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Posted: Thu Jun 14, 2007 12:38 pm
by J.R.
Richard Ruck wrote:Morning, all!

Here's today's word:

caubeen

• noun - an Irish beret, typically dark green in colour.

— origin early 19th cent. : Irish, literally ‘old hat’, from cáibín ‘little cape’, diminutive of cába ‘cape’.
No relation to a hasbeen, then ??? :lol:

Posted: Fri Jun 15, 2007 10:48 am
by Jude
nor runner bean either

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2007 8:37 am
by Richard Ruck
Back again:


siddhi

• noun (pl. siddhis) Hinduism

1. [mass noun] complete understanding; enlightenment.
2. a paranormal power possessed by a siddha.

— origin Sanskrit

Posted: Wed Jun 20, 2007 11:10 am
by Jude
Richard Ruck wrote:Back again:


siddhi

• noun (pl. siddhis) Hinduism

1. [mass noun] complete understanding; enlightenment.
2. a paranormal power possessed by a siddha.

— origin Sanskrit
Are the 2 not synominous?

Posted: Thu Jun 21, 2007 8:45 am
by Richard Ruck
Jude wrote:
Richard Ruck wrote:Back again:


siddhi

• noun (pl. siddhis) Hinduism

1. [mass noun] complete understanding; enlightenment.
2. a paranormal power possessed by a siddha.

— origin Sanskrit
Are the 2 not synominous?
Not really.

The first is a state of being, the second is a usable attribute.

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2007 8:46 am
by Richard Ruck
Here's an udder one:

garget

• noun [mass noun] - inflammation of a cow's or ewe's udder.

— origin early 18th cent. : perhaps a special use of Old French gargate ‘throat’; related to gargoyle. The term was used earlier to denote inflammation of the throat in cattle.

Posted: Fri Jun 22, 2007 11:46 am
by J.R.
........... and I thought it was what a posh woman in Fortnum & Masons asked for when looking for a special implement in the kitchen department !

:oops:

Posted: Mon Jun 25, 2007 8:41 am
by Richard Ruck
For those of you looking to take up a new hobby:

barbola

• noun [mass noun] - the craft of making small models of fruit or flowers from a plastic paste.

— origin 1920s : an arbitrary formation from barbotine.

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2007 8:33 am
by Richard Ruck
Sorry, seem to have lapsed a bit this week.

Back today, though!

stichomythia

• noun [mass noun] - dialogue in which two characters speak alternate lines of verse, used as a stylistic device in ancient Greek drama.

— origin mid 19th cent. : modern Latin, from Greek stikhomuthia, from stikhos ‘row, line of verse’ + muthos ‘speech, talk’.

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2007 9:07 am
by Euterpe13
How on earth do you work that one into a conversation ???

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2007 9:40 am
by Richard Ruck
Euterpe13 wrote:How on earth do you work that one into a conversation ???
Speak in rhyming couplets with a willing partner?

Actually, my wife and her best friend employ a special conversational technique, which sees them both talking at each other at the same time.

I wonder if there's a word for that.... :roll:

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2007 10:04 am
by cj
Richard Ruck wrote:Actually, my wife and her best friend employ a special conversational technique, which sees them both talking at each other at the same time.
You can get twice as much said in half the normal time. Sounds good to me!!

Posted: Thu Jun 28, 2007 1:48 pm
by englishangel
Richard Ruck wrote:Sorry, seem to have lapsed a bit this week.

Back today, though!

stichomythia

• noun [mass noun] - dialogue in which two characters speak alternate lines of verse, used as a stylistic device in ancient Greek drama.

— origin mid 19th cent. : modern Latin, from Greek stikhomuthia, from stikhos ‘row, line of verse’ + muthos ‘speech, talk’.
I had two work colleagues in my previous job who talked to each other like this, though in English not Ancient Greek. I wonder if they know that there is a word for it.

Posted: Fri Jun 29, 2007 9:03 am
by Richard Ruck
Friday at last!

One for the weekend:

skolly

• noun (pl. skollies) S. African informal a petty criminal of mixed ethnic origin; a hooligan.

— origin Afrikaans, probably from Dutch schoelje ‘rogue’

Posted: Sun Jul 01, 2007 10:45 am
by Richard Ruck
I really should be out doing something rather than sitting at the computer, but the weather's just too dismal, so....

factitive

• adjective - Linguistics (of a verb) having a sense of causing a result and taking a complement as well as an object, as in he appointed me captain.

— origin mid 19th cent. : from modern Latin factitivus, formed irregularly from Latin factitare, frequentative of facere ‘do, make’.