Language & Grammar discussion
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What's Your Word for the Day?
pok-a-tok -- a Mayan game with religion significance. Play it in 2012 to celebrate the End of the Pok-a-Tok World As We Know It.
Carol, What's your word of the day? SOCCER? You'll upset much of the world, where it's called FOOTBALL.
ambipedrous -- able to use either foot while scoring goals in... um... football.
ambipedrous -- able to use either foot while scoring goals in... um... football.

Pronunciation: \ˌra-bə-ˈlā-zhən, -zē-ən\
Function: adjective
Date: 1817
1 : of, relating to, or characteristic of Rabelais or his works
2 : marked by gross robust humor, extravagance of caricature,
How's that word?
Only England calls it football.....it is soccer in NZ, Australia and US (the only countries that count!)
1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8... (just counting, as req'd by NZ, Australia, and the US).
Rabelaisian is a nice literary word for naughty stuff, which leads us to:
NETHER (as in regions, as in Rabelais's favorite lands... Down Under, mates!)
Rabelaisian is a nice literary word for naughty stuff, which leads us to:
NETHER (as in regions, as in Rabelais's favorite lands... Down Under, mates!)
Pearl Buck wrote about THE GOOD DEARTH, didn't she? And remember, "DEARTH" does not mean a total lack of something, it means a shortage. Mickey Rooney knew as much, and he lived in Electri City.

Turducken here....chicken stuffed in a duck, stuffed in a turkey....sounds better than the alternative....chucky!!
The Words of the Day according to the Gospel of Bryan Garner:
"A gourmet knows well and appreciates the finer points of food and drink. A gourmand, on the other hand, is commonly understood to be a glutton for food and drink. An epicure is essentially the same as a gourmet, though perhaps with a touch of overrefinement. Epicureanism is a philosophy concerned with personal happiness and freedom from pain" [Editor's note: Where do I sign up?].
For dinner conversation on Thanksgiving, is all.
"A gourmet knows well and appreciates the finer points of food and drink. A gourmand, on the other hand, is commonly understood to be a glutton for food and drink. An epicure is essentially the same as a gourmet, though perhaps with a touch of overrefinement. Epicureanism is a philosophy concerned with personal happiness and freedom from pain" [Editor's note: Where do I sign up?].
For dinner conversation on Thanksgiving, is all.
They will be next week (but, as Barbara Kingsolver assures us, turkeys are the stupidest birds known to God -- stupid enough to look up into driving rain and drown).
Ben Franklin's choice for our national bird, they are ALL OVER THE PLACE in recent years. Not an unusual sighting, that is.


2. Filling in the blanks where other (rude) words would go.
3. A greeting! I personally say meep instead of Hello...
4. A random expression of happiness used to fill gaps in conversation.

That's pretty darn funny!!! meep-meep!!!...meep-meep!!!....I used to love watching the antics of those two!
So what's the rational behind banning it at a school...just gonna make tose lil' darlins' more apt to blurt it out IMO.
That was why he had to take such extreme measures. The lil darlins were ALREADY blurting it out -- left and right, road and runner.

Anyone planning on this for feast day???
TURDUCKEN
In the United Kingdom, a turducken is a type of ballotine called a "multi-bird roast."
An alternative is using a Goose instead of a Turkey, resulting in a Gooducken.
The largest recorded nested bird roast is 17 birds, attributed to a royal feast in France in the early 19th century (originally called a Rôti Sans Pareil, or "Roast without equal") - a bustard stuffed with a turkey, a goose, a pheasant, a chicken, a duck, a guinea fowl, a teal, a woodcock, a partridge, a plover, a lapwing, a quail, a thrush, a lark, an Ortolan Bunting and a Garden Warbler. The final bird is small enough that it can be stuffed with a single olive; it also suggests that, unlike modern multi-bird roasts, there was no stuffing or other packing placed in between the birds. This dish could not be legally recreated in the modern era as many of the listed birds are now protected species.

In Italy, since the seventeenth century, the name given to a professed gallant and attendant of a married woman; one who dangles about women. Lady T. You know I admit you as a lover no farther than fashion sanctions. Joseph S. True—a mere Platonic cicisbeo—what every wife is entitled to.
I want one! :-)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cicisbeo

SYNECDOCHE
noun: A figure of speech in which a part is used for the whole (as hand for sailor), the whole for a part (as the law for police officer), the specific for the general (as cutthroat for assassin), the general for the specific (as thief for pickpocket), or the material for the thing made from it (as steel for sword).
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Books mentioned in this topic
Beautiful Creatures (other topics)Co. Aytch: A Confederate Memoir of the Civil War (other topics)
The Grass Is Always Greener over the Septic Tank (other topics)
The Yearling (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Erma Bombeck (other topics)F. Scott Fitzgerald (other topics)
John Franklin Bardin (other topics)
Robin Reardon (other topics)
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fungible \FUHN-juh-buhl\, adjective:
1. (Law) Freely exchangeable for or replaceable by another of like nature or kind in the satisfaction of an obligation.
2. Interchangeable.
noun:
1. Something that is exchangeable or substitutable. Usually used in the plural