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We've seen the word spat, meaning "young, floating oysters, which attach themselves to oyster shells and artificial beds." Of course, a "spat" can also be a minor dispute, and "spat" is the past tense of "to spit". This week we'll present some further words which have two or more disparate meanings. flute – 1. a familiar musical instrument 2. architecture: a long groove as a decorative motif, as on an architectural column (also, a like groove or furrow, as in cloth or on furniture; common on a quiche pan) 3. a tall narrow wineglass
– Shelbyville (Indiana) News, Dec. 31, 2008 Champagne glasses come in many shapes and sizes: A saucer, called a coupe in France …, disperses bubbles quickly from its shallow bowl. It is generally smaller than a flute, and is ideal for a quick toast. A flute and a trumpet (or pomponne) keep bubbles in the glass longer. As for the legend that the saucer was modeled on the shape of Marie Antoinette’s breasts? Almost certainly false. – New York Times, Dec. 24, 2008 trumpet; saucer; pomponne (wineglasses) – see quote and illustrations above | ||
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... and spat is the jocular singular of spats a kind of pearl-gray gaiter or puttee. —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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Why do you call it jocular? Both M-W and Dictionary.com use it in the singular. Spats are still used, according to Wikipedia, and the Los Angeles Times (LAT) reports (October 14 2007) "the spat's back."
Don't you just want to rush out and buy some? Or maybe this is your style. You'd look dashing walking down the street in your spats . And you can get them for your kids, too. | |||
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Why do you call it jocular? Because I've never heard anybody speak about a single spat. (Maybe "I lost one of my spats".) And, I didn't look it up. I just assumed one spat would be like one pant or one scissor. Shouldn't the title be rewritten as back of the spat? —Ceci n'est pas un seing. | |||
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The situation is similar for "shoes", "socks", "gloves", and so on. Their definition will appear in the dictionaries as singular but they are most usually referred to in pairs. 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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shoal – 1. an area of shallow water, or a submerged sandbank visible at low water 2. a large number of fish swimming together (related to "a school of fish") Etymologically, two separate words. The first sense is often used figuratively; see quotes.
– Peter Greenberg, Don't Go There!: The … Must-Miss Places of the World sense 1, figurative: The granting of favorable concessions to dictatorial regimes is a practice hardly limited to the current administration … . But even the best-endowed regimes need help navigating the shoals of Washington, and it is their great fortune that, for the right price, countless lobbyists are willing to steer even the foulest of ships. – Ken Silverstein, Harper's Magazine, July, 2007 sense 2: "Oh, bother these fish!" said Lucy, for a whole shoal of small fat fish, swimming quite close to the surface, had come between here and the Sea People. But though this spoiled her view it led to the most interesting thing of all. – C. S. Lewis, The Chronicles of Narnia | |||
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Of course, the inimitable Wodehouse had something to say on the subject of spats...http://wodehouse.ru/55.htm Richard English | |||
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Very interesting ... The Russian Wodehouse Society. I wonder what the average Russian makes of Bertie Wooster and the inimitable Jeeves? 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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He or she probably thinks that we still live in that glorious timewarp world that was Wodehouse. Were that but true! Richard English | |||
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I don't know if you saw it but when Paul Merton did his recent series on India he also met up with an Indian Wodehouse readers' group. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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That's right Bob, I remember! I'd imagine that a lot of Indians do think we still live like that, especially as the Raj only ended 60-odd years ago. 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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It is a pity that we can't hold a wordcraft convention somewhere like Blandings Castle. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
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Actually that suggestion has much merit, the more so since we don't as yet have a venue for Wordcraft 2009. Hall and Woodhouse do have a pub in Hampshire called The Empress of Blandings and the PGW society in the UK http://www.pgwodehousesociety.org.uk/ have many events. Richard English | |||
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shirr – 1. to gather (cloth) into decorative rows by parallel stitching 2. to cook (eggs, in their shell or a small dish) by baking until set Opposites, in the sense that the latter is simplicity, while the former adds ornament to simplicity.
– Lauren Weisberger, The Devil Wears Prada Shirring sure is sexy. Instead of adding bulk, artfully placed gathers actually hug your figure and add texture to a garment. … "Shirring takes away the simpleness of clothes," he [designer Pierre Garroudi] said. "It gives the impression of draping." – New York Daily News, Dec. 28, 2000 But her favorite way to express their [eggs'] simplicity is to shirr them. It's an old-fashioned technique that essentially means baking an egg. In her version, the eggs in ramekins are simmered in seasoned cream that reduces slightly into a soft sauce. "This is kind of a retro dish you don't see much anymore," she said. – New York Times, July 5, 2006 (see article for picture, and link to recipe) | |||
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gudgeon – 1. a certain small freshwater fish (or various similar fishes) often used as bait to catch larger ones . . .2. slang: one who is easily duped 3.a a pivot or spindle on which something swings or rotates b. the tubular part of a hinge into which a pin (called the pintle) fits (nautical: such a socket for a rudder) c. a pin holding two blocks of stone together¹
– BBC News, Dec. 1, 2005 the fool: I hope I am not such a gudgeon as that! – Georgette Heyer, The Reluctant Widow the fitting: Raging Bull's woes hung from some faulty gudgeon bolts that attach the rudder to the boat. – Independent, Jan. 2, 2007 But it gets interesting when you ask what was the Shakespearean-era connection between the fish and foolishness. In some metaphors the gudgeon is the fool doing the swallowing, who will "swallow anything". In others, the gudgeon is bait being swallowed, and the fool is the one who takes the bait and gets caught ("hook, line and sinker"). Contrast the former metaphor in Barry, Ram-Alley ("Has the gudgeon bit?" "He has been nibbling."), with the latter in Butler, Hudibras ("To swallow gudgeons 'ere they're catched, / And count their chickens 'ere they're hatched.") ¹Question: In sense 3, can gudgeon sometimes mean a pin fitting into a socket, and sometimes mean the socket?. Does the word trunnion also have the same pair of pin/socket meanings? I don't know. Can any reader shed light?This message has been edited. Last edited by: wordcrafter, | |||
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Today's word can be a commendation or condemnation, or a potation! smoothie – 1.a. a person with polished manners, who acts with deftness, assurance, and easy competence . .b. a person with an artfully suave, ingratiating manner; esp., a man with that manner toward women 2. a creamy beverage made of fruit blended with juice, milk, or yogurt (implies low-calorie?) The last sense, though still not in some major dictionaries, is by far the most common.
– Kathy Reichs, Deadly Decisions Emily came back from the dining room with her usual lunch: an all-natural fruit smoothie and a small to-go container of iceberg lettuce topped with broccoli and balsamic vinegar. … I was starving. – Lauren Weisberger, The Devil Wears Prada | |||
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Another potation today. But the other meaning, though much less common, strikes me as far more interesting, and a vivid metaphor. sundowner – 1. chiefly British: a drink taken at sundown 2. Australian: a vagrant; a tramp
– Per Petterson (Anne Born, translator), Out Stealing Horses: A Novel The uncle, a wild or renegade sundowner, would arrive from Australia once every few years bringing no gifts but his yarns. – Thomas Pynchon, V. sundowner's syndrome – agitation, pacing, insomnia and confusion, specifically at night. Associated with Stage 2 Alzheimer's disease. | |||
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pallet – a portable platform on which goods can be moved, stacked, or stored, especially with the aid of a forklift pallet – a straw bed or mattress; an inferior bed or sleeping place Etymologically, these are two separate words, yet are not the meanings somewhat similar? The first comes from a root meaning ""a flat tool" (and it has other, related senses); the second from a root meaning "straw".
– Thomas L. Friedman, The World Is Flat 3.0: A Brief History of the Twenty-first Century Our beds were on wooden shelves, built in platforms of three. There were pallets of straw to sleep upon, sour smelling and alive with fleas and lice. – Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows, The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society | |||
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I first heard the second sense of pallet from this Mississippi John Hurt classic. | |||
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Me too, neveu. But I never thought of checking utube. Thank you for a wonderful memory. | |||
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Enjoy this about a double meaning. | |||
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