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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 02, 2003 07:23
Last week's words were highly abstract and conceptual. This week, we turn to concrete words from the animal world.

carapace – the thick shell that covers the back of the turtle, the crab, and other animals. also, metephorically, something likened to a shell that serves to protect or isolate from external influence.

Next time you eat lobster or crab, perhaps you'll admire the animal's carapace instead of its shell.

quote:
The car has become the carapace, the protective and aggressive shell, of urban and suburban man.
- Marshall McLuhan
 
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Picture of Kalleh
posted June 02, 2003 13:44Hide Post
I recently came across this word while reading; I hadn't heard it before. I like it!
 
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posted June 02, 2003 18:29Hide Post
an exoskeleton, usually made of chitin - another good word. Pronounced "KITE-'n".

(If you stretch it a little, it could be the lead car in an Italian road race.)
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 03, 2003 07:02Hide Post
dewlap - a fold of loose skin hanging from the neck of a person, or of certain animals (like the wattle of a turkey, for example)

Originally used as to cattle. You can imagine the dewlap on an obese or elderly person.

Regarding etymology, the sources have an interesting conflict:
Webster says, "The pendulous skin under the neck of an ox, which laps or licks the dew in grazing."
Others say that 'dew' is of unknown source, and the 'lap' is from lappe "loose piece" (O.E. læppa).
 
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Picture of shufitz
posted June 04, 2003 07:58Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by haberdasher:
an exoskeleton, usually made of chitin - another good word. Pronounced "KITE-'n".


What's the difference between a carapace and a shell?
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 04, 2003 08:41Hide Post
Some "tail-words": coward, caudal, acaudal, scut

caudal – pertaining to a tail (Latin cauda, tail)
acaudal – tailess

Coward comes from the same root. Think of the metephor of a coward as someone whe turns tail or slinks away with his tail between his legs.

scut – a stubby erect tail, as on a hare, rabbit, or deer
 
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posted June 04, 2003 19:16Hide Post
I haven't looked it up, but here is my understanding:

A SHELL is an external covering usually made of hard calcium-containing material (Os-Cal = "Oyster Shell Calcium"), like chalk. It may grow by accretion over time, like a Chambered Nautilus, but generally is of a fixed shape. It is usually one-part, except for bivalves that have two shells hinged together.

A CARAPACE is an external covering made of a hard protein-containing material. It's organic, and it burns, as anyone who used to play in the sun with a magnifying glass as a kid can attest. In beetles it's chitin. I don't know what it is in turtles. In fingernails it's keratin, and I think in horses' hooves too. I don't know the details of how it grows. It can be multipart and quite complex in form, and is often articulated - think of lobster claws.

In English we are sloppy about our usage, and speak of lobster "shells" without even thinking of what they're made of. In that context it's a functional description rather than a materials one.

All this is of course subject to amplification, refinement and correction by anyone more technically expert in the field.
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 05, 2003 07:17Hide Post
Some "nest" words:

nidify, nidificate – to make a nest
nidicolous – remaining in the nest after hatching until grown or nearly grown

What wonderful poetic metaphors come to mind!

Ever year my wife nidifies about the house, with her spring cleaning and redecorating.

Will we ever be empty nesters? Our nidiculous son, the high school graduate, won't move out: he lolls around the house all day. His older sister re-nidiculates: she's a boomerang baby who came back after college.


I'd like to think this next word for "coward" came from the same nidi root, much as coward relates to caudel. But apparently it did not.

niding –a coward; a dastard; a term of utmost opprobrium. (also written nithing)
 
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posted June 05, 2003 18:01Hide Post
If a turtle doesn't have a shell, is he homeless or naked? Confused
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 06, 2003 06:56Hide Post
Laze outside on a warm summer evening, and enjoy the sound of the crickets chirring.

chirr - a trilling vibrant sound, such as that made by crickets, grasshoppers, or cicadas (verb: to make that sound)

stridulate - to make a shrill grating, chirping, or hissing sound by rubbing body parts together, as certain insects do. (It is a stridulant sound made by a stridulatory insect.)
 
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posted June 06, 2003 13:10Hide Post
quote:
If a turtle doesn't have a shell, is he homeless or naked?
No. But he's definitely vulnerable!

[This message was edited by haberdasher on Fri Jun 6th, 2003 at 13:20.]
 
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Picture of jerry thomas
posted June 06, 2003 13:16Hide Post
The turtle lives twixt plated decks
That practically conceal his sex.

I think it clever of the turtle
In such a fix to be so fertile.

-- Ogden Nash
 
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Picture of Kalleh
posted June 06, 2003 14:12Hide Post
One of my favorites, Jerry! Big Grin Wink
 
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Picture of Richard English
posted June 07, 2003 00:48Hide Post
Of course this doesn't work so well in the UK since Nash was talking about those animals that walk on dry land, not the ones that swim in the sea. This I know since my parents had an original illustrated edition of Nash that clearly showed the "turtles" as the dry land type.

Here we call the land jobs "Tortoises" and reserve the word "Turtle" for the aquatic version.

Richard English
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 07, 2003 23:18Hide Post
epizootic – of a disease which attacks many animals at the same time. (The equivalent of epidemic; strictly speaking, that term is limited to a disease widespread among people.)

A similar word is murrain, from Latin for "death". As best I can tell, murrain originally meant a pestilence or plague, but now particularly means a plague among domestic animals.

Epizootic is not to be confused with epizoic: growing on the external surface of an animal; as, an epizoic parasite
 
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Picture of wordcrafter
posted June 09, 2003 06:35Hide Post
It seems appropriate, for a word-board, to end an "animal theme" with a word on animal communiciation.

zoosemiotics - loosely, "animal language", but including signals other than sound, such as a dog's tail-wagging

Coined by Thomas A. Sebeok in 1963, apparently in his Communication in Animals and Men. This word is not in one-look's dictionaries. Who can check OED for us?
 
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Picture of C J Strolin
posted June 09, 2003 13:22Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by wordcrafter:
_dewlap_ - a fold of loose skin hanging from the neck of a person, or of certain animals (like the _wattle_ of a turkey, for example)
.


This brings to mind the similar word "dunlap," most often referred to in the phrase "Dunlap's Disease," a condition resulting from someone's overfondness for sweets, fast food, and/or beer as illustrated in the following typical conversation:

1st: He's got Dunlap's Disease.
2nd: Really?
1st: Yeah. His belly dun lapped over his belt.
 
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