"Our language reflects our disrespect. Something worthlessor unappealing is 'for the birds.' An ineffectual politicianis a 'lame duck.' To 'lay an egg'is to flub a performance. To be 'henpecked!' is to be harassed with persistent nagging.'Eating crow'is eat humble pie. The expression 'bird brain,' for a stupid, foolish, or scatterbrained person, entered theEnglish language in the early 1920's because people thought of birds as mere flying, pecking automatons, with brains so small they had no capacity for thought at all. "That view is a gone goose. In the past two decades or so,from fields and laboratories around the world have flowed examples of mental feats comparable to those found in primates."
Jennifer Ackerman. The Genius of Birds (New York: Penguin Books, 2017) ** NOT EXACTLY HUMPHREY BOGART
“ boggart is, depending on local or regional tradition, a malevolent genius loci inhabiting fields, marshes or other topographical features. The household boggart causes objects to disappear, milk to sour, and dogs to go lame. They can possess small animals, fields, churches, or houses so they can play tricks on the civilians with their chilling laugh.”
Wikipedia –“English Folklore” **
FROM TOKYO
Sign in a self-service elevator in a Tokyo apartment house: “Keep your hands away from unnecessary buttons for you.”
** TWO BEAUTIFUL WORDS
“The two most beautiful words in the English language are: ‘Check enclosed’.
**
15 WORDS SELECTED BY DR. WILFRED FUNK AS THE MOST BEAUTIFUL IN THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
ABOUT EARLY MOVING PICTURE MACHINES SUCH AS THE ZOETROPE & NOMINAL EMBROIDERY
“By the end of the nineteenth century, hundreds of variation of those toys abounded, each with its own name, either simple or ornate –Praxinoscope, Choreutoscope, Wheel of Life. All of those stroboscopic toys shared, in addition to the common use of persistence of vision, several traits that were to continue as trends in later movie history. Most striking was the inventors’ passion for fancy Greek and Latin names to dignify their dabblings: Thaumatrope, Phensakistiscope, Viviscope, Zootrope. This passion for nominal embroidery would later dominate the first era of motion pictures – Kinetoscope, Bioscope, Vitascope, Cinematographe –and beyond it – Vitaphone, Technicolor, Cinemascope….”
Gerald Mast. A Short History of the Movies (New York: Penguin Books, 1971) **
BLIND DATE WITH AN EDITOR OF WEBSTER’S DICTIONARY
Oh my beating heart. O good gracious! Her kisses on my lips were butyraceous.
LJP **
MOVIES & VOCABULARY BUILDING
Wet-assed hour –(n) Time of trouble or fear “Come the wet-ass hour and I’m everybody’s daddy.”
Spoken by Al Pacino’s character in SEA OF LOVE ** WORD COUNT TO TEN
STONE CEMENT WORKS WREATH REELS OFF OUR ROOF FIFI VENERATES BLOGS MESSI XEROXES SOCCERS SCORES FREIGHT TONI NEEDS THIS LIST FORGOTTEN
** THE SAXOPHONIST PAUL DESMOND PRAISES DAVE BRUBECK
“Desmond, after hearing Brubeck who tended to play ‘way out’ : ‘Man, like wigsville ! You really grooved me with those nutty changes.”
“White Man Speak With Forked Tongue” in JAZZ by Whitney Balliett in The New Yorker (Sept. 16, 1992)
** ADJECTIVES USED BY THE NOVELIST SHIRLEY HAZZARD
An "administrative smile' An "immoderate sunset" An "infirm chair" in a room of "unconvinced Westernism" Old buildings whose "violated and ghostly elegance" persists
from On Shirley Hazzard by Michelle deKretser (New York: Catapult, 2019
FILM DIRECTOR ADJECTIVES
“Stephen (Spielberg) and David (Lynch) have a profound kinship as fellow radicals in the world of cinema. I believe In addition to Hitchcockian, the next two cinema names that are now in our dictionaries are Lynchian and Spielbergian.”
Laura Lynney. Time Magazine (June 21,2022)
**
A SINGLE LETTER CAN MAKE ALL THE DIFFERENCE IN THE WORLD
Sweetshop sweatshop A single letter Divides them, That & thousands Of lives ruined.
7 thoughts on “BITS & PIECES OF A MISPLACED LIFE: WORDS, WORDS, WORDS”
Oh, LP!, you slay me. Butyraceous: you’ve taught me a new word yet again. Thank you! And where I grew up if someone was bogarting a joint it meant they were being greedy with the weed-y. That usage may just be a Bronxism, I dunno.
“James Joyce, author of Ulysses, chose cuspidor as the single most beautiful word in English.
In the second volume of the Book of Lists, philologist Willard R. Espy identified gonorrhea as one of the ten most beautiful words.”
Thank you for the infotrmation, which I’ll; ise in my nerxt WORDS, WORDS, WORDS blog..
Willard Espy was a good ftiend of mine. THe Book of Lists is also a favorite bookl.
Oh, LP!, you slay me. Butyraceous: you’ve taught me a new word yet again. Thank you! And where I grew up if someone was bogarting a joint it meant they were being greedy with the weed-y. That usage may just be a Bronxism, I dunno.
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Good stuff, Lou!
The sign in the Tokyo elevator reminded me of another sign, this one in a tailor shop in Hong Kong: “Ladies have fits upstairs.”
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Great sign, Thanks,
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“James Joyce, author of Ulysses, chose cuspidor as the single most beautiful word in English.
In the second volume of the Book of Lists, philologist Willard R. Espy identified gonorrhea as one of the ten most beautiful words.”
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Thank you for the infotrmation, which I’ll; ise in my nerxt WORDS, WORDS, WORDS blog..
Willard Espy was a good ftiend of mine. THe Book of Lists is also a favorite bookl.
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To paraphrase Paul Desmond, “you really grooved me with those nutty bits & pieces.”
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THANK YOU!
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