Language & Grammar discussion
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What's Your Word for the Day?
I thought Shakespeare used it in Romeo & Juliet -- the Queen Mab speech by Mercutio. Or maybe I'm thinking of "atomie."



Thank You. It was not a formal letter ,so mayhap I didn't mis-step
Raise High the Roof Beam. JD Salinger, no?
I'm not very good at "friending." In fact, I'm best avoided.
I'm not very good at "friending." In fact, I'm best avoided.
I just like saying, "Bumfodden." It's a wonderful euphemism for TP (a bridge over the Hudson, I believe, between Joisey and New York state).

Eclogue
A brief, dramatic pastoral poem, set in an idyllic rural place but discussing urban, legal, political, or social issues. Bucolics and idylls, like eclogues, are pastoral poems, but in nondramatic form. See Edmund Spenser’s “Shepheardes Calendar: April,” Andrew Marvell’s “Nymph Complaining for the Death of Her Fawn,” and John Crowe Ransom’s “Eclogue.”
A brief, dramatic pastoral poem, set in an idyllic rural place but discussing urban, legal, political, or social issues. Bucolics and idylls, like eclogues, are pastoral poems, but in nondramatic form. See Edmund Spenser’s “Shepheardes Calendar: April,” Andrew Marvell’s “Nymph Complaining for the Death of Her Fawn,” and John Crowe Ransom’s “Eclogue.”
Eclogue looks like it's missing the first "o." Ecologue. That, too, is a word (if not a word of the day), no?
Back in my geological days, I loved the word dodecahedron. A solid, usually a crystal, with 12 faces or facets. The word rolls of the tongue in a most satisfying manner.

cube, tetrahedron, octahedron, icosahedrown, dodecahedron.
Plato, they say . . .

I just watched The Phantom Tollbooth. The multifaced dodecahedron is voiced by Mel Blanc. It was a fun movie, though I was glad when my little sister told me she preferred me reading aloud.
My word of the day is ersatz which neither sounds nor means exactly what I expected. I thought it meant something closer to pretense or affectation, but the dictionary says:
–adjective 1. serving as a substitute; synthetic; artificial: an ersatz coffee made from grain.
–noun 2. an artificial substance or article used to replace something natural or genuine; a substitute.

fussock
A lazy fat woman. An old fussock; a frowsy old woman.
Definition taken from The 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue, originally by Francis Grose.
Now there is probably an interesting volume: 1811 Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue Is it a sort of UrbanDictionary.com for the 1800s perhaps?
Hi, Summer. Fussock is a great name for a grouchy old woman because it has the word "fuss" in it.
And some things in life should never be made of ersatz (often man-made) stuff. Like butter, for instance.
And some things in life should never be made of ersatz (often man-made) stuff. Like butter, for instance.

Reproach, criticism, warning."
It sounds like it should be an aversion to animals instead.

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The adjective is anomic. It refers to a condition of individuals or society characterized by a breakdown or absence of social norms and values, as in the case of refugees.