flux - 12c., from O.Fr. flux, from L. fluxus, pp. of fluere "to flow."
Originally "excessive flow" (of blood or excrement); an early name for
"dysentery;" sense of "continuous succession of changes" is first recorded
1625.


that pushes bach the origen of the unit(e) "fluxus" ablit.

GSZ


----- Original Message -----
From: "Bertrand et Claudia CLAVEZ" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 03, 2002 12:56 AM
Subject: Re: FLUXLIST:by the by...


> Tintinnabulation is of common use in French, as much as the verb
> "tintinnabuler", but I didn't know it was invented: who's the author?
(Lewis
> Carrol? James Joyce? Barbara Cartland?)
> Bertrand
> > I must admit, it says a lot about an artist when an invented word
becomes
> > part of language.
> > Do you think that in itself is fluxus?
>
>
>

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