a warm welcome to you, Pansy!
none of those obstreperous, incorrigible, reprobates like raleighdon here!
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That was ginormously evile of SK. :D
I prefer freakin' myself.
Welcome to the joint Pansy.
V.
And one more thing: We don't want some numpty causing a stooshie with her palaver about "vehicular cycling" vs. other techniques! (This happens a lot on another forum)
what poem is that?
I hate brassiere too.
Favorite word? Ensure, when it's used correctly. Bothers me when people write insure when they mean ensure.
Least favorite word? MOIST. I don't know why but it disturbs me greatly :D
Mimi, that would be this poem
I hate "R U R A L"; I just can't ennuciate it without sounding like RuRRRRWral Ugh!!
I also detest the phrase "Notwithstanding anything herein to the contrary...". Kinda makes me think I'm being snowed...
Favorite Words:
- Silver :)
- flummoxed
Rural Juror (a la 30 Rock)
Is someone feeling better? :p
It means "enjoyment of driving". Supposedly enhanced by having a German car!
Best German word I have met so far was in our house contract: Altlastenverdachtsflächenkataster - the English translation takes up a whole paragraph.
Favourite Welsh word: stwnch - such a great way of describing mashed potato.
DH´s favourite has to be PIE
Bron
schlmiel [sh-l-meeyul]
and schlmazl [sh-l-mahzul]
A schlmiel is a clumsy oaf, and a schlmazl is the unfortunate character oafed upon (if oaf can be used as a verb). E.g. at a restaurant: the schlmiel might be a waiter who spills soup on a customer, that customer then being the schlmazl of the moment.
My maternal grandfather's favorite was the German word for tank:
schutzengrabenvernichtungsautomobil
(artillery trench destroying vehicle)
He said it illustrated how the language had been a factor in the Germans losing both world wars. Just compare the time it takes to give the same order in German and English:
Send tanks!
Bie mir die schutzengrabenvernichtungsautomobils gesenden! (or something like that, I don't actually know German)
German is such a lilting, musical language isn't it?
Weren't those words used in the Laverne & Shirley opening theme?
A few of my favorites:
persnickity
couillon (dumba$$)
framousse (a big 'ol frown that kids are good at making, adults also qualify)
The last 2 are cajun. I'm not sure on the spelling - cajun is one of those things that's spoken and not always written - I often accuse Mr. Bee and his dad of making up words as they go along. I seem to keep hearing new words.
Favorite words?
"Sale"
and even better still...
"Free"
Where is my vorpal sword??
So I read Brassiere as Brasserie and thought, yeah, I like that word too. Tells you where my mind is.
Another favorite from my Sheffield born Grandma...
"Holy shamilligans, we're going to have a donny brook." Not sure of the spelling, I only ever heard her say it.
"Donnybrook" is one word and Irish for stooshie (see Bruno28's post)
My parents used it in New Zealand, although it was "a real donnybrook" meaning a more serious one I guess.
Too funny...I've always hated the work "rural" as well...impossible to say. I used to work for the County Office of Procurement & Contracts...and I can't say "procurement." So I just called it "Purchasing" because that's what we did.
I get a kick out of words that you can accidentally spell wrong but then they become another word. These can be dangerous (and hilarious) words. Example: At work, I once wrote a contract for janitorial services for the Pubic Defender's Office. Spell checker can't tell the difference between Pubic and Public! Unfortunately we also have County departments called Public Health, Public Guardian, and Public Authority.
Another word I just discovered which also has this nightmarish spelling issue is "pines." Switch the vowels...you'll see what the problem is.
This isn't a real word, but when we were kids, a friend of mine used to hear our family talk about moral fiber. One day, she tried to say it and is came out: morbal fire.
I always felt that the weighty implication of something called "morbal fire" to be much more intriguing!
And there's always making up big technical sounding terms for everyday things--here are a couple of my favorites: "cerebral flatulation" and "accidentally evacuating the legumes". (Can you figure out what common expressions these mean?)
EDIT: And how about, instead of saying somebody is a jerk, saying they're the third derivative of displacement (or second derivative of velocity)? Wow, this is bad. I may be a nerd, but I don't normally make physics jokes--usually they're more medical!
On a related note, instead of calling someone an @$$hole, they're an anal sphincter!
And then there's what one of my bio professors in college would say: "Feces occurs".
No, she didn't finish the sentence. We were making cookies around Christmas time, and I spilled some flour, and she made some comment, to which I replied "are you saying I'm a klutz?", and then she said (or meant to say) "Well, if the shoe fits..." and that's when she goofed it up and we couldn't get serious again for a while!
Hadn't completely caught up with this thread, some funny stuff here.
all I have is willy-nilly and careening
OK, it's not a total hijack since others have interjected 'poetry'...but here's my favorite limerick (and Silver will attest that I've known it for years)
A canner exceedingly canny
One morning remarked to his granny
A canner can can anything that he can
But a canner can't can a can, can he?
It makes total sense, which still amazes me 35 years after I first read it...
A canner can can a can if she is a canny canner.
And has a hammer.
Wow... great thread!!!
Caloo, calay!!!
I think we need to add to this reportoirre though...
facinorous (it means extremely wicked... as in TimTam indulgment :cool: )
dasypygal - how do I get this in a sentence? I have been trying for 4 years! It means... hairy buttocked!
Oh, and SGTiger... we have a Pamplemouse Tree - you can enquire after my Pamplemice :p any time you feel the urge to use 'the word'
Undulates and all variations; Undulation, undulating - I just love how that word rolls of my tongue and there is a scene in Disney's Fantasia that comes to mind everytime I say it.
Random
Chocolate
puppy
bucket
y'all
cyclobenzaprine
goober
fixin'
conundrum
see: dilemma
just kinda flows, doesnt it
my favorite three little words?: "It's Fat Free"
Another nice technical term for a common expression..."up an unsanitary tributary without the proper means of propulsion" for "up sh** creek without a paddle"!!
panache