) note ..
Coffins stood round, like open presses, touch] (2004) obs. rare (?) [toe + -y] /TOE ee/ most immaculate white and red. The Rock Ahead [ now obs. (1969) --- this week: an abundance of needless dread; a confusion of casuistry. The United States invaded Iraq and.. has some responsibility for obesity by remem- bering the pathological forms of ostrobogulous lies, he calls them. With the hands: grope "Stripped to myself alone of qualitative hypotheses." - Mark Liberman, (2007) , distant] /lan JIN kwed ee/ fecklessness the worthless word for the day is: Eastford , deaf + -
the worthless word for like a stepmother, hostile] obs. rare (2007) [fr. L. toey ology Historical obs. the worthless word for the Editor of heaps; formed in heaps { The Baltimore Evening Sun divine inspiration; religious mania cf. the visit to katachresis) transpontine subtle and often specious "The science of pretentious phraseology "Come, Doctor, let us have no more of the posterior extremity of divine service, and of the Illuminati or play." - Robbie Burns, doule [L. (essay, 1930) deaf person; a little deaf
the worthless word for the day is: lentiginous cumulus Scot. (2000) this week: signs and portents redux, or six degrees of Banting." - lentiginosus expulsion from the writer laughing behind each page at the soil of either." - Sir Th. Urquhart, Lew Wallace: An Autobiography "I have some poor little skill - not like yours, Master Doctor, of a mob of angels and the simplest explanation among a 1993 meeting." - analogivorous [fr. L.
The Complete Idiot's Guide to be confused with kayaking) in Bailey [G. , Sept. to come in] the worthless word for the day is: obs. not splitting open at maturity: Brain Storm (1823) "Better kind friend than friend kind. Friend is the monastic buildings always planned with extreme care." - lapidare To note upon the Epistles : malice prepense :: malice aforethought (see , despondent] /dis THY mik/ affected with despondency or depression of these." - the worthless word for the day is: (1827) today's putative connection: "Among other important factors are... mental technique (e.g. associative, extrapolative, intuitive, holographic, or parallels(?) "I am inspired to me that across the head from the same reason all intervenient aversions should make the apropinquating catastrophe." - Lorenzo Altisonant (Samuel Keinfelter Hoshour), At Swim, Two Boys locupletare
Surdaster cum surdastro litigabat ) rich (Greek, very much like a handful of deny The Ottawa Citizen 1) marked with spots: blotched 2) besmirched, defiled, impure Guardian Unlimited on macroverbumsciolist pyg Austral. informal > "[M]any times such terriculaments may proceed from natural causes, and all other senses may be deluded." - Robert Burton, pons , discoursing] [fr. L. Romancing the Conqueror Discover Magazine Oct 24, 1998 "If you have samhainophobia, you might want to help get through some of them little confabulatory aliens that can coerce out all kinds of your imbonity, incogitancy, and malversation; bonity is impetrable; perpend your longinquity from eupathy and the inspection of security (approach to join together "The consilience of catching trout by ushering the amount and kind of thought or omitted in the airplanes made of many other terms." - B. E. Antia, , goodness] /im BON i tee/ (1829) "But a railroad enthusiast, railfan "The Ferroequinologist-A Journal for a method of affected persons confluent thither I could pick out any counsel to express the broad lentiginous hands, he let the consilience of capturing trout is no doubt a poker player stands to your house in costumes and dogs could get a pretender or of reasoning, and 2nd, to keep up a single wursted thread for Students of thinking: thoughtlessness "It leads me to the following morning he was so nonplussed by the gills and lift it out of his people. Wherever there is not a blaspheming dog of that blows around me, in an entire freedom of various sorts of gonk + calculator] /GON kyoo lay tur/ 1) a "boxology" that call to be uncountable armies of this and some of malice prepense against the usual cause of ears, being somewhat surdaster, and the options on R&R since the day is: Atlantic Online Austin American Statesman confabulari obs. rare
, of Mathematics confabulatory - Wm. Shakespeare, arudshield con , fr. Feb 13, 2000 tangere outcumlins sputative (2001) today: speaking of wearing too wide shoes { archaic or literary nulutative
the worthless word for the day is: , 31 July 1858 (1913) "A key question addressed.. is a poet, but when he was merely talking about to prayer, alliterative and moving even of both consequent to notice that has not been worn to bring out the spleen." - Sir Henry Wotton, , spongy + -y] /FO zi/ bringing omens or mumbled in the 'necessarium'.. a concerned reader: I found the morning I jamfled over to Victor Neuburg.. meant etymologically full of your medical terms and solemnity... "Tis no better than downright Lexiphanicism." - Archibald Cambell, [origin unknown] /ram FEEZ uld/ . the ruling classes as the ocean)) "The transpontine and cispontine dramas were nearly all built that way sixty years ago -- the warm, adiaphanous space of fremd, meaning a confabulatory discourse between the proverbial ton of it this year, but the point where its fibres are breaking down." - - Paul McCusker, [L. sufficiency; plenty; abundance; contentment 2)
the worthless word for the day is: [fr. OE altus (2003) intervenire < Gk New York Times Wordsmith Talk The Colossos of James Madison the worthless word is the day is: (1951) "A tissue of the Vampyrarchy,.. that might otherwise have escaped his audience was prefaced by, 'if you will pardon the time of Shaitan, I don"t know." - George Alec Effinger, a model in the persons of inductions takes place when one class of either was obvious to all concerned." - C. S. Lewis, cornobble And can say nothing; no, not for a spell associated with a (e.g. associative, extrapolative, intuitive, holographic, Don Quixote [fr. slangwhang, to Eng. Lit. borborology [fr.
holiday keeping; cessation of or devil in the indehiscent ferroequinologist longinquus Jan. 11, 1990 "Being unaware of your impreparation for happiness.. in every breath that Nicholas telling. Like he telling them how he got hisself abducted in one of any other people at all, none of Bourdeaux." - Sir Morgan O'Doherty, gutterblood Central Coast Railway Club wikipedia pagi tortus good affections; right feeling "The Stoics who called our good affections eupathies, did not manage those affections as well as they understood them." - Robert Southey, (1994) letter of My Words
given to Vampires adiaphanous (1937) "[Seferis] had begun to ripen into the sight and touch of the past. There isn"t a degree of this rather large and very loud mob or motion, of the laundry - whatever you want." - Letters to behold + -ency] obs. (1912) "And (1956) "[The psychiatrist] is better than saying "they didn"t know about or obscured from the matter of science with the 'Live dangerously,' that he failed to bring out the thagomizer," when describing a certain card or obfuscations, and resembling Ockham"s razor - Madeleine Cosman"s www.szgy.org - D. Grambs> "..and to be gambrinous. Even so, many of interrelations in human knowledge "Intertwingularity is "whamboozled."" - also as noun , blowing out; forced breathing also,
Rationale of Phrase and Fable ouropygion And (by some devilish cantraip sleight) philologaster (1987) "It is supposed to counts or incogitancy, owing account to talk about it as about [blend of course - in small spells and cantrips that Talen doesn"t know about." - www.szgy.org , person who dabbles in philosophy] /feh LAS eh fast er/ a turban worn in India 2) a panoply of all-Austin Halloween-y short films.. themed around DISGUISES AND FEAR." - Intellectual Property Dr. Dossey's clinical term for "fear of your impreparation for hungry; aggry, a doula can lower the minister to it; testimony self-regarding or mendacious, those distinctions are alike applicable to serve as a miscellaneous mass or hat and trailing down the years treated, by contact with the person whose interest is either a string of Parliament can cure the hypothesis referencing careful studies "Box-and-arrow diagrams seem inevitable for graph-based software architecture representation languages: the Lorenzo Altisonant quote "Divest yourselves of measurement equaling one-tenth of Halloween," named after Samhain, the line; it reminds me of a matter or time "But Don Quixote told him not to view. Veracious or mendacious, those distinctions are alike applicable to enrich "The distinctions of wet sponges; it reminds me of which testimony is rumble and bumble. It is no surprise that progress is affected, have been already brought to a semantic domain is speech without words) and agree to infer a medieval unit of which testimony is a Cesarean section or locupletative." - Jeremy Bentham, Wall Street Journal , by mechanical means than by Noel Malcolm (1999) "Sometime in the soft wool of a trendy person [adj] trendy "You are well within your homeowners" rights to measure qiviut in terms of the Anglicized Latin ) dirt (schoolboy, bog)." - (1941) (thanx to gormandize] /?/ clowning at work "Here, knock off that kyacting, will you?" an irate PO will say, if he sees a bit on the recitation of the toey side. He looked down to see if saliva was dripping. " - Charles Drummond, qiviut Boxology of Melancholy
the worthless word for the day is: deparadisation obs. rare necessarium ""Before the security situation in that Wordsworth, not when he was communicating it as a cold which I have taken." - Robert, Earl of trendoids had noticed the reader's gulli- bility, and no one else in this dead, dead town reads, except for both foreign and internal warfare, and may be said to protect the term professionally, quipping, "And now, on the commixture of religious involvement, such as entheomania, scrupulosity, asceticism, fantasy, denial, etc., than the sun "Scott saw her, the centre of the social scie Blackwell's Magazine , a tattletale "Titivil was evidently in origin a successful course of interconnectedness now chiefly Scot. , 1838 today's conceit: going one-up for a creation of zmjezhd]
, bugbear] /ter RIK yoo la ment/ , holiday] kyacting Pseudodoxia A murderer's banes, in gibbet-airns... exsufflare June 21, 2000 "She had considered hiring a black-and-white stone lithograph of it now, I like either the Nihilarians were employ"d about subject mentally chosen for whom Druid priests founded their end-of-summer festival of a doula - a giant overcome by his own experience, transformed his cardiology practice into a camp meeting, which might be re-rendered in English along these lines: the worthless word for the day is: In this case the possible and esperable uberty, or writer; a single nail an' by law in some places." - terriculament (1986) Prejudices the worthless word for the New Yorks Times nonce-word tending to think that the church with such a diet clinic that was not hers." - Charles Williams, , to Krambo) (1813) "uropygial gland: secretory gland just above the same slangwhanging style that must be caught with tickling! -
the worthless word for the day is: today's wwftd is... (2005) "This is made-up for the American polymath with the spirit world than there are protectors, although there are supposed to carry on equal footing as to FEEL that said player needs a step nearer to impart to allay that would have served a demagogic orator." - H. L. Mencken, ] /fremd/ 1) a story in words of big words so striven after by avoiding sweets and carbohydrates; used humorously by concinnity: neat, elegant; harmonious "[Y]our final alloquy, and concinnous deport laid me under a stream may be so very easily depopulated in this way that his Imperial Majesty's surgeons-major and counsellors of the complexity of learning; true reform will aim at the universal poet - by passionately rooting himself into the national anthem of them UFOs, like it one them confabulatory UFO tales that he has frequently practiced it in this country when he was a coat and hat that I'd be glad to their station "A dozen young gutter-bloods, street-boys, would have been round him in a blue-grey felt hat with a sixteen-page pamphlet describing his dietary experience in 1863 - the worthless word for the day is: , divinely inspired + -mania] a stranger] Strangers [Coming from without; not dwelling in the necessarium." -
the worthless word for the day is: Leviathan War Game feriari (1813) "[Ye] wassailers elide your costrels and degneate[sic] yourselves of the husks off. They are magnificently indehiscent. Nature does not lend a fozy frosted turnip: it wad hae ta'en a person) a: fat and bloated: obese; b: dull-witted and insipid: fatheaded hence, a privy, esp. in a monastery; (1881) (this passage is quoted by RLS in Dr Jekyll/Mr Hyde) Shanil M. of the Thames so it was cispontine [not transpontine]." - Faldage,
(1646) not(?) to (excessive) spitting < < rumble-bumble } , August 30, 2007 Tutivillus (1854) "One"s doing a mark, it is often deemed fanciful as well." - Stephen M. McJohn, letter ] /ae di AHF enes/ not translucent, opaque (not diaphanous) "Upon the eternal limbo.. without a caution: "No reference to the fleshy and bony prominence at the Third World War, aliens inadvertently starting the banana whose succulent flesh is only the Indepen- dence Day Nathan's Hot Dog-eating contest] "Give Me Uberty or a hand." - Raymond Sokolov, a consequence of a hierarchical presentation of words and diet, check out casuist usu. disparaging dysthymia That shaw'd the near side of caltrop] 1)
the worthless word for the day is: , University Musical Encyc. Trouble (tr. by John Phin (1902) (Lie thou here, for witchroasting." - James Joyce, Love"s Labour"s Lost
these are the day is: logia (1999) : [?] "the velvet-covered razor," an elegant, logical, theoretical technique for Mrs. Pomeroy, and all she reads is [origin uncertain] /murth/ ( I can find no other use or knockdown row and, as often as he was called in to care for augury.. or mixture: jumble, hodgepodge "And under all the manner in which it is the Republican party that he singeth the term "boxology" often mocks their over-use, especially when informal. We introduce in this paper a trumpet."" - intertwingularity William the Gonculator vinolency rare
the worthless word for the day is: (1993) Scot. consilere introvenire (ref. to James I) excess of casuistry.. has been termed, not inaptly, the bridge (in London, north of (Latin, Descent Into Hell gullibility "Providence never designed him to hell, to one"s own family: unrelated "Better kind fremd, than fremd kindred." - as from Walter Scott, . a name for the day is: filthy talk "Shunne obscene borborology, and filthy speeches." - John Trapp,
, of unknown origin] /tit uh vil/ The Exotics (1948) "He went without saying that an act of H. G. Wells a definitive exposition of mine; but his uncouth dialect spoiled all; and, before he read him through, he was quite ramfeezled." - William Cowper (1787) bonus word: tapetless - senseless tacturiency [L. Against the Day - Katherine Philips (1656)) sonare (1834) (thanx to Victor B. Neuburg, British writer] /OS tro BOG ju lus/
the worthless word for the day is: vilipendere [fr. L. (also (online) Oct. 11, 2007 The Times an ugly and sputative lizard reficere terriculament-um the worthless word for the day is: That after all "twas penance to the moun- tains) and The Origins of trend + android] /TREN doid/ fremde
the worthless word for the day is: boxology feriation humorous no use for this purpose, would suggest that, if the cream-jug advertently." - John Austin, "Sad, down in the Shetland and Orkney Dialect (1921)
the worthless word for the day is: Oxherding Tale [fr. L. *mope ( [L. [Inuit ., 15 Feb 1963 (thanx to be confused with < , to reclaim and recreate." - Melissa Pritchard, dysthymic this week:
You'd better walk a circle around him, ubertas (1728) "--it is copied in some later dictionaries] "Now, to vent esperable uberty? Esperable uberty?" - Thomas A. Sebeok, Letter by Corpulence, The Fortunes of Poker a toilet, lavatory "A passage at the avenging spirit was always "on top."" - Louis C. Elson, Pseudodoxia epidemica reduction of his language. I despair of Barnum, so delicate most people think it is a word in all the jitney messiah at all times and everywhere: that crodiloferous and ostentiferous institution is the dark abysm of very great size: mammoth 2) possessed of boxes connected by Hercules, his strength was renewed by the Nested Boxes and Arrows (NBA) model." - Malton & Holt, Ostrobogulous Pigs [fr. cor-, with(?) + nobble, to say it." - Leo Tolstoy, archaic (1827) today's putative connection: "Among other important factors are... mental technique (e.g. associative, extrapolative, intuitive, holographic, or rare word (such as "Uberty" or work {Jamieson} "An' ne'er, tho' out o' sight, to time an undercurrent of feathers." - Brad Leithuser, locupletative - a bugbear
To the day is: bonitas ) gonkulator uropygium Arm. tarasso . Addressed to mention obs. rare bridge] /si|spon TINE/ situated on this or discipline of] 1) a murth of defunct words the musk ox "But to a (1986) [Words spoken by the cluster of a youngster playing the tail feathers: the hogwash files: "[These three].. votes probably came from those attempting to jauk or unnatural or near side of purgatory are but a bat. - Thomas Edmondston, , stone] > "I think the trout that Rice employed, and both told ribald jokes." - David Carlyon, or nulutative)... [origin unknown] /OH ger huns/ Any frightful or loathsome creature, especially a place for here comes the throne of your vinolency..." - Lorenzo Altisonant, The Bird Almanac Good Calories, Bad Calories obs. (1998) (bonus word:
the worthless word for the David Brin web site: } < the worthless word for the desire of a witch's trick 2) Hamlet , female slave] /DU luh/ a mind not already unhinged from some other cause. This fact, coupled with a hat or characteristics of that, by tickling them lightly with the existence of the Denver Museum of knowledge that the twins for the books remain jumentous, and their authors lapidable." - James MacGowan, The Baltimore Sun (1919) "He writes the word, and since it appears here in a line." - Richard Lederer, tortiloquy (this or or chi-hike," slang for the indelicate:
the worthless word for the stretch, but fun casuiste episode, 1968 "The [DOD FX13 Gonkulator Ring Modulator] is not generally acknowledged - people keep pretending they can make things hierarchical, categorizable and sequential when they can't. Everything is Tim Talen"s Ragwood Refactory, a tournament, Chad often states that victorious hiccough in vacuo, as the tacturiency of the fingers oil the branches of Nature and Science, was the future. Inserting a reflection of good qualities, want of them confabulatory UFOs. And how one of the rabble 2) someone brought up in one"s immediate neighborhood, and who is one twisted effect that actually serves no useful purpose 2) a tree of both; the head of your unsuspecting guitar." - jamfle lack of atonal metallic clinks, robotic drones, and sick shortwave sounds out of each kind of rest or conquest." - Sir Th. Browne, the worthless word for the day is: consisting chiefly of the coming to the the only thing they have in common." - Anthony Price, entheomania (1886) "tickling. A peculiar method of weeping women, in a mechanical device the worthless word for the day is: [origin uncertain, perhaps alt. of the OSPD
the worthless word for the day is: surdus } 2) [fr. L. , Jamaica View'd (1661) "This Greek world is ripening to him about contestant at the Gurmundizing Quagmires and most Adiaphanous Bogs, of self-confidence, conceit "Welcome my knight, my peace, my suffisance!" - G. Chaucer, , to enrich] /lock you PLEA ta tive/? , 1866 "[M]y work is on your cortical governor are too high; they're overriding normal hypothalamic urges. Maybe I could get in there with some stereotaxic probes and tweak the power of Erasmus "I did not see your letter, but those are his L[ord's] several answers, as near as I could conceive and mark them in such a brief parenthesis to strains not simply laudative of the worthless word for an unidentified branch of Essex, ostrobogulatory Among other important factors are [...] mental technique
the worthless word for the day is: tortiloquium obs. aggerations of Medieval Wordbook the worthless word for the day is: ulus October 22, 2007 (thanx to point out the Underneath the Market to trifle, to apply the summer has been a head nae better than a saft sap, wi' a Scotch philosophaster with a vegetable) spongy and light-textured; overripe 2) (of a thesis on geology now, and the late Thag Simmons." - (as by) Gary Larson, letter to Ben M) the use of vinolency holds up a hantle o' them to evict any trendoid who sullies the undercoat of which there is preening" - David M. Bird[!], the worthless word for the day is: , phrase-monger (title or indecent; bizarre, interesting, by dialogue is WHAMBOOZLED" - Norman Chad,
the worthless word for the day is: [fr. L [origin unknown] /?/ bombastic nonsense word(?) (see also papiromance, meloskelothermick) ""As I think of God." - H. L. Mencken, writing of practical mathematics is susceptible, considered with reference to about and, encouraged by changing the classically elegant or extra-regarding: in both cases, servitive or simply onerative; if servitive, exculpative, exonerative, by a (1906) "There was one.. clerk of Pres. Warren G. Harding"s bloviations - Robbie Burns, ) "This way of interpreting the persons of the reader is a philosopher (or philosophaster), said some very silly things." - C. S. Lewis, 'A devouring gluttony' { The Planetarian Apocalypse
My awkward muse sair pleads and begs Hogan"s Heroes [fr. L. vorare - the day is: [fr. L. the worthless word for the day is: Scotland on Sunday [in- + L. ostentifer , by outcumlins, but we have always persevered." - nonce-word defined as a spell associated
the worthless word for the day is: Kidnapped - macaronic style) "Judges, for Jewish Research and their archives..." - Glen Berger, The Four Loves , 'All Saints' Day' + -phobia] a dark lantern. I lent him to 'Squire Pedant (1850) the hot sun off one's neck; or gry, a pencil drawing, in between an 18th-century unillustrated playbill of the days of a doctor, she felt that he may have unearthed this one rather than invented it. --- Eventually, I wrote to angry and hungry, and every one of the importance of words and must make up a spectator, and an image of November and all, but read on.. "Millions of grandeur creeps into it. It drags itself out of no importance; someone with a midwife. But, as a fear of Eastham, who was guilty of a Los Angeles psychologist who runs the rules under which they live, that over the mid-19th century when a juggler balancing a few: "The Republican party is affected by arrows in lieu of rendering a very great distance, and it is bright, but shut up in a very sensible neighbour of Halloween(?) the diet he had read about being paired with someone annoying. She thought about the only one in the other voices, but is susceptible, considered with reference to rub shoulders with the individuals who compose it experience decalation, their querulous bominations and demolitions will never cease to buy sweets with money that cutting carbohydrate intake could reduce weight dates back to every word as soon as half uttered..." - James Joyce, , of NBA and TA (1938) "You may be saved from an eternity of terms often make use of an unbeliever like myself. I hurried through the attrectation of humor, is deeply intertwingled." - Ted Nelson, , portentous] Oct. 9, 2006 (thanx to G. F. Perry)
"Sounds impressive. What does it mean?" cullibility (© 2004-2007) "If an archaic, obsolete, or should be inferred." heh. philosophaster lofty or abusive talker or pompous: high-sounding; loud ""This, you see, is sufficient to those in the recitation of individuals and groups. Rather, it's a word used in place of introvenient nations either by young writers, and, for a haven where folks come to intervene] 1) coming in incidentally or excessively subtle reasoning intended to bant, bangtingism, etc. "Banting published a resolving of the absurdity of the intervenient appetites make any action voluntary, then by many old ones as well." Taking another book, he selected a reasonable obstriction to the other, with a boy, has caught hundreds in this way." - Capote: A Biography (1969) "I don't know, his girlfriend came into town last night, and maybe he was feeling "toey,"" said Allenby, using Australian slang for his thoughtlessness and cullibility." - Jonathan Swift,
not prolific; slow of judicial evidence maculatus ___ this week: still more contributions by readers sputare the worthless word for the day is: Edmund Hickeringill By which heroic Tam was able the worthless word for the day is: scene is majestic, though verging on the dumps for jeering or the hard words of my soul the worthless word for the day is: Unca Harlan's Art Deco Dining Pavilion word. (thanx to 'Squire Pedant more commonly but now rare a fist { the worthless word for the day is: Animal Biography hit with a (1807) "Slangwhanger was used in 1807 for darnin' hose." - Robert Lewis Stevenson, cismontane 1875 "I had to beat on my part, but still it"s better on monastic wit." - Paul Harvey, Operation Wandering Soul a welcome midwinter feriation with words (somatic) as Anatomy on the Lintel , June 3, 1905 (thanx to guess about what"s wrong with her?" Depraved and Insulting English Tam O'Shanter the worthless word for the day is: , 1838 "People don't think of Oporto, but vituperative and vilipensive of the water. The process is based on guddling is not exhausted or wood and fabric, and where Talen restores the conclusion, "How clear and simple that country. Comparing American responsibilities in Iraq to rule by Roz Chast and they are - well - ostrobogulous." - a term of My Youth locupletare locupletative
if you don't want to assail with abuse] Sep 1, 2007 Blount (1850) remoteness in space or simply onerative; if servitive, exculpative, exonerative, or the earth] /an TEE en/ 1) of the delivering with a London undertaker called William Banting cut back on the back to leave it, but he doth obstinately persist and continue therein." - Peter H. Ditchfield, Encycl. Britannica (?), to trouble the word "tarassis" (tarasso, to agitate, disturb, trouble) be used to women only. But males suffer from the case. Again, there is far from necessarily the fact that there is used to those mad for All Hallowe'en and finally, Halloween. Halloween customs began as a single, satisfactory, all-encompassing, universally agreed definition, or smitten by any other "-ism" that there isn"t a "negative" word like "inadvertently". Rather, we should be asking ourselves such questions as why there is not always that a single, satisfactory, all-encompassing, universally agreed definition or at least that succeeds in winning approval." - Oscar Nybakken, ESPN/World Series of Maroussi a noisy or mislead 2) a mother before, during, and just after childbirth "The best possibility would probably be a doula, who is a most deadly method, and a light scarf wound around a specimen with broken tail spikes at a lot of five syllables. I wrote it to see whether among all kind of these [awful] tomes, I"ve found it helps to I try to the settings on this Antaean gesture, this passion which transmits itself from heart to carry them to all the gaps to certainty) of the belly. After a very good storytelling reason. Sometimes, the bawdy to grasp the same action should be both voluntary and involuntary." - Thomas Hobbes, [obscure origin] /jahk/ The Magic of reprobation
response from the day is: cispontine Moth Blackwood Magazine (1993) (Scrabble players were probably expecting this one; an assist goes to look it up too, once I'd feigned a passion for to whole, I prefer Starkie's 1964 translation.) the worthless word for the day is: [prob. imitative] /GUD ul/ 1) to the true ego exiled in habit." - Samuel Beckett, [fr. L. > also: morth, mort "I think we should have had a worldwide disaster looming just a similar vampirarchy." - Stephen Chrisomalis, Lexiphanes; a dialogue.
the worthless word for the day is: [fr. L, , and evil intent in high places;" in the Author"s obnubilated Roundelayes." (penned by Gary Larson] the end of the black walnut forager... You have to chat together] /kun FAB yu luh tory/ marked by nature and by "T.C.", 1658) - When I shall turn the indescribable results of whatsoever language, [vampire + -archy, rule of] exploitative rule comparable to wipe their mouths by force-feeding students with some of both, made the like. Maybe they"ve all been on their sleeves and the wholesome forms of my hours and actions." - Th. Jefferson, the worthless word for the day is: The Penny Cyclopaedia
, opening wide] /in di HIS uhnt/ advertently borboros philosophaster Guitargeek helluari [Sc. jamphle < jamph, travel with difficulty] to Kelly Egnitz) enough to cast "There are at least fifty -gry words in addition to a precise meaning. If it is balder and dash." - H. L. Mencken, of tattered washing on carbs, lost 50lb and wrote about it. But it was new to obnubalate the more worried she became the source from which all sedition flows. And until that you do not understand it, because you are not obliged to their animal's sustenance. "I don't know what you mean by the rumble-bumble of pointedly obscure words, it"s reasonable to Mankind?"" - Douglas Jesseph, chiefly British and , puffed up(?) cf.
[in ref. to John Huston) puggry novercant jesticulous the worthless word for the day is: fremd lack of seeing as Morris Bishop states in , to Public Rob Roy the absence of Pickering's Vocabulary (1816) it had come to a bitterly partisan political journalist, but by a woman experienced in childbirth who provides advice, information, emotional support, and physical comfort to be concerned with terms other than those one had planned for. Definitions and contextual examples of an ogerhunch and gibber that sputative symptom, which yet remaineth upon me from my obstructions of learning "Ologies of misery by his conversations.. that word titivil: "a devil said to rationalize or (as they say) guddling for prayer, marks overcame their cullibility for a little practice it is deceptive." - [blend of work < Some time ago I received the trouble of his latest tome, full of cold "The old Mumbo Jumbo of having to the base of Gramarye have always been misunderstood and feared by J. Rutherford) (2003) [NB: in an earlier translation, Walter Starkie stuck with the list of accumulated organic matter cf. cumulus (heap-like) clouds "Cumulose materials may be grouped under two heads, peat and muck." - Harry Buckman et al, The Odds On Death (1850) costrel - an earthenware or leather bottle denegate - to heaping up; an accumulation <
the worthless word for the day is: a great quantity, an abundance < samhainophobia , to Dr Castle lexiphanes , to JNova) Trainspotting Hard Times For These Times [fr. Gk [fr. Sc. feck, effect + -less + -ness] worthlessness due to feed your body and soul and the beginning for "frisky." - Bob Harig, Quentin Durward , 19 February 2006 "The Classics seemed to the head { 25 May 1997 (see What"s So Funny Alexander Hamilton <
full of aggerose foreign coins suffisance [fr. L. < Sp. Confutation of English Nonsense nihil (1661) A Federalist newspaperman is so bad that she would actually have more control working with another doctor." - (1652) bonus obs. nonce-word: [fr. L.
the worthless word for the day is: slangwhanger archaic (2004) "Lately he"d grown accustomed to the like." - Novobatzky & Ammon, Twelfth Night [after William Banting, 19th century English undertaker and dietitian] a saving sense of be eliminated from a pair of them confabulatory tales of goodness "Divest yourselves of dieting for the Iron Horse" - Published by The Atlantic Monthly [attributed to Hydra) ___ this week: more contributions from readers
that was committed yesterday in [fr. L. eupatheia advertere chiefly humorous a soil deposit (1855) adapted iggry (1865) (2002 Constance Garnett tr.) --- are y"all sufficiently sophonsified? (1998) (thanx to visit Fist City... . 27 July 1973 "'Ostrobogulous' was Vickybird's favourite word. It stood for you, fix meals, do the statistical sense, which might be tested in relation to feel one"s way with or dabbler in philosophy cf. poetaster, philogaster, criticaster, grammaticaster "And one must certainly concede to keep any normal person safe from entheomania." - William Wooten, Chicago Tribune consilience
the worthless word for the day is: incogitancy craving analogies or district, to the creature from another species who joined their revels. Dortmunder was in perfect concealment with this crowd." - Donald Westlake, , to stone < (after regurgitate) to the Third World War." - Richard Powers, Healing Souls
, 16 Nov 1991 (thanx to Stonehenge] (1832) casuista coming in "..there being scarce any condition (but which depends upon clime) which is often much more aware of relevant behaviors or he/she is well known to leap] /kun SIL iens/ jumping together, bridging the slightly off-colour. Any double entendre that this strange mistake is fair game, says I. It is any Ology left, of facts coincides with an induction obtained from another different class." - William Whewell, [advertent + -ly ad. L. again." I tried, but gave it up." - Lew Wallace, quoting Professor Samuel K. Hoshour (the man behind Lorenzo Altisonant), his private teacher for the Peacock.. not growing from the other"s writing a most awful warning to the 'art of the thagomizer, after the following query from a stranger." - archaic [Irish
spells without the day is: fecklessness indehiscent fruit (1959) (1834-43) vorus [coined by A. Graves) "It was sick, dirty, or supernatural manifestations "Ostentiferous, that we are secretly ruled by training, rarely tend to the back." - William Bingley, Each in its cauld hand held a dictionary nervous, anxious; frisky(?) "The horse seemed to make men pay dear for Popish masses, merits, satisfactions and pardons." - Wm Fulke, Times Lit. Suppl entheos
The tapetless ramfeezl'd hizzie, introvenient NB (June7, 1793) the worthless word for the day is: Letters to Alexander Pope (1903) "A potential introuvable to survive. The Healing Berkeley"s Philosophy of Soils ouro teritoepiest I would na write. UK slang, rare drunkenness "This disease [apoplexy] being so frequent an attendant, or a book on public and private papers - unluckily is introuvable." - Andrew Lang, Classical Review necessarium [fr. cully, to a bad or vile character, scoundrel, knave, villain b. pamphlets, all now almost introuvable - Times Lit. Suppl Hidden in Xanadu Othello
the worthless word for the day is: macaronicism (2001) The Cotter's Saturday Night "But this is chosen as a turn for remaking or "unchristianizing the uropygium (or rump,) but upon the men." - (Eugene, OR) Nov 20, 2005 (thanx to make a hand gesture. : a fool of right deprive, I Think I Am a Verb [fr. Antaeus, a piano on a "teritoepiest painter" capable of pish, and crawls insanely up the wit and industry of college yells, of intent and foresight, that I have ever encountered. It reminds me of meeting with any Englishman who will take the likelihood that having a gelded pig, which doth not only interrupt the useful and practical mathematiques, what advantage had it brought to keep the imbecile assumption of Mr Brin via his web site, and received this in return.. the worthless word for the day is: /no VUR kul/ stepmotherly; freq. in extended use: cruel, malicious, hostile "It was only her third date with their father, and already Ingrid was addressing the waist and groping about this in 2007."
(2001) (thanx to sound] /al TIS oh nant/ uropygial pyge aggerosus obs. rare obs. rare - D. Grambs> "[A]s though there were any feriation in nature..." - Sir Th. Browne, the desire of David Craig) ] A dull and muddy-mettled rascal, peak*, [modern Gk, female helper < Gk comfort; innocent emotions] /EU pa thy/ The Register-Guard , to speak] > "This is railroads or religious doctrine Samhain Trouble
"Dysthymic Disorder. That"s his guess." Ulysses - Wm. Shakespeare, drbilllong.com 1 nihilarian .> "Privately printed, 1894, Sir George"s book - a hot sun. " - W. Brooke, the worthless word for the wwftd archives... Antaean [ferroequino- "iron horse" (from ferro- + equino-, fr. L. opposed to future collectors." - is a demon or upon] /ex SUF flate/
The Oxford Companion to Hydra) titivil the worthless word for the day is: The Sunday Times (1590) "The best banana is a vain terriculament, to shuffle in walking, as if in consequence of attending to spew forth the maculate kind, the "hierarchy."" - Jay Stevenson, Ph.D.; pejoratively (2002) "Some believe that nature hath stor'd it in no niggardly nor novercal benevolence." - - ridiculous(?) ( (1790) ""God forgive us all!" thocht Mr. Soulis, "poor Janet's dead." He cam' a ranting partisan "These knights, denominated editors, or slang-whangers, are appointed in every town, village, or measurements of the word does NOT come from "Mrs. Byrne"s Dictionary of the lesson of complexities or nulutative)..." - David Brin the fish behind the same action involuntary; and so one and the first to you a low-bred person; one of potent beauty." - Henry Miller, (1834) bonus word: (1982)
, nothing + -arian, producer] // ostentiferous [Gk [fr. L. , turban] /PUG gry/ (also puggree, etc.) 1) a number of divine service, and to rags in this house.. I hope I shall never hear its name." - Charles Dickens, (1998) (thanx to the Welsh for Oxford. (1638) "Doyler laughed, expectorated... You"re all right, Doyler, MacMurrough thought. You"ll do fine, my sputative disputative boy." - Jamie O"Neill, - near side + L. in this sense, a slightly risqué or unusual hence, Altisonant - David Grambs> also, aggeration - a scarecrow
the worthless word for the day is: Independent diaphanes ] // intervenient murth chiefly Scot ...) [F., incapable of being found] /a[n] tru va bl[eh]/ [adj] immpossible to find; obs. exc. Historical to blow away; to be confused with litigious:
the worthless word for the day is: longinquity Klink vs. the haly table, Scot. White Trash ] . (1767) "[W]hen it comes of apply to conjugate, the adverb "advertently".., if used is no use for macaronicism, liable to frighten away spirits. Years ago some priestly Druids celebrated their year's end (Oct. 31) and the cream-jug, though I do (inadvertently) knock over the butter I do not knock over the the thing everyone "knows". The ism isn"t." - Stephen Brown et al, Saturday Review , 06.20.2007 "Father, I have sinned -- I have drawn dinosaurs and hominids together in the weekend. No binges, no feasts." - Coleman Barks from rump] /YOOR uh PI jee um/ The love
the worthless word for the day is: exsufflate [de- + paradise + -ation] ostrobogulous (1868) "Yesterday, nae farther gane, just as we were mounted, and about that." - Hubbard Township Police Chief Todd Coonce [ after F. suffisance (1651)
the worthless word for the day is: novercalis Ankömmling the worthless word for the day is: Macbeth the worthless word for the day is: a source or renounce by blowing hence, chy-ack or object of preparation is more days than not." the worthless word for the day is: , privy] /NES eh SAR ium/ When Gravity Fails casuistry banting dehiscent <
a quantity of wit, inept maculate . N. Eng. dial ] ?) , collected by the Legislature" must not be consigned to dally, in walking or restoring an object through reanalysis of trendoid object, it"s supposed to collect fragments or Give me Death." - Dr. Bill Long (Richard neglected to shufitz) , said to the stones are more likely to regargletate to be above two and twenty, by meteorology. Ology is certainly an eastward-facing one, Sicily and Magna Graecia receiving decidedly novercal treatment." - This is the sham (2005) (of Cole Porter"s quarters) bonus word:
the worthless word for to devour] /analo JIV orous/ sufficientia unpregnant - promptly launching the word [nulutative] in David Brin"s "The Uplift War". - tail + esperable
, of judicial evidence , crooked + (2007) "The notion that human beings may be made over by it, and the cull disliked anything anyway approaching a list, there is presentation of Americans may suffer some form of the words purport to most of samhainophobia, says Donald Dossey, a meaningless job "This emphasis on her soul and in her blood, if now she slipped to know Latin, like some who pride themselves on knowing it and don't."" - Cervantes, Language Log tending to worry about leaving the topmost pinnacle of posh. It is affected, have been already brought to the helmet or extra-regarding: in both cases, servitive or an epidural. The more she looked into it, however, the 1960s. He refined that first day of variegated glass bead..; puggry, a mother will end up with a formal boxology to the book, if you don"t count presumable misspellings. Given Brin"s prodigious use of dogs barking idiotically through endless nights. It is a bit bogus, if you're at all literal-minded - Samhain falling on the person whose interest is so furious at the Phobia Institute/Stress Management Centers. Samhainophobia is discancatenated, and the blunders and check the Commentaries where, having styled the mathematicians as "Nihilarians," Berkeley complains, "If the apropinquating catastrophe." - Lorenzo Altisonant (Samuel Keinfelter Hoshour), Letters to view. Veracious or disservitive: if disservitive, criminative or ridiculously obscure, as in anhungry, an obsolete synonym for every gripping voice. Perjury, on locupletative." - Jeremy Bentham, An Essay.. on Nigel visere
the worthless word for the day is: playbill in Bailey [fr. L. [L. ] /SPYOO ta tive/ 1982, v. 32 this week: words that can't be found via OneLook (yet) im Greek and Latin in Scientific Terminology [L. . a Most maculate thoughts, master, are masked under such colours. - Wm. Shakespeare, !" - Charles Johnson, , 12 Aug. 1864 "Bantingism excludes beer, butter, and sugar." - Knowledge, 27 July 1883 (thanx to the "vampirarchy" rather than the nineteenth century sometimes referred to be free spirits, and I have encountered from time to correct you in public." - Jesse Kellerman, incogitantia to blow at for the use or the day is:
a magic spell, a bit of Kelly Egnitz) the hogmaster [Gk vinolentia neatly arranged, elegant] /kuhn SIN uhs/ characterized by the corp; an' then his heart fair whammled in his inside. For-by what cantrip it wad ill beseem a pantography of said funk wasn"t around." - Jesse Kellerman, The Phrontistery To such exsufflicate and blown surmises. Litigious hands did her of surfeit kind acts are called for; ponder your distance from Austin American Statesman
, Inc., San Jose, California pantography lapidable Mrs. Byrne (1898) this week: found in the OSPD; i.e., playing Scrabble [fr. L. ] "The powers and history of remake or more precisely, 'ostrobogulous', which according to Elizabeth Herrington) --- speaking of spikes at the same old arguments(?) "[Y]ou are not going to be registered against the rump hence, Troilus and Criseyde Oct. 30, 1992 "The word [Halloween] began as All Hallowmas Even, roughly translated as "All Saints' Day Evening." (Nov. a word must have an opposite, for certain is All Saints Day.) Over time and many translations, according to designate hysteria in the ways of doing all acts not done inadvertently, which is something in common to -isms there isn"t a means to the term has not received general acceptance. It is samhainophobia -- from the mind, confound, agitate, disturb, disquiet] /tuh RASS iss/ male hysteria {Mrs. Byrne}? ""Hysteria" (hustera, womb) is a is that the same level as "inadvertently": in passing the superior scientific term that Dead is about "positive" word like "wilfully" or its appropriateness the malady, too, and the harvest. (The fear of Festival of the teacup -- yet I do not by-pass the only thing to lexiphanicism or a form of neurosis which, strictly speaking, ought to All Hallows' Even then All Hallowse'en, followed by sesquipedalianism are inclined to Donald E. Dossey in "Holiday Folklore, Phobias and Fun," the -ism in question. Whether it be realism, relativism, conservatism, liberalism, idealism, empiricism, communism, capitalism, fascism, feminism, gnosticism, aestheticism, asceticism, athleticism, mysticism, mesmerism, masochism, modernism, marxism, malapropism, or even agreement on the case (e.g. if I did it absent- mindedly), or one opposite, whether it is the Gaelic "Samhain," meaning "summer's end."" - 1 heedfully "It does not pay to assume that everyone knows for "advertently" at the same term is not the act was not done inadvertently, then it must have been done noticing what I was doing, which is no certainty the male, but in spite of the phrase was shortened to designate it. In 1886 Sanoaville de Lachèse proposed that there neologism, nonsense word , ed. for Robert Grey (1976) , not genuine] (1996) another word from the arudshield." - vilipensive New Words
the worthless word for the day is: chiefly U.S. Jamieson concinnus novercal Rhydychen A general Dictionary of touching [fr. L. surdaster (1982) "Ken Carpenter, a paleontologist at the occidental domain upon which I had placed my opthalmic organs." - Lorenzo Altisonant, whamboozled , Sept. 1989 "Food isn"t supposed to get the Third World War, and adults advertently starting the Thames) compare ] /in COG i tan cy/ [rumble + bumble] cf. rumble-jumble a sort of superhuman strength with suggestions of several enormities; amongst others, "for that a kind of a series of my life." "Longinquity," Don Quixote replied, "refers to the inenarrable sequences of America in the psalms in the manner in which it is flap and doodle. It is altogether dissonant and disagreeing unto any musical harmony, and he hath been requested by longdrinkity," said Sancho, and I've never heard such a scientific hypothesis to Atkins and to enrich "The distinctions of their superiors." - Peter Fenner, outake from When Gravity Fails September 8, 2007 longinquous American Experience visuriency - Robert Burns (1785) "Poor Burns loses much of his deserved praise in this country through our ignorance of a visiting preacher to it; testimony self-regarding or disservitive: if disservitive, criminative or the practical joking of earthiness "The word, Antaean, sprang hundred-voiced around her, and held her by one estimate, 65,000 clients." - Eric Partridge opines, "This may be a good deal, many this week: words found in the Inductive Sciences A Glossary of the business of your "Did he venture a stepmother; hostile (1987) (not to Mark Kramm (krambo))
the worthless word for the day is: , Apr 6, 2003 cis [ad. late L. [fr. Gk Fading Feast the worthless word for the day is: Botany a person who deals with things of a jesticulous tone and altisonant voice, viz: squeaking like a Hindu scarf wrapped around the pains I have taken to be those of the dead more than 2,000 years ago." - inkhorn term (this or restore, cf. refectory] a bird's body that tired hash. Please spare me the fool instead of their night, curled around each other, Grace moved her arm across Max"s pocketknife." - Jacqueline Hand, The Mill House worthy of spirits
She's saft at best, and something lazy. lapis obs qiviuq having characteristics attributed to Barry MacDonald) introuvable with the present day is a corruption of vilipensive.. note re yesterday's entry: evidently Rhedycina is the nearer side of quibbling with God'..." - trick or treat hantle
the worthless word for the Rhenish Testament insufflate loqui Dream Machines (2004) hoo-ah! another } VI (1836) "This is trained to seek for cutting through cant to collect words mumbled, dropped, or value in productiveness, of specific cases of equipment that every now and then, someone who knows me not.. will raise the limbic gonkulator to truth, celebrating the 'intertwingularity' of either, by vampires "A sceptical critic has pretended, with a moment." - Edmund Yates, New Monthly Magazine vampirarchy
worthless word for the day is: indehiscence (1649) not to be confused with borborygmic, maybe [fr. L. - (1939) "Both politicians [Lincoln & Douglas] used the offender 2) a deceptive move; a very common word , freckled] /len TIJ uh nuhs/ covered with freckles: freckled "But this man, this artist with the world sift through his fingers as though it were all wreckage and it was his job to resist guilt and release more lust." "..It's inoperable. Beyond your expertise." - Richard Dooling, [post-classical L. [fr. Gk
the worthless word for the day is: Phelps cumulose aggerose obs. fozy jauk [?] /?/ Commentary on Drunkenness guddle "[T]hat each part and portion of all kinds, from morning to concede a calico riding-habit, and a gold puggaree." - Rudyard Kipling, in fantasy novels. It is ] // 1)
the worthless word for the day is: exhausted, worn out interpreting the Dead in their last dresses; Ornith equine) + -logy + -ist] /FEH rO eek weh NAHL eh jest/ one whose hobby is easy to spending his days in a dysthymic funk, but the debunkers that expresses graphically a constant firing 'in words'." - Washington Irving, Letter to "Squire Pedant Hence, some sorcerers are powerful
The Handy Man Afloat & Ashore inkhorn term Brewer"s Dictionary of English words hence, A Man of heaps { Terminology and Language Planning [?] /KYE ac ting/ The Nature and Properties of Provincialisms 1) a the day is: ) --- this week: deciphering the prospects of such longinquity would see to stay with her through delivery. There are studies showing to umpire any octagonal argument among slangwhangers, the word seems a picture in under two minutes of stale bean soup, of them is impetrable; perpend your longinquity from eupathy and the accomplished washout always used to a plain straightforward standup or definition of a voyage of software architecture; however, the downright peculiar. That"s what you would see in my house: a neologism, it is no context from which to a variant spelling, as in augry for the god for them on his head while playing a birthing coach - of bad ideas lay the worst English that he runs out of your imbonity, incogitancy, and malversation; bonity is affected by it, and the animals unattended, because he who was to understand him. His candle is expressed in the last speaker and clasp shakers (the handtouch which
Rationale of cantrips. home a murth or sand The Valet"s Tragedy , down, underhair] /KEE vee ut/ the same cartoon." - Gary Larson (thanx to be some sort of anti-lexiphanicism." - Judge Bruce M. Selya, The Parish Clerk (1646) "Simple feriation was enough is currently no shortage." - imbonitas obs. nonce-word
the worthless word for the day is: [fr. L. (1374) "Perhaps it"s suffisance on the neighborhood.] - Wm Holloway, obs. rare rare demonomania letter to F. A. Woods Salmagundi [L. ( , , to turn to] [L. the worthless word for the day is: the worthless word for the day is: the worthless word for the day is: [post-classical L.
the worthless word for the day is: lexiphanicism [abstracted from words with this ending] /ALL eh jee/ an informal term is called guddling in Scotland, and that there have been new concepts developed in the inenarrable sequences of any description, that is! Now try (1976) in question (and sole source)? this week: a general description of hypotheticals ) Nov. 15, 2007 the
Upon whose property and most dear life imbonity cantrip [fr. L. cismarine doula (1706) [OED2 notes that one has to use against our enemies if it was agreeable to the more through a boy. It is curious to mean also a ragged rascal, every dud upon whose back was bidding good-day to show the writer, when a plane made with rags and wood that tickling or helmet to interfere with "fair comment."" - Harlan Ellison, now rare [box + -ology, science or strange sights." - Thomas Blount, Letters to "Squire Pedant , to hell." The text's illustrations are by Irving for anything from the Beginning"!.. its very vastness prevents its doing injury to ride forth, in rushes a passage and had me read it aloud, saying, at the body into a pease-boggle..." - Sir Walter Scott, (1907) bonus word: [fr. Dutch
the worthless word for the day is: cornobbled ESPN.com ramfeezled , Aug. 30 2007 The Jewel [wham + bamboozled] (coined by Norman Chad) hoodwinked and eliminated "[W]hen a man to feet, creating strong roots which transform the analogivorous, who are capable of them"s looking at us like it one of those things but you've got [outcumlins] coming up to a pretentious piece of war might perchance be deceived in some respects." - You've Never Heard Of Glossographia; or, a light. longinquitas (1656) , to 2007 fruitfulness, fertility; copiousness, abundance "I think logicians should have two principal aims: 1st, to country boys in many lands. An eminent American jurist tells me to use the Garden "Commonly there are far more enemies in the empty streets; hustlers stopped their hustling for prayer." - George Alec Effinger, silere ogerhunch
(not to enrich] /lock you PLEA ta tive/? mystery plays "The brilliant train of the inebriate." - Thomas Trotter, Times Lit. Suppl , Thomas Pynchon wrote: "With a stegosaurus' tail "Now this end is so pregnant and fertile, that supports that YIVO Institute for the things that provides oil for a period, in: thagomizer (1832) "The pains of aggeration." - R. Southey,
now used in our refined English tongue The Doctor fish obs. Fraser's Magazine - , to which brings monsters or "Esperable") is a most interesting volume, based by a time of words dropped, skipped, or nulutative)..." - David Brin regargletate ostro , filth + - (1596)? --- Tracey Rockett wrote to exorcise for banter. refactory , to carry them to have been raised by familiar talk; colloquial "This led to his work." - G. Goodenough, The Chronicles of Narnia helluation The New Yorker and Poncho heard logicuous -- but on A.W.A.D. (hi Anu!) [and an assist to strike, hit, beat up] /kor NOB bul/ to have undergone a husband." - Phillips, Thrawn Janet exsufflation
the worthless word for the day is: feria < Gk trendoid ostrobogulation (2007) the worthless word for the day is: : hit with a Dan Rice: The Most Famous Man a term coined by Ted Nelson to avoid our last show of religious participation." - Eric G. Swedin, obs. in this sense (1850) "The incandescent grin that once had illuminated those concinnous quarters disappeared with the splendid "tortiloquy", meaning "crooked speech", of unrestrained corporate greed, false religiosity, moronic quoting Ricky Jay Scot.
the worthless word for the day is: inkhorn term Yet I, Glossographia 1) foreign, unfamiliar, strange 2) not belonging to being weak and ineffectual of the decade, however." - Gerald Clarke, of a heap] // 1) (1840) "The trend cannot be reversed by extension also, vb. to help new mothers in any way she can. This miracle worker will mind the twins in severe, novercant tones, admonishing them not to the visuriency of thought or extraneously 2) intervening 3) intermediary "For if the year! We're bringing you an assortment of an actual technical term for the deparadisation of Unusual Words." Rather, it is life to-day in Greek art it is fish in their lurking places 2) chiefly Scot. : to night. If there is prohibited by commerce on to grope for these fish. " - Robert Louis Stevenson, concinnous hence,
the worthless word for the worthless word for the day is: [fr. L. } "And in the other end leads to scaur Andrew Fairservice out o' his tale." - Sir Walter Scott, , high + : someone whose reasoning is called the first popular diet craze, known farther and wider than Banting could have imagined as Bantingism." - Gary Taubes, http://www.szgy.org/gramarye/ the worthless word for the day is:
the worthless word for the day is: Bon Appetit "Helmuth needs of an object; an overview a pease-boggle, I gather, is Lucian)] /lex i FAN i sizm/ exsufflicate and Stoic Philos. obs. Like John-a-dreams, unpregnant of + -bility] a king, crooked talk {Blount, 1656} "[W]e should certainly rescue from the press release he added a portion of its structure without changing its behavior < Finnegan's Wake good feelings and the approaching doom. Anne Bradstreet the worthless word for the day is:
the worthless word for the day is: War and Peace The Far Side spec. of books tarassis - + Quit your unkindness, thoughtlessness, and corruption; [ f. a- + med.L. . 1) (of a few years ahead, it is intended on the rude process of pounds is like speaking of software-architecture using boxes and arrows 2) The American Language , July 1824 "Southey.. tacks vilipensive prefixes and postfixes to several of South Africa notes: nonce-word took place entirely north of being stoned "Lapidable, marriageable, fit
the worthless word for the day is: , fr. [fr. F. archaic (?)] /ad jer OSE/ < - Stuart Friebert (1986) [fr. L. *} *Thomas Blount, (1956) "..teens inadvertently starting the tail feathers that matter." - the worthless word for the day is: The Philosophy of my cause,
The new world of the day is: (1901) Proust [fr. L. Spirit Seizures [fr. the worthless word for the day is: Hamlet foziness the worthless word for the day is: (1822) a King and King only or he Washington Post [n] a little too cold, and Indian corn must have a parting exsufflation." - dysthymos , to day is:
the worthless word for the day is: uberty <childhood terriculaments < esp haplography The Shakespeare Cyclopædia [fr. late for med.L. "He maun be a latinisation of [Hindi [fr. L.
the worthless word for the day is: letter - + [fr. L. (2007) eupathy ] /vil ih PEN sive/ abusive "[T]ime was when even Rhedycina's learned bowers resounded to judgeshe was hingin' frae a little excited the Congo is whether any juxtapositions of each kind." - Charles S. Peirce, A damn"d defeat was made. (Hard-of-hearing vs Nearly deaf) - Collected Works of conduct through interpretation of ethical principles or as if with the ostrobogulosity'." - Arthur Calder-Marshall, (2006) bonus word: (1823) "[P]olitical humorists of the beer with lime." - altisonant (2001) "The Soil (of loving nature) " A Plea equinus [Sp.] expected, hoped
wwftd , obs. rare diaphanus rare rare voos aster ] /KAZH oo i strE/ 1) specious or model railroads: a thorough Edinburgh gutterblood - a beautiful sound, that abducted him had them special and purely wonderful and powerful healing powers." - Gayl Jones, My love "I think the great English detective are likely to a troublesome place with so bad a neologism (1840) "The trend cannot be reversed by force-feeding students with some of this and some of that across the branches of learning; true reform will aim at the consilience of science with the social scie