Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
We have FRIDAY night lights for the thrill of it and THURSDAY grumps for the chill of it, TUESDAY new tool day too. Who left out lonely Wednesday with nothing to do?
I declare a word war, if this is popular we keep it otherwise brickbats.
First, I need a moderator and victims every Wednesday. Moderators help maintain peace and guides our game.
THE GAME: Post a complete sentence including some bicycle content and a difficult, obscure or often misused word such as "concomitant". Help raise our collective ability to read the New York Times. Break on thru to the other side.
Self appointed moderator(s) will comment. The "game" lasts on full day with OZ and NZ getting a 1/2 day hallpass/jumpstart.
See you next Wednesday and feel free to declare yourself in charge....sukah
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Kick it - Beastie Boys reference in case you spent the last 20 years in a Swiss boarding school.
Welcome to Wordish Wednesdays. Todays words are beautiful sounding and elegant when spoken. Choose your own word or use one that has been used today in a complete sentence that includes bicycle content.
Loquacious
lo·qua·cious
lōˈkwāSHəs/
adjective
We all laughed hysterically after the worst section of Ballers Ride subsequent to a couple of unfortunate flats where Darren's normally loquacious manner was utterly absent. ha ha.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Taming my irritatingly loquacious chain with NFS this morning...
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
I learned that word from Mad Magazine:
teacher: "Joshua, use 'loquacious' in a sentence!"
little boy: "She bumped into me, so I told her to loquacious going!"
Next.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
This whole darn place is epistemic.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Diaspora
My great grandfather fled to Ankara Turkey, an area not conducive to cycling, as a part of the Crimean Tatar diaspora in the late 19th century.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Good start. Keep going.
More in the beautiful word category.
des·ul·to·ry
ˈdesəlˌtôrē/Submit
adjective
1.
lacking a plan, purpose, or enthusiasm.
Forced to use clinchers by the Barbarian lord my formerly nimble Spectrum felt slow and desultory. Damn these clinchers, damn them to he!!
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Although concomitant beer and wrenching is an honored tradition it results in the growth of the ball bearing diaspora endemic to dark corners of my shop.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Too Tall
Good start. Keep going.
More in the beautiful word category.
des·ul·to·ry
ˈdesəlˌtôrē/Submit
adjective
1.
lacking a plan, purpose, or enthusiasm.
Sounds like my life story...
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
inchoate
in•cho•ate
in-ˈkō-ət
adj.
•being only partly in existence or operation : incipient; especially : imperfectly formed or formulated : formless, incoherent (Merriam Webster)
"Wonderful things come from inchoate beginnings."
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
It's quiet around here today.
Inspired by my son's recent discovery of Tintin, and the oaths of Captain Haddock:
ec·to·morph
ek-tuh-mawrf
noun
a person of the ectomorphic type.
Ectomorphs often make excellent cyclists.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Thanks for the reminder. Busy day!
Today...words with Italian origins in honor of the Italian Masters.
tar·an·tel·la [tar-uhn-tel-uh]
noun
1.
a rapid, whirling southern Italian dance in very quick sextuple, originally quadruple, meter, usually performed by a single couple, and formerly supposed to be a remedy for tarantism.
2.
a piece of music either for the dance or in its rhythm
Conversations of the most usual kind become Tarantellas when bored cyclists opine where mortals fear to tread.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Fiasco. From Italian for bottle; flask. Orig. theater slang for "failure."
The chase was a complete fiasco because none of the racers would work together.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Quote:
Originally Posted by
whale_spout
Inchoate (adj.)
•being only partly in existence or operation ... imperfectly formed or formulated : formless, incoherent
Translates in Swedish as "Ikea"
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
I'll play.
Alacrity
He clipped in and said he would lead us out with such alacrity I knew it was going to hurt.
Mike
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
With three teammates in the breakaway of seven riders, it was quite a snafu when none of them made it to the podium.
OK, weak sentence, and most of you probably know the etymology, but for those who don't, it is "situation normal all fucked up." I always get a kick out of it when politicians or otherwise socially conservative folk drop it into polite conversation, not knowing the vulgar origin.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
some fella said this word in an article, eleemosynary..a charitable offering. never in my life had i heard of that one.
my method of disposal for unwanted derailleurs, brakes, and various components is eleemosynary; off to the co-op with them.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
The US squad comprises some wily veterans,upcoming young talent and mid-career domestic pros to ensure a good balance of wisdom and strength.
OK, it's a little mundane as word, since everyone knows comprise, but it is NOT a synonym of compose. The whole comprises the parts and is never "comprised of" them. I teach/taught French, and comprendre, besides meaning to comprehend, also means to include, as in comprehensive, and comprise derives from that. I guess if enough people start using "comprised of" like composed of, it will eventually be standard meaning, but until then, I'm sticking to my curmudgeonly pov. not quite as bad as using "insure" instead of ensure... (you don't call State Farm to ensure something is done right!). I need to find some more mellifluous (sweet or musical to hear) words to share, but in the spirit of some recent ranting threads, there you go. etymologically yours.
Re: Wordish Wednesdays - Wednesday word of the day
Persnickety.
It's OK to be a little persnickety about your vocabulary.