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  • If a heart has a feeble or slow tick

    There's a tried and a true medico trick.

    They virtually seize it

    And rhythmically squeeze it

    With drugs that are called inotropic.

    February 26, 2017

  • Where you marry yourself. Spotted in a Guardian article.

    February 26, 2017

  • I guess heart-on-sleeve people are familiar with the concept.

    February 26, 2017

  • Aleutian waterproof pullover shirt made of dried animal intestines according to NPR's Says You!.

    February 25, 2017

  • Sin + gap + ore and sing + a + pore.

    February 25, 2017

  • First rate and fabulous according to NPR's <i>Says You!</i>.

    February 25, 2017

  • The Word of the Day, if you will,

    Is only the grist for the mill

    The rhymes in their dread pace

    Cascade down the headrace

    So the rumble of verse is not still.

    February 25, 2017

  • Apparently, from the picture shown below, it's a Quebec marmot, circa the 1800's.

    https://books.google.ca/books?id=J2NRAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA221&dq=weenus

    Arctomys empetra

    February 26, 2017

  • Wild speculation disnae have ae guid record in etymology.

    February 25, 2017

  • Weenus is also intentionally dirty. It was probably coined to sound like penis/wiener, and has few non-humorous usages.

    February 25, 2017

  • cunning linguist is dirty. It means someone who performs cunnilingus, according to wiktionary. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cunning_linguist#English

    February 25, 2017

  • A baby pangolin, apparently.

    February 24, 2017

  • *eats fuflun*

    February 24, 2017

  • Also, Ruzuzusaurus's comment reminds me that one of the great Australian comebacks of my school years was "look it up in your Funk & Wagnalls".

    February 24, 2017

  • But don't get pissy at me about that.

    February 24, 2017

  • Reminds me a bit of urinal.

    February 24, 2017

  • Rob Burns wrote some verse on a louse -

    Apostrophized once a wee mouse.

    Was I out of school when

    We studied his fool-hen

    Or has he not honored the grouse?

    February 24, 2017

  • I found "cleeds" in "The Rituals Of Dinner" by Margaret Visser. She writes:" Meat feeds, cloth cleeds, but manners makes the man," went a sixteenth-century jingle...

    February 24, 2017

  • to tempt Murphy's law.

    February 23, 2017

  • Is anyone going to eat that last fuflun?

    February 23, 2017

  • Oh, fun! It doesn't surprise me that something might be missing from the Scrabble dictionaries. Traditionally, the Official Scrabble Players Dictionary pulled from just "five in-print collegiate dictionaries, namely The Random House College Dictionary (1968), The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (1969), Webster's New World Dictionary (1970), Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary (1973) and Funk & Wagnalls (1973)" (quoting https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Official_Scrabble_Players_Dictionary&oldid=698206686).

    So I looked up undine on an online version of the OED (subscription only, sadly). At the bottom of the entry, it has a "Draft additions 1993" section which has information about undinal--it references the 1891 Century Dictionary definition--which brings us right back to the Century definition here on this Wordnik page.

    Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm just going to wander off to look up confectio Damocritis again.

    February 23, 2017

  • A recent edition of the TV programme Countdown announced undinal as a valid English word, being an adjective derived from undine, a water spirit. But it does not appear in my Oxford English dictionary, nor any similar Latin dictionaries (except as unda - a wave), nor the SCrabble dictionary or any other according to Wordnik (this page). Etymology apparently stems from the 16th or 17th Century Latin coinage.

    February 23, 2017

  • be good and do good.Talk is cheap, show me your code

    February 23, 2017

  • I take a great pleasure in knowing

    That aftermath follows on mowing.

    This naming of eddish

    Has turned to my fetish

    And foggage foretells the next sowing.

    February 23, 2017

  • silly memes aside, this word actually appeared in print.

    https://books.google.ca/books?id=dFMCAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA63&dq="whomst";;;;;

    https://books.google.ca/books?id=FERaAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA246&dq="whomst";;;;

    https://books.google.ca/books?id=QZ5BAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA184&dq="whomst";;;;

    So, there you go memers, it's been word'd.

    The 19th century also had  what-d'ye-call'em  

    February 23, 2017

  • oh no.. a new meme.

    Set your search engine or video search for "whomst'd meme" , and brace for the impact of silly words.

    February 23, 2017

  • Brings

    February 23, 2017

  • I googled the word/name Merchester, which I heard on a British TV mini-series.

    I had never heard of a town or city with that name and was curious about its location.

    All searches tried to re-direct me to Manchester.

    Eventually, I found it on the Wordnik site.

    All usage references were to a work by Brother Copas.

    There were no comments about the word and it was no one's favorite.

    Perhaps I felt bad for the word?

    I entered this comment.

    Also, it has occured to me that "Merchester" may be a dialetical representation of "Manchester."

    It could also be just a fictional name.

    It seems to me to have a rather North Country "feel" to it.

    cheers,

    rf

    It has occured thet

    February 22, 2017

  • none

    February 22, 2017

  • Like words that hide in ellipsis

    Or planets obscured by eclipses,

    Some peace-seeking prey

    Have mastered a way

    To thrive under threat using crypsis.

    February 22, 2017

  • It's a common belief in Britain that (certain types of) cheese before bed can give you weird dreams or nightmares.

    In A Christmas Carol, Ebenezer Scrooge blamed cheese for causing his ghostly night-time encounters. He only ate “a crumb”, and the story may have had a happy ending, but the idea that cheese gives you nightmares still persists. Is there any truth to this?

    http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20120417-does-cheese-give-you-nightmares

    February 22, 2017

  • @VM We should get a few in. Make a...shrubbery!

    February 22, 2017

  • Vegan cheese for dreams of cute rescue wombats, etc.

    February 22, 2017

  • I would guess it's an allusion to Dicken's A Christmas Carol when Scrooge tries to explain Marley away:

    "“You may be an undigested bit of beef, a blot of mustard, a crumb of cheese, a fragment of underdone potato. There's more of gravy than of grave about you, whatever you are!”"

    February 22, 2017

  • See comments at cheese dream.

    February 21, 2017

  • n. An especially vivid and/or bizarre dream.

    n. An open-faced sandwich of grilled or broiled cheese on bread.

    I came across this term in a Guardian interview with Lorraine Bracco:

    The famous fill Bracco’s conversation. Somehow, though, it feels less like namedropping than her just being one of those people for whom life ended up like an ongoing cheese dream, random faces drifting by. Madonna turns up here, Christopher Walken there.

    https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/feb/20/lorraine-bracco-goodfellas-the-sopranos-martin-scorsese

    It seems to be a British expression and may be founded in a study of British cheeses published by the British Cheese Board in 2005 claiming to have determined that eating cheese just before going to bed can affect your dreams. It further claimed that the type of cheese you ate controlled what sort of dream you had: Stilton for bizarre effects, cheddar for dreams of celebrities, etc.

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4851485

    I have seen it used as two words and as a hyphenated word. The definition I provide above is my best guess at the application of this term. Can anyone add more to this?

    (For the sake of completeness I include the sandwich definition but I am in no way curious about that. It has a Wikipedia entry.)

    February 21, 2017

  • I'm always in the market for overhead projector bulbs, too.

    February 21, 2017

  • A sailor should be a good knotter

    And know how to rig his lines tauter:

    So master the riches

    Of bowline and hitches

    And humble but mem'rable snotter.

    February 21, 2017

  • "Due to what happened #lastnightinsweden the most valuable #wordoftheday is 'källkritik'. Meaning #factcheck"

    https://twitter.com/swedense/status/833682059642228737

    February 21, 2017

  • http://www.standard.net/Police-Fire/2017/02/20/Layton-police-arrest-two-in-connection-to-boogeling-spree.html

    Police said in a Facebook post that boogeling is the act of going out at night and looking for unlocked cars or garages to enter and steal from. Police also said that they knew what boogeling was, they just didn’t know it had a name.

    Layton Police Sergeant Clint Brobowski told Fox 13 that the “boogelers” entered the homes through unlocked doors and even through unsecured doggy doors.

    February 21, 2017

  • http://www.standard.net/Police-Fire/2017/02/20/Layton-police-arrest-two-in-connection-to-boogeling-spree.html

    Police said in a Facebook post that boogeling is the act of going out at night and looking for unlocked cars or garages to enter and steal from. Police also said that they knew what boogeling was, they just didn’t know it had a name.

    Layton Police Sergeant Clint Brobowski told Fox 13 that the “boogelers” entered the homes through unlocked doors and even through unsecured doggy doors.

    February 21, 2017

  • http://www.marieclaire.com/beauty/news/a24241/blorange-hair-color-trend/

    Enter the perfect winter pastel: Blorange, which is—you guessed it—blonde + orange. Created by the empress of crazy AF hair colors, Bleach London's Alex Brownsell, her test subject was none other than Georgia May Jagger who has become her dye-job guinea pig of sorts.

    February 21, 2017

  • Short for International Correspondence Writing Month: http://incowrimo.org/

    Every February

    February 21, 2017

  • @bilby. You won me over when you mentioned the dwarf poinsettia leaves.

    February 21, 2017

  • Not a delectable cinnamon roll from a yet-to-be-discovered eastern European country?

    *disappointed*

    February 21, 2017

  • I can conceive of using it before the fact.

    "Ruzuzu is planning to go one better than Evel Knievel's failed Skycycle jump over Snake Canyon. The attemptress is building her own vehicle out of old epidiascope parts, a rocket sled and dwarf poinsettia leaves."

    February 21, 2017

  • spotted this term near heligimbal - wikipedia lists it as a balloon used for filming.

    February 20, 2017

  • spotted in a Fermilab video


    February 20, 2017

  • the (usually ball shaped) motion stabilized camera mount on a helicopter or aircraft.

    spotted term in a video about nature videography.

    February 20, 2017

  • Conservative In Name Only

    Similar acronym RINO

    February 20, 2017

  • My tea, made of herbs and holistic,

    Has a health-giving characteristic:

    It soothes and it tames

    Intestines in flames

    Because it is antiphlogistic.

    February 20, 2017

  • "It was a bitter cold Sunday, wet and misty, dismal, dreich, everything as dripping and grey as only Inverness in November can be; we stood at the Memorial by the river in our uniforms with the Provost and his wife and some people from the council and the British Legion, and we each stepped forward in turn below the names carved on it to do this thing, the weight of which, the meaning and resonance of which, I didn't really understand, thought I'd thought I knew all about war and the wars, until I got home after it and my parents, with a kindness that was quiet and serious, sat me down in the warm back room, made me a mug of hot chocolate then sat there with me in a silence, not a companionable silence, more mindful than that."

    "Good voice" by Ali Smith, p 35 of Public Library and Other Stories

    February 20, 2017

  • She must have failed. I would imagine the name is given only after the fact. Those who succeed would be known as something other than attemptress.

    February 19, 2017

  • The egg can be coy and just float;

    Her suitor though must locomote.

    An ambitious sperm

    Must earnestly squirm

    If ever he'll be a zygote.

    February 19, 2017

  • No doubt a precursor to the zigzagabout, which will bring traffic to a complete stop.

    February 19, 2017

  • .is a squared off roundabout. The sharper turns supposedly slow down cars more.

    February 19, 2017

  • Do CamelCase and snake_case etc. count?

    And lowercase and UPPERCASE?

    February 18, 2017

  • If pretty miss mammoth should happen upon

    A masculine hunk of a mastodon

    Like trumpets his bellows,

    Her sighing like cellos,

    Will swell a primeval diapason.

    February 18, 2017

  • I ventured from the hotel and joined the hajj of blue-jeaned yokels that paraded slowly and patriotically past the empire's historic landmark. ~ Paul Beatty, The Sellout

    February 18, 2017

  • :all you can eat:

    February 18, 2017

  • techy speak - short for debug

    February 18, 2017

  • An example of mawworm:

    “He would be the very Mawworm of bachelors who pretended not to expect it.”

    Excerpt From: George Eliot. “Middlemarch.” iBooks. https://itun.es/us/dOSzx.l

    February 18, 2017

  • Shitgibbon was used in a presidential insult tweet: "Hey @realDonaldTrump I oppose civil asset forfeiture too! Why don't you try to destroy my career you fascist, loofa-faced, shit-gibbon!"

    shitgibbon is an example of a shitgibbon compound.

    http://allthingslinguistic.com/post/157210818652/the-orgin-and-constraints-of-shitgibbon

    February 18, 2017

  • kishon

    February 17, 2017

  • double amphibrach a stanza form using amphibrachic dimeter, - ' - | - ' - ; it consists of eight lines, with the shortened 4th and 8th lines rhymed, and one line (usually the sixth) consisting of a single word. It is a variation of the double dactyl form.

    Example: this rendering of "Humpty Dumpty":

    As Humpty was sitting

    upon a partition,

    he misplaced his balance

    and suffered a fall.

    A sodden, unsightly

    reorganization

    of yolk and albumen

    appeared by the wall.

    Though all the king's horses

    were called to the rescue,

    he couldn't be saved from

    the blistering sun.

    In spite of their dazzling

    equestrianism

    and expert attendance,

    poor Humpty was done.

    Does this have a moral?

    Perhaps that in life as

    in politics sitting

    on fences is fine,

    but slipping a bit is

    anticipatory

    of suddenly facing

    a fatal decline.

    Several pieces in *The Bard & Scheherazade Keep Company* by Jan D. Hodge, are written in this form, including "The Taming of the Shrew" and "Hamlet."

    February 17, 2017

  • http://www.thedrum.com/opinion/2017/02/14/move-over-millennials-here-comes-gen-real

    So-called 'gen real' (that’s generation Z to the unacquainted) currently constitutes 35% of the world’s population and will soon make up four in every 10 consumers in the world’s largest markets.

    February 17, 2017

  • Thank you, ruzuzu.

    February 17, 2017

  • Lovely! You might find a few yoink-worthy things over on the-glassworks list.

    February 17, 2017

  • Ah, qms. Another delight. Thank you.

    February 17, 2017

  • The dilettante's blossom is bright

    But withers in weather and light.

    The deep-rooted scholar,

    Though paler and smaller,

    Persists like a phreatophyte.

    February 17, 2017

  • prosumer

    February 17, 2017

  • Short for organizations

    February 16, 2017

  • That's going to be one big test tube!

    February 16, 2017

  • From the examples listed: psychological operations

    February 16, 2017

  • Spotted in article about bringing back mammoths, or mammophants

    February 16, 2017

  • Mammoth cloning article in the guardian: '“We hope to do the entire procedure ex-vivo (outside a living body),” he said. “It would be unreasonable to put female reproduction at risk in an endangered species.”'

    February 16, 2017

  • A mammoth elephant hybrid.

    February 16, 2017

  • Oh, sheet. It is a truth universally acknowledged that every potential list is an existing list.

    I made it to worksheet before I realized the sheet list I'd just created already exists here!

    February 16, 2017

  • My new favorite list! Thank you.

    February 16, 2017

  • A true but a somewhat obscure fact

    Is wombats make cubes out of pure scat.

    This isn't a trick;

    They do shit a brick.

    I'll swear it and sign with a jurat.

    See also comments at scat.

    February 16, 2017

  • An overly aggressive handshake where someone's whole arm is pulled, spotted in the news. aka yankshake

    February 16, 2017

  • Cf. Byronic.

    February 15, 2017

  • Also known as onychoschisis or lamellar dystrophy.

    See also onychorrhexis.

    February 15, 2017

  • onychoschizia n. The term onychoschizia includes splitting, brittle, soft or thin nails. (fingernails and toenails)

    http://www.aocd.org/?page=BrittleSplittingNail

    February 15, 2017

  • With nukes that fly across the sea

    We strive to balance bellicosity.

    The nations assume

    Their mutual doom,

    So peace is preserved by isostasy.

    February 15, 2017

  • As you wish both, too!

    February 15, 2017

  • As you wish too alexz.

    February 14, 2017

  • SPOILER ALERT: in the movie The Princess Bride, "as you wish" means "I love you"

    February 14, 2017

  • Spotted in a linux presentation: "Auto industry is way behind smartphones. 36mos to produce infotainment system."

    February 14, 2017

  • Amazon's word for an interjection, so their talking gizmo can say Bazinga with emphasis. Speech emoticon?

    February 14, 2017

  • Rhyming synonym for "asshole" in a public forum.



    Whoa, whoa, whoa. What the H?! No, any manager who isn’t a complete and utter glassbowl is not going to start feeling that FMLA is being abused if the employee who has properly requested it actually uses it.

    February 14, 2017

  • As blogging went mainstream in the aughts, a small circle of feminist bloggers—mostly straight, thirtyish or younger, American, and living on the coasts—was elevated along with it to the status of regular columnists.

    https://www.candybank.com/public/50AF55E3-0D89-0AB8-816C-57B32B97D1D8

    February 14, 2017

  • When love's first mad exhilaration

    Gives way to a plan for affiliation

    Wise lovers adjust

    And temper their lust

    To tend to their domiciliation.

    February 14, 2017

  • sometimes refers to Portland Oregon. Letters come from the airport code.  Not everyone refers to their city by airport code. 

    February 14, 2017

  • The version I saw was So-Called Ruler...

    February 14, 2017

  • First use? Elayne Boosler on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ElayneBoosler/status/797658318411960324

    1/20/17, when our classy POTUS & FLOTUS are replaced by SCROTUS and HOTUS. #nevertrump

    February 14, 2017

  • From Dec 15 2016, "Supremely Corruptible Ruler of the United States"

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/debra-jane-campbell/its-the-little-things-fro_b_13642952.html

    I have been reminded of Roger Boisjoly recently as I see our current President-Elect crossing some ethical lines that others have not crossed in the past and I worry that we are taking baby steps in a very dangerous direction. I fear that instead of choosing the next President of the United States (POTUS), the electoral college is about to vote for a man who could become known as SCROTUS - Supremely Corruptible Ruler of the United States.

    February 14, 2017

  • Bottoms up!

    February 14, 2017

  • "You can tell me at supper. Aunt Oona's having the whole family over for Irish stew and crubeens."

    Crosstalk by Connie Willis, p 27

    February 14, 2017

  • explained in emoji: 👀 😒

    February 13, 2017

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