Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Bert Date: 30 Jun 00 - 10:40 AM Ah place names... Stanstead Mountfitchet, Chipping Ongar, Stapleford Tawny, Stanford Le Hope, Corringham, Fobbing, Woodham Ferrers, Toot Hill, Little End. And that's just in Essex, you can go on forever. Here |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: GUEST,John Hill Date: 30 Jun 00 - 11:06 AM I asked someone the way whilst I was at Cleethorpes Folk Festival and they directed me down a "snicket" which seems to be a short cut ... wonderful word. |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: GUEST,John Hill Date: 30 Jun 00 - 11:11 AM Not that it really matters but I was in Whitby for the Moor and Coast at the time not Cleethorpes.. it must be a local word |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: GUEST Date: 30 Jun 00 - 11:16 AM Snicket is indeed northern (yorkshire) wordiness - it means those little gaps in between buildings - nowhere near wide enough to even be a lane, and maybe only just qualifying as a path! One of my favourite words is parapet, just for the sound, and discombobulate. Priddy! jayohjo XX |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Mbo Date: 30 Jun 00 - 11:24 AM Ha ha Bert! Reminds me of the town Chipping Cleghorn in "By The Pricking Of My Thumbs," my favorite Agatha Christie book. Have you ever heard the Monty Python radio bit about the strange names of towns you find in the English countryside, when traveling on a train? It's hilarious! --Mbo |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Skipjack K8 Date: 30 Jun 00 - 11:36 AM Slubberdegullion (Sloven) Snorkel Punnet Antidisestablishmentarianism Zeal Monachorum (pronounced by true Devonians as Zeal Me Knacker Um) Skipjack ...... Skipjack |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: The Walrus at work Date: 30 Jun 00 - 12:27 PM Great selections. If you are allowing "discombobulate" can I add "oojar" (or to give it it's full version "oojar-cum-pivvy", one of those whatsits...thingamebobs..you know..er..where you can't remember the name of something. Another favourite is "sennight" an archaich alternative to "week" (presumably the same vintage as fortnight). Walrus |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: GUEST,Free Reed Date: 30 Jun 00 - 12:37 PM Blackwater Northey Osea Pyefleet Nass Bench Head Othona Nice words, eh Skipjack? FreeReed |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Sandy Paton Date: 30 Jun 00 - 03:38 PM Thanks for "sennight." There's one I can use, although not as often as I find use for omphaloscopist (navel-gazing singer-songwriter - akin to omphaloskepsis). |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Bert Date: 30 Jun 00 - 04:10 PM Othona! FreeReed? Did you have to go scuba diving to find that one? |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Skipjack K8 Date: 30 Jun 00 - 04:12 PM Identify yourself, Free Reed |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Skipjack K8 Date: 30 Jun 00 - 04:17 PM You're either brother or lover. |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: mactheturk Date: 01 Jul 00 - 02:34 PM Phrases too like..."harder than woodpecker lips" or "steeper than a cow's face"... etc....
MP |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Bill D Date: 01 Jul 00 - 03:01 PM shamelessly cut & pasted..but funny! The Washington Post's 'Style Invitational' asked readers to take any word from the dictionary, alter it by adding, subtracting or changing one letter, and supply a new definition. Here are some recent winners: Reintarnation: Coming back to life as a hillbilly. Foreploy: Any misrepresentation about yourself for the purpose of obtaining sex. Giraffiti: Vandalism spray-painted very, very high. Sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the recipient who doesn't get it. Inoculatte: To take coffee intravenously when you are running late. Hipatitis: Terminal coolness. Osteopornosis: A degenerate disease. Burglesque: A poorly planned break-in. (See: Watergate) Karmageddon: It's like, when everybody is sending off all these really bad vibes, right? And then, like, the Earth explodes and it's like a serious bummer. Glibido: All talk and no action. Dopeler effect: The tendency of stupid ideas to seem smarter when they come at you rapidly. Intaxication: Euphoria at getting a refund from the IRS, which lasts until you realize it was your money to start with. Ignoranus: A person who's both stupid & an asshole. |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Skipjack K8 Date: 01 Jul 00 - 03:45 PM The bontiest chompers in the clundy = Good food |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Linda Kelly Date: 01 Jul 00 - 04:16 PM 'Me oldun's avin a canary!' =i believe my mother may be a little upset! |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: GUEST,Free Reed Date: 01 Jul 00 - 07:09 PM Mullachabu. Now there's a good word. FreeReed |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: MarkS Date: 01 Jul 00 - 09:15 PM Flusterpated - For when you are out of sorts but don't know why. |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Callie Date: 02 Jul 00 - 03:24 AM Then there's all the Meaning of Liff words" name places which are used to describe phenomena which don't have a name. Such as "Epping" used to describe the pointless gesture you make trying to catch the waiter's attention. My friends and I do the same for Australian places and concepts which are as yet nameless. Such as: Dapto - one of those multiple powerboards of which some in-points are unusable because one of the plugs is oversized. Fairfield - the attractive LAST piece on the plate, left there in politeness. Bexley - the undesirable last piece on the plate, left there because no one wants it. Sefton - to eat the Fairfield. Leppington - the sip of drink had by a singer directly after finishing a song, in that awkward moment when people are clapping and you don't know what to do with your hands. Sometimes a Leppington can take the form of fiddling with the tuning keys of the guitar. Callie |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Liz the Squeak Date: 03 Jul 00 - 02:10 PM Ah, Wainscotting = that word that sounds like a village in Dorset.... according to Monty Python that is... And I came across defenestration yesterday in a book. Funny how these things happen. I was reading the book in Sheffield..... I do believe there's another thread about that! LTS |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Bill D Date: 03 Jul 00 - 05:29 PM My wife's mother used to have a boarder, very nice fellow, except for an 'interesting' habit...when there was shared food in the refrigerator (i.e.,ice cream), he would never want to eat the last serving, so he would take half of it...which led to some VERY small portions. It has become a joke in our family in refering to a bit of stuff almost too small to matter, but still put back in the ('fridge'), that there is only a "Weiseger" left, after his last name. Has kind of a ring to it..I can imagine 100 years from now scholars arguing over the origin and spelling.."Weissiger"..."Wiesiger".."wissiger"..etc.. "There any of that chawklet pie left, Maw?" "Wal, Juniors been at it...only about a Weiseger left" |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: mactheturk Date: 04 Jul 00 - 02:28 PM b'twix 'n b'tween... fortnight....
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Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: bbelle Date: 04 Jul 00 - 02:32 PM fond affection dearth plethora equality |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: p.j. Date: 04 Jul 00 - 03:04 PM I like words that make people do silly things with their mouths. Try these out loud and try to look dignified... Wasps Vests Desks
And while we're at it, am I the only one who has trouble casually saying the phrase DIGITAL TRADITION? One other thing... I've been on a quest for the last couple of years to find 2 words in the English language. First: The ONE-syllable word with the MOST number of letters. (So far I've collected a few with nine letters, can anyone give me a legitimate offering with ten?) Next: The word with the most SYLLABLES and FEWEST number of letters. (Currently I have a couple of three-syllable words made of only 4 letters.) Anybody wanna play? :o) PJ |
Subject: RE: BS: Best Words From: Scabby Douglas Date: 05 Jul 00 - 06:30 AM Scotland has it share of Liff-type placenames. two of my faves are: Throsk, and Menstrie.. I always thought that Throsk sounded like a disease that sheep might get... and Menstrie could be a phase of the moon, perhaps? Cheers |