Enron Mail

From:wsmith@wordsmith.org
To:linguaphile@wordsmith.org
Subject:AWADmail Issue 73
Cc:
Bcc:
Date:Sun, 24 Mar 2002 15:21:10 -0800 (PST)

AWADmail Issue 73
March 25, 2002

A Weekly Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day
and Other Interesting Tidbits about Words and Languages

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From: Wordsmith Sponsor (sponsor@wordsmith.org)
Subject: Sponsor of this AWADmail issue: SPELL

Advertisement:
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abused and misused in the media and elsewhere? Well, so are a lot of others,
members of the Society for the Preservation of English Language and Literature
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From: Anu Garg (anu@wordsmith.org)
Subject: Interesting stories from the net

Terror Slang:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A47134-2002Mar18.html

Anglo-Saxon vs. Latin:
http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1002,149%257E465220,00.html

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From: David B. Rice (drice@unity.ncsu.edu)
Subject: Uriah Heep

Re: March 18's word of the day: Uriah Heep is also the name of a fairly
bad 1970s British rock band that still makes the rounds, albeit with only
the lead guitar player surviving from the original lineup.

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From: Lorrie (lorriedeck@msn.com)
Subject: Uriah Heep

I follow the American tradition of naming my cars. Several years ago, I
bought a Jeep Cherokee. It was the first vehicle I gave a masculine name.
I named it Uriah Jeep. Obviously, I thought that was humorous. What was
not so funny was how often I had to explain to others who Uriah Heep was.
And even more pathetic was that most people, while not familiar with the
Dickens character, were familiar with a rock band from the 70's with the
same name.

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From: Mike Masin (nemesis258@mchsi.com)
Subject: Re: Uriah Heep

I still hold a rather vivid picture, in my mind, of Uriah Heep, from my
first reading of David Copperfield some fifty years ago. I feel that the
words unctuous and shifty would be better measures of him than hypocritical.

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From: Lauren.Collins@uticanational.com
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--circe

Circe is indeed the goddess who lured sailors to her island and then
turned them into swine. However, she did finally relent and give them
directions to get home. No doubt this was the genesis of men being afraid
to stop for directions.

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From: K. C. Rourke (lorrett@fantasymakers.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--circe

I know a number of women (I count myself one of them) who I refer to as
"Reverse Circes". We go through life attempting to turn the swine back
into men!

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From: Mike Pope (mpope@microsoft.com)
Subject: Re: Methuselah

Surely the great age of the original Methuselah was never more memorably
invoked than by Ira Gershwin in the song "It Ain't Necessarily So":

Methuselah lived nine hundred years
Methuselah lived nine hundred years
But who calls that livin'
When no gal will give in
To no man what's nine hundred years

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From: Stewart Gordon (smjg@iname.com)
Subject: RE: A.Word.A.Day--methuselah

You also get methuselahs in John Conway's so-called Game of Life. It's a
pattern of just a few cells that grows and then stabilises after many
generations. Some outstanding examples are known as the "r-pentomino",
"acorn" and "bunnies".

http://www.ericweisstein.com/encyclopedias/life/topics/Methuselahs.html

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From: Rob Gordon (rgordon@mec.ca)
Subject: Re: Mogul

I love AWAD, and am always impressed by both your creativity in selecting
words and your thoroughness in defining them. So I was surprised that in your
definition of 'mogul' you did not mention one of the word's most common
colloquial uses: to skiers, moguls are the bumps in a downhill run created
by the continuous 'S' pattern of linked turns that are made in the snow.
As a hill becomes skied-in by many skiers, the S-shapes become deep ruts,
and the mounds of snow between the ruts become moguls. More skilled and
daring skiers then have fun by skiing OVER the bumps, or moguls. "Moguls"
is now a sanctioned discipline and an official medal sport in the winter
Olympics.

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From: Wordsmith Sponsor (sponsor@wordsmith.org)
Subject: Sponsor of this AWADmail issue: Namix

Advertisement:
Expert naming solutions for products, services, and businesses:
http://namix.com


............................................................................
A word in a dictionary is very much like a car in a mammoth motorshow - full
of potential, but temporarily inactive. -Anthony Burgess, author (1917-1993)

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