Go ![]() | New ![]() | Find ![]() | Notify ![]() | Tools ![]() | Reply ![]() | ![]() |
Member |
This theme is a personal challenge for me. To make it work, I’ll have to come up with a few brand new words in the next few days. Wish me luck! sillage - the “wake” or “trail” of a perfume’s scent. Does it spread quickly or slowly, a long way or a short one, strongly or weakly? Does it linger in the air after its wearer has left the room? (The ll is pronounced like a consonant y.)
- Marcia DeSantis, 100 Places in France every Woman Should Go or occasionally, figurative: [T]he street has no real memories for me — other than the countless stories my father would share — but the sillage of our past lives still lingers in the air. - Toula Drimonis, Montréal, Mon Amour, cultmtl.com, June 4, 2019 | ||
|
Member |
As opposed to the aroma of silage, I suppose. | |||
|
Member |
I'll hold fire on my "You Are Not So Smart" posts for a while now that the real boss is back. ![]() "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
|
Member |
Hi, Bob. Feel free to fire away! I learned today’s word from a video about the most populous bird in all history, by far: gallus gallus domesticus — otherwise called the chicken. alectryomancy - divination using a rooster (a cock). Arrange the letters of the alphabet in a circle, put grain on each letter, place a cock in the center of the circle, and record the order of the letters he picks … pardon me, pecks. An Etruscan practice, adopted by the Romans.
- Charles Willeford, “A Genuine Alectryomancer,” in Alfred Hitchcock’s Murder Magazine, December 1959 (as anthologized by Linda Landrigan (2011)) | |||
|
Member |
I parse that word as a- meaning without, lect- meaning read, tryo- (ryo?) presumably meaning rooster, and -mancy, divination. That comes out to be "predicting the future by a rooster, who can't read"? | |||
|
Member |
I think we could use a variation on that to choose our respective country's leaders. Couldn't be any worse than our current systems. Great new set of words. "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
|
Member |
Geoff, I was thinking of "silage" too, having grown up on a farm and all. | |||
|
Member |
FOMO - fear of missing out A great stock-market word, currently in heavy use about the rush to invest in Bitcoin. Other very-recent examples:
- Forbes, June 16, 2019 When you’re so tired but you have serious FOMO! You don’t want to miss anything on your first day of life. - Video: a newborn giraffe, exhausted, struggles to stay aWake. | |||
|
Member |
Orbiginally posted by haberdasher: Then does the name “Alexander” mean a man who can’t read? Or a man of few words? Or perhaps a man above the law? I like it! ![]() | |||
|
Member |
Naturally, I looked up Bequia on GoogleEarth. Just offshore from it, I learned, is a tiny island which “is uninhabited, but is used by whalers to flense their catches”. “flense”? flense - to strip the skin or fat off a carcass, especially that of a whale This might strike you as a useless word. But consider its figurative potential.
- Derek Lowe, Fixing the Drug Industry?, in blog “In the Pipeline”, December 13, 2004 | |||
|
Member |
Not quite sure how, but for once you came up with a word that I already knew. ![]() "No man but a blockhead ever wrote except for money." Samuel Johnson. | |||
|
Member |
You may be getting in on the ground floor here. Our quotation today is from a very interesting article in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal. I highly recommend it to you. Perhaps the word has been bandied about in the relevant scientific community, but as best I can tell, this quote is the first time it has been used in public print.
...... A blight-tolerant American chestnut tree is the latest example of what the science community has begun to call a GRO — a genetically rescued organism. Scientists use a gene from bread wheat that produces an enzyme. The enzyme is found in all grain crops, plus bananas, strawberries and more. (I reordered the quotation a bit, to make this excerpt more clear.)This message has been edited. Last edited by: wordcrafter, | |||
|
Member |
footling - trivial and irritating (Used in the UK, Australia and New Zealand, but rare in the US.) I almost always find my quotes on my own, but this one, stolen from OED, is too good to pass up. “We had to cancel a seven-week trip to New Zealand at the last moment when my wife became ill,” the author explains, and you completely understand how he felt about his £18,000 travel-insurance claim.
- The Telegraph, July 25, 2014 | |||
|
Member |
Love the quote! ![]() | |||
|
Member![]() |
This brought back fond memories. A visit to that island (BECK-wee) was part of a long-ago family trip. Our parents bought us hand-sewn garments made from locally-woven cloth. Mine was a 'dress' w/a '69-length hem I'd wear as a shirt today ![]() | |||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
![]() | Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
|