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My challenge is that I am going to try and look up a word I either do not know or only "sort of" understand the meaning of when it is used in context and then introduce it into a sentence on my chosen "victim" then report on here how I got on and award myself a mark out of ten for relevance.

That's if I can keep it up.

0/10 Complete failure - couldn't be bothered/ didn't speak to anyone all day. Frowner

1/10 = I was getting desperate and used it inappropriately. Disappointed
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.
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10/10 = not only did I use the word appropriately but my audience was none the wiser or looked at me in awe of my vocabulary. Big Grin

Rules! Added on 8th July
Anyone can use their own word or mine or someone else's BUT much appreciated if a definition is given and that you report back here and award yourself a score out of 10 for relevancy. You can use the word in an email, a conversation or a post on here. If used in a post on here please give a link. Syd somehow managed to use "bardolatry" in the music thread. I awarded her 4/10 - it would've been a higher score but I don't think she was actually listening to Stay by Shakespeare's Sister so she had falsely engineered its usage Big Grin .

I think using the word on this forum in someone else's thread would be fun - especially if in general (less likely they'll know what we're up to) - even at the risk of sounding like a wordy prat! Big Grin

MASSIVE bonus points for using the word in a thread title!


I read this one in a letter on Teletext and hadn't a clue what it meant...

Gallimaufry

A hotchpotch, jumble or confused medley.

This word has been around since the sixteenth century, is still in use, but isn’t particularly common today. It’s one of those terms sometimes trotted out to give a literary feel to one’s writing, or spoken in a facetious tone for a quick laugh. Its origin is uncertain, though it could have come from the French galimafree, which might have referred to a kind of sauce or stew. Support for this comes from its earliest sense in English of a ragout or hash, to which the current meaning is obviously a figurative reference. “So now,” a writer lamented in 1579, “they have made our English tongue a gallimaufry, or hodgepodge of all other speeches”.

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I said to RS (work colleague) during a convo about MJ: "There’s a gallimaufry of his past hits in the charts, aren’t there?" (very feeble. I know).

RS said nothing Disappointed . I asked him why he hadn't spotted this new and exciting word and he said he'd just assumed I'd meant "a lot of". He expressed no interest whatsoever in what it meant.

He wanted to speak about Torchwood a few hours later and I cut him off saying that since he hadn't expressed any interest in my new word I really didn't want to listen to his Torchwood musings Shake Head (I have never watched it anyway).

I am putting this down as a failure.

1/10 Frowner
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by King Kev:
Laugh That's funny.


Do you watch Torchwood Kev? RS seems to think the "baddies" are something to do with RTD 456. He said -456 is the coldest temperature of something or other(?) and RTD are Russell T Davies' initials.

You can see why I cut him off in mid flow Big Grin
Baby Bunny
So you mention gallimaufry to someone and a bit later they start talking about Torchwood. Could there be some connection - Torchwood originates from Doctor Who who came from Gallifrey which is similar to gallimaufry?

Don't know about -456, but absolute zero (impossible to get colder than this) is -459.67 Fahrenheit.
El Loro
quote:
Originally posted by Baby Bunny:
quote:
Originally posted by King Kev:
Laugh That's funny.


Do you watch Torchwood Kev? RS seems to think the "baddies" are something to do with RTD 456. He said -456 is the coldest temperature of something or other(?) and RTD are Russell T Davies' initials.

You can see why I cut him off in mid flow Big Grin


Could you ask him to record a CD of his thoughts on Torchwood, I have trouble sleeping you see. Big Grin
I can see exactly why you cut him off lol.
Kev
quote:
Originally posted by El Loro:
So you mention gallimaufry to someone and a bit later they start talking about Torchwood. Could there be some connection - Torchwood originates from Doctor Who who came from Gallifrey which is similar to gallimaufry?

Don't know about -456, but absolute zero (impossible to get colder than this) is -459.67 Fahrenheit.


Gallifrey eh? Eeker I am gonna tell him but I wasn't in work today - I shall pass on the temperature info too Thumbs Up
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by King Kev:
Could you ask him to record a CD of his thoughts on Torchwood, I have trouble sleeping you see. Big Grin
I can see exactly why you cut him off lol.


I'll see what I can do Big Grin

I have a bag of lavender on the bed post (I sleep well anyway - just like the smell).
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by mufcdiver:
Glance

Is this the Torchwood Thread?


It was the Tour de France thread but it was universally ignored Mad so I edited it. Big Grin

Lance Armstrong missed out on the yellow jersey today by fractions of a second!! Eeker
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by Tarquin Vilenose II:
Bardolatrous.

Joseph Mankievicz's 1953 film version of Julius Caesar was 'bardolatrous, text bound' etc.


Just looked that up...

Bardolatry is a term that refers to the excessive adulation of William Shakespeare, combining the words "bard" and "idolatry".

There is NO way I'm going to be able to work that one in with anyone I know. Big Grin

Have you managed to?

I am going to choose words that stand a chance of slipping under the radar of the listener - "gallimaufry" wasn't a good choice but I needed to know what it meant. RS isn't on his guard yet but it's only a matter of time before he gets suspicious and I will have to find a new victim. Devil
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by Baby Bunny:
quote:
Originally posted by Tarquin Vilenose II:
Bardolatrous.

Joseph Mankievicz's 1953 film version of Julius Caesar was 'bardolatrous, text bound' etc.


Just looked that up...

Bardolatry is a term that refers to the excessive adulation of William Shakespeare, combining the words "bard" and "idolatry".

There is NO way I'm going to be able to work that one in with anyone I know. Big Grin

Have you managed to?

I am going to choose words that stand a chance of slipping under the radar of the listener - "gallimaufry" wasn't a good choice but I needed to know what it meant. RS isn't on his guard yet but it's only a matter of time before he gets suspicious and I will have to find a new victim. Devil


Yes, I have used the word 'bardolatrous' both in conversation and writing. I used it in New York when I was contrasting the American appreciation of Shakespeare with the rather ignorant cultural affection that is now apparent in England. I also used it when I was reviewing Stephen Greenblatt's lovely work, 'Will in the world'.
FM
Illywhacker has tickled me for many years and long before it was the title of a best selling novel...

I'm sure one of my relatives must be involved in its unknown 19th century origin (whacker)...an Australian con-man.

I'll try and fit it in tomorrow Big Grin
Heatseek
quote:
Originally posted by Tarquin Vilenose II:
Yes, I have used the word 'bardolatrous' both in conversation and writing. I used it in New York when I was contrasting the American appreciation of Shakespeare with the rather ignorant cultural affection that is now apparent in England. I also used it when I was reviewing Stephen Greenblatt's lovely work, 'Will in the world'.


Well, you had a valid reason for using it.... Thumbs Up

My challenge is that I am going to try and look up a word I either do not know or know the meaning of or only "sort of" understand the meaning of - if it's used in context – and then introduce it into a sentence on my chosen "victim" then report on here how I got on and award myself a mark out of ten for relevance.

That's if I can keep it up.

0/10 Complete failure - couldn't be bothered/ didn't speak to anyone all day. Frowner

1/10 = I was getting desperate and used it inappropriately. Disappointed

10/10 = not only did I use the word appropriately but my audience was none the wiser or looked at me in awe of my vocabularly. Big Grin
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by Heatseek:
Illywhacker has tickled me for many years and long before it was the title of a best selling novel...

I'm sure one of my relatives must be involved in its unknown 19th century origin (whacker)...an Australian con-man.

I'll try and fit it in tomorrow Big Grin


Heat, what does it mean? Also, please report back if/when you manage to slip it in... Glance to a conversation.

Are you a con-man, then? Do I need to put an extra padlock on the Sponge's store room? Crying
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by El Loro:
Torchwood originates from Doctor Who who came from Gallifrey which is similar to gallimaufry?

.

The word "Torchwood" is actually an anagram of "Doctor Who".

Have we got a new word for today?

If not please can I choose it?

MEGRIM
Åŗтγмαģš
Hi Arty, wavey

When I started this I didn't know whether or not anyone would join in - just added some (not very strict) rules to my OP. They are:

Anyone can use their own word or mine or someone else's BUT much appreciated if a definition is given and that you report back here and award yourself a score out of 10 for relevancy. You can use the word in an email, a conversation or a post on here. If used in a post on here please give a link. Syd somehow managed to use "bardolatry" in the music thread. I awarded her 4/10 - it would've been a higher score but I don't think she was actually listening to Stay by Shakespeare's Sister so she had falsely engineered its usage. Big Grin

I think using the word on this forum in someone else's thread would be fun - especially if in general (less likely they'll know what we're up to) - even at the risk of sounding like a wordy prat! Big Grin

Just looked up megrim:
1. megrim - a caprice or fancy. Often used in the plural.
2. megrims - depression or unhappiness: "If these megrims are the effect of Love, thank Heaven, I never knew what it was" (Samuel Richardson).
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by Baby Bunny:
Hi Arty, wavey

When I started this I didn't know whether or not anyone would join in - just added some (not very strict) rules to my OP. They are:

Anyone can use their own word or mine or someone else's BUT much appreciated if a definition is given and that you report back here and award yourself a score out of 10 for relevancy. You can use the word in an email, a conversation or a post on here. If used in a post on here please give a link. Syd somehow managed to use "bardolatry" in the music thread. I awarded her 4/10 - it would've been a higher score but I don't think she was actually listening to Stay by Shakespeare's Sister so she had falsely engineered its usage. Big Grin

I think using the word on this forum in someone else's thread would be fun - especially if in general (less likely they'll know what we're up to) - even at the risk of sounding like a wordy prat! Big Grin

Just looked up megrim:
1. megrim - a caprice or fancy. Often used in the plural.
2. megrims - depression or unhappiness: "If these megrims are the effect of Love, thank Heaven, I never knew what it was" (Samuel Richardson).


I only knew "megrim" to mean unhappiness. As in "I am feeling especially megrim today".
However, now I see it means a headache too - a bit like migraine.
quote:

megrim - a severe recurring vascular headache; occurs more frequently in women than men
hemicrania, migraine, sick headache
cephalalgia, head ache, headache - pain in the head caused by dilation of cerebral arteries or muscle contractions or a reaction to drugs


*goes off to use it in another thread*
Åŗтγмαģš
quote:
Originally posted by Artymags:
Done it!

Just used "Megrim" in context on the "New Mums" thread. Nod


Well done Artymags Thumbs Up 6/10.

Artymags said: "All that cachophany gives me a megrim" on pg 18 of the "New Mums" thread.

I too managed to slip it into a convo (again RS was the victim).

His daughter visited him and his wife last night and he wanted an Indian but no-one else did so they ended up ordering a KFC so I managed "But your megrim [caprice or fancy def.] was for an Indian?". Slight pause this time by way of a reaction followed by "What?". RS is now deffo suspicious of me.

2/10. Points deducted for sounding like I was reading from a script - the whole sentence was "forced".

Not sure I will EVER use this word again Big Grin
Baby Bunny
quote:
Originally posted by Baby Bunny:
Syd somehow managed to use "bardolatry" in the music thread. I awarded her 4/10 - it would've been a higher score but I don't think she was actually listening to Stay by Shakespeare's Sister so she had falsely engineered its usage. Big Grin



Haha - I read that last night - didn't have a clue what she was on about!!

I shall read the rules in this thread later and join in ...
Rexi
What's our word for tomorrow going to be, BB ?

I quite like "Ineluctable" - it means unavoidable.

quote:
Adj. 1. ineluctable - impossible to avoid or evade:"inescapable conclusion"; "an ineluctable destiny"; "an unavoidable accident"
inescapable, unavoidable
inevitable - incapable of being avoided or prevented; "the inevitable result"


but that's only a suggestion if you haven't got a good one of your own to use. Smiler
Åŗтγмαģš
Baby Bunny

I out you as Frank Muir and I claim my prize ....!! Big Grin Laugh


heres one ...TITTYNOPE
Im using on my shrink next time I see her ... Clapping Clapping Clapping Thumbs Up

refers to a small quantity of anything left over be it a measly morsel of gristle remaining on a dinner plate, or the dregs of draft beer left nestled behind in the bottom of a tankard at a party.
Mike Strutter
Tergiversation.

Neither Mrs Margaret Thatcher nor Mr Winston Churchill were inclined to tergiversate. In the US we might say that the neo-conservatives are similarly inclined. Tergiversation may be perceived as weakness.
FM
Deontological.

Frankena's luxuriant classification of ethical theories includes a contrast between deontological theories and their consequentialist counterparts.

A deontologist does not look to the consequences of actions but believes that some acts are right in themselves and should always be followed. Truth telling, obedience to the law, keeping agreements etc. are examples of acts that they may believe are right in themselves.

You simply have to admire deontologists.
FM

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