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The Thanksgiving Feast

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November 12, 2008, 20:31
wordcrafter
The Thanksgiving Feast
USn's will celebrate their Thanksgiving holiday next week, with its traditionally sumptuous family meal. Wordcraft honors that holiday by devoting this week's theme to words of the feast.

provender – food or provisions (also, dry food for livestock, such as hay
[from Latin præbenda things to be furnished (præ- before + habere to hold), influenced by provide]

Ogden Nash tells of a fancy double-date in The Private Dining Room.Bonus word:
raffish
– marked 1. by flashy vulgarity or crudeness; tawdry; or 2. by careless unconventionality; rakish
November 13, 2008, 04:56
Robert Arvanitis
Related to "prebend," the income from an estate.


RJA
November 13, 2008, 20:29
wordcrafter
Ambrose Bierce defined "to eat" as meaning "to perform successively (and successfully) the functions of mastication, humectation, and deglutition." We'll look at the first of these today, with the other two to follow.

masticate – to chew (food) [also, to grind and knead (rubber, for example) into a pulp]Perhaps I should have saved masticate for a theme of "Words that Sound Dirty, but Aren't". Wink Here's an example.
November 14, 2008, 18:57
wordcrafter
to eat – to perform successively (and successfully) the functions of mastication, humectation, and deglutition

masticate [discussed yesterday] – to chew (food)
humectation – the act of moistening
deglutition – the act of swallowing
(The verb forms humect, humectate and deglute are "now rare" or "obsolete", says OED.)

Humectation is rare, but humectant (a substance used to reduce the loss of moisture) has become much more common in the last decade or so. Deglutition is also rare, but I found nice figurative usages in a classic, and in a Thanksgiving-Day story about "deglutition" in a marriage.

This message has been edited. Last edited by: wordcrafter,
November 15, 2008, 17:07
wordcrafter
ingurgitate – (literal or figurative) 1. to swallow food or drink greedily; to gulp down; to "pig out" 2. to eat or drink to excess

So say the dictionaries. But it seems to me in actual use, the term implies being forced to swallow something disagreeable, to have it "shoved down your throat".
November 15, 2008, 20:25
neveu
quote:
Eugen Joseph Weber

Americans may be familiar with the late Prof. Weber from his excellent series The Western Tradition on public television.
November 16, 2008, 18:11
wordcrafter
Here's a word you can drop into Thanksgiving Day celebrations. It can be remembered because it's related to razor, in that each comes from a root meaning "to scrape".

rasorial – related to birds that scratch the ground for their food – such as the turkey, who is the "guest of honor" at the Thanksgiving feast. Other rasorial birds are the chicken, partridge, grouse, quail, and peacock.
November 18, 2008, 07:25
wordcrafter
For your Thanksgiving feast, I wish you the good form of satiety. As the Romans said, "Eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow we diet." May you and your turkey each be well-stuffed.

satiate (noun form satiety) – 1. to satisfy (an appetite or desire) fully 2. to satisfy to excess

Usually used in either a blood-thirsty sense or a sexual sense. For example: