This week's theme: toponyms coined after places in Ireland.

limerick (LIM-uhr-ik) noun

   A humorous, often risque, verse of five lines with the rhyme scheme aabba.

[After Limerick, a borough in Ireland. The origin of the name of the verse
is said to be from the refrain "Will you come up to Limerick?" sung after
each set of extemporized verses popular at gatherings.]

Today's word in Visual Thesaurus: http://visualthesaurus.com/?w1=limerick

-Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)

  "First of all, the limerick judges at this newspaper would like contestants
   to know that we are acutely aware that 'Journal' rhymes with 'urinal.'
   Almost as much fun as reading limericks was reading excuses from the
   people who wrote the limericks. It was as if we had caught someone
   reading the Sex With Aliens Weekly at the supermarket. Diane Harvey, of
   DeForest, for example, began her entrant thusly:

  'It is with a deep sense of shame that I submit the following puerile,
   low-brow limericks and confess the guilty pleasure I had in writing them.
   As one who normally leads a completely respectable life, I cannot tell
   you what an illicit thrill it was to shed the trappings of responsible
   adulthood and for a 'brief shining moment' indulge in rude juvenile
   humor once again.'

  "Several writers put the 'Journal-urinal' rhyme to obvious use, and a few
   similarly included good-humored critiques of columnist George Hesselberg,
   as in the one by Dan Barker, of Madison:

   There once was a parrot named 'Colonel,'
   Who read all the papers diurnal.
   But his favorite page
   On the floor of his cage
   Was the Hesselberg page from the Journal."

   Limerick Tricks: - Readers Turn Their Talents to Punny, Funny Rhymes;
   Wisconsin State Journal (Madison); Jun 2, 1996.

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Pronunciation:
http://wordsmith.org/words/limerick.wav
http://wordsmith.org/words/limerick.ram

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