Language & Grammar discussion
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What's Your Word for the Day?
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David
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Mar 10, 2009 11:58AM

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Panjandrum is to factotum as supervisor is to secretary.

For some reason, it calls to my unstable mind the great Huey P. Long's riff on "high popalorum" and "low popahirum," the two carnival-barker remedies offered by our two dominant political parties. You can hear and see the great Huey, who is nothing like Sean Penn, here. It's short and well worth watching.
Janice wrote: "How about formication? the feeling of ants crawling on ones skin."
Fornication is more fun.
Fornication is more fun.
Remember the old album cover to Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass's Whipped Cream and Other Delights? Of course not. That was, what, 50 years ago?

Now for something completely different. Something much more eeeevil. Not so much a word of the day but an all-time favorite of mine:
defenestrate (v.) to throw something or someone out a window (n. defenestration)(from the Latin for window, fenestra)

Lord, how I hated that book. An insult on Cow Hampshire, in my opinion.
Oh. I guess I'll go with
COWS
Oh. I guess I'll go with
COWS

(Window of opportunity...argh. I read a lot of the previous posts, and words would turn up more than once, so I figured I was safe to post my favorite.)

–adjective having well-shaped buttocks.
1- Her gown (perhaps as a result of the scorching winds coming off the ambas) clung damply to her body, clearly revealing her callipygian curves and the entire shapely length of her legs.
2- My lovely visage, callipygian frame, startlingly awesome calves and charming smile will yet go down in history!


"Shribble," to keep messing with an object using one's fingers.
"Cooding," messing with one's privates.
"Coodling," the same but with two fingers.
"Rug 'em," to use a carpet sweeper.
"Brinking with toys," a borrowing from the Portuguese brincar, "to play," by my then bilingual daughter, adding English verb endings.

The wrinkles on my husband's forehead form an M when he is concentrating or angry.
It wasn't discombobulate was it Janice? That is one my mum used but it is a real word. If you were discombobulated it meant that you were out of sync and not quite yourself....
Have we ventured into the "Mispronunciation" thread? There's something like that somewhere in this joint...

chatoyant: varying in color when seen in different lights or from different angles
I think of Carol Channing doing her lighthouse impersonation in a stunning, chatoyant gown.
Gabi wrote: "Would that be where Fossil came from? associates with the use of a dig in the archaelogical sense. Did I spell that right? "
Exactly. But altho archaeology does deal in fossils sometimes, paleontology deals in them almost exclusively.
Exactly. But altho archaeology does deal in fossils sometimes, paleontology deals in them almost exclusively.
Gabi wrote: "I tend to lump anything to do with all that under Archaeology, regardless. "
Lots of people do, but as a former paleontologist, it always makes me cringe.
Lots of people do, but as a former paleontologist, it always makes me cringe.

Myself, I was happy that in the childs hymn, I think called 'Jesus Loves Me, This I Know' , I could refer to my own father in the line 'You Bring Yours to the Foreman, and I'll Bring Mine' (actually made more sense to me than when corrrected to 'you in your small corner and I in mine'..)
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