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 Don't know if anything has been posted about these before, but they always make me laugh. As it sounds - it's where you get long headlines that are entirely made of nouns or contain a long run of nouns in them. Anyone else seen any of these? Post a link here to your favourites if you see any good ones! This one's quite impressive: "Profit Distribution Plan share buy back offer acceptance notice" - although presumably "buy back" should actually be one word, so this comes in at 8 nouns long. Also it's not a headline, so perhaps it doesn't count. Anyone top that? ------------------------ If your rhubarb is forwards, bend it backwards.  | ||
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| Member | 
 Language Log often has fun with these.  In addition, these noun piles often end up as crash blossoms. 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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| Member | 
 Hehe, I love the term "crash blossoms"! Adding that to the mental wossname. Stanley noun pile conversation word game possibility wonder. ------------------------ If your rhubarb is forwards, bend it backwards.  | |||
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| Member | 
 Isn't share used as a verb there?  | |||
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| Member | 
 No, Kalleh. It's a noun, meaning 'stock'. The fact that it looks like a verb adds to the confusion when trying to parse it. 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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| Member | 
 Hmmmm....  redolent of "Odour of Chrysanthemums." by D.H. Lawrence.  If one expires in a crash, aren't mums crash blossoms?    | |||
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| Member | 
 Of course, arnie.  Now it makes total sense; last night it didn't.  I must have been tired.  | |||
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