Lyrics & Knowledge Personal Pages Record Shop Auction Links Radio & Media Kids Membership Help
The Mudcat Cafesj

Post to this Thread - Printer Friendly - Home
Page: [1] [2] [3]


BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'

greg stephens 11 Mar 03 - 08:46 AM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 11:14 PM
Ebbie 10 Mar 03 - 09:40 PM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 04:51 PM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 04:49 PM
Amos 10 Mar 03 - 04:42 PM
Beccy 10 Mar 03 - 03:14 PM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 03:04 PM
beadie 10 Mar 03 - 02:58 PM
beadie 10 Mar 03 - 02:53 PM
GUEST,herc 10 Mar 03 - 02:51 PM
GUEST,Q 10 Mar 03 - 02:48 PM
beadie 10 Mar 03 - 02:48 PM
McGrath of Harlow 10 Mar 03 - 02:01 PM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 01:37 PM
GUEST,Q 10 Mar 03 - 01:20 PM
Sooz 10 Mar 03 - 01:04 PM
McGrath of Harlow 10 Mar 03 - 11:31 AM
GUEST,Strollin' Johnny 10 Mar 03 - 10:54 AM
Amos 10 Mar 03 - 08:53 AM
Mr Red 10 Mar 03 - 07:48 AM
GUEST,Sooz(at work) 10 Mar 03 - 06:05 AM
Nigel Parsons 10 Mar 03 - 05:46 AM
GUEST,Strollin' Johnny 10 Mar 03 - 05:39 AM
katlaughing 10 Mar 03 - 12:32 AM
Ebbie 10 Mar 03 - 12:20 AM
katlaughing 09 Mar 03 - 11:49 PM
Amos 09 Mar 03 - 11:49 PM
Ebbie 09 Mar 03 - 11:32 PM
Amos 09 Mar 03 - 11:15 PM
katlaughing 09 Mar 03 - 10:18 PM
GUEST,Q 09 Mar 03 - 08:54 PM
Mary in Kentucky 09 Mar 03 - 07:52 PM
Amos 09 Mar 03 - 07:41 PM
Ebbie 09 Mar 03 - 05:31 PM
Mr Red 09 Mar 03 - 12:36 PM
katlaughing 09 Mar 03 - 12:04 PM
Nigel Parsons 09 Mar 03 - 11:55 AM
*daylia* 09 Mar 03 - 10:57 AM
katlaughing 09 Mar 03 - 09:37 AM
Amos 09 Mar 03 - 09:04 AM
Mr Red 09 Mar 03 - 06:53 AM
Hrothgar 09 Mar 03 - 04:50 AM
Susanl 09 Mar 03 - 04:42 AM
Susanl 09 Mar 03 - 04:36 AM
BlueJay 09 Mar 03 - 03:59 AM
Mark Cohen 09 Mar 03 - 02:45 AM
Clinton Hammond 09 Mar 03 - 01:51 AM
JennyO 08 Mar 03 - 11:35 PM
Amos 07 Mar 03 - 03:38 PM

Share Thread
more
Lyrics & Knowledge Search [Advanced]
DT  Forum Child
Sort (Forum) by:relevance date
DT Lyrics:













Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: greg stephens
Date: 11 Mar 03 - 08:46 AM

McGrath can't think of an alternative to "parenting". Well, my parents brought me up, I don't recall any parenting in those days. And male and female parents are equally capable(linguistically at least) of bringing kids up. Or "raising" them, which is, or was, I believe the American term.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 11:14 PM

Looks like Mrs. Worcester must've been channeling. Of course I meant the offending advert said "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should!

G'night, Mrs. W.

kat


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Ebbie
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 09:40 PM

I don't like 'crispy'. Why won't 'crisp' do?

Or: It was so fun! Or even: It was funner today.

I suspect that my great grandchildren (should that day arrive) and I will not be able to communicate.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 04:51 PM

Forgot one other word I hear all of the time, but I don't thnk it's been mentioned, yet: outsourcing! HATE it!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 04:49 PM

Language rules never apply in advertising, though. The goal is to use the least words possible to convey all of the benefits one might experience through whatever product is being touted, i.e. not buy this chair because it reclines and has a cushy seat and a bunch of other features...SINK into this chair and FEEL the softness as you drift off to a hot dream filled with nubile nymphettes or hunks, etc.

And, of course to say this chair is entirely wrong unless one has it to hand.

Advertising will always be short bits of the language because they are driven by space restrictions and cost.

I'll never forget my old blessed Latin and English teacher, Mrs. Worcester. She was always pointing out shoddy adverts to us, the most famous of which was "Winston tastes good as a cigarette should!"

kat


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 04:42 PM

Part of the problem stems from the incompatible uses of language. Those seeking to communicate appreciate the subtleties that using language well provides, and they like them because ti makes greater communication possible. Greater communication is based on greater discrimination between similarities, which asymptotically approaches the communication of truth as understanding increases.

Others wish to use the same tool for the purpose of control and "operating" people's minds for them, not communicating. To this group, any association of syllables that will produce a desired behaviour, willing or not, understanding or not, is endowed with legitimacy because it seems to forward their shabby purposes. They have no concern for understanding, only for reaction induced. George Bush and advertisers are birds of this feather. People who slang up the language in a sloppy way often do so because they are trying to impress and NOT trying to communicate -- so they paint bizarre "scenarios" and use word like "leveraging" and "branding" and "bottom-line" to make themselves sound smart, tight, hip and effective, when what they are really doing is simply advertising their egos. Been there. Got the tee shirt!

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Beccy
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 03:14 PM

Call me Nero Wolfe if you must, but the oddities of language that irritate me are:

Futurecast (duh)
Newscast (ergh)
Stormcast (puhleeeeeeze)


Why does everything have to be made flashy or cute? Butchering of the language does not equal originality. I blame advertising. I'd like to share a little bit of what makes it onto our airwaves and print media around here. I will use their punctuation and spelling.

"Eatin' good. In the neighborhood." Applebee's
"Take pictures. Further." Kodak
"Once you pop, the fun don't stop." Pringles


I could continue, but I won't. I think the most distressing development is the tendency to use guillotine sentences in print advertising. They really should know better than to make a string of sentences that consist entirely of adjectives.

I'm done for now.

Beccy


Beccy


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 03:04 PM

LOL @ "Q"


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: beadie
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:58 PM

I have no idea why this thing won't let me post any more than the opening of my last two attempts.

I have been trying to say that (from first hand experience) a vasectomy doesn't hurt any more than having your teeth cleaned. If you had one done and felt more than minor discomfort, SUE.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: beadie
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:53 PM

Mr. Red:


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,herc
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:51 PM

daylia, I'm sorry you got metered yesterday.
dan


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Q
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:48 PM

Uterotomy, performed with a uterotome as the utible instrument. Ha! new word for me.
From now on I will use utible for usable. Or utilious? Even better. Love that OED!

I have heard the phrase "to dollar it to death." Somehow translating this into the British monetary equivalent doesn't quite work.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: beadie
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:48 PM

Mr. Red:


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 02:01 PM

Of course that's a combination of a Latin word and a greek word. Using "uterus" as the word for womb I think it really should be "uterosection", or "uteroextraction".


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 01:37 PM

LOL, Q! I'm sticking to my uterical!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Q
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 01:20 PM

Thread creep-
Hyster- goes back to the old Greek word for womb. Hysyeralgia, a pain in the womb, goes back (the word, that is) to the 17th century. Women may suffer from hysteric passion. Hysterectomies began in the 1880s. Tomlinson wrote (1657) that the plague is a poyson retained in hysterical women. Crooke, in 1615, wrote- "Hysterical women, that is, such as are in fits of the mother."
Lots of interesting stuff in the OED! What? Would you dispute these conclusions by men of science?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Sooz
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 01:04 PM

I don't have a problem with "parenting" either. In these days when not every family has two, its good not to offend the one which remains. Also not to make a division between "mothering" and "fathering" is helpful. I ramble so I'll stop.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: McGrath of Harlow
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 11:31 AM

Well, I'd say there is something in common between a mother and a father when it comes to what they do to their children, and I can't think of another word than "parenting" that would cover it.

The two requirements for a new word is that it should be necessary/useful, and that it should sound right. The latter part is where most of those words ending up "ize" fall down. Often enough - bu no means always - they are meeting a need for a word, but they just do it so badly. Which means the vacancy is still open.

But very often, if you hunt around, the word you need is there all the time.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Strollin' Johnny
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 10:54 AM

Dear Nigel/Sooz/Amos,

Excuse me while I scream.

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAGH!!!!!!!

Johnny


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 08:53 AM

Well, Sooz, I think "mobile" and it's younger brother "stabile" are examples of specialized fields coming up with terms to talk about things not found in the commons -- in this case art forms, but the principle occurs in every trade. "Modem" and "register" are prime examples. Maybe we should opportunize the situation and invent specialized terms for folkies so we too could exclusivize our peers, thus leveraging our status. A way of making the pie higher.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Mr Red
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 07:48 AM

Ebbie

Call me a pedant but medically what you describe is vasechtomy because it is the vas defferens that are cut. Vas is a vessel (as in tube) and can be described as a duct.

The best way to describe it is PAINFULL.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Sooz(at work)
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 06:05 AM

What about the nounification of adjectives and/or adverbs? "Mobile" is my pet hate - in more ways than one come to think of it.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 05:46 AM

From "dictionary.com" it seems this use of the word has already been dictionarised! Nigel


"lev·er·age    ( P ) Pronunciation Key (lvr-j, lvr-)
n.

The action of a lever.
The mechanical advantage of a lever.
Positional advantage; power to act effectively: "started his... career with far more social leverage than his father had enjoyed" (Doris Kearns Goodwin).
The use of credit or borrowed funds to improve one's speculative capacity and increase the rate of return from an investment, as in buying securities on margin.

tr.v. lev·er·aged, lev·er·ag·ing, lev·er·ag·es

To provide (a company) with leverage.
To supplement (money, for example) with leverage.
To improve or enhance: "It makes more sense to be able to leverage what we [public radio stations] do in a more effective way to our listeners" (Delano Lewis). "


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Strollin' Johnny
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 05:39 AM

My pet hates are 'Parenting', and an new one which I keep hearing spouted ad nauseam by 'IT Professionals' (whatever they are!) - 'Leverage', as in "We need to leverage this up" - surely it should be "We need to lever this up" or "We need to apply leverage to this"?

It's also their practice to pronounce it the US way here in the UK, with a short 'e' instead of the long-'e' UK pronunciation, 'Leever'.
Prats the lot of 'em.
JB


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 12:32 AM

Why, thank yew! Remember you read it here, first! What a hot spot Mudcat is!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Ebbie
Date: 10 Mar 03 - 12:20 AM

I like 'uterectomy'!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 11:49 PM

Okay, okay, "fixed" it is, but I didn't feel broke(n)! **BG** Darn, there goes Nigel's great turn of phrase! darn, I guess i just had an uterectomy...so maybe they uterized me? LOL!!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 11:49 PM

The difference between the right word and the nearly right word is the difference between the lightning and the lightning bug, as Mark Twain pointed out.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Ebbie
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 11:32 PM

Spayed, of course, is when even the urge to mate is taken away- so human beings do not get spayed. They get only the capacity to bear young taken away.

Same with 'neutering'. Male animals get neutered- human males get the duct cut, so the urge to mate is intact, only the means to reproduce has been compromised.

As you all know. But it bothers me to hear those phrases tossed around so freely and inaccurately. You can say you got yourself 'fixed', though!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 11:15 PM

Well, I dunno kat, about circulating terms and then telling people only you can use them. Seems a tad unfair to me. Tell ya what -- I'll retract the Victorian slant, and call you spayed, if you'll lower the bar on fair use! :>)

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 10:18 PM

Oh, please, Amos! Not the old-fashioned Victorian oblique references to unmentionable parts! We fought long and hard to be able to say vagina, penis, uterus, ovulate, cervix, testicles, etc. without having to couch them in such terms! And, actually we should make them take back "hyster" since it perpetuates that hysterical sterotype of a woman. So, what? They took it out, so I can no longer be hysterical?! I am woman hear me roar!**bg**

I equate spayed with pets, too, BUT I am a cat AND it's kind of like the Virginian said, "Smile when you call me that!" I wouldn't want just anyone to refer to it that way, but I can and will when referring to myself.

kat


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: GUEST,Q
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 08:54 PM

A number of those mentioned so far became noticable in the 1970s, although their history is probably older. Civil servants coined many of them- British, Australian, American, Canadian- their papers (Bunff) are too boring to read, but going through their memos would turn up older dates for many of these verbs from nouns.

Mentioned above- to stomach. This is an old one, first in print in 1523.
And Mary, if you were a gardener, you would know that to winter, or to summer, plants, roots, bulbs is old usage indeed. Do you have to winterize your car where you live? Just winter me where it is warm.

Medical people use a lot of these words- lobotomize for example, from the 1930s. Hysterectomize is horrible, I agree. (Er, the first is even worse).

While I was checking a word here, I ran across gnosticize (from Gnostic) in the Oxford. Dates back to the 1860s in print.

Verbicizing nouns has been going on in English since the language became identifiable as a language.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Mary in Kentucky
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 07:52 PM

I misremembered a movie in another thread recently (nobody noticed, hehe), but what I meant to say was that in the movie, Picasso Summer, Michel Legrande wrote a song which was used as background music which had the words, "Summer me, winter me..."    Now what does that mean?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 07:41 PM

Once upon a time it was held that horses sweated, men perspired, and women glowed. For the same reason I would be highly reluctant to describe a woman as having been spayed! :>) It's a word I associate with pets.

But there is no justification for the coinage of hysterectomized!! Why not a simple construction, such as "underwent a hysterectomy", "had her womb cut out" or more politely, perhaps, "underwent surgery for feminine complications"? It seems to me we don't really need a coinage for everything, and that some things are (and should be) actually dignified by circumlocutions.

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Ebbie
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 05:31 PM

i actually rather like ' to summit'. Many people climb a mountain but not nearly all of them 'summit'. And surely summit is better than 'peak': I peaked a mountain...:)

Summit has a connotation of exhilarated fulfillment that 'I made it to the top' doesn't have, imo.

Differences of opinion make a horse race (or laugh).


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Mr Red
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 12:36 PM

and he was in full speight. Ho Ho Ho.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 12:04 PM

LMAO, Nigel, good one! Aye dinna see tha' comin'!


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Nigel Parsons
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 11:55 AM

Kat: I agree about hysterectomized, why not call a spayed a spayed?

Nigel


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: *daylia*
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 10:57 AM

Well, I'd add to this shower of witticisms, but now I hafta go shower!

Little Hawk is back from Trinidad   :)   and we're going out for lunch. If we can find our way through the yet another meter (well, 15 cm) of snow we got dumped with last night that is!

A real snow-job! he he he

daylia


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: katlaughing
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 09:37 AM

That's odd, I posted to this late last night and now it's gone.

I just saw this in a medical article on line: speaking of women who had hysterectomies: hysterectomized! Funny, I thought I was just "spayed!"


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 09:04 AM

Susanl:

Welcome to the maddening merry-go-round of the 'Cat, glad to have you here. Sure we've peeved these articulations before, but we're always glad to hear from a new peevee!! (I think it is a disease spreading from Washington!)

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Mr Red
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 06:53 AM

New Zealand is full of them. Any noun = verb is the rule.

They also delight in curiosities like "up-take" which is a direct eqivalent to "pick up" as in "up-take a sales leaflet about the subject"


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Hrothgar
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 04:50 AM

I get irritated when I see a noun used as a verb when there is a perfectly good and obvious (and related) verb available. The best example that springs to mind is to "trial" something instead of "try" it.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Susanl
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 04:42 AM

TO someone somewhere. That's what I meant, of course.


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Susanl
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 04:36 AM

"Nice" used to mean ugly, mean, rude centuries ago. Language changes. I hate when it changes in thoughtless ways. But noone cares what I think. It changes anyway.

My pet peeves aren't rational. I can accept so many things that happen to English. But these things drive me CRAZY!!! "Perculate" instead of percolate (although we won't hear that very often or for much longer), "nucular" (and I've heard physicists pronounce it that way which astonishes me), apostrophes being used for plural when they only belong to the possessive (e.g. CD's for sale) and "myself" and the like being used in a verbose and inaccurate way (e.g. "If you have any questions, please address them to the secretary or myself".)I'm new at Mudcat and I'm sure those points have been brought up a million times so I'm being redundant but I had to say something about it someone somewhere. So, thanks Mudcat. (Sorry Mudcatters. Thanks for listening.)


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: BlueJay
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 03:59 AM

Verbizing nouns has always bothered me. I always try to letterize my sentences for maximum effectuicity. By god, we've got to start ruleizing some of this shit, or the English language is foredoomed.
Thanks, BlueJay


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Mark Cohen
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 02:45 AM

Because it's there, Clinton.

The most outrageous one I've heard recently is donor and--choke--donee.

As much as I admire and respect Edwin Newman, the truth is that none of us pedants has a snowball's chance in hell of preventing these changes, no matter how loud we pout. I've just accepted the fact that "enormity" is now just a variant of "bigness" and has pretty much lost its meaning of "great evil"; and that "reticent" now means "reluctant" instead of "taciturn", so the phrase "reticent to speak" no longer belongs to the Department of Redundancy Department. (After all, "naughty" used to mean "awful", and "awful" used to mean "wonderful.")

Aloha (literally, "I see your living breath"),
Mark


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Clinton Hammond
Date: 09 Mar 03 - 01:51 AM

I have a question about climbing Everest

If people climb Everest because it's hard, why then do they always climb the easy side?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: JennyO
Date: 08 Mar 03 - 11:35 PM

Does this mean that if you are a secret Santa, you Santor your Santee?


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate

Subject: RE: BS: Nouns as Verbs: 'to summit Everest'
From: Amos
Date: 07 Mar 03 - 03:38 PM

Made mah day, Bill D -- you're my Toast Postee of the Week!!

A


Post - Top - Home - Printer Friendly - Translate


Next Page

 


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.


You must be a member to post in non-music threads. Join here.



Mudcat time: 26 April 5:51 PM EDT

[ Home ]

All original material is copyright © 2022 by the Mudcat Café Music Foundation. All photos, music, images, etc. are copyright © by their rightful owners. Every effort is taken to attribute appropriate copyright to images, content, music, etc. We are not a copyright resource.