Language & Grammar discussion
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Grammar Central
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What's Your Word for the Day?
Yikes. The "-icide" words! Funny how we get into word groups like that. Also appealing, I think, are all the "animals in groups" words. A "murder" of crows. A "pod" of whales. A "flock" of birds. A "school" of fish (scale of 1 to 10), etc.
Here's a word I came across in my readings last night. It's one of those many words I've come across before but never enough to remember the meaning. Maybe this time? Definition and examples courtesy of dictionary dot all-is-com:
anodyne
\AN-uh-dyn\ , adjective;
1.Serving to relieve pain; soothing.
2.Not likely to offend; bland; innocuous.
noun:
1.A medicine that relieves pain.
2.Anything that calms, comforts, or soothes disturbed feelings.
Quotes:
But for the most part the British charts were clogged with anodyne ballads.
-- Nigel Williamson, "Here's a little story, to tell it is a must", Times (London), January 11, 2000
He is alternately accused of being too much the warrior and too anodyne.
-- Hanna Rosin, "The Madness of Speaker Newt", New Republic, March 17, 1997
Numbness . . . may have replaced pain as the complaint of our century now that aspirin analgesia, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDS), and other anodynes can take away the pains of the civilized world.
-- Howard M. Spiro, Facing Death
An avid fisherman himself, McGarr shares Nellie's philosophy: "I do not merely fish for fish," she would say, "I fish for doubt's anodyne and care's surcease."
-- Marilyn Stasio, "Crime", New York Times, September 19, 1993
This third novel by a reporter for The New York Times shrewdly examines love as an anodyne for rural isolation.
-- "Notable Books of the Year 1997", New York Times, December 7, 1997
anodyne
\AN-uh-dyn\ , adjective;
1.Serving to relieve pain; soothing.
2.Not likely to offend; bland; innocuous.
noun:
1.A medicine that relieves pain.
2.Anything that calms, comforts, or soothes disturbed feelings.
Quotes:
But for the most part the British charts were clogged with anodyne ballads.
-- Nigel Williamson, "Here's a little story, to tell it is a must", Times (London), January 11, 2000
He is alternately accused of being too much the warrior and too anodyne.
-- Hanna Rosin, "The Madness of Speaker Newt", New Republic, March 17, 1997
Numbness . . . may have replaced pain as the complaint of our century now that aspirin analgesia, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents (NSAIDS), and other anodynes can take away the pains of the civilized world.
-- Howard M. Spiro, Facing Death
An avid fisherman himself, McGarr shares Nellie's philosophy: "I do not merely fish for fish," she would say, "I fish for doubt's anodyne and care's surcease."
-- Marilyn Stasio, "Crime", New York Times, September 19, 1993
This third novel by a reporter for The New York Times shrewdly examines love as an anodyne for rural isolation.
-- "Notable Books of the Year 1997", New York Times, December 7, 1997

The book I am reading now (A Time of Gifts) is loaded with vocabulary beyond my ken. I don't have it beside me, but I can see I'll have to rectify that and bring it here so I can provide a word a day (maybe 8 times a day). Really. Putting me to shame, he is.

The state of being romantically infatuated or obsessed with another person, typically experienced involuntarily and characterized by a strong desire for reciprocation of one's feelings but not primarily for a sexual relationship.
It has been suggested that this state results from fluctuations in the levels of various neurotransmitters, such as serotonin and dopamine.
Nice to put a word to how I spent a lot of time in my late teens!

I forget 97% of them. Probably we've put up the SAME Words of the Day multiple times. And no one's noticed! Except for Gabs....

Found this one in Bereft and needed to look it up. Nicely written book!

hebephrenia he·be·phre·ni·a (hē'bə-frē'nē-ə, -frěn'ē- e)
n. A schizophrenia, usually starting at puberty, characterized by foolish mannerisms, senseless laughter, delusions, hallucinations, and regressive behavior.
I know it sounds like the adolescent norm, but I've always heard of it as the willingness to engage in limitless unimportant minor tasks accompanied by the inability to perform ANY important ones.
Stephen wrote: "the willingness to engage in limitless unimportant minor tasks accompanied by the inability to perform ANY important ones. "
Oh lord, I'm doomed.
Oh lord, I'm doomed.

berrieh (Yiddish) - an extremely energetic, talented, competent woman
There seem to be plenty of examples right here in this group.
BTW... I'm still curious about who answered my trivia question about which religion Ganesh was most familiar with in Ordinary Magic


There seems often to be a monotheistic element in polytheistic religions - perhaps a deus otiosus - whom one approaches only indirectly. And indeed, some monotheistic religions have saints or other intermediaries.
True. This is the rap Protestants place on Catholics -- their God-worship of a woman (of all things) in the poly-form of the Virgin Mary.


insidious
in·sid·i·ous [in-sid-ee-uhs] operating or proceeding in an inconspicuous or seemingly harmless way but actually with grave effect.
It's not a new word to me and probably not to most of you but I just started watching the movie version of Kazuo Ishiguro's Never Let Me Go and it gave me a whole new appreciation for the word.
On it's surface it's the story of a group of kids being raised in a private school environment but its really an exploration of some of the emotional and ethical issues around what cloning could become in a dystopian society. While I generally avoid dystopian fiction, this one snuck in under the radar as YA love story. I'm only partway through the movie and while I keep wanting to switch it off, I know that I'm not going to. And that I'll get and read the book that inspired it.
See what I mean about insidious?

Ort [awrt] Usually, orts. a scrap or morsel of food left at a meal. The reason this kinda useless word qualifies is because of the Ort Cloud. That accumulation of small leftovers after the solar system was formed. It's thought that the Ort Cloud contains over a billion small bodies. Talk about not cleaning your plate!
Second is
nous [noos, nous] 2. slang (Brit) common sense; intelligence
The reason that this one makes todays top of mind list is because I heard it used today on a BBCAmerica broadcast episode of Law & Order UK. I had a friend years ago here in St. Pete and she was kind of a wacky British Ex-pat who used the word to mean "Ready, Willing and Able" It had a special meaning as these were special people. Not only bright and capable but willing to do. For her to say someone had nous was high praise indeed.
There are small bodies in a cloud? Sounds very Edgar Allan Poe.
And yes, I have heard of ORT as leftovers on a plate, though our parents never used it back in the "clean your plate" days when you and I might actually be forced to remain at the supper table until every last scrap of food was gone (sigh)...
And yes, I have heard of ORT as leftovers on a plate, though our parents never used it back in the "clean your plate" days when you and I might actually be forced to remain at the supper table until every last scrap of food was gone (sigh)...

The Evolution of Ethan Poe



Humor is our way of giving up, D.E. I mean, I could throw out some titles but it would be the wildest of wild guesses unless you're reading Black Beauty, Seabiscuit, or Mr Friend Flicka.




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Books mentioned in this topic
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vespine -- like a wasp
soricine -- like a..."
I loved these words when I was a kid (caprine??)
Others I liked were equine (I'm a sagitarius after all), leonine (lion), ursine (bear) and pavonine (peacock).
Next I had a thing for the gloomy "icide" words - patricide, matricide, fratricide, regicide etc