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Grammar Central > What's Your Word for the Day?

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message 2001: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
Hang about! There was something about a possum in there!!


message 2002: by Ken, Moderator (last edited Jan 27, 2010 04:55PM) (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
opossum -- 1610, from Powhatan (Algonquian) apasum "white animal." It's native American.


message 2003: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments "posso dicere" ----possible to tell....no possoms here!


message 2004: by David (new)

David | 4568 comments She's marrying an Irishman.
Oh, really?
No, O'Reilly.

He bought her a fur coat.
Oh, really?
No, opossum.

That guy looks like the President.
Oh, really?
No, Obama.




message 2005: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments Words to Describe The Taste of Food.

Words such as scrumptious, succulent, oily, umami, esculent, and delish, gritty, stringy, creamy, rich, decadent, herbaceous....etc.

Do you have some faves???


message 2006: by David (new)


message 2007: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments cloying


message 2008: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments au·to·di·dact (ôt-ddkt)
n.
A self-taught person.
[From Greek autodidaktos, self-taught : auto-, auto- + didaktos, taught; see didactic.]

I suppose you could say this describes me.


message 2009: by Ruth (new)

Ruth | 16546 comments Mod
You were taught by a Chevrolet?


message 2010: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments No a Plymouth Barracuda. You know I had my first car for 23 years before I got rid of it. I sold it to a young man in Huntington Beach who thought he was getting a treasure. Now I find out he did. I still see it every now and then.


message 2011: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Was for me. That car ran forever.


message 2012: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Ha ha. Many successful men were autodidacts. At the moment, I can think of one -- Lincoln. Still, even if you went through the public school systems, you have to say -- to a degree -- that we're ALL autodidacts if we love books.


message 2013: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments Gabi...a great force to be reckoned with!


message 2014: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
"I am Gabi. Hear me roar!" -- Helen Reddy


message 2015: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
Helen Reddy....another great Australian!


message 2016: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
The Australian word of the day is ARVO, which means, quite simply, "afternoon."


message 2017: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
I hosted my neice's 21st this arvo.....


message 2018: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
niece neice niece neice.

"i" before ni"e"ce except after c-ya at her 21st.


message 2019: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Ah the memories of being 21.
So young so foolish was I.
I thought the world was at my feet
Then I discovered it was a beaten path.
Upon which wiser ones than I
Had once traversed.


message 2020: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
(Any minute carolakittykat will say, "If I knew then what I know now," or, better still, "If I had my ___-year-old brain in that 21-year-old body!")

Youth, it's wasted on the young. My doctor (Heidegger) told me as much.


message 2021: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Me!! Use a cliche(gasp)as old as that.(or as old as me).




message 2022: by David (new)

David | 4568 comments Ve get too soon oult und too late schmart.


message 2023: by Debbie, sardonic princess of cheerfulness (new)

Debbie (sardonicprincessofcheerfulness) | 6389 comments Mod
Oh yes! And NE....my fingers were tired.......


message 2024: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
I know, I know. Just joshin', is all.


message 2025: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments clang-tint

noun, the timbre or quality of a compound musical tone, due to the relative number and intensity of the harmonics present in it; acoustic color.

A calque of German 'klang-farbe,' literally sound-color.

Examples
“Poetry, in fact, is two quite distinct things. It may be either or both. One is a series of words that are intrinsically musical, in clang-tint and rhythm, as the single word cellar-door is musical. The other is a series of ideas, false in themselves, that offer a means of emotional and imaginative escape from the harsh realities of everyday.”


message 2026: by David (new)

David | 4568 comments Jes' funnin' ya, NE.


message 2027: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments BODACIOUS ...... (I like this word!)

Definitions
adjective, remarkable; prodigious.
adjective, audacious; gutsy.
adverb, completely; extremely.
adverb, audaciously; boldly.

Popularized in the comic strip 'Snuffy Smith,' bodacious is probably a blend of the words 'bold' and 'audacious,' whose combined senses are evident in the following description of Sevier County, Tennessee, as 'the most bodacious display of tourism this side of Anaheim.'

Examples
“If they show a hankering for more bodacious playthings, call 'em tomboy, humor 'em for a few years and then slip 'em the bad news.”
“Man oh man, it'll be a bodacious blow to authority.”


message 2028: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments CACHINNATION

Pronunciation: [kak-uh-`ney-shuhn:]

Definition: Convulsive, hysterical, or immoderate laughter.

Usage: A cachinnation may best be described as “crazy” laughter, the kind that makes a person seem just slightly off-kilter. Indeed, the word is described in early dictionaries as being indicative of hysteria or mania. Many medical dictionaries list cachinnations as being “without apparent cause,” suggesting that the compulsive qualities observed when the word was first defined in English have not died out completely. A cachinnation, of course, need not indicate the presence of mental illness, as the word may now be used to mean any immoderate amount of laughter.

Suggested Usage: Cachinnations are perhaps best exemplified by the Joker in The Dark Knight. His laughter is unsettling at best, and it demonstrates that he might not be “all there” upstairs.

Etymology: Like many words in the English language, cachinnation is from the Latin cachinnationem, which is an action noun of the word cachinnare, to laugh aloud. The word is onomatopoetic, meaning the sound of the word was meant to imitate the sound of the action—similarly to the way a “cackle” imitates the laugh of a witch.


message 2029: by [deleted user] (new)




I did it first on L&G....whoop do dooo....


message 2030: by Ken, Moderator (last edited Feb 07, 2010 10:22AM) (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
crass [from the Latin crassus meaning "thick, dense, fat":] -- "gross in mind, insensitively coarse, utterly stupid ("Crass often conveys the suggestion of 'utterly' in a degrading sense.")

Great word because there's so much to apply it to in life.


message 2031: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments So one could crassly cachinnate.

Good one to use in a novel..."as she crassly cachinnated across the crowded room....." paints a picture. :-)


message 2032: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Can you cachinnate in public, though? I know it's illegal in Texas (as are most things).


message 2033: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments (snicker)


message 2034: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments I caught someone cachinnating once, but I looked the other way!


message 2035: by Carol (last edited Feb 07, 2010 11:22AM) (new)

Carol | 10410 comments I look away only if rolling on the floor,while cachinnating.


message 2036: by David (new)

David | 4568 comments Muskellunge a large pike-like fish of N. America


message 2037: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 155 comments If that word were derived from German, it would mean "muscle lung". However, Merriam Webster tells us it's a North American native term which entered the English language via Canadian french.


message 2038: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Try another dictionary. It could still be derived from German via French.


message 2039: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Put your faith in Merriam. And if she's not available, Webster.


message 2040: by grebrim (last edited Feb 08, 2010 07:36AM) (new)

grebrim | 155 comments Yep, even German Wikipedia tells us the same story. The Indians called the fish maashkinoozh, which means ugly pike,; this was transformed into masque allongée and then into Muskellunge. From ugly fish to drawn-out mask to muscle lung, interesting.


message 2041: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments That feller was one big maashkinoozh. hmmmm


message 2042: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments CACOETHES

Pronunciation: [kak-oh-'ee-theez:]

Definition: Compulsion, mania.

Usage: When it first appears in many dictionaries, the word cacoethes is defined as “a bad custom or habit.” Though it is relatively uncommon, the word has been around in English since at least the mid-1600s, with meanings ranging from compulsion or irresistible urge to a persistent or incurable ulcer of the stomach. Cacoethes is perhaps best defined today as a “mania,” almost an unhealthy obsession to act in a certain (often socially unacceptable) way. Less commonly, it may be used as a synonym for an overwhelming passion.

Suggested Usage: “I’ve got the need… for speed!” a friend will say as he revs up his car and speeds down the highway. You might want to explain to him that driving so fast is dangerous and against the law; therefore, his need is perhaps a cacoethes. If a compulsion to do something is without regard for the rules of safety or acceptability, chances are it may be described as a cacoethes, which is a very funny-sounding way of explaining to someone that they really, really need help.

Etymology: It is relatively obvious that cacoethes, a word which originally meant “an itch for doing something,” was originally a Greek term. Our spelling and usage comes from the Latin form of the Greek word kakoethes, a bad or sick habit. It is further derived from the Greek terms kakos, meaning bad, and ethe, character or disposition.


message 2043: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments So now, we could see a crassly cachinnated fella with a cacoethes to boot!


message 2044: by Carol (new)

Carol | 10410 comments Sounds like some nasty disease.


message 2045: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Cacoethes sounds like some character in a Sophocles play.


message 2046: by [deleted user] (last edited Feb 08, 2010 03:37PM) (new)


hmn..more like one from the chorus of Euripides production!


message 2047: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 155 comments It reminded me of cacahuètes, the French word for peanuts.


message 2048: by grebrim (new)

grebrim | 155 comments Here is another word that has travelled a long way:

PORCELAIN

It comes from 'porcella', which is 'little pig' in Italian dialect. The word was then used for 'vagina' for obvious reasons, and then for 'shell' because of similarity in shape. Then, people obviously must have thought that when the first china was imported to Europe, it was made from shell powder, so they named it 'porcellana', which was adopted by the french and turned into 'porcelaine' to finally become the English 'porcelain.'



message 2049: by Ken, Moderator (new)

Ken | 18714 comments Mod
Invented in China, I believe.

quell -- to put down, as a riot; to pacify or soothe. What's interesting is that it comes from the Anglo-Saxon cwellan, "to kill." Such a nice word, too. Talk about "killing me softly"!


message 2050: by Savvy (new)

Savvy  (savvysuzdolcefarniente) | 1458 comments AMPHIGORY

Pronunciation: ['am-fi-gawr-ee:]

Definition: A parodic piece of nonsense writing.

Usage: Amphigory is a word that may refer to any piece of writing, including verse, song, or prose, that doesn’t make sense. An amphigory is very often a parody of some other, more familiar piece of writing or song. The burlesque connotations of the word amphigory (spelled originally “amphigouri”) have been attested since the 1800s, as amphigory exemplifies the gross exaggeration and social commentary of burlesque theater. Webster’s Revised 1913 Dictionary explains that, upon further reflection or attention, amphigory “proves to be meaningless.”

Suggested Usage: Use amphigory as an antidote to the boring parody and satire everyone else seems so captivated by. See, modern parody is often very banal and boring, and the sharp commentary rarely skewers its target. We suggest you start with a staged political parody involving two lizards running for president of the aquarium. Civil unrest quickly turns into a bloodbath; hence, an amphi-gory! (Get it?)

Etymology: While various ideas have been proposed as to the actual etymology of the word amphigory, the origin of the word remains uncertain. The French word amphigouri might come from a Greek term meaning “to circle on both sides,” although others have suggested that the Greek suffix –agoria, speech, might account for part of the meaning. As amphigory certainly conveys the idea of “circular speech,” this etymology is commonly cited.


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