November 24, 2006, 20:39
KallehSticky-outie
My husband needed a haircut, and I called his hair "sticky-outie"...it's babyish, I know, but it seemed to describe it so well. There really is no other word that works; it wasn't really "unkempt" or "dishelveled." It was definitely "sticky-outie." [He got a haircut, and it's quite handsome right now.

]
My question...have you made up any words to describe something where there isn't a perfect word for it? If so, what are there?
November 25, 2006, 09:08
zmježdHis hair was sticking out?
November 25, 2006, 09:17
missannThe sniglet books are full of such things. My favorite is the one for when it is raining and you drive under a bridge. The rain stops hitting the car momentarily. That is a downpause.
November 25, 2006, 09:25
dalehilemanA wordboard is an Internet site at which words are discussed
I thought it had been my invention but a couple of the half-dozen significant Ghits are close in meaning
November 25, 2006, 11:53
arnieRichard invented
catapostrophe for "apostrophe misuse" some years ago. I quite like it.
November 26, 2006, 20:34
Kallehquote:
His hair was sticking out?
Unfortunately, yes, zmj.
I forgot about
catapostrophe; that is a good one! There are even 325 Google sites for it, though many are redundant (including some from OEDILF and Wordcraft) and others aren't relevant to the apostrophe definition.