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AWADmail Issue 704A Weekly Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day and Tidbits about Words and Language
From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
Why It’s a Good Sign If You Curse a Lot
Newsmakers 2015: The Year’s New Words
A Festival of Language for the Good of Yiddish
From: Jascha Kessler (urim.urim gmail.com) Some four+ decades ago, my wife, Julia Barrett, author of four wide-selling and variously translated Jane Austen sequels, bought a folding lorgnette in Bath: pinchbeck. That was during research for her first, Presumption. She had the lenses changed and wore it on a chain to theater and opera to read programs. An elegant piece of early Victorian vintage. Admired everywhere in the US as exotic -- and taken for gold, of course.
Jascha Kessler, Santa Monica, California
From: Gary Muldoon (gmuldoon muldoongetz.com) The word pinchbeck evokes the song “Ya Got Trouble” in Meredith Wilson’s The Music Man, in which Prof. Harold Hill warns of, among other things, your son playing for money in a pinchback suit. (video, 5 min.)
Gary Muldoon, Rochester, New York
Some other readers were reminded of this song from the musical. While it
appears the word pinchbeck would fit in this context, pinchback/pinch-back
is something different. It’s a style of close-fitting coat with a pinched
or pleated back. (See pictures)
-Anu Garg
From: Dor Hale (dhale3ca live.com) If you ever lived where jaybirds are common, then you may know the term “guilty as a jaybird”. Back East 50 yrs ago, I recall my mom cooling freshly baked pies on the kitchen’s broad windowsill, only to discover them “sampled” by the jaybirds. She’d point at them and utter “You’d take the lined laundry if it was edible.” We have hawks out in these parts who love to chase the jays, flying in quite a fast and furious chase after them, at mid-tree level. If caught, the jays become prey, their mocking irritating and egging on the hawks’ chasing. We’ve seen them catch the jays in their feet mid-air. Thank you for that Day’s Word - a glimpse into the blue jay, red jay, or black jay.
Dor Hale, Santa Ana, California
From: Steven Baird (stevenkbaird cs.com) Cool how Kansas Governor Sam Brownback could be used in a sentence for both meanings.
Steven Baird, Miami, Florida
From: Camille Coelho (camillec67 hotmail.com) This is what we need! An unpronounceable word for coffee!
Camille Coelho, Medford, Massachusetts
From: Pierre-Alexandre Sicart (pa_sicart hotmail.com) The quick brown fox jumps over a crazy dog. (Yeah, I didn’t try very hard.)
Pierre-Alexandre Sicart, Midi-Pyrenees, France
From: Jean Babcock (jean.babcock att.net) “The quick brown fox jumps over a zany dog” comes to mind.
Jean Babcock, Manchester, Missouri
From: Jonathan Knisely (jknisely nshs.edu) The quick brown fox jumps over a hazy dog.
Jonathan Knisely, New Haven, Connecticut
From: Cathy Flynn (rncmf aol.com) Here’s my attempt: Voracious readers may have zeroed in on the joker’s query but what great experience did it offer?
Cathy Flynn, Brooklyn, New York
From: David Schatzky (davidschatzky hotmail.com) Xmas wishes for Anu Garg, best-ever word-quest king: justice, zen peace, harmony, merry times!
David Schatzky, Toronto, Canada
From: Frank Belvin (frank.belvin alum.mit.edu) This week’s theme brought to mind the following: When I was living in the Boston area some years ago, I occasionally played chamber music with William Lipscomb, a Harvard faculty member, who was awarded the Nobel prize in chemistry in 1976. Bill was quite an accomplished clarinetist, and we enjoyed playing chamber music at his Belmont house. Often our pianist was Stephen Morris, who also composed. Some time after our learning of Bill’s having been awarded the Nobel prize, Steve came for an evening of music, and presented Bill with the score of a recent composition of his. It was a chamber piece written for a sizable group. I don’t recall the instrumentation, and I never heard it performed, but Steve made sure that we looked at the score, and he had us pay particular attention to the stave labeled “Bell”. We weren’t quick enough on the uptake, and he had to point out to us that the bell part had no notes assigned, meaning that his piece was a “no bell” piece.
Frank Belvin, Berkeley, California
From: Liam Proven (lproven gmail.com)
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY: Just thought you’d like to know -- it was the wrong Newton. Thanks for a most entertaining and educational mailing list!
Liam Proven, Brno, Czech Republic
Thanks for the correction. We’ve updated the quotation and the attribution on the website now.
-Anu Garg
From: Dharam Khalsa (dharamkk2 windstream.net)
Dharam Khalsa, Espanola, New Mexico
From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
When I work Hahvahd Yahd pahkin’ cahs
-Steve Benko, New York, New York (stevebenko1 gmail.com)
Said the priest when we lined up for vidimus
-Steve Benko, New York, New York (stevebenko1 gmail.com)
Two divers discovered a shipwreck.
-Anne Thomas, Sedona, Arizona (antom earthlink.net)
The glow of romance may be pinchbeck
-Steve Benko, New York, New York (stevebenko1 gmail.com)
You bid me come, and I do;
-Laurence McGilvery, La Jolla, California (laurence mcgilvery.com)
From: Phil Graham (pgraham1946 cox.net) Might we call The Hunchback’s odd bell-ringing “quozi modal?” Military recruits ask, “Vidimus drill sergeants hold so many inspections?” They disagree on Trump’s genuineness, so Sean Hannity wants to pinchbeck. Believing Gatsby could pimp Daisy on the streets, Nick said, “Jay, hawk ‘er.” My former wife, the nurse, administers emetics. You should see my ex purge a patient.
Phil Graham, Tulsa, Oklahoma
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Words are a commodity in which there is never any slump. -Christopher
Morley, writer (1890-1957)
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