Though the meaning is completely different, I wonder why your cacoethes make me think if cacahuètes?Algot Runeman wrote:cacoethes
GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Does your comment relate to the Howdy Doody TV show?
Buffalo Bob frequently asked about hearing from the "peanut gallery."
Buffalo Bob frequently asked about hearing from the "peanut gallery."
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Well now, what with "peanut gallery", "negligible cost", "Charles M. Schulz", "apenootjes" (Flemish for ape nuts), "pindakaas" (Dutch for peanut cheese/butter), "The Peanut Institute", etc., peanuts do get around, don't they?Algot Runeman wrote:Does your comment relate to the Howdy Doody TV show?
Buffalo Bob frequently asked about hearing from the "peanut gallery."
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
splotch
Pronunciation: /spläCH/
informal
noun
a daub, blot, or smear of something, typically a liquid:a splotch of red in a larger area of yellow
verb
[with object] (usually be splotched)
make a daub, blot, or smear on:a rag splotched with grease
Origin:
early 17th century: perhaps a blend of spot and obsolete plotch 'blotch'

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
My painting skill is a combination of spills and splotches. The resulting work is, if nothing else, random.
Pronunciation: /spläCH/
informal
noun
a daub, blot, or smear of something, typically a liquid:a splotch of red in a larger area of yellow
verb
[with object] (usually be splotched)
make a daub, blot, or smear on:a rag splotched with grease
Origin:
early 17th century: perhaps a blend of spot and obsolete plotch 'blotch'

-------------------------------------------------------------------------
My painting skill is a combination of spills and splotches. The resulting work is, if nothing else, random.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
If you drop several cans of paint from high enough to make them go "splat!" when they land, you'll get a set of splotches good enough to be mistaken for a surreal painting. Rorschach can help naming it.Algot Runeman wrote:splotch
But if it's all the same to you, I'd rather have a splotch of good Scotch.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
clemency
Pronunciation: /ˈklemənsē/
noun
mercy; lenience:an appeal for clemency
Origin:
late Middle English: from Latin clementia, from clemens, clement- 'clement'

Photo Credit: Penn State News
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Clementine clutched her small purse and wrung her handkerchief with white-knuckled fingers. The jurors were filing in from their deliberations. Her son was not looking at them, simply hanging his head, resigned to his fate. Clementine didn't have much hope either. The best she saw ahead was a guilty verdict, but she had hopes the judge would have pity for the boy and offer clemency in his sentencing.
Pronunciation: /ˈklemənsē/
noun
mercy; lenience:an appeal for clemency
Origin:
late Middle English: from Latin clementia, from clemens, clement- 'clement'

Photo Credit: Penn State News
-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_-=_=-
Clementine clutched her small purse and wrung her handkerchief with white-knuckled fingers. The jurors were filing in from their deliberations. Her son was not looking at them, simply hanging his head, resigned to his fate. Clementine didn't have much hope either. The best she saw ahead was a guilty verdict, but she had hopes the judge would have pity for the boy and offer clemency in his sentencing.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Sorry, I'm too much overwhelmed with pity and compassion for Tom Dooley to think of any comment.Algot Runeman wrote:clemency...
Clementine clutched her small purse and wrung her handkerchief with white-knuckled fingers. The jurors were filing in from their deliberations. Her son was not looking at them, simply hanging his head, resigned to his fate. Clementine didn't have much hope either. The best she saw ahead was a guilty verdict, but she had hopes the judge would have pity for the boy and offer clemency in his sentencing.
Poor boy, you're bound to die.

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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
oyez
Pronunciation: /ˈōˈyā, ˈōˈyez/
(also oyes)
exclamation
a call given by a court officer, or formerly by public criers, typically repeated two or three times to command silence and attention, as before court is in session.
Origin:
late Middle English: from Old French oiez!, oyez! 'hear!', imperative plural of oir, from Latin audire 'hear'
-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----
"Oyez, oyez! This court is not actually in session. I just like saying that."
Oy vey.
Pronunciation: /ˈōˈyā, ˈōˈyez/
(also oyes)
exclamation
a call given by a court officer, or formerly by public criers, typically repeated two or three times to command silence and attention, as before court is in session.
Origin:
late Middle English: from Old French oiez!, oyez! 'hear!', imperative plural of oir, from Latin audire 'hear'
-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----^-----
"Oyez, oyez! This court is not actually in session. I just like saying that."
Oy vey.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Once I tried opening oysters by calling "Oyez, oyez!" at them.Algot Runeman wrote:oyez
But they didn't listen, they stubbornly remained firmly closed. Oh yeah.
I had to entice them the hard way.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
simony
Pronunciation: /ˈsīmənē, ˈsi-/
noun
chiefly historical
the buying or selling of ecclesiastical privileges, for example pardons or benefices.
Origin:
Middle English: from Old French simonie, from late Latin simonia, from Simon Magus (Acts 8:18)
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Simone sat stoicly and remained silent. Though she was in a politician's office, she hoped she might get relief. She was prepared to grease the wheels of justice. She hoped "her" governor might offer simony for her son's transgressions.
Pronunciation: /ˈsīmənē, ˈsi-/
noun
chiefly historical
the buying or selling of ecclesiastical privileges, for example pardons or benefices.
Origin:
Middle English: from Old French simonie, from late Latin simonia, from Simon Magus (Acts 8:18)
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Simone sat stoicly and remained silent. Though she was in a politician's office, she hoped she might get relief. She was prepared to grease the wheels of justice. She hoped "her" governor might offer simony for her son's transgressions.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
After much negotiating and haggling, Simone and "her" governor reached an understanding.Algot Runeman wrote:simony
Simone sat stoicly and remained silent. Though she was in a politician's office, she hoped she might get relief. She was prepared to grease the wheels of justice. She hoped "her" governor might offer simony for her son's transgressions.
He would grant her son simony if, in exchange, she and/or her son first thoroughly simonized all four of the governor's family's cars.
Spoiler: show
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
voluntourism
Pronunciation: /ˌvälənˈto͝orˌizəm/
noun
a form of tourism in which travelers participate in voluntary work, typically for a charity:at the core of voluntourism is the desire to help others [as modifier]:voluntourism programs
Origin:
1990s: blend of volunteer and tourism
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Voluntourism necessitates the desire to leave home. My couch would miss me! It might also help if I had skills.
Pronunciation: /ˌvälənˈto͝orˌizəm/
noun
a form of tourism in which travelers participate in voluntary work, typically for a charity:at the core of voluntourism is the desire to help others [as modifier]:voluntourism programs
Origin:
1990s: blend of volunteer and tourism
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Voluntourism necessitates the desire to leave home. My couch would miss me! It might also help if I had skills.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
shebang
Pronunciation: /SHəˈbaNG/
noun
1 [in singular] informal a matter, operation, or set of circumstances:the Mafia boss who’s running the whole shebang
2 North American archaic a rough hut or shelter.
Origin:
mid 19th century: of unknown origin

[Sometimes a shebang screams "MILITARY!"]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Cindy has always been a little bit reluctant to commit. She has never been involved in more than one-third of a shebang.
Pronunciation: /SHəˈbaNG/
noun
1 [in singular] informal a matter, operation, or set of circumstances:the Mafia boss who’s running the whole shebang
2 North American archaic a rough hut or shelter.
Origin:
mid 19th century: of unknown origin

[Sometimes a shebang screams "MILITARY!"]
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Cindy has always been a little bit reluctant to commit. She has never been involved in more than one-third of a shebang.

Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
She herself was unscathed, but when she saw the havoc hurricane Sandy had wreaked on her house, her car, her carefully tended garden, her greenhouse, on the whole shebang, she wailed like a banshee.Algot Runeman wrote:shebang
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
That's a saying I've heard many times, but only today did I check to see its meaning. I wonder how many similar phrases are simply "known" with almost nobody bothering to look them up to learn the details.E.P.S. wrote:She wailed like a banshee.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
I knew the expression but I had no idea the banshee is Irish.Algot Runeman wrote:That's a saying I've heard many times, but only today did I check to see its meaning. I wonder how many similar phrases are simply "known" with almost nobody bothering to look them up to learn the details.E.P.S. wrote:She wailed like a banshee.
I always thought of a djinn or genie or demon, something Arabian anyway.

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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
tombolo
Pronunciation: /ˈtämbəˌlō/
noun (plural tombolos)
a bar of sand or shingle joining an island to the mainland.
Origin:
late 19th century: from Italian, literally 'sand dune'

Photo Credit: ThoWi at Wikimedia Commons
...........................................................................
At low tide, Sam could easily walk across the tombolo to the island. If he was then late to work, he blamed the tide coming in.
Pronunciation: /ˈtämbəˌlō/
noun (plural tombolos)
a bar of sand or shingle joining an island to the mainland.
Origin:
late 19th century: from Italian, literally 'sand dune'
Photo Credit: ThoWi at Wikimedia Commons
...........................................................................
At low tide, Sam could easily walk across the tombolo to the island. If he was then late to work, he blamed the tide coming in.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Once when I was on holiday in Spain, the hotel organised a fiesta on the nearby tombolo, with barbecue, Zarzuela, Paella, music and dancing, and Sangria à volonté.Algot Runeman wrote:tombolo
The highlight of the evening was a tombola. But as usual my ticket won nothing, zip, nada. The most modest prize coveted I could write on my belly ...
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
babymoon
Pronunciation: /ˈbābēˌmo͞on/
noun
informal
a relaxing or romantic vacation taken by parents-to-be before their baby is born:on the eve of my third trimester, we boarded a plane for a week-long babymoon among the quiet canals of Amsterdam
a period of time following the birth of a baby during which the new parents can focus on establishing a bond with their child:a babymoon is regarded as a crucial time for a family to establish itself
Origin:
1990s: blend of baby and honeymoon
☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾
Let's face it, a babymoon vacation is mostly a cute way to say "self gratification" just the way many weddings are just an excuse for a big party.
Pronunciation: /ˈbābēˌmo͞on/
noun
informal
a relaxing or romantic vacation taken by parents-to-be before their baby is born:on the eve of my third trimester, we boarded a plane for a week-long babymoon among the quiet canals of Amsterdam
a period of time following the birth of a baby during which the new parents can focus on establishing a bond with their child:a babymoon is regarded as a crucial time for a family to establish itself
Origin:
1990s: blend of baby and honeymoon
☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾
Let's face it, a babymoon vacation is mostly a cute way to say "self gratification" just the way many weddings are just an excuse for a big party.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Quiet canals? That trip must have been long ago.Algot Runeman wrote:... a relaxing or romantic vacation ... among the quiet canals of Amsterdam ...

Though I usually just skip any news articles about Kim Kardashian, recently my eye fell on a picture of her babymooning the innocent bystanders with her astonishing baby bump. I was impressed.Algot Runeman wrote:babymoon
Until I realised it was a postnatal image of her rear. Then I was *really* impressed.

Spoiler: show
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
No woman in her third trimester would fly in a plane unless they really had toAlgot Runeman wrote:babymoon
Pronunciation: /ˈbābēˌmo͞on/
noun
informal
a relaxing or romantic vacation taken by parents-to-be before their baby is born:on the eve of my third trimester, we boarded a plane for a week-long babymoon among the quiet canals of Amsterdam
a period of time following the birth of a baby during which the new parents can focus on establishing a bond with their child:a babymoon is regarded as a crucial time for a family to establish itself
Origin:
1990s: blend of baby and honeymoon
☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾+☽-☾
Let's face it, a babymoon vacation is mostly a cute way to say "self gratification" just the way many weddings are just an excuse for a big party.
In the 60’s, people took acid to make the world weird. Now the world is weird and people take Prozac to make it normal.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
intransigent
Pronunciation: /inˈtransijənt, -zi-/
adjective
unwilling or refusing to change one’s views or to agree about something.
noun
an intransigent person.
Origin:
late 19th century: from French intransigeant, from Spanish los intransigentes (a name adopted by the extreme republicans in the Cortes, 1873–74); based on Latin in- 'not' + transigere 'come to an understanding'
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Charles was in transit to his new assignment. He was unhappy. His boss had been intransigent about giving him a few days off before rushing off again. Work seemed to be just one crisis after another, and he was the guy they always seemed to send the farthest away to deal with the worst of them. Charles was expecting to face the next crisis at home. His wife, Maura, hadn't even looked up from her morning coffee when he rushed out to the taxi.
[ Hey, is this a sexist word? Intransi-gent? ]
Pronunciation: /inˈtransijənt, -zi-/
adjective
unwilling or refusing to change one’s views or to agree about something.
noun
an intransigent person.
Origin:
late 19th century: from French intransigeant, from Spanish los intransigentes (a name adopted by the extreme republicans in the Cortes, 1873–74); based on Latin in- 'not' + transigere 'come to an understanding'
-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-^-
Charles was in transit to his new assignment. He was unhappy. His boss had been intransigent about giving him a few days off before rushing off again. Work seemed to be just one crisis after another, and he was the guy they always seemed to send the farthest away to deal with the worst of them. Charles was expecting to face the next crisis at home. His wife, Maura, hadn't even looked up from her morning coffee when he rushed out to the taxi.
[ Hey, is this a sexist word? Intransi-gent? ]

Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
Algot Runeman wrote:intransigent
MidasKnight's wives are quite intransigent. When in their third trimester they absolutely refuse to fly in an airplane unless it's urgent.MidasKnight wrote:No woman in her third trimester would fly in a plane unless they really had to
I didn't know airlines chartered obstetric flights on demand.

Oh! Is that the "express delivery" they advertise?
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
crepitate
Pronunciation: /ˈkrepəˌtāt/
verb
[no object]
make a crackling sound:the night crepitates with an airy, whistling cacophony (as adjective crepitating)spidery fingers of crepitating electricity
Origin:
early 17th century (in the sense 'break wind'): from Latin crepitat- 'crackled, rustled', from the verb crepitare, from crepare 'to rattle'
-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*
Head beneath the whitewater river's surface, John could hear only the small stones bounce and crepitate. He wasn't aware of up or down. He hoped he figured it out before the sound completely faded away.
Pronunciation: /ˈkrepəˌtāt/
verb
[no object]
make a crackling sound:the night crepitates with an airy, whistling cacophony (as adjective crepitating)spidery fingers of crepitating electricity
Origin:
early 17th century (in the sense 'break wind'): from Latin crepitat- 'crackled, rustled', from the verb crepitare, from crepare 'to rattle'
-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*-----------------*
Head beneath the whitewater river's surface, John could hear only the small stones bounce and crepitate. He wasn't aware of up or down. He hoped he figured it out before the sound completely faded away.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.
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Re: GAME: Word of the Day (WOTD)
abeyance
Pronunciation: /əˈbāəns/
noun
a state of temporary disuse or suspension:matters were held in abeyance pending further inquiries
Law the position of being without, or waiting for, an owner or claimant.
Origin:
late 16th century (in the legal sense): from Old French abeance 'aspiration to a title', from abeer 'aspire after', from a- 'toward' + beer 'to gape'
==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ====
The judge determined her best course was to hold the defense lawyer in contempt of court, but at his plea, she held her decision in abeyance until after the trial.
Pronunciation: /əˈbāəns/
noun
a state of temporary disuse or suspension:matters were held in abeyance pending further inquiries
Law the position of being without, or waiting for, an owner or claimant.
Origin:
late 16th century (in the legal sense): from Old French abeance 'aspiration to a title', from abeer 'aspire after', from a- 'toward' + beer 'to gape'
==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ==== ====
The judge determined her best course was to hold the defense lawyer in contempt of court, but at his plea, she held her decision in abeyance until after the trial.
Words are a game. Sometimes I play alone, but I encourage YOU to play, too.