Interesting to see widespread use of this bit of philosophical jargon on the Twitter.

    Who said Twitter was an intellectual desert?

    October 1, 2011

  • I'll have the house-sweepings please, waiter.

    October 1, 2011

  • As prolagus alludes, this is an oncomatopoeia.

    September 29, 2011

  • Imagine being savaged by a watermelon. Bilby I'm surprised you treat the subject so lightly.

    September 29, 2011

  • Citation on blue.

    September 28, 2011

  • "The pilot Juan Fernandez procured a deed of the isle named after him, and for some years resided there before Selkirk came. It is supposed, however, that he eventually contracted the blues upon his princely property, for after a time he returned to the main, and as report goes, became a very garrulous barber in the city of Lima."

    - Melville, The Encantadas, Sketch Seventh

    September 28, 2011

  • "So they told him he might have his pick of the Enchanted Isles, which were then, as they still remain, the nominal appanage of Peru."

    - Melville, The Encantadas, Sketch Seventh

    September 28, 2011

  • You're probably right. I prefer it with the 'r' though.

    September 28, 2011

  • Were you looking for mrkgnao, sionnach?

    September 28, 2011

  • *marginalizes bilby's discourse*

    September 28, 2011

  • Waiter! There's a girl in my sausage fest!

    September 28, 2011

  • "So, is new-style atheism the sausage party that media coverage would suggest?"

    - Why the New Atheism is a boys' club, guardian.co.uk, 26-9-11.

    September 27, 2011

  • Sure it's not a spoonerism?

    September 26, 2011

  • I'm sure he will live Apsley ever after.

    September 25, 2011

  • Yet more CD genius (which I'm sure every manjak of you will appreciate).

    September 25, 2011

  • I'll have the clam, please.

    September 23, 2011

  • See kip.

    September 22, 2011

  • I think that young or small beef creature needs some consolatory brackets.

    September 22, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    September 22, 2011

  • You are the walrus?

    September 22, 2011

  • Much to love in that example. Jujubes. The odd assortment of "small articles". The smokers 'cachous. The moral "ought". The non-specific "dishonest customer" (or does Punch have a specific dishonest customer in mind?) And of course the muff.

    September 22, 2011

  • What is its name?

    September 21, 2011

  • Perhaps Melville was looking at penguins the wrong way, i.e. horizontally.

    n.b. that is a handsome, and very symmetrical, penguin.

    September 21, 2011

  • Sometimes I think of Melville as the evil twin of Charles Sanders Peirce.

    September 21, 2011

  • Haven't you noticed how awfully asymmetric penguins are?

    September 21, 2011

  • "Higher up now we mark the gony, or gray albatross, anomalously so called, an unsightly unpoetic bird, unlike its storied kinsman, which is the snow-white ghost of the haunted Capes of Hope and Horn."

    - Melville, The Encantadas, Sketch Third

    September 20, 2011

  • "What outlandish beings are these? Erect as men, but hardly as symmetrical, they stand all round the rock like sculptured caryatides, supporting the next range of eaves above. Their bodies are grotesquely misshapen; their bills short; their feet seemingly legless; while the members at their sides are neither fin, wing, nor arm. And truly neither fish, flesh, nor fowl is the penguin; as an edible, pertaining neither to Carnival nor Lent; without exception the most ambiguous and least lovely creature yet discovered by man. Though dabbling in all three elements, and indeed possessing some rudimental claims to all, the penguin is at home in none. On land it stumps; afloat it sculls; in the air it flops. As if ashamed of her failure, Nature keeps this ungainly child hidden away at the ends of the earth, in the Straits of Magellan, and on the abased sea-story of Rodondo."

    - Melville, The Encantadas, Sketch Third

    September 20, 2011

  • I think there's a name for sentence-length mondegreens like that - a French word maybe?

    The big challenge is to find two such sentences which both make sense individually.

    September 20, 2011

  • I've come across these buggers before - I think William Boyd mentions them in an essay on his West African nonage.

    September 19, 2011

  • Great word and great quotations.

    September 18, 2011

  • I suppose it amounts to the same thing...

    September 18, 2011

  • Sure it's not a plane?

    September 18, 2011

  • Do you like mushrooms?

    September 18, 2011

  • I think this pathogen is already epidemic on Wordnik. We just have to try and infect the rest of the world.

    September 17, 2011

  • You can't fight it!

    September 17, 2011

  • Just watching that scene mentally, and laughing - though not, I'm ashamed to say, out loud.

    September 17, 2011

  • I have a question.

    September 17, 2011

  • Dan: I wonder if French "lieu" is related to Spanish "lugar", place. Seems reasonable. If so, it's great that "loo" is related to the Spanish - and presumably the Latin - for "place".

    September 17, 2011

  • You Aussies must be terrible prudes if you won't take a shower while your missus lays a cable. I'm surprised.

    September 17, 2011

  • It sounds like an advertising slogan. "The bladder champion!"

    September 17, 2011

  • Ha ha! I might have known!

    Actually, it's possible your GR review was how it got on my wishlist in the first place - I can't remember how I heard of it.

    September 16, 2011

  • Speaking of sex and trees, I recently ordered a copy of this novel. Has anyone read it?

    September 16, 2011

  • The consultant will see you shortly.

    September 16, 2011

  • Thank you for being can-did.

    September 16, 2011

  • I don't see what the Little Prince has to do with Johnson's ballsack.

    September 16, 2011

  • Johnson's always popping up where you least expect him.

    September 16, 2011

  • This is worse than it sounds. I would have thought a sarcocele to be some quaint Provençal country dance.

    September 16, 2011

  • If someone said they were having their bathroom - or their loo - renovated, then I would indeed assume that the crapper was being ripped from its moorings. Very few houses have a room with a bath but no toilet in it these days, so the sense of "bathroom" as distinct from "loo" is obsolete.

    Rolig, there is actually a transatlantic distinction re: "go to the bathroom". The sense of "urinate and/or defecate" is pretty much confined to North America, I think. In the UK one would say "the dog crapped in / shat in the kitchen", or in more polite language, "fouled" or "soiled" the kitchen. So I think in this case the Americans take the periphrasis a step further than the Brits do, as they do also by using the ridiculous term "restroom".

    I've never heard it called "the head". Surely there is a list somewhere?

    September 16, 2011

  • My money is on the W.C.

    But equally, would one call a room with no toilet a "bathroom"? In your scenario, were "loo" to be replaced with "bathroom", I bet most people would still infer that the person was going to the room with the W.C. Ergo, "bathroom" is a synonym of "loo".

    The way the English language tiptoes around this subject is pretty pathetic. We require a polite, specific word for the thing itself (crapper or bog, perhaps) and also for the room (dunny, shithouse?) - words which aren't euphemisms. I'm fed up with restrooms and lavatories and washrooms and privies.

    September 16, 2011

  • See ya later, rotavator.

    September 15, 2011

  • Fantastic list, hh!

    September 15, 2011

  • Tall, erect and leguminous, that's me.

    September 15, 2011

  • Bilby, in my experience "loo" can refer to both the bathroom and the toilet. One can be on the loo or in the loo.

    September 15, 2011

  • lol

    September 15, 2011

  • Excellent!

    September 15, 2011

  • To snuffle, scratch and sniff at the ground. Like a truffle pig.

    See earthling.

    September 15, 2011

  • The Vikings were great nourishers. Always suckling babbies, them Norsemen.

    September 15, 2011

  • It's a tough call, but I think I'd rather be a tree than a valid scrabble word.

    September 15, 2011

  • Yes, part of the auditory landscape of London. The reason it's so well imprinted on the London psyche is not just its repetition but the intonation used in the recorded messages. "Mind... the GAP." There's a suspenseful delay before "the gap" which seems to imply that there is more to the gap than we're being told, or that the "the gap" isn't just the gap between the platform and the train, but a more terrible existential gap into which we shall all of us assuredly fall sooner or later.

    September 13, 2011

  • Are you seriously going to leave this comment on every noun which is also a verb??

    September 13, 2011

  • As a Scottish place name, this may not belong on madmouth's list, but I've had it revolving in my mind for some time now and... well, I wouldn't mind a beef tub of my own.

    September 8, 2011

  • Oh boy, Ruzuzu, for that you deserve a great, strouting Rabelaisian codpiece, a codpiece so big it obscures your entire person. Ruzuzu that was so much fun. You're lucky there are no Vulcans in Lincoln (at the last census, anyway) because if there were, they'd all be glomming on to you with the mind-melds.

    September 8, 2011

  • NSFW but high genius - The Gush, from Chris Morris's legendary Radio 1 show "Blue Jam".

    September 7, 2011

  • I omitted it because I felt it was essentially the same as jimson weed. I am a bit of a fascist like that.

    September 6, 2011

  • See mangold for verbing.

    September 6, 2011

  • emeralding - lovely.

    September 6, 2011

  • I wonder if there's ever been a man called Rusty Steppe-Moss.

    September 6, 2011

  • For me this brings to mind neither muck nor moss, but the magnificient horned pies beloved of Desperate Dan.

    September 6, 2011

  • I'd rather suck a kiwi or a moa.

    September 6, 2011

  • Until something is done about the bile salt, nothing will ever get better.

    August 17, 2011

  • The surefire sign of bad writing.

    August 17, 2011

  • Horrible how this memetic modern-major-general phrase has infected everyday discourse. I heard a cop, naturally, use it on the TV news the other day, along the lines of "our thoughts are with the hearts and minds of the victims..." And today I'm reading a subpar nonfiction book (2010) about earthquakes and I get:

    "China's reported success story injected a surge of scientific adrenalin into the hearts and minds of those who saw prediction as the holy grail of the new seismology."

    August 17, 2011

  • You'll have to add a pronunciation so that I don't embarrass myself when I use it.

    August 10, 2011

  • This is a superb word. Could it be something geometrical? Some sort of inbred dog, maybe?

    August 9, 2011

  • Either or both. I've been seeing a ton of Giant Hogweed by the roads lately.

    August 9, 2011

  • Term apparently still in use in the Black Country, bilby, judging from the tweet by @seanoliver86.

    August 8, 2011

  • ...or your loved ones shall die of lice?

    August 8, 2011

  • Narrowness of the skull is fine in moderation, but one certainly wouldn't want it to become excessive.

    August 8, 2011

  • Wordnet 3.0 living up to its lineage here.

    August 8, 2011

  • If you're knowledgeable about invasive species, biocon, I'd love to see a list of them (non-scientific names preferred).

    August 8, 2011

  • nemophila, nemophila, nemophila. There, I did it. *checks world still turning*

    August 8, 2011

  • Dasani is pure branding, its success the ultimate expression of form over substance. You could say that about any bottled water, but the meaningless name is the cherry on top.

    August 8, 2011

  • Especially the one from "Story-Lives of Great Musicians".

    August 5, 2011

  • Thanks for all the recent improvements and bug-fixes.

    August 5, 2011

  • Then stop wearing it.

    August 5, 2011

  • It is precisely by not being "of benefit to our community" that this phrase, and countless others like it, benefit our community.

    August 5, 2011

  • You should change your answer to door #3, because a goat is better than a car.

    Goats have personalities, cars don't. And as dontcry notes, you can get cheese out of a goat, but I never heard of anyone getting cheese out of a car.

    August 4, 2011

  • Same eggcorn here rolig!

    July 29, 2011

  • Ha ha.

    July 28, 2011

  • "To mark territory, hippos spin their tails while defecating to distribute their excrement over a greater area. Likely for the same reason, hippos are retromingent-- that is, they urinate backwards."

    - From the Wikipedia article on the hippo.

    July 28, 2011

  • Excellent. The first sentence in particular is like a description of some retro-futuristic variation on the ouija board - which is actually how I've always thought of the telephone.

    July 28, 2011

  • Thanks biocon! Fun coinkidink then. Reason I ask is 'cause near where I grew up there was a small precipitous hill called "The Cliffe" or "The Clive". I always wondered where the name came from, and this word seemed to blend the two spellings.

    July 25, 2011

  • c.f. eructate?

    July 25, 2011

  • That should be the Wordnik logo.

    July 25, 2011

  • Interesting. Wonder if it's related to cliff.

    July 25, 2011

  • Cool! Yes, kludging would seem to be the best translation.

    July 25, 2011

  • Thank you!

    July 25, 2011

  • I take umbrage at that.

    July 23, 2011

  • editrix is one of my favourite words but I wouldn't call its falling into disuse a "dumbing down of gender". In fact I think I prefer the gender-neutral occupations. It's certainly less hassle than e.g. Spanish where you're always having to add an 'a' if the person happens to be female.

    July 22, 2011

  • "So near the hull did they come, that the stridor or bony creak of their gaunt double-jointed pinions was audible."

    - Melville, Billy Budd

    July 21, 2011

  • It sounds like a title by Edward Gorey.

    July 20, 2011

  • Whilst the layer of oil may well be exceedingly or exceptionally thin, I hope it isn't, as the definition states, excessively so.

    July 20, 2011

  • The parenthetical snark about "some geodesists" is pure joy.

    July 20, 2011

  • I'm imagining some sort of word-coining committee. Was a quorum present?

    July 20, 2011

  • And don't even think about saying "ab ovo".

    July 20, 2011

  • Portuguese for "chicken". Where the heck does it come from?

    July 20, 2011

  • A big one - words of unknown origin

    July 20, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    I was thinking along the lines of cannonade...

    July 19, 2011

  • I'm sure they're very clever (albeit oddly-monikered) fellows, but until they've made the Statue of Liberty disappear I really don't think they deserve to be mentioned in the same breath as David Copperfield.

    July 18, 2011

  • What a glorious, consolatory-prophetic comment.

    July 18, 2011

  • Or "The twelfth chime of the clock saw the spectabundal acolytes seated tensely around the pentagram, in the guttering light of the candelabra."

    July 6, 2011

  • It can't be a verb. I imagine something like: "The cat waited, spectabundal, for the goldfish to swim within reach of its paw".

    July 6, 2011

  • Also rub-dub.

    July 2, 2011

  • Were they true, they were highly extenuating, and were they a lie, they they but a mediocre sally - so of course they were heartily well meant.

    Your parsnips are not, thank God!, my responsibility. But I will do you the courtesy of my advice: smother the buggers in lard, basted with your own umbrage, and consume without compunction.

    July 1, 2011

  • But one learns from one's mistakes, n'est-ce pas, mon amie? By alluding to your extensive learning, I was paying you a compliment - so pray return that umbrage, which I believe was withdrawn from the fell swoop page.

    July 1, 2011

  • If they're so succulent, why do they require seasoning and boiling??

    Heads need to roll over this one.

    July 1, 2011

  • Yeah, this one raises a small imaginary stormcloud over my head as well.

    July 1, 2011

  • My 'a' in both aqua and aqueduct is as in 'cat'.

    July 1, 2011

  • anol

    June 30, 2011

  • CSP always struck me as a meat-and-potatoes man.

    June 30, 2011

  • Klein bottle

    June 30, 2011

  • timothy

    June 30, 2011

  • Is not the mounted liger multifunctional? Satay,

    mouth-watering, bone-forming enchiladas, gluten-free

    masala, psychoactive potpies (guarded jealously),

    unwholesome nontraditional croquettes - you've got to say,

    though lesser-known, of common stock he definitely ain't

    (and in the world of quesadillas he's a St.)

    - by Alfredo Lyddite

    June 30, 2011

  • Loch Ness Monster? Dr Jamieson?

    June 29, 2011

  • Parallel universe? String theory?

    June 29, 2011

  • You misunderstand, sionnach, and not for the first time. A particularly ruthless individual may well swoop felly twice, thrice or any number of times, on different targets - but one can't by defintion experience - that is, fall prey to - more than a single such swoop.

    I'm really thinking of the head honcho of the Nazgul, the Witch-King of Angmar, on his faithful fell beast here (I think the fell beasts are more or less the fellest swoopers known to man).

    Whomp, whomp.

    June 29, 2011

  • A bouncing bomb?

    June 28, 2011

  • I've long been in favour of literal timestamps - they're more precise, and sometimes knowing the intervals between posts can add nuance, or help one to interpret an old conversation. I can't see an advantage to "about three years ago" etc.

    EDIT: this comment was following one by adrian which has disappeared.

    June 28, 2011

  • "I had no longer that feeling of unutterable loneliness; but felt, rather, that I was less alone, than I had been for kalpas of years."

    - William Hope Hodgson, The House on the Borderland

    June 28, 2011

  • Good question, reesetee. Perhaps if more than one was required, it would no longer be quite so fell?

    June 27, 2011

  • Every school had bike sheds back in the day. Behind the bike sheds was the scene of illicit activities like smoking, fighting and smooching. I've never heard of a house with a "bike shed" though - at home I use the back yard for those activities.

    June 27, 2011

  • The guy sitting in front of you who reclines his seat during meal service.

    June 27, 2011

  • Also whiskerando.

    June 26, 2011

  • Great! Thanks.

    June 26, 2011

  • Saw this one floating by on the main page. Can anyone explain it?

    June 25, 2011

  • "In the mingitorio a stench like mercaptan clapped yellow hands on his face..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "...a Chinese hunchback in a retiform visored tennis cap..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • Feel free to add to penis-related lists.

    June 25, 2011

  • "...the fact that that hideously elongated cucumiform bundle of blue nerves and gills below the steaming unselfconscious stomach had sought its pleasure in his wife's body brought him trembling to his feet."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "...'the film he made out of Alastor before he went to Hollywood, which he shot in a bathtub, what he could of it, and apparently stuck the rest together with sequences of ruins cut out of old travelogues, and a jungle hoiked out of In dunkelste Afrika...'"

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • See note 178.5 in The Malcolm Lowry project for an explication.

    June 25, 2011

  • "'I have,' the Consul said, 'a slight confession to make, Hugh... I cheated a little on the strychnine while you were away.'

    'Thalavethiparothiam, is it?' Hugh observed, pleasantly menacing. 'Or strength obtained by decapitation. Now then, don't be careful, as the Mexicans say, I'm going to shave the back of your neck.'"

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "She was, unlike the Philoctetes, everything in his eyes a ship should be. First she was not in rig a football boat, a mass of low goalposts and trankums. Her masts and derricks were of the lofty coffee-pot variety."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • Citation on untumultous.

    June 25, 2011

  • "...till there was nothing but the black untumultous face of the songless lyre itself, soundless cave for spiders and steamflies..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • Citation on whiskerando.

    June 25, 2011

  • "There was a lane branching to the left before you reached Jacques' house, leafy, no more than a carttrack at first, then a switchback, and somewhere along that lane to the right, not five minutes' walk, waited a little cool nameless cantina with horses probably tethered outside, and a huge white tomcat sleeping below the counter of whom a whiskerando would say: "He ah work all night mistair and sleep all day!" And this cantina would be open."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "The strychnine - he had ironically put some ice in it - tasted sweet, rather like cassis; it provided a species of subliminal stimulus, faintly perceived: the Consul, who was still standing, was aware too of a faint feeble wooling of his pain..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "They moved on past the front of Cortez Palace, then down its blind side began to descend the cliff that traversed it widthways."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "The shop, adjacent to the Palace, but divided from it by the breadth of a steep narrow street desperate as a winze, was opening early."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "Outside, in the sunlight, in the backwash of tabid music from the still-continuing ball, Yvonne waited..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • Citation on flexitone.

    June 25, 2011

  • Contains its own scrabble score (ten).

    June 25, 2011

  • "The old bandstand stood empty, the equestrian statue of the turbulent Huerta rode under the nutant trees wild-eyed evermore..."

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • "Alas, but why have I not pretended at least that I had read them, accepted some meed of retraction in the fact that they were sent?"

    - Lowry, Under the Volcano

    June 25, 2011

  • I do worry about this. I have pharyngemphranxiety.

    June 24, 2011

  • Is it true that the longer you bear navel oranges, the more your bare navel oranges?

    June 24, 2011

  • I'd worry that a snack pack may invalidate my nakedness.

    June 24, 2011

  • Here's my reaction to Herxheimer's reaction:

    "Up at Herk-Heimer Falls, where the great river rushes

    And crashes down crags in great gurgling gushes,

    The Herk-Heimer Sisters are using their brushes.

    Those falls are just grand for tooth-brushing beneath

    If you happen to be up that way with your teeth."

    - Dr Seuss, The Sleep Book

    June 23, 2011

  • I'll pronounce it as soon as I have a private moment.

    My office is relatively secluded, but I wouldn't want the receptionist, who sits not far away, to think I was taunting her.

    June 23, 2011

  • A taunting sound.

    June 23, 2011

  • Yes indeed: as in ner ner ni ner ner.

    June 23, 2011

  • We have a book made from elephant dung paper at home. It's one of those books that lie around the house and no one's sure where they came from. I wouldn't call it a classic. Nice texture though.

    June 22, 2011

  • Wow! I'm Kylie, a 4 month-old mongrel from Auckland.

    June 22, 2011

  • C.f. erumpent.

    June 22, 2011

  • Yes, particularly disturbing/arresting are compounds like meathead, meatball, meatpuppet.

    And I agree about fleisch, too - sounds like the noise of meat being processed.

    June 22, 2011

  • I want to combine the two.

    June 22, 2011

  • I missed this 12 months ago.

    *opens bag of cheez-its*

    June 21, 2011

  • Aka is not aka i.e, i.e. i.e isn't aka aka.

    In the sense quoted by billprice, referring to a simple subject or object, aka works fine. But in the broader sense of "i.e." ("that is to say..." referring to a proposition or conclusion) - a "thought" rather than a "thing" - aka is no alternative.

    Better, then, to stick to aka's original meaning, i.e. alias.

    June 21, 2011

  • +1

    June 21, 2011

  • Down with tweets and images on the comments page!

    I would also like to see displayed, along with each list a word appears in, the owner of that list.

    June 20, 2011

  • Arf! That's superb!

    June 20, 2011

  • I like the new look and feel a lot and it seems pretty user-friendly to me.

    I've only one beef, but it's a big one - a whole raw steer in fact. I hate the in-your-faceness of the Twitter feeds next to the comments. The tweets are almost always irrelevant, usually moronic, often misspellings or typos, frequently obscene and occasionally offensive, so couldn't they be hidden behind a button somewhere instead of staring us in the face?

    Sionnach said somewhere that he sees Wordnik as something of a haven from the turpitude of the internet in general, and it's the same for me. If I want to dip my toe in the cesspool, I can find my own way to Twitter or Youtube, but please don't pipe it onto Wordnik's wonderful comment pages!

    Again, considering this is a fairly radical redesign, I'm pleased and impressed. Thank you all for taking such good care of the site and for feeling the same way I do about words - there's nowhere remotely like Wordnik.

    June 20, 2011

  • Wow! Yes, epic list.

    June 18, 2011

  • I always get this mixed up with Mott's Clamato.

    June 17, 2011

  • Nice. Did you stand on the plinth for a while?

    June 17, 2011

  • Right.

    June 17, 2011

  • It must be Welsh.

    June 15, 2011

  • I knew a bloke in Chile who was called el mataburros by his friends on account of his reckless driving and history of accidents on a particular behairpinned mountain road.

    June 15, 2011

  • Who ate all the pyes?

    June 15, 2011

  • See comment on cwm. Apparently an Amharic verb, to swish water around in the mouth.

    June 15, 2011

  • I love machubchub!

    June 15, 2011

  • That's what comes of studying Uranus.

    June 15, 2011

  • Someone should at least favorite this.

    June 15, 2011

  • Hi Mike! I was just in Oregon on vacation. What a great state!

    June 15, 2011

  • It's not one of those Aussie-cliché words which everyone knows are Australian. But that only goes to strengthen its status as a true Australianism (and New Zealandism, baaaa!)

    June 15, 2011

  • Well, I've reinstalled my dickey OED and it's not much help. Apparently it's a back-formation from rorty, adj. (also raughty) "of dubious propriety" (among other senses) which is of course "of obscure origin" (OED-speak for "sorry we haven't a clue").

    The only usages it gives of the verb form are as gerunds - rorting used as a noun.

    June 15, 2011

  • I can't remember the last time I encountered an Australianism that was totally new to me, like this. I quite often run into regional American slang with which I'm unfamiliar, and it's always exciting when I do, but as a Brit I always identified more closely with Australians (and hence their lingo) than with Americans.

    Would love to know the etymology of rort. I bet it's some weird Gaelic thing; that would explain why it's so strange to me.

    June 15, 2011

  • Usage by bilby on red or green.

    June 15, 2011

  • Well, rort is entirely new to me! Thanks cobber.

    June 15, 2011

  • If I could only have one or the other: green.

    June 15, 2011

  • Angels have glands?

    June 14, 2011

  • And give it someone you love in a cheap vase.

    June 14, 2011

  • Picalilli.

    June 14, 2011

  • I do sometimes wonder how all these zen jokes have stood the test of time.

    June 14, 2011

  • Because he ate with relish the inner organs of annelid worms?

    June 14, 2011

  • Erm..

    June 13, 2011

  • I've picked a few picayune specimens already, or rather my kids have. And yesterday we had our first strawberry, surprisingly red after a soggy spring.

    June 13, 2011

  • Shank you very much for shat, bilby.

    June 13, 2011

  • I was just wondering about that the other day. I work downtown so I can drink coffee, eat sushi, and all manner of other things pretty much whenever I want. My email's on my librarything profile.

    June 13, 2011

  • Not just your personal definition. A mishit in a ball game - football, tennis, golf - is a pretty widespread meaning of shank.

    June 13, 2011

  • I agree there is a case to be made for the leek.

    As for the onion, I believe I'm on record as saying it's my favourite vegetable, and I will champion it in any debate touching on the vegetable universe. And it certainly conveys its dignity (rotundity and hue, remember?) until you cut (or bite) into it, and it assails you with that sweet, stinging prickly perfume and bleeds its pungent juices all over your hard-bitten fingertips... I love it and it may look dignified, but inside it's a punk.

    June 13, 2011

  • Well I've heard of moreish, but this is a new one to me. I think I prefer this one.

    June 12, 2011

  • Delightful!

    June 12, 2011

  • Ignatius Loyola

    would probably have been an ambassador for Coca-Cola

    had he been alive today -

    but God called him away.

    June 12, 2011

  • Joan of Arc

    thought "what a lark

    talking directly to God is!"

    as she dodged the dead bodies.

    June 12, 2011

  • That's a good one, sionnach.

    June 12, 2011

  • Saint Francis of Assisi

    was very fond of geese. He

    loved animals not a little. He

    ended up being the patron saint of Italy.

    June 12, 2011

  • Brilliant, favourited, and all the other nice things people say about lists on wordnik!

    June 11, 2011

  • blockquote
    (some html is allowed)

    June 11, 2011

  • Definitely belongs on a "sounds filthy" list.

    June 10, 2011

  • When Wales and England met Scotland 430m years ago during the frankly smutty-sounding Caledonian orogeny, a range of mountains – the Caledonides – of Himalayan proportions was formed at the centre of a continent that contained all the world's landmass.
    - Ian Vince, Britain's Historic Past, in guardian.co.uk, 26-5-11.

    June 10, 2011

  • Bruce Willis?

    June 10, 2011

  • I also approve this message, milos.

    June 10, 2011

  • Presumably from Portuguese sertão, wilderness.

    June 10, 2011

  • I'm sorry that sionnach's excellent conversation-starter dropped dead in the water "almost 2 years ago".

    I'd make rude gestures in a languid fashion.

    June 10, 2011

  • Kohlrabi and baby okra may indeed be teh alsome, but they aren't dignified!

    Beets are a contender I suppose, as would be most of the sturdier roots, but if it's a combination of brilliance and rotundity you're after then you're going to be running up hard against the majestic pumpkin.

    June 10, 2011

  • I think the sporting adage "form is temporary, class is permanent" applies. If we're going to speak of dignified vegetables then the dignity must be enduring, not merely a passing fad or foible.

    Although I don't especially like the taste of them, I do find artichokes especially dignified. They have such stability, and also a sort of primness about them, like a maiden aunt in a great skirt (although like all vegetables, they yield readily to a salacious reading).

    June 9, 2011

  • On closer reading, it's not the Prof who's stopped up.

    That's a relief!

    June 9, 2011

  • Always insist on a sheathed cuke.

    June 9, 2011

  • "...a tall, stopped man..."

    I'm sorry to hear about the Prof's internal congestion. No doubt D van der P is somehow behind this.

    June 9, 2011

  • That's why you're so necessary - you're like a bot crawling wordnik for good stuff.

    And I mean that in a good way - some of my best friends are bots.

    June 8, 2011

  • O cornball ye faithful?

    June 8, 2011

  • Ridiculous. Every potential wordie list, etc.

    June 8, 2011

  • Can't believe hernesheir or ruzuzu hasn't included this on some panoptical corn-themed list.

    June 8, 2011

  • First class froggery.

    June 8, 2011

  • I'll save you the trouble and bracket red tube-wanking homies for you, shall I madmouth?

    June 8, 2011

  • Typically accomplished with an exultant cry of "nuts!" or "megs!" from the successful party.

    June 8, 2011

  • I quite agree rolig; it's your last objection that really makes this word an utter failure. You can't just stitch together any two words and have a witty portmanteau - there has to be a verbal vetting, too.

    June 8, 2011

  • Thanks for alerting me to so many exquisite lists, ruzuzu. Your *favorited* is truly a wordnik kitemark.

    June 8, 2011

  • Citation on klinotaxis.

    June 8, 2011

  • I had just about heard of toroidal group motion – the ring formed by some fish or the aforementioned slime moulds – but klinotaxis and hysteresis are new ones on me. The former describes what happens when a flock of birds "decides" to travel in one particular direction rather than in another- Nicholas Lezard, reviewing Flow by Philip Ball, Guardian.co.uk, 8-6-11.

    June 8, 2011

  • Probably no harm done if it was just the once?

    June 7, 2011

  • The World According to Garp Hing?

    June 6, 2011

  • In my (library) copy of Simplicissimus, tr. Mike Mitchell, the word gaol was repeatedly given as goal.

    June 6, 2011

  • Bloody hell, what a list! I think I could more or less define 10 of these, and probably spell about 15-20.

    June 6, 2011

  • Treatable with a preparation h bomb.

    May 21, 2011

  • After days of deliberation, I've decided this is my favourite STF (or at least the one I most want on a mug - I was very fond of athlete's foot fetish as well, not to mention hemorrhoid cream puffs).

    May 20, 2011

  • For sure Duffel van der P's comments were coming with the notification emails until about a week ago - now I have to actually look at the list to get my daily fix, which sort of makes the emails redundant.

    May 20, 2011

  • I discovered Wordie while browsing the "also on" drop-down list on Librarything. The first word I listed, and still one of my favourites, was donkeyman, which I'd found in a novel not long before. My second might have been poopyhead.

    May 20, 2011

  • Potential Wordnik tagline alert!

    May 20, 2011

  • Yes, I've no doubt you'd be well into "follow-through" territory with that...

    May 19, 2011

  • Simultaneous pouting and snorting, that is. Not pea coffee.

    May 19, 2011

  • The last time I tried that, I farted.

    May 19, 2011

  • I was only joking. Although it certainly is uncannily spammish.

    May 19, 2011

  • SPAM.

    May 19, 2011

  • Thanks prol, I noticed it as soon as I logged in this a.m!

    I've also noticed in the last few days that the explanatory comments posted with each wotd are no longer showing on the notification emails.

    May 19, 2011

  • How do I see a list of word-of-the-day lists? Is there some central place from where I can access them?

    I just can't get to grips with the feature, feel like I'm missing something obvious.

    May 19, 2011

  • dope wars is the only one here that I've played - it's a classic from pre-Facebook days.

    May 19, 2011

  • I'm sure you used to be able to view a given Wordnik's activity, i.e. everything they've done, listing, commenting, favouriting, tagging etc., and click through back to the very beginning. But now I can't find it.

    May 18, 2011

  • Despite having a name like a Lovecraftian horror.

    May 18, 2011

  • I wonder what a giblich looks like. It's probably cute.

    May 18, 2011

  • I did a "first words" list here which is quite revealing, I think.

    May 18, 2011

  • Adorable.

    May 18, 2011

  • Was that a listed side-effect? If not, you should certainly sue.

    May 18, 2011

  • Presumably the same as stile in the sense of hurdle.

    May 18, 2011

  • Most often in the construction "have a shufti". Proper slang though, strictly verbal.

    May 18, 2011

  • (unicode & # 3 8 3 ;) (minus the spaces)

    May 18, 2011

  • Pray replace your f's with long eſſes!

    May 18, 2011

  • iron maiden? brazen bull? Those may be straying into the realm of execution, I suppose. Still, there's an extensive grey area.

    May 18, 2011

  • Very interesting.

    But I think the reason that employing very is often seen as poor style is not that it fails to convey what is meant, but that it does so abstractly, by - *flicks through Creative Writing 101 Textbook* - telling instead of showing. Better to say that reesetee's desk is large enough to accommodate a nine-hole golf course than simply to say that it is very large.

    Also perhaps because it's prone to overuse. However I do like it in its older sense of genuinely, verily: the "very gentil parfait knight".

    May 18, 2011

  • picayune!

    May 17, 2011

  • Fun list!

    May 17, 2011

  • See jam tomorrow.

    May 17, 2011

  • Bread, witch, bread. Pickles optional.

    May 17, 2011

  • I suppose that would be a witchwich.

    May 17, 2011

  • A witch sandwich?

    May 17, 2011

  • Well, that's a matter of preference. But whether it smells good to you or not, surely you'll admit that it smells better than it tastes.

    May 17, 2011

  • It's not a bad poem, but it ends too soon.

    May 16, 2011

  • What were the poems about numbers, zuze?

    May 16, 2011

  • Yes, definitely rolig. I would be very surprised to hear whilst used in normal speech by someone under the age of 35, and in a young person it does sound quite plummy and public school, that is if it's not an obvious affectation. However - and the more I think about this the less certain I am - it's the sort of word you also hear on the lips of working-class pensioners in pubs - especially, and here it gets bizarre, old women.

    So there you go, unreliable anecodtalism at its finest from someone who hasn't lived in the UK for seven years.

    May 16, 2011

  • Yes, quite an honour! I had never heard of a spelling bee until after I left school , and I bitterly regret not being able to take part in one. They look like fun.

    May 16, 2011

  • Ha! Love the "apparently" in CD's defintion.

    May 16, 2011

  • I had a suspicion I might not be first to this gem.

    May 16, 2011

  • "'This morning we have seen a young man take this activity a step further and attempt to plank on a balcony. Unfortunately he has tragically fallen to his death,' Queensland Police Deputy Commissioner Ross Barnett told reporters.

    The man and another person had been out during the night and were planking in various locations on their way home."

    - Yahoo! News, 15-5-11.

    May 16, 2011

  • Speaking as a subject of Her Majesty, I can confirm that whilst, amongst and amidst are in common use in speech and informal writing, although in all three cases I think the non -st forms predominate.

    Personally I don't like and never use whilst; the other two I'm neutral on and cannot with certainty deny that they occasionally pass my lips.

    Actually, on reflection, I think I prefer amidst to amid, but among to amongst - purely arbitrary I suppose.

    May 16, 2011

  • In answer to oroboros's original question, and forgive me the tardy response: no. She should persevere and pay no heed to the neighsayers.

    May 9, 2011

  • Did you milk it?

    May 9, 2011

  • Hurrah! Now add 119 favourites, 81 lists - or better still, 181, and preferably 67 pronunciations before you comment again - but I'm sure you can do that in the next 12 hours or so. You are unhesitatingly the mainstay of Wordnik, and that makes you a mainstay of my mind.

    May 9, 2011

  • Visiting the parentals in North Wales with pitstops in London at either end.

    May 8, 2011

  • Hurrah! Now I'm treating myself to a well=deserved vacation (really: I'm in the UK this week).

    May 7, 2011

  • protean seemed appropriate for an actor - though in hindsight not as appropriate as playful.

    Would like to hear the five accents pronouncing professor von schmartzenpanz.

    May 5, 2011

  • I knew Century Dictionary (for some reason I'm loath to abbreviate this) would be your downfall, ruzuzu. I do like a game of scrabble although I'm long out of practice.

    May 5, 2011

  • For what it's worth, I chose od because I like it and I thought short words would be in short supply.

    May 5, 2011

  • Yes he did. And playful is another one I'm kicking myself over (I'm kicking my knees, in case you were wondering). Too clever by half. A bit like froggo's stripper in the last one.

    May 5, 2011

  • Usually halberd, I think.

    May 5, 2011

  • Ruzuzu, I'll take the mug if you'll accept the Sisyphean task privilege of masterminding the next edition a year hence. Incidentally it was the looniness that gave your lunette away to me.

    And I can't believe I didn't get distingue! Shoddy lapse.

    May 5, 2011

  • I assumed a mortsafe was one of the many tools frogapplause uses to create frogapplause.

    May 5, 2011

  • I've just realised that in true Eurovision-fashion, the winner of ID the 'nik is required to compere the next installment. Because this daunting challenge outweighs the allure of the mug, and because it would certainly prolong the agony entertainment, I am happy to continue with a playoff.

    May 4, 2011

  • *investigates emergency sources of umbrage*

    May 4, 2011

  • I mean the playoffs would be fun but I'm not giving up on that mug without exhausting every legal avenue first.

    May 4, 2011

  • But hernesheir didn't get credit for his own word.

    Recount please!

    May 4, 2011

  • Hang on a minute. As far as I can see, 'zuzu got these right: blafferty, erinmckean, fbharjo, frindley, PossibleUnderscore, seanahan, wordnicolina. It's seven, no?

    May 4, 2011

  • I demand a recount. *lawyers up*

    May 4, 2011

  • I call shenanigans! Surely 'zuzu only has seven correct?!

    May 4, 2011

  • Not so fast, ruzuzu!

    May 4, 2011

  • I think I agree about espresso.

    May 4, 2011

  • It's squeaky bum time.

    May 4, 2011

  • I like the taste of coffee, but the smell is better. I'm really struggling to think of things that taste better than they smell. Beer, maybe. Wine, sometimes. And some relatively odourless foods like confectionary... but there isn't much.

    May 4, 2011

  • sinistral was a tough one to assign; there were four or five possibilities.

    May 4, 2011

  • *applauds*

    May 4, 2011

  • That doesn't mean I'll scoff anything with a 'c' and an 'l' in it.

    May 4, 2011

  • This is exciting isn't it? It's like Eurovision, as sionnach says, with all the high camp and none of the Balkanised political skulduggery.

    May 4, 2011

  • I just looked up calepin.

    May 4, 2011

  • But no, I've never tasted celery.

    May 4, 2011

  • Excellent.

    May 4, 2011

  • Good one.

    May 4, 2011

  • Depends what you mean by "taste".

    May 4, 2011

  • Practically everything smells better than it tastes.

    May 4, 2011

  • A connection made by prolagus on that very page!

    May 4, 2011

  • Odds of at least one correct at random please, sionnach?

    May 4, 2011

  • Oooh! That is frankly embarrassing.

    May 4, 2011

  • Brilliant!

    May 4, 2011

  • Is there a list for hork-puns? If not, should there be?

    May 4, 2011

  • horking

    May 4, 2011

  • I was suspicious of tear-resistant but it was a case of following the herd. I'd rather be wrong and have company than right and lonely.

    May 4, 2011

  • I never stepped on a frog but when I was a about the same age I joined a friend in placing worms on our bike chains and spinning the cranks.

    Disgusting I know - what a way to foul up your drivetrain.

    May 4, 2011

  • lol - that sionnach, always making a fool of himself

    May 4, 2011

  • wtf

    May 3, 2011

  • "Playing bumble-puppy with Minnie Beebe, niece to the rector, and aged thirteen--an ancient and most honourable game, which consists in striking tennis-balls high into the air, so that they fall over the net and immoderately bounce; some hit Mrs. Honeychurch; others are lost. The sentence is confused, but the better illustrates Lucy's state of mind, for she was trying to talk to Mr. Beebe at the same time."

    - E.M. Forster, A Room With a View

    May 3, 2011

  • Citation on last.

    May 3, 2011

  • "He praised the pine-woods, the deep lasts of bracken, the crimson leaves that spotted the hurt-bushes, the serviceable beauty of the turnpike road."

    - E.M. Forster, A Room With a View

    I'm struggling to find the sense of last being used here.

    May 3, 2011

  • It's bloody terrifying.

    May 3, 2011

  • Citation on country frolics.

    May 3, 2011

  • Wonderful. It has all the innocent bucolic lubricity of Nabokov's Ada, with none of the emotional constipation. Thank you, Ruzuzu.

    May 3, 2011

  • I tried to at the time, but couldn't access it for some reason. Could you supply?

    May 3, 2011

  • For example, 227, 233 and 239.

    May 3, 2011

  • Definitely up there with WTM!

    May 3, 2011

  • Thanks for the sexy prime triplet.

    May 3, 2011

  • Ha ha! I had sionnach as boggy due to a tenuous Irish - "bog Irish" connection (not that he is any such thing - purely a semantic connection)...

    May 3, 2011

  • First thing I did was try to identify the seven (c)red-herrings, i.e. the seven words I thought most likely to have been thrown into the mix by gangerh.

    Then there were two or three match-ups that I was certain of, so I filled those in. Then it was a case of eliminating all the "no-way!" combinations and seeing what was left that worked. I also took account of other people's choices, going with the mass of opinion in a couple of cases where I might otherwise have chosen differently.

    May 3, 2011

  • Ha! Another classic Century Dictionary moment.

    May 3, 2011

  • Or, bizarrely to me, strong aorist. I suppose it's "strong" because it doesn't need the sigmatic crutch?

    May 3, 2011

  • I read that as an x-ray of a bowl of red grapes sitting on his foot.

    May 2, 2011

  • Based on ruzuzu's late change, I've made two of my own.

    May 2, 2011

  • Yep, dative (i.e. for, to) singular feminine superlative of An. Gk for dessert.

    May 1, 2011

  • I would like a way to mass-import Ruzuzu's favourite words into my own favourites list.

    How about mass-pilfering tools in general - for lists, I mean? A tool that lets you copy the contents of one list, whether yours or someone else's, straight over to another one.

    April 28, 2011

  • You have good taste in cheese.

    Wait... Laughing Cow?!

    April 27, 2011

  • Breast friends.

    April 27, 2011

  • *Only the phoney... know the way I feel tonight...*

    April 27, 2011

  • A valuable commodity in "Identify the Wordienik".

    April 27, 2011

  • Change my ming? Right, I'll change my ming to "mind".

    blafferty, alas no. Some people just like to be helpful.

    April 27, 2011

  • I'm putting this up here but will probably change my ming at some point:

    bilby -- slopseller

    blafferty -- ascian

    chained_bear -- mediæval

    dontcry -- tear-resistant

    erinmckean -- calepinerienne

    fbharjo -- chrestomatic

    frindley -- alexis

    frogapplause -- mortsafe

    gangerh -- emordnilap

    hernesheir -- hidelugged

    mollusque -- systematic

    oroboros -- protean

    PossibleUnderscore -- balsamaceous

    Prolagus -- harlequin

    pterodactyl -- present

    reesetee -- sinistral

    ruzuzu -- lunette

    seanahan -- prodigal

    sionnach -- boggy

    Wordnicolina -- greenhorn

    Wordplayer -- playful

    yarb -- wodge

    April 27, 2011

  • I'm also having trouble with hernesheir.

    April 27, 2011

  • Trickiest wordniks to identify: fbharjo and prolagus.

    April 27, 2011

  • If a police officer sits the suspect down beforehand and assures him that everything will be fine, is that a pre-perp walk pep-talk?

    April 27, 2011

  • Not much love for alexis, I notice.

    April 27, 2011

  • Or like Masterblaster from "Mad Max 3: Beyond Thunderdome".

    April 27, 2011

  • The mind/body duality made flesh.

    April 27, 2011

  • No wait. bilby's breadfruit vendor.

    April 27, 2011

  • Noam Chomsky?

    April 27, 2011

  • Perhaps he felt intimidated by Ray Mears.

    April 27, 2011

  • No need for get-out-of-jail-free cards: I put MacGyver in there with you.

    April 27, 2011

  • Only if it's phoney.

    April 27, 2011

  • I'd like a full lexicon of the spicular elements of sponges, so that I can incorporate as much of it as possible in a sonnet.

    April 26, 2011

  • Just noticed prolagus also provided a spreadsheet - well, there's another one for "systematic", ha ha. Thank you also, p, though I went with the first one I saw.

    April 26, 2011

  • Amusing about rubber launching her, though. Brings to mind ballistics. Wheeee!

    April 26, 2011

  • I assume it's referring to cash crops?

    April 26, 2011

  • The novel that is, not just the citation.

    April 26, 2011

  • "At certain times of the year, particularly after the rainy season, they velvet mites'>velvet mites proliferated, and the grass around our house hotched with them."

    - William Boyd, Memories of the Sausage Fly (collected in Bamboo).

    Reading that Lanark citation from two years ago makes me want to go back and read it again.

    April 26, 2011

  • Literally?!

    April 26, 2011

  • I like wiktionary's erumpent blast and earthy depths as well. Well done wiktionary!

    April 26, 2011

  • Thanks blafferty for the spreadsheet, saved me some toil there. I used to love those logic puzzles when I was a kid.

    I intend to cogitate for as long as I'm allowed, because this is a real noggin-botherer - as the attempts at guessing my word so far suggest.

    April 26, 2011

  • A recipe for disaster in my experience.

    April 26, 2011

  • Pure joy.

    April 21, 2011

  • I agree with duckbill on this one. Ludicrosity makes me cross-eyed.

    April 21, 2011

  • You could have called the child Ham-let.

    April 21, 2011

  • Cute!

    April 20, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    Wordnik is all about the comedy today.

    April 20, 2011

  • Ha ha! Love the wine/swine pun! I've been to Denny's only once, while my wife was giving birth to our second kid, and it was crap, but this ad has convinced me to try again.

    April 20, 2011

  • Ha ha!

    April 20, 2011

  • I want a bike made out of this.

    April 20, 2011

  • Just because it rhymes, I suspect.

    April 20, 2011

  • Undoubtedly John Cabot, the discoverer of Newfoundland.

    April 20, 2011

  • Good morning, dontcry.

    April 20, 2011

  • Is it closer to white, or brown?

    April 20, 2011

  • Prescriptivism... bloody hell. *shakes head*

    April 20, 2011

  • Or a sloth. No, you want something dynamic for your fetch. I'm glad mine's a pigeon.

    April 20, 2011

  • Honestly, all this guff about "word-making". As if English was cold-forged by some mythical Wayland Wordsmith in a halcyon age of morphological innocence.

    April 20, 2011

  • I haven't read those books (yet), but the idea is a very old one.

    Fetches may take the form of ... livestock
    .

    Wouldn't it suck if your fetch was a sheep or something.

    April 20, 2011

  • Bad Greek, but perfectly good English!

    April 20, 2011

  • Rule by horses.

    April 19, 2011

  • triage?

    April 19, 2011

  • It certainly is a rip-snorter of a word.

    April 19, 2011

  • I think so.

    April 19, 2011

  • You see this "fake word" allegation from time to time. How is it possible to have a fake word?

    April 19, 2011

  • Yeah, I've heard both front and put up used with both cash and money in both the UK and North America. Not sure there's much of a regional distinction here.

    April 19, 2011

  • I remember my Grandfather saying this!

    April 19, 2011

  • Thanks!

    April 19, 2011

  • This one's nice and obscure.

    April 19, 2011

  • Meaning wot?

    April 19, 2011

  • When I was at school we called this a donkey scrub.

    April 19, 2011

  • My guess is it was one of the spellings regularized by Webster - it would have come into English from French, presumably, hence originally "-re".

    April 19, 2011

  • No, I don't think it does. But there are certainly two distinct kinds of nostalgia: a personal one, and a more communal one, perhaps harking back to a supposed golden age, a traditional culture or just an earlier way of life, all of which could date from hundreds or thousands of years ago. This I suppose is what benw is trying to identify.

    For example, I sometimes feel a pang of nostalgia for the Cretaceous.

    April 18, 2011

  • benw - interesting. I don't know the answer but I'll say this: nostalgia ain't what it used to be.

    April 18, 2011

  • Thanks for pristinity, moll - another good offering, but to me at least pristine implies not only unbroken, virgin, but also perfectly clean and uncontaminated. In the end I just went with unbrokenness - it was not important anyway, just a lame comment on a blog.

    April 18, 2011

  • Definition: the state of being un; not being something.

    (yoinkage paid)

    April 18, 2011

  • *double yoink*

    April 18, 2011

  • damn, you, arby!

    April 18, 2011

  • "I'd been plugging away for many hours when there came a sound I'd never heard the like of in my born days. Eh, I won't forget that."

    - C.S. Lewis, Prince Caspian

    (am reading it to my daughter)

    April 18, 2011

  • Nice citation! What was the work?

    April 18, 2011

  • Hi writer - just to let you know there's no need to leave definitions on common words, since there are multiple dictionary definitions accessible under the "definitions" section of each word's page (top left).

    April 17, 2011

  • To quote ruzuzu - *favourited*

    April 16, 2011

  • Is that a slight, moll?

    Thanks, integrity is the best suggestion yet. It's slightly diluted by its ethical connotation, which I would say is dominant, but it might be as close as I'm going to get.

    April 16, 2011

  • *slurps on caesar*

    April 16, 2011

  • Awesome - talk about killing two birds with one stone!

    April 16, 2011

  • Our house is small, and garageless, so I have to keep my bikes in a windowless storage room upstairs. The room smells unmistakeably of bike - I suppose it must be a blend of grease, rubber and (to my shame) dirt.

    April 15, 2011

  • That sounds like just the tool I need for raking the pebbles from my brook!

    April 15, 2011

  • I appreciate your efforts ruzuzu, ineffectual as they are.

    April 15, 2011

  • ??

    CD has a bunch of adjectival and verbal senses listed under "noun" - but it's not a noun. And anyway, by far the stronger meaning is "healthy, fit, sprightly".

    April 15, 2011

  • Nah, I need a noun. Like "unbrokenness", but not so awkward.

    April 15, 2011

  • Ha ha. It's like they used a spam template and forgot to change the placeholders.

    April 15, 2011

  • Is there an abstract noun meaning "the state of being intact, of being not yet broken"? Basically, "intactness"?

    "Wholeness" and "completeness" won't do, because they connote quantity.

    April 15, 2011

  • Thanks for the plug 'jo, tho' that list is really more yours than mine! Don't think I haven't noticed and marvelled at your ongoing additions to it.

    April 15, 2011

  • Yeah, I've heard a few people use it like that. It's not a regional thing as far as I'm aware, more like an affectation.

    April 15, 2011

  • Something needs to be done about people looking up capitalized words and then complaining when the usage examples relate to proper nouns (or "proper names"). There needs to be some way of informing people that wordnik is case-sensitive, or else someone needs to review the obliviots and cull them.

    April 14, 2011

  • I always thought they employed professional jeans-wearers to wear the jeans until they acquired that "distressed" look.

    April 14, 2011

  • Nice list!

    April 14, 2011

  • All too often while shopping for groceries, I find myself plunging my face into the biggest bunch of coriander I can find and inhaling until my lungs are swollen with the vivifying, coppery, earthy fragrance.

    April 14, 2011

  • (Not that I'd ever presume to speak for ruzuzu).

    April 14, 2011

  • Recommend? I would insist upon it!

    April 14, 2011

  • *facepalm*

    April 13, 2011

  • How long have I to think of a word, g-love?

    April 13, 2011

  • Brillliant!

    April 13, 2011

  • I first heard this used by José Mourinho when he was at Chelsea.

    "As we say in Portugal, they brought the bus and they left the bus in front of the goal. I would have been frustrated if I had been a supporter who paid £50 to watch this game because Spurs came to defend. There was only one team looking to win, they only came not to concede - it's not fair for the football we played."

    - Mourinho, September 2004.

    April 13, 2011

  • You're looking at a list of definitions, not synonyms. And yes, I can actually imagine exclaiming "Oh! Bisexual!" every time something is perfect. I think it would be funny - although I'm sure the novelty would wear off.

    April 12, 2011

  • Fabulous prize. I'm extra motivated this time.

    Are you going to throw in a few red herrings, too?

    April 12, 2011

  • Reminds me of Gavin Ewart's semantic limericks.

    April 12, 2011

  • I think I might have got it mixed up with Shakespeare's "country matters".

    April 12, 2011

  • I honestly thought this was a euphemism for houghmagandy, or at least Ugandan discussions.

    April 12, 2011

  • Sorry, I meant which, not what.

    April 11, 2011

  • Precisely, madam.

    So - what blog are these quotes from?

    April 11, 2011

  • Is there some sort of preparatory regimen we should be doing? If so, I share your secret.

    April 11, 2011

  • Reminds me of that great Hotel Hallways blog, now sadly defunct.

    April 11, 2011

  • CD getting cosmic on our asses.

    April 11, 2011

  • No need to be rude.

    April 11, 2011

  • Which blog?

    April 11, 2011

  • *throws away porn collection, grabs musty old copy of CD*

    April 11, 2011

  • No, I don't want worts on my nipples, thank you.

    April 11, 2011

  • There is an even shorter form: spam.

    April 11, 2011

  • yonks

    April 11, 2011

  • yonks ago

    April 11, 2011

  • Yes, we used to use this jocularly when I were a lad.

    April 11, 2011

  • So no more "the current threat level is orange"?!

    Airports won't be the same.

    April 11, 2011

  • Toto - small, black, and a dog, is, in toto, a small black dog.

    April 11, 2011

  • Sounds ghastly. I'd rather be turned into a newt.

    April 11, 2011

  • Tua can play at that game!

    April 11, 2011

  • Bilby!

    April 11, 2011

  • How much, pray?

    April 11, 2011

  • Sort of butt-like.

    April 11, 2011

  • Hope you don't mind my adding blue (a mixture of black and blue).

    April 11, 2011

  • Fantastic idea for a list!

    April 11, 2011

  • *heads for bar*

    April 9, 2011

  • I mean Wordnik...

    April 9, 2011

  • Yeah, nut yourself reesetee! If you will insist on doing the life thing, then you're going to have this problem on Wordie.

    April 9, 2011

  • You should do stand-up, ruzuzu.

    April 9, 2011

  • I read a novel recently - "An Ice-Cream War" by William Boyd - which features an entrepreneurial sisal farmer whose prized possession is his mighty mechanised decorticator.

    And now this!

    April 9, 2011

  • What sort of cup do you use for your jelly?

    April 8, 2011

  • Looking forward to being pleasantly cup in about nine hours' time.

    April 8, 2011

  • Worthy of a dedicated list.

    April 7, 2011

  • Well, I think it's a very nice test.

    April 7, 2011

  • If this word comes from Irish Gaelic then I'm a Dutchman's uncle.

    April 6, 2011

  • Plural of Oman.

    April 6, 2011

  • Not sure he needed the "slowly", though.

    April 6, 2011

  • Threepio waxes lyrical!

    April 6, 2011

  • My favourite scene from all the Star Wars movies.

    April 6, 2011

  • Well done, now work on the other 'd' words. You will notice they also differ from each other.

    April 6, 2011

  • Hmm. I can't say I felt ravished by Proust.

    April 6, 2011

  • stout... erect... stem... hairs... sauce... oil expressed... residue... fertilze(r)...

    Century dick-tionary.

    April 6, 2011

  • Cigarettes used to be sold singly by many corner shops in England in the 80's. Of course the biggest customers were kids.

    April 6, 2011

  • I'm carnal and proud!

    April 6, 2011

  • Harrrr!

    April 5, 2011

  • I didn't know you were married, sionnach.

    April 5, 2011

  • Got any SPAM lightening tips?

    April 5, 2011

  • ...and why they spent all that time sitting around in cafes instead of standing proudly at the bar like ordinary folk.

    April 4, 2011

  • Yes, that's the idea. Ou sont les culottes d'antan?

    April 4, 2011

  • True, but you have to have had pants - or the idea of pants - to be without them. It's very French actually, being and nothingness and all that palaver.

    April 4, 2011

  • Wasn't there a "panvocalic pants" list somewhere?

    April 4, 2011

  • Spelled kitschy.

    April 4, 2011

  • I'm still totally baffled about stake.

    North American sports reporting has countless weird synonyms for score.

    April 3, 2011

  • Ha!

    Obviously it's out of context, but translation: Bunbury (a player) scored for Kansas City, giving them a 1-0 lead over the Whitecaps.

    It was a cracking game - wish I hadn't turned the T.V. off with 25 minutes to go and the 'caps down 3-0. They ended up drawing 3-3 with two goals in stoppage time.

    April 3, 2011

  • "Bunbury staked Kansas City to a 1-0 lead in first-half stoppage time."

    - Whitecaps stage amazing comeback to salvage tie, cbcsports.ca, 2-4-11.

    April 3, 2011

  • Well, this is enticingly exotic - where's it from?

    April 3, 2011

  • The community, p? Why, it's nothing but a mess of squirrel headed nubbins that all hell couldn't shuck.

    April 1, 2011

  • It should be the site tagline.

    April 1, 2011

  • It's what's for dinner!

    April 1, 2011

  • I'm no expert on CSS scripts, but wouldn't that be hovver?

    April 1, 2011

  • The Wordnik "community" in a nutshell.

    April 1, 2011

  • What's this, a mis-saying of umpteen?

    April 1, 2011

  • This list is all gold! What collection are they from?

    April 1, 2011

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