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Rants: OT & OTT > WORD/QUOTATION of the DAY Resurrected

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message 151: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Kench!

... strolls away, giggling and whistling...


message 152: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Seb Kirby, a good writer, tweeted this:

Thomas Jefferson: The most valuable of all talents is that of never using two words when one will do.


message 153: by J.A. (new)

J.A. Beard (jabeard) Recently, a beta reader was reading over a scene in my book and then became confused because the word I'd used in the particular context, she didn't understand.

I admit I was a bit surprised because it didn't strike me as that confusing, but it did get me to thinking about the fine balance of maximum connotative specificity with word choice and accessibility, which admittedly, is more of an issue in some types of writing than others (i.e., certain types of self-conscious 'literary' writing may not have accessibility at all as a goal or a particular voice may be a bit less mainstream, et cetera).


message 154: by Andre Jute (last edited Dec 24, 2013 11:02PM) (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
I'm an intellectual. I write like and for intellectuals. If anyone else likes my books, I'm happy, and I've often been surprised at which books became best sellers, but if I have consciously to write down I consider it hard work and want to be paid advertising rates. Since I earned seven figures in base salary, with more in expenses and still more in bonuses, you can grasp how impossible a demand that is.

I should probably also add that I can spot an Ivy Leaguer writing down so he can make a fast buck or be a talking head on the goggle box a mile away, and that the result never fails to ring a false note with me. Of course, some Ivy Leaguers are just badly educated, or dumb, or crude, or untalented. The fellow who wrote the monster hit of the 1970's, the tearjerker Love Story, wasn't too to bright to start with, and taught English at Harvard but wrote like Robert Ludlum wit a bunged-up head-cold: that was his best style. It was bad lit, but it wasn't hypocritical.

(Now he'll turn out to be another of Sierra's old boyfriends and she'll try to claim that, like that axe murder, whatsisname, that she ran away to Mexico with, Erich was really very sweet if you overlooked a few small eccentricities.)


message 155: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments LOL - Sierra can really pick 'em.


message 156: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Everyone has a book in them. Sometimes jammed where an exasperated writer shoved it. -- Wendy C. Allen


message 157: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments New word for the day:

Gormless - lacking intelligence and vitality.

Thanks to Katie!


message 158: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
I always thought gormless was helpless and useless and resigned to your fate. "Gormless Henry just sat waiting for the flood to roll over him."


message 159: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments I always thought gormless was having no cojones, grin...


message 160: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Sharon wrote: "I always thought gormless was having no cojones, grin..."

Not so sure a gormless fellow would have the energy to learn Spanish.


message 161: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Kench!


message 162: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments mubble fubbles, n.
A state of depression or melancholy; despondency, low spirits. Chiefly in in (also out of) one’s mubble-fubbles .
. . . .
1610 Christmas Prince (1922) 152> And when your brayne, feeles any paine, with cares of state & troubles We’el come in kindnesse, to put your highnesse out of ye mumble fubbles.


message 163: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Zero zip?


message 164: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Paul Johnson, the historian, first quotes his namesake, Dr Johnson: “Sir, among the anfractuosities of the human mind, I know not if it may be one, that there is a superstitious reluctance to sit for a picture.”

Then Johnson, Paul, adds, "There are few people, perhaps none besides Johnson, who can work a word like 'anfractuosity' into a speech at a convivial gathering. What does it mean? Why, tortuous."

Perhaps you gentlemen would like to know that ROBUST can be reached by ouija board.


message 165: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Word of the day: hiraeth

(noun) A homesickness for a home to which you cannot return, a home which maybe never was; the nostalgia, the yearning, the grief for the lost places of your past.


message 166: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
You win; Kat: I didn't know it. Now, for bonus points, tell us the pronunciation and etymology of hireath.


message 167: by K.A. (last edited May 07, 2014 09:36AM) (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments The world is Welsh (a heritage I claim from my maternal Grandfather who was a Strobridge back in the old country.)

Look what I found on Google:

http://www.theparisreview.org/blog/20...

It’s pronounced “here-eyeth” (roll the “r”) and it’s a Welsh word. It has no exact cognate in English. The best we can do is “homesickness,” but that’s like the difference between hardwood and laminate.

Homesickness is hiraeth-lite. A quick history lesson is a good idea before a definition: in 1282 Wales became the first colony of the English empire. Because England eventually ruled half the globe, we all know its first colony by the name the colonizers gave it: Wales, which means “Place of the Others,” or “Place of the Romanized Foreigners.”



message 168: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
By the rivers of Wales I sat me down to weep...


message 169: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Nice quote! I'll have to look it up.

I would really like to see the UK one day. I'm a bit scared to leave the US, it's a big world and I might get lost. LOL


message 170: by Andre Jute (last edited May 07, 2014 06:18PM) (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Nah, the Welsh valleys are just like the area around Asheville, NC. As long as you remember that inbreeding is also a form of networking, you'll be okay.


message 171: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments LOL - I guess people are the same everywhere.


message 172: by Andre Jute (last edited Aug 11, 2014 04:15PM) (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
I'm swithering between telling you what the word means and letting you look it up for yourselves, and that introduction also defines its meaning.

Apparently of Scottish origin.


message 173: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Leave it to the Scots to have such intreging words.


message 174: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Hoon.

A hoon is an Australian road hooligan.


message 175: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Found on the net:

> Don't be evil - Google 2004
>
> We have a new policy - Google 2012


message 176: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments BABBLEMENT (n.)
"Senseless prattle" or "unmeaning words," according to Webster. To twattle, incidentally, is to gossip or chatter.


message 177: by K.A. (last edited Oct 16, 2014 04:51PM) (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments A TwoFer!

FOPDOODLE (n.)
The perfect name for "an insignificant fellow" -- Webster described this word as "vulgar and not used."

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/paul-an...


message 178: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
FOPDOODLE (n.)
The perfect name for "an insignificant fellow" -- Webster described this word as "vulgar and not used."


It is now, in ROBUST on Goodreads!


message 179: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments LOL - I thought they had some really fun words that we want to start using again. Fopdoodled is one of them.


message 180: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
K.A. wrote: "LOL - I thought they had some really fun words that we want to start using again. Fopdoodled is one of them."

Vulgar people might misinterpret it, vulgarly.


message 181: by Dakota (new)

Dakota Franklin (dakotafranklin) | 306 comments Fopdoodled!

As a verb it sounds obscene, all right.


message 182: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Hi everyone {waves...} Was feeling a bit hireath, thought it might be fun to babble on a bit with some old fopdoodle (is there a female version?) and gormless friends, but I swithered when I realized that's not you lot, so I guess I will take me mubble fubbles and scoot on out of here...


message 183: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments LOL That was great!


message 184: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Sharon wrote: "Hi everyone {waves...} Was feeling a bit hireath, thought it might be fun to babble on a bit with some old fopdoodle (is there a female version?) and gormless friends, but I swithered when I realiz..."

You should be on stage, Sharon!


message 185: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Tillotson (storytellerauthor) | 1802 comments Ha ha Andre, I would forget all my lines!


message 186: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
What you need is a teleprompter.

Teleprompter.

Imagine what Dickens would have thought the word meant, even after television was explained to him. Perhaps a little man popping his head out of a Punch and Judy box to give prompts?


message 187: by Dakota (new)

Dakota Franklin (dakotafranklin) | 306 comments With an iPad, Dickens could have been the Steve Jobs of the nineteenth century. On the whole, I'd rather have Dickens...


message 188: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
As long as I am not forced to read Dickens, you can have him all you like.


message 189: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments mogigraphia, n. Writer’s cramp.
. . . .
1891 F. Taylor Man. Pract. Med. (ed. 2) 339 The disease is hence called writers’ cramp and scriveners’ palsy; graphospasm and mogigraphia have been used as technical terms.

Something every writer should know. ;-)


message 190: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
"... Scriveners’ palsy..."

You shoulda stuck to Microsoft Word.


message 191: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Oh, good one!


message 192: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments réchauffé, adj. and n.
. . . .
A. adj.
Of food: reheated, heated or warmed up again; made from leftovers. Freq. fig.: reworked, rehashed; unoriginal, derivative. Also as a postmodifier, after French use.
. . . .
1838 Times 27 Dec. 5/4 This was a rechauffée version of the well-known story of Jane Shore.
. . . .
B. n.
A warmed-up dish; a dish made from leftovers. Freq. fig.: a reworking or rehash (chiefly depreciative).
. . . .
1870 R. Broughton Red as Rose I. xiii. 272 A réchauffé of one’s own stale speeches is not an appetising dish.


message 193: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
You're so elegant, my dear.


message 194: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments From The Oxford English Dictionary Word of the Day:
first foot, n.
. . . .
1. Eng. regional (north.), Sc., and Irish English (north.) The first person to cross a householder’s threshold in the New Year.
. . . .
1883 J. Parker Tyne Chylde 4 How glad..the dear soul was when she had a good ‘first-foot’ on New Year’s morning.

What if the first foot is a paw? Does it matter which species? LOL


message 195: by Andre Jute (last edited Jan 01, 2015 08:02PM) (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
K.A. wrote: "What if the first foot is a paw? Does it matter which species? LOL"

Depends on the size, curvature, orientation and sharpness of the fingernail. Once you get past that lot, cleanliness seems a bit superfluous.


message 196: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Gee - it's pretty complicated. Kench


message 197: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
Exactly. What if the first paw through the door doesn't belong to your poodle?


message 198: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments Poodle?

Trouble (the Jack Russell) would have a fit if I brought home a poodle - unless it was female, then Ms Mocha (Jack Russel cross) would have a large farm animal. LOL

When it comes to critters, I can only bring home terriers (or terrorists).


message 199: by Andre Jute (new)

Andre Jute (andrejute) | 4851 comments Mod
K.A. wrote: "I can only bring home terriers (or terrorists)."

Dyslexia makes for an interesting life!


message 200: by K.A. (new)

K.A. Jordan (kajordan) | 3042 comments nuppence, n.
. . . .
No money; nothing.
. . . .
1886 A. Lang in Longman’s Mag. Mar. 551 The Americans can get our books, and do get them, and republish them and give us nothing—that awful minus quantity, ‘nuppence’!
1964 Observer 20 Sept. 27/7 Living on nuppence.


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