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Send me a PM with your daffynition of "rhytiscopia." | ||
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You've got mine... | |||
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...and mine. | |||
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AND MINE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Post your choice. (One need not have submitted an entry in order to play. The more, the merrier!) Rhytiscopia 1.) Uneven muscular movements in the eyelids 2.) Picturing in the mind's eye; imagination 3.) A neurotic preoccupation with facial wrinkles 4.) A condition in which tree replenishment has exceeded biological balance; overplanting 5.) A narrowing of the visual field 6.) The tendency to belittle others by looking down your nose at them 7.) Color-blindness specific for the colors purple and yellow | |||
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Mirror, mirror, What do I see? Lots of wrinkles on little ole me. I'll take #3. | |||
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jo and arnie should always be made to guess last because now I'm tempted to say 3. I shall resist though and go for 5 "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
I think you guys have misinterpreted this word. It's from the Latin "copia," plenty. So it means lots of rhryts - whatevertheheck they are! I'll guess #1 just for fun. | ||
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My cornu runneth over... copiously. I'll reject everything to do with eyes, leaving 3, 4, and 6. An excess of trees fits right - that'd be #4, methinks. | |||
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Wow, a lot of "eye" definitions. I will select #4. | |||
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3. for me please. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Is that it? Caterwauller??? Anybody??? Last call. | |||
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Never mind posting the answers, Saranita. We all know it must be 3. | |||
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Yes, well, it is most likely 3, but I'm going to guess 2 anyway cuz it sounds goodly. ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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Good point, Kalleh, but I am bound by duty. ;-) 1.) Uneven muscular movements in the eyelids X Kalleh winked and seduced Asa. p.s. Asa, I thought “rhyts” was the last thing some people get before dying? ;-) 2.) Picturing in the mind's eye; imagination X Arnie pictured in his mind’s eye that someone would imagine his definition to be the correct one, but, alas, as sometimes happens to those with visionary minds, his vision was not shared. EDIT: ...except by Caterwauller, who posted her guess at the same time I posted the results. 3.) A neurotic preoccupation with facial wrinkles * Jo’s personal experience (though you sure can’t see it in the photo) and whatever arnie may be hiding behind that beard led them to victory. 4.) A condition in which tree replenishment has exceeded biological balance; overplanting X Did you know that suckers are young plants that sprout from the horizontal roots of a parent plant? I sowed the seeds and suckered in haberdasher and Kalleh. (And hab, you might want to see a doctor about your cornu.) 5.) A narrowing of the visual field X Bob’s admirable restraint saw him deceived by Asa. (See, Bob? Leo Durocher was right: nice guys finish last.) 6.) The tendency to belittle others by looking down your nose at them X Caterwauller’s fine social conscience didn’t fool anyone but her point is well taken (said saranita, while looking down her nose). 7.) Color-blindness specific for the colors purple and yellow X Bob didn’t have any lookers on this one, but, Bob, you piqued my curiosity. I found “tritanopia,” [I’m betting you were familiar with that] defined as “complete blue-yellow colorblindness.” Is there a specific term for purple-yellow colorblindness? NEXT!!!!!!!!!!!!! | |||
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I happened to know from somewhere or other that rhytidectomy is a medical term for a face-lift, so I guessed that rhytiscopia must have something to do with wrinkles. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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Your plastic surgeon's office???? | |||
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I can assure you that I am too algophobic ever to venture near a plastic surgeon! BTW, In the UK we would never speak of a doctor's "office"; we'd always say "surgery", even if the doctor were not a surgeon. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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When you go to the doctor, what do you call it then? Not his/her office? I am surprised I hadn't heard that term over the years. I have worked with cosmetic surgical patients. Geez! | |||
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I knew the word from my stint as a medical transcriber. | |||
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Kalleh, since rhytiscopia is a neurotic preoccupation with facial wrinkles, hopefully those people were not accepted for surgery and were instead treated for psychological issues. Somewhere in the deep, dark recesses of memory, I recall that the British say "surgery" instead of "doctor's office," but I cannot recall whether or not they say "the" beforehand. Is it "I've an appointment at the surgery"? Is there a thread here for words such as those in the paragraph above -- differences between English-speaking countries for common things such as elevator / lift, bathroom / loo? | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
How about a rigid surgeon? | ||
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. . . or a metal surgeon . . . or a cement surgeon? ******* "Happiness is not something ready made. It comes from your own actions. ~Dalai Lama | |||
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We would normally speak of the doctor's surgery, as I said. We wouldn't use "I've an appointment at the surgery" any more than I suspect Americans would use "I've an appointment at the office", without mentioning the word "doctor". Most usually, we'd say "I've an appointment at the doctor's", with "surgery" left implied. There's a long thread in "Potpourri" - British vs. American English. Build a man a fire and he's warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he's warm for the rest of his life. | |||
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<Asa Lovejoy> |
Did you hear about the tree surgeon who slipped and fell out of his patient? | ||
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Can we make something with, say, the modernist/topiary designer who couldn't wait? I.M.Pei-tient | |||
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