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YLTO!! Glossing the Glossary
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Cathie
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May 17, 2013 12:46AM

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Tsundoku - (n) Japanese.
Buying books and not reading them; letting books pile up unread on shelves or floors or nightstands."
That's me to a tee!

tracklements are those things which complement the main ingredient of a meal and, traditionally, at least, may be found in the vicinity of the said ingredient - for example, horseradish root in good beef country.


Sarariman - A Japanese corporate businessman [Anglicization of Japanese sarariman, salaried man]
One of the Japanese girls, who I tutored several years ago, told me that she wanted to be a salary man when she grew up. : )
Being a salary man is very common in Japan. It just means having a business or professional job.

I've just encountered that term for the first time used in that context in
The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry. He walks by a "field of rape" at some point.

"Don't have to tell you, I was ropeable."
adj: angry; furious
ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from the notion that the person requires to be restrained.

"Don't have to tell you, I was ropeable."
adj: angry; furious
ORIGIN late 19th cent.: from the notion that the person requires to be re..."
I like it!

It tends to get use around my place as "I'm *&%^ing ropeable!!" Usually with a lot of frantic, heavy pacing and hand waving.

It is perplexing, Rus, that we sometimes don't seem to be speaking the same language!


Debra wrote: "busker: a person who entertains in a public place for donations"
Having heard a fair few, I can say that "entertains" is not always true. Maybe "attempts to entertain, including trying to play a musical instrument with no skill and a lack of an ear for a tune" might be closer to the truth at times!
Having heard a fair few, I can say that "entertains" is not always true. Maybe "attempts to entertain, including trying to play a musical instrument with no skill and a lack of an ear for a tune" might be closer to the truth at times!

Even our everyday street buskers have wonderful exuberant personalities, if not perfect talent.

What book are you reading Debra?


I will have to check out Tortured Spirits. I'm looking forward to seeing what you think of it.
Phantom of the Opera is wonderful, isn't it. Ranks as one of my all time favorites, right up there with Cats!

Ironically Phantom and Cats are the two musicals I have travelled to Toronto to see. Both were great!☺

I LOVED Phantom! Saw Cats in Detroit. Haven't seen a play or musical in years, though. Did see The Blue Man Group in Las Vegas last year. That was hilarious and wonderful!

"She fossicked in her bag for the plastic folder in which she was keeping her travel documents."
I know it means rummage or search. My 'searching' indicates it is a UK and Australia term from fossick.

"She fossicked in her bag for the plastic folder in which she was keeping her travel documents."
I know ..."
Another word similar to fossicking and with the same meaning is ferricking but I cannot find it online anywhere but perhaps it has been morphed from ferreting. My family use ferricking quite a bit - I remember my parents saying to me as a kid "What you ferricking about at?" quite a lot!

[a-duhm-breyt, ad-uhm-breyt]
verb (used with object), ad·um·brat·ed, ad·um·brat·ing.
1.
to produce a faint image or resemblance of; to outline or sketch.
2.
to foreshadow; prefigure.
3.
to darken or conceal partially; overshadow

Secatures(sp) are known by my family as snips.... As are parsnips.
And on to vegetables.. I recall reading somewhere that British swedes and Scottish turnips are the same. Or something.

I will have to check out Tortured Spirits. ..."
Phantom of the Opera is my favourite ever musical. I first saw it back in 2004 in London and have now seen it seven times; six times in London and once in Las Vegas. I am a little bit obsessed! ;) The sequel, 'Love Never Dies' was good too. I love musicals in general and have been lucky enough to see many good ones. Les Miserables is my second favourite after Phantom. They are both brilliant!

I came across this spelled as bidi in Claire DeWitt and the Bohemian Highway.

To make things confusing, we have both swedes and turnips here. God knows the difference. To my untrained eye, I think the swedes are bigger.
I'm having issues at the moment between working out squash. It seems Americans call everything and anything a squash. I got a few recipes yesterday and trying to work out if they are talking about what we call squash, or what we call pumpkins.
Butternuts are pumpkins for example. They have a hard external skin and are hardish inside until you cook them. Our squash are soft and very similar to zucchinis, but are a different shape. Like a star or a cog but kinda... squashed...

Happy cooking! :)

Anyway, here we are talking about squashes and such and I thought it a funny coincidence.

As for turnip and swede, both are available here - I think Swede tends to be more yellow and sweeter than turnip but it's not something I eat regularly so don't hold me to that.


Also, I have never seen one of these fabled spaghetti squashes. I need to find one.

Thanks for explaining courgettes, my Indian cookbook kept referring to them and I couldn't figure out what they were. Courgettes = Zucchini. Much clearer now.
I don't think we use Squash for all Pumpkins. Those orange ones you buy at halloween are certainly Pumpkins but some other members of the family are squash (butternut is one I remember). Is it me or do they all taste of wet cardboard?

ROFL!!!! I have never had anyone say it quite like this, Helen. In my experience, most either say they like squash or they hate it - no matter what kind of "squash" it is.

Clav´i`ger
n.
1. One who carries the keys of any place.
1. One who carries a club; a club bearer.
In Soulless clavigers are human helpers for werewolves. They lock them up during the full moon, among other duties.

Just curious. What about pattypans? There are in the zucchini family. What do you call them?
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Black Sheep (other topics)Black Sheep (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Georgette Heyer (other topics)Georgette Heyer (other topics)
Jim Thompson (other topics)