AWADmail Issue 221
                        August 6, 2006

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

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From: Anu Garg (garg AT wordsmith.org)
Subject: Interesting stories from the net

Iranian Leader Bans Usage of Foreign Words:
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060729/ap_on_re_mi_ea/iran_foreign_words

Au Revoir, Freedom Fries:
http://nytimes.com/2006/08/04/opinion/04fri4.html?ex=1312344000&en=5099ddd17ba94326&ei=5090
http://tinyurl.com/hdp6x

A Defense of the Word "Sucks":
http://slate.com/id/2146866

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From: Rudy Rosenberg Sr. (rrosenbergsr AT accuratechemical.com)
Subject: verbs in English
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/ensorcell.html

Verbs and nouns are what makes English such a versatile language. In English,
almost every word can become a verb unlike in French where a noun needs a
verb to make it go.

For instance, :Knife. You can knife someone. In French, un couteau will just
lie there, inanimate, until a verb brings it to action: Donner un coup de
couteau.

That is what made the prose of Jacques Brel so great. He took everyday French
nouns and used them (incorrectly) as verbs. e.g. derrieriser instead of using
the more common "Enculler"

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From: Carolanne Reynolds (gg AT wordsmith.org)
Subject: verbs

I think of verbs as the engines of the language.

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From: Ann Andrusyszyn (aandrusyszyn AT barrie.ca)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--guttle
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/guttle.html

This word took me back to the songs of northern England as the only place
I've regularly heard "guttle" used is in a millworker's song -- from the
early 1800s I think -- and the chorus goes:

"Poverty poverty knock
 My loom is a-saying all day
 Poverty poverty knock
 Gaffer's too skinny to pay
 Poverty poverty knock
 Keeping one eye on the clock
 I know I can guttle
 When I hear my shuttle
 Go poverty poverty knock."

The slow steady beat of the song and the words (pov er ty pov er ty knock)
does indeed echo the steady thrum of a shuttle as it travels from side to
side of the loom in the cotton mills.

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From: Liz King (ejking AT micron.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--dehisce
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/words/dehisce.html

This is very timely for me. Recently I trimmed some mature pods on my
sweet pea and threw them on the compost pile. Last night I heard a
snapping sound like a twig breaking and finally realized that as the
pods dried, they were opening and releasing their seeds--dehisce. My
lupine also does this--flinging its seeds as the pods dry and spring
open. How wonderful I now have a word to describe it!

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From: Linda Owens (lindafowens AT netzero.net)
Subject: dehisce

My favorite dehiscent plant is jewelweed (aka touch-me-not, impatiens
biflora) When you brush by, touch, or squeeze the ripened pods, they
spring open and leave curly residue and seeds flying about. The whole
plant is good against poison ivy, if you rub on the juice, or make a
potion by boiling the plant in water, letting it sit for 15 minutes,
and then refrigerate for a few weeks. It can be frozen for the winter.
I've used this potion on my kids' chicken pox with better results than
prescription drugs or OTCs.

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From: Lee Sataline, MD (leesataline1 AT cox.net)
Subject: dehiscence

The word dehiscence is one of the most vexing words in the surgeon's lexicon.
When a post-op patient "dehisses", one or more of the tissue layers of the
incision have come apart. In a worst scenario, underlying organs (e.g gut,
lung, etc.) bulge out of the wound. (In Shakespeare's Henry VI, the injured
Clifford exclaims, "The air has got into my deadly wounds...") There are also
non-surgical dehiscences that involve a tooth or the pharynx. My favorite
term from medical school - a long, long time ago - was Zuckerkandle's
dehiscence, a defect in the skull's ethmoid bone.

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From: Robert Cook (geoduck42 AT hotmail.com)
Subject: Using Word-A-Day Words
Refer: http://wordsmith.org/awad/awadmail220.html

Re: Linda Scott's question about using Word-A-Day words.. I create a daily
fantasy "webcomic" called The Mansion of E, in which many of the characters'
names have been taken from my archive of Word-A-Day messages; whenever
possible, the name reflects some aspect of the character's occupation or
personality. Some of the ones I've used are Agita, Cumshaw ("Comshaw" in the
comic), Telic, Spatchcock and Nevus.

http://www.mansionofe.com

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From: Emily Bott (palaka AT hawaii.rr.com)
Subject: Uses of AWAD

Let me count the ways. I read the emails from my kids first, then delete
the spam. Now it's time to luxuriate in AWAD. A secondary benefit: moving
gingerly because of a compression fracture of the spine, I don't feel all
that great at 6 a.m. You serve as an honorable distraction.

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From: Sparrow F. Alden (lfsalden AT alumni.bowdoin.edu)
Subject: Re: AWADmail Issue 220

In my fondest imaginings, I write great fiction novels (in truth, I write
mediocre grocery lists, but we all have our dreams). Each morning when I
read a new Word A Day, I imagine how it might fit into dialogue between
two favorite characters. One of them is a plain-spoken gal who tends to
use those good, solid words of Old English derivation; her very educated
friend uses those of French or Latin or Greek root.

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From: Tori Miller (notjustebonyandivory AT yahoo.com)
Subject: Uses of Wordsmith words

My absolute favorite use of Wordsmith words is in my essays. I'm a high
school student, and so far, my English teachers have been... cough...
sub-par. When I use some of the more obscure words in my paper, they often
get circled and have a question mark placed to the side. I, for one, find
this endlessly entertaining.

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From: Paul Loscocco (ploscocco AT hotmail.com)
Subject: How do you use AWAD

As a middle school teacher, I love to challenge and stimulate my students
with words and meanings. I save the words in a special file on my school
account, and use our "Smart Board" to put the entry out for them to see
and discuss. I am also the word master for our local spelling bee, so many
of the words are used to entertain and confound the local spellers.

............................................................................
This aphorism would be seven words long if it were six words shorter.

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