Wordcraft Community Home Page
Bluffing game: nous

This topic can be found at:
https://wordcraft.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/410600694/m/4201046165

September 24, 2008, 06:16
bethree5
Bluffing game: nous
Nous is the new word for the game. Send your daffynition to me via PM. If you don't know it, don't look it up. If you do, don't post it!

If you guess correctly, you receive a point. Each vote for your daffynition is also worth a point for you.
September 25, 2008, 11:49
BobHale
Mine's sent.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
September 26, 2008, 05:41
bethree5
Thanks, Bob.

Hey folks we have three so far, & a fourth on its way. The weekend has arrived: time for wordplay. The more the merrier!
September 26, 2008, 18:30
Kalleh
Mine, too.
September 27, 2008, 05:43
<Proofreader>
Should it be in anapest or double dactyl?
September 28, 2008, 16:04
bethree5
Anymore contestants? A selection of daffynitions will be published for voting at the close of the day tomorrow.
September 29, 2008, 20:00
<Asa Lovejoy>
Isn't tomorrow already here where you live? Where's the list? Smile
September 30, 2008, 06:12
bethree5
Slow as usual folks, thanks for waiting.

Here they are, please vote for one:

NOUS

1. An archaic term meaning "nothing"(STELLA)

2. (n) Scottish dialect: vomit (ARNIE)

3. cockroach (Lancashire dialect word)(BOBHALE)

4. Depression engendered by a plan’s failure to fulfill expectations. (PROOFREADER)

5. Nous - n. A writing instrument. [Origin: 1710–20; < F, OF, of obscure orig.](KALLEH)

6. The world as we conceive it to be.(ASA)

7. The hazelnut, or filbert. Primarily Scottish. (VALENTINE)

8. The food source for a developing insect while inside the egg.(MYTH JELLIES)

9. Riddle (arch.)(BETHREE threw this in for the heck of it)

This message has been edited. Last edited by: bethree5,
September 30, 2008, 07:06
<Proofreader>
I always thought a nous was the rope that goes around a French collaborator's neck, but I'm obviously wrong. So I'll have to choose #2, after a close study of Bethree's limericks.

If I knew how to do it, there would be a giant smiley face after the last statement. Since I don't know how, believe me, it's a joke.
September 30, 2008, 07:17
bethree5
Intrinsically funny, Proofreader-- emoticon unnecessary.
September 30, 2008, 09:36
Myth Jellies
I'll guess 6


Myth Jellies
Cerebroplegia--the cure is within our grasp
September 30, 2008, 09:45
BobHale
I know the meaning of nous. The trouble is, not only isn't the meaning I know there but nothing there looks remotely related to it. Frown
So I'll just guess at one of the others. 9 Please.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
September 30, 2008, 10:16
bethree5
Red Face Red Face Red Face Red Face Red Face Red Face

Okay, I completely blew it. I default: Bob H, you win!

Just chalk it up to having sh** for nous!!! Should have refreshed my memory on how this silly game is played.

Hanging my head... & my nous, too.... in utter shame.

Here 'tis:

1. Greek Philosophy. mind or intellect.
2. Neoplatonism. the first and purest emanation of the One, regarded as the self-contemplating order of the universe.
[Origin: 1670–80; < Gk noûs, contracted var. of nóos mind]

GAME OVER
September 30, 2008, 11:20
BobHale
Ah shucks. You didn't oughta gone and done that. It would have been great to see what arnie came up with in the absence of the correct answer. After all "nous" could have all sorts of meanings and everyone could have guessed, even without the right answer being there.
I only know because around these here parts the word "nous" is in common use for "common sense".
I just figured that there was another meaning that I didn't know.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
September 30, 2008, 11:56
bethree5
Well, what can I say, Bob, except that-- I not only didn't know the word was in common use across the pond... I had neither the nous to figure out how to rescue the game, nor the bolas to bluff!
September 30, 2008, 12:38
<Proofreader>
quote:
a nous was the rope that goes around a French collaborator's neck,

So that might be how they stop philosophisers in France.
September 30, 2008, 14:41
<Asa Lovejoy>
I had assumed it to be related to knowledge, so kinda sorta hinted at the right definition with my entry, #6, and I snagged one person. So let's declare mine to be the right answer! Big Grin By that logic, Myth Jellies is the winner!
September 30, 2008, 15:01
BobHale
quote:
Originally posted by bethree5:
Well, what can I say, Bob, except that-- I not only didn't know the word was in common use across the pond... I had neither the nous to figure out how to rescue the game, nor the bolas to bluff!


Don't know if it's common throughout England, just in my bit of it.


"No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson.
September 30, 2008, 15:48
Valentine
I too knew the word, and probably would have guessed #6.

When I played this game in college, the word was first announced to the players. If anyone knew it, he was honor bound to disclose that, and define it. In that case, if the word had a second meaning, it could still be used.

For example, had nous been announced (which it wouldn't have been, since all players not only knew the word, but knew that all players knew the word), and defined, the announcer _could_ have gone on with the game, looking for the second meaning - common sense. Because the two meanings are somewhat closely related, the round then would have involved guessing who came up with the related meaning - the original announcer, or someone else trying to fool the others.

Similarly, because we all had some Greek, and most of us some Latin, words that appeared to have Greek or Latin roots might be chosen - to confound the players as to whether that was a false appearance, or not. Fake definitions might, or might not, play on that theme. This often resulted in several very similar definitions, making the choice among them particularly difficult.
September 30, 2008, 15:51
Valentine
bethree5, if no one objects, could you post who the authors of the fakes were, for future reference?
September 30, 2008, 15:57
stella
'For future reference', Valentine. That sounds ominous! Smile (I was fake #1.)

The word 'nous' is commonly used here too. I was interested to see it had another pronunciation because we always rhyme it with mowse.
September 30, 2008, 16:06
jerry thomas
No noose is good news.
September 30, 2008, 16:13
Valentine
Stella: When I played in college, there was an element of gamesmanship involved, because most of us were pretty good friends, and had played together often. History was important.

I was #7. Not one of my better ones, I think.

When you say common, in what sense?
September 30, 2008, 17:37
<Proofreader>
I was #4 and had not the slightest idea what the word meant. Since this is the same logic applied to the bail-out, I must not only be the winner but you all owe me a lot of money.
September 30, 2008, 18:01
<Asa Lovejoy>
So, given the problem with this one, I think Beethree5 should select another word. Is that OK with the rest of you?
September 30, 2008, 18:06
<Proofreader>
yes.
September 30, 2008, 19:27
Valentine
That's fine by me. I ran across a good one today, but it can wait.
October 01, 2008, 07:16
bethree5
Will do, anon-- must off to work.

Clarification, pls: do we Wordcrafters have a rule, as Valentine mentioned, of posting the word in advance, to find out if it is sufficiently obscure? For example, should all who know quickly PM the host & advise?-- or just "keep it dark"?

Stella, how interesting: "nowse"! Is it "noose" to others who use it?

Also, I'm curious: did everyone really know the word (besides me & Proofreader)?

I came across 'nous', by the by, in a novel by Claire Messud (French/Algerian background), used in passing as part of the narrative (someone 'hadn't the nous to...'). Though no major intellect here, I am widely read in Eur. lit. & had never encountered it. As far as I know it's not used in contemporary American-speak (thus sharing the fate of 99% of the rest of the OED... sorry... feeling down on America just now... Roll Eyes)
October 01, 2008, 08:01
Valentine
I don't think the advance posting rule is followed here. It was easy, when we were all in the same room, but would significantly slow things down here.

Regarding "nous". I had never heard of its meaning of "common sense", but as I almost immediately PM'ed you, I think almost everyone with any knowledge of either Ancient Greek or Philosophy knows its primary meaning. I haven't studied either in almost 35 years, but the word was completely fresh in my nous mind.

Given that, I would almost certainly have been able to pick out "common sense" as the true definition, unless there were fakes that were also closely related to the well-known meaning.
October 01, 2008, 09:50
jerry thomas
Until the word "nous" appeared here, the only place I had ever seen or heard it was in French, meaning "we".
October 01, 2008, 09:59
bethree5
Well then Jerry I have to agree with your summary in re: 'nous', the philosophical term of art: no nous is good nous!!

NEW BLUFFING WORD TO APPEAR SHORTLY ON NEW THREAD - AGAIN, SORRY ALL.
October 01, 2008, 22:28
arnie
Sorry, folks, it's been hectic at work and I haven't been able to visit for a few days. Like Bob, I was congratulating myself on feeling sure I knew the real meaning.


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.