AWADmail Issue 206
                        April 23, 2006

      A Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day
     and Other Interesting Tidbits about Words and Languages


----------------------------

From: Blake Stacey (blake.staceyATens-lyon.fr)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--belles-lettres
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/belles-lettres.html

Those of us who grew up with the comic strip "Calvin and Hobbes" probably
remember the time the two main characters were reading a book together,
and Calvin said, "It says here that 'Religion is the opiate of the
masses.' What do you suppose THAT means?"

In the next panel, the family TV was thinking to itself, "It means Karl
Marx hadn't seen anything yet."

----------------------------

From: Gordon Balfour Haynes (lexiconATverbivore.com.au)
Subject: unplug your drug!

Television is a very poor substitute for a life.

Not only is "experience" via tv secondhand (and thereby worthless in terms
of life- and character-building), but it's rarely real at all.

Its content is either:

1. undisguised fantasy ("How you, too, can live the lives of the rich and
famous [and fictional] instead of your own dreary grey existences"), or is

2. "truth" (a.k.a. "news") so dramatised, sensationalised, filtered, and
depersonalised that it better qualifies as gratuitous violence, thinly
disguised pornography or, even more today, propaganda in "patriotic"
clothing, or is

3. advertising (another form of lies and fantasy: "You, too, will be popular
if you use our product").

I'm regarded as a fully functional and well informed person, aware of what's
going on around me in both micro- and macro-worlds, yet I evicted the tv
from my life in 1977 - about 1450 weeks ago. I don't think I've missed
anything essential.

If people can't give up tv for a day - or a week! - then they ought seriously
to examine their lives - and go get one (each) of their own. Smoking opium
would be far less destructive of lives and brains than the electronic opiate
of the masses.

----------------------------

From: Rhana Bazzini (rhanaATatt.net)
Subject: In defense of TV :-)

It's so easy to criticize TV but like all forms, books included, one must
be selective.

I find myself watching C-SPAN quite a bit. There are interviews, forums,
lectures that are fascinating and I would never be able to attend. C-SPAN 2
on the weekends is a treasure trove of author/book interviews. I hear of
many books that I'd miss if it weren't for their programs.

Also there are many people who are housebound and unable to read for many
reasons for whom TV is a wonderful companion.

Now for a confession, I watch "Desperate Housewives". It's a hoot for when
one's brain is tired and a brief escape from the real world is in order.

Life is a mix. All things in moderation. Well, OK, most things.

----------------------------

From: Dave Zobel (zobeldaveATaol.com)
Subject: orihon, origami, origarasu?
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/orihon.html

An amazing blender of science and art is Robert Lang (Ph.D. applied physics,
Caltech), who has revolutionized origami with his astoundingly complex and
beautiful designs http://www.langorigami.com/art/artmain/artmain.php4

Most of Lang's creations are folded from uncut sheets of paper, but he's
also developed airbag folding patterns, and he's the man who figured out how
to squeeze a telescope lens the size of a soccer field into an ordinary
rocket http://www.llnl.gov/str/March03/Hyde.html

What would be the word for that -- origarasu, perhaps? (garasu = glass)

----------------------------

From: Elizabeth Creith (hedgehog.ceramicsATsympatico.ca)
Subject: orihon

I'm a bookmaker and an origami addict. For a couple of years I've been
making what I learned to call "flutter books". These are books with a
single accordion-folded page that flutters out from between its covers.
Hereafter I will call them "orihons". Thanks for the new word!

Regarding television - I have one in my home, but we have no reception,
and use it strictly for rented movies. In fact, I have not had a working
television in my home since 1989.

----------------------------

From: Pantelis Giamarellos (pantgATotenet.gr)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--amphigory
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/amphigory.html

The word "amphigory" comes from Greek and it derives from the two words
"amphi" = both, two ways and "agorevo" = speak, address a speech to public.
The meaning is a word or phrase with multiple meanings.

Oracles given by the famous in ancient years Delphi Oracle were notorious
for being amphigories. One of the best and most known until now is the
Oracle given to one Greek king who enquired about his luck before leaving
for war. The Oracle said "Leave and return not die in war." Depending on
the way a comma is placed in the phrase the meaning may change from
"Leave and return not, die in war" or "Leave and return, not die in war."

----------------------------

From: Steve Jones (steve.jonesATgalarson.com)
Subject: Amphigory

For his Kindergarten talent show my son Isaac recited The Jabberwocky by
Lewis Carroll:
'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves Did gyre and gimble in the wabe...
http://www.math.luc.edu/~vande/jabtext.html

Now in 3rd grade he'll be able to tell everyone what exactly this tale is.
He and his younger brother, Levi, now are staging productions of the tale in
the back yard. They truly are my beamish boys!

----------------------------

From: Martin Donell Kohout (makoATuts.cc.utexas.edu)
Subject: amphigory

I knew this word primarily through its adaptation by the late Edward Gorey,
an artist and writer of profoundly strange sensibilities, who titled various
collections of his works Amphigorey, Amphigorey Too, and Amphigorey Also.

Gorey may be best known to American audiences as the man behind the
wonderful animated opening credits of the "Mystery!" series on PBS, but he
was a prolific (and truly weird) author and illustrator. Years ago our
younger daughter memorized his macabre alphabet rhyme, "The Gashlycrumb
Tinies", and proudly recited it before her first-grade class, thereby
disconcerting her teacher (and probably a few classmates as well).

----------------------------

From: Jenny Ellsworth (jellsworthATmac.com)
Subject: Amphigory

I always thought amphigory was not merely nonsense, but nonsense that
appeared to have meaning, so that the listener or reader was drawn in to
an attempt to figure it out. It is not just silliness, it is deception.

My favorite use of the word is from Robert Heinlein's book Stranger in a
Strange Land:

Jubal Harshaw: "But you know, or should know, that I am a senior
philosophunculist on active duty."

Capt. Heinrich: "Repeat?"

Jubal Harshaw: "Haven't you studied amphigory? Gad, what they teach in
schools these days!"

Since a philosophunculist pretends to know more than he does in order to
impress others, the statement was no more than simple truth.


............................................................................
Words differently arranged have different meanings, and meanings differently
arranged have a different effect. -Blaise Pascal, philosopher and
mathematician (1623-1662)

Send your comments to wordsATwordsmith.org. To subscribe, unsubscribe, update
address, gift subscription, visit http://wordsmith.org/awad/subscriber.html

This message was sent to "[email protected]".

Reply via email to