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Apologies for my absence. As a partial atonement I'll give you a word which, although tremendously important, has not made it into any dictionary I know of, either printed or on-line.
– Reason Magazine (on line), May 13, 2009 (verb: to frac) This definition is adapted from Alberta Oil magazine, April 2009, which says, "[F]raccing has evolved into a high industrial art … This breaks up a lot of rock, making a lot more gas available. These new technologies are enabling us to access a whole lot more low-permeability [poorly flowing] rock than you would ever be able to reach with a vertical well.” | ||
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Tempus fugit – time flies (or more accurately, "time flees") From Latin fugere "to flee" we get fugitive, subterfuge and centrifuge (centrifugal force: "fleeing the center"), and also today's word. fugacious – apt to flee away or flit. Hence fleeting, of short duration, evanescent (of things); or fleeing, ready to run away (esp. of persons) Both senses deserve illustration, and the "fleeing" sense ties into a yesterday's quote. Yesterday we saw the problem of underground oil that flows too sluggishly. But conversely, the fact that it can flow raises another problem. Who owns a mineral under a piece of land, if the mineral can't be trusted to stay there until the landowner mines it? if it can "flee"?
– Nicholas George Malavis, Bless the pure & humble: Texas lawyers and oil regulation, 1919-1936 Oil and gas in place are minerals, but because of their fugacious qualities, they are incapable of an ownership distinct from the soil. – Illinois Supreme Court, 1939 (taken from secondary source)
– Malaysia Star, May 3, 2009 In the 1940's, with domestic help scarce and fugacious, eating out has gained a new popularity … – Robert Sharon Allen, Our Fair City To the extent that a legislative majority acts thus as a permanent bloc, not a fugacious vote-trading coalition, it resembles a political party. – James M. Buchanan, in Competition and cooperation: conversations with Nobelists about economics (Alt, Levi, and Ostrom, editors) | |||
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"Fugue" in simple form can be either the contrapuntal musical form or the psychological state. RJA | |||
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And, of course, there is "fug-ue". Lexicographers differ on its exact meaning. | ||
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Yesterday we mentioned centrifuges … In monitoring Iran's nuclear program, one key indicator is whether it possesses a certain difficult-to-produce steel alloy which is exceptionally hard and strong. This special alloy is a key component of the latest generation of super-powerful centrifuges used to enrich uranium.
– The Guardian, January 28, 2007 Manhattan District Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau announced today a 118-count indictment of a Chinese citizen and his company for charges relating to the proliferation of illicit missile and nuclear technology to the Government of Iran. The company is a major supplier of banned weapons material to the Iranian military. [T]he materials shipped included: … 24,500 kilograms of maraging steel rods. – District Attorney's news release, April 7, 2009 (some ellipses omitted) [etymology: the cooling converts the carbon-in-iron solution to a form called martensite. The word maraging means martensite + aging.] | |||
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dacoit – a member of a band of armed robbers, in India or Myanmar [from Hindi for "robbery by a gang"]
. . .How come an illiterate, low caste, diminutive woman had managed to lead a gang of fearsome dacoits in the Chambal Valley? India had a long history of warrior queens, she replied. "Why don't you ask those Congresswallahs why they made Indira Gandhi prime minister?" . . .I told her that she would go down well in London. She seemed intrigued and said she didn't have a passport. Could I help her get one? . . .I tried to remind myself that I was talking to a woman who was supposed to have killed 22 high-caste Thakurs in revenge for the gang rape she had suffered. – The Telegraph, July 2001 (ellipses omitted). The full article is worth a read. | |||
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penetralia – the innermost parts; the "innards" [emphasizes "private" or "secret". Often used of a building: the holiest parts of a temple; the private family-chambers of a palace.]
– Plutarch's Lives (John Dryden translation) With his screwdriver, blunt and long, … he cracked the shields hiding the machine's penetralia. A screw popped and flew into the shadows. – Daniyal Mueenuddin, In Other Rooms, Other Wonders | |||
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Seems like penetralia should have something to do with gentalia. | |||
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In hindsight, I should have saved "penetralia" for a theme of "Words that Sound Dirty". For shame that I didn't have a sufficiently dirty mind to think of it! I shall endeavor to remedy that defect. | |||
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welkin – the vault of the heavens; the sky Often used with a sense of awe (first quote), particularly of a loud, primal, and powerful sound that "makes the heavens ring" (second quote).
– Piers Anthony, On a Pale Horse And oh but the lads were fair taken aback; Then sudden the order wis passed tae attack, And up from the trenches like lions they leapt, And on through the nicht like a torrent they swept. On, on, wi' their bayonets thirstin' before! On, on tae the foe wi' a rush and a roar! And wild to the welkin their battle-cry rang, And doon on the Boches like tigers they sprang … – Robert W. Service, The Haggis of Private McPhee | |||
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Some of us excel in lewd thinking. It's a gift. | |||
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I always thought a "welkin" arose following a blow to the foreskin. And I thank god for my lewd gift. | ||
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gammadion – a certain symbol, described below. The name arises because the symbol can be described as four copies of the Greek letter Γ (gamma): one in upright position; the others made by successively rotating the first a quarter-circle, clockwise, around its bottom-left point.
– Alan Robbins, A Small Box of Chaos But you know that symbol quite well by another name, a name that English took from Sanskrit. It comes from svastí "well-being, fortune, luck" [sú good + astí being], and that happy origin is very ironic, for the word now has an extreme negative connotation. The word is swastika. | |||
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