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AWADmail Issue 705A Weekly Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day and Tidbits about Words and LanguageSponsor’s Message: Hate dumb winter? This week’s Email of the Week winner Ellen Peel (see below) as well as all AWADers everywhere can buy 2 x tickets to wicked smart sunny word fun paradise for only $25. Escape now!
From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
Electronic Toys for Infants Associated with Decreased Quantity and Quality of Language
Mapped: The 7,000 Languages Across the World
Cracking the Code to Speak Cherokee
From: Dave Hatfield (ddhatfi verizon.net) On my first trip to Frankfurt am Main in 1980, I stepped into the Headquarters for the US Army V Corps in the Abrams Building, formerly known as the I.G. Farben building. Following my host to his office, I got my first look at a paternoster, which I was about to ride to the 4th floor of the building. It didn’t seem quite safe by American elevator standards, but I was assured by my host that only a few dozen soldiers were killed on it each year. I chose to assume he was joking, so I jumped in the next open car and took my first ride. Quite the experience.
Dave Hatfield, Severn, Maryland
From: Yitzhak Dar (yitzhakdar gmail.com) In 1966, as part of the renewed relations between Israel and Germany, a group of German-speaking young Israelis was invited to Germany for a seminar with young German students of the Paderborn Pädagogische Hochschule. It was, for most of our group, including for my wife and myself, the first trip abroad. The first German town we visited was Munich, and we watched open-mouthed the paternoster elevator, which was used in a tall building, trying to figure out what happens when it reaches the top. We rode it, of course, more than once. Checking Wikipedia I found that there are still many paternoster elevators in Europe, most of them in Germany, though a large number of them are for the use of the building’s employees only.
Yitzhak Dar, Haifa, Israel
From: Andrew Pressburger (andpress sympatico.ca) The photograph of the entrapment in the contraption, attached to today’s word, illustrates the dilemma I once found myself in, the attempted escape resulting in my pate being crowned with a sizeable bump and the misuse of the prayer in the form of an oath. Ironically, according to my sources, there is no relation between pate and pater, except in this instance.
Andrew Pressburger, Toronto, Canada
From: Paul Lentz (patptc.tmv gmail.com) Also used to describe a chain of lakes in a glacial valley.
Paul Lentz, Peachtree City, Georgia
From: Rick Loveland (rick_l global.co.za) Up the west coast and 160 kilometres from Cape Town there is the quaint little fishing village of Paternoster and, although it is unconfirmed, one of the old tales from the area is that it was named after the Catholic Portuguese seaman who survived a shipwreck and prayed to the Lord on reaching dry land.
Rick Loveland, Port Alfred, South Africa
From: Ellen Peel (epeel sfsu.edu) Subject: paternoster elevator A hilarious scene involving a paternoster elevator appears in David Lodge’s novel Changing Places, the tale of a faculty exchange between a professor from Euphoric State (a thinly-disguised UC-Berkeley) and a professor from Rummidge (an imaginary red brick university in the UK). The American, Morris Zapp, has incurred the wrath of Gordon Masters, the somewhat loony former chair of the Rummidge English Department, and thinks Masters has been shooting at him. Zapp flees Masters by stepping into the paternoster, and a farcical chase ensues, with the two of them stepping into and out of the elevator on various floors. At one point, as Zapp “stood pondering on the landing Masters appeared before him moving slowly downwards, standing on his head. They gazed at each other in mutual puzzlement until Masters sank from Morris’s sight. It was only much later that Morris deduced that Masters, having been carried upwards beyond the top floor of the paternoster’s circuit, and being under the impression that the compartment turned over to make its descent, had performed a handstand in the belief that he would drop harmlessly from ceiling to floor when his compartment was inverted.”
Ellen Peel, San Francisco, California
From: Steve Birch (albinvega@btopenworld.com) A paternoster is also an item of fishing tackle used to keep the hook length/s away from the main line at right-angles to stop tangles. Used them from the 60s.
Steve Birch, Malvern, UK
From: Tessa Rosier van Rooyen (tessnic iburst.co.za) When I read today’s word -- gaudeamus -- I immediately broke out in song. We were taught that drinking song that starts “Gaudeamus igitur, juvenes dum sumus” at my Camps Bay, Cape Town school in the 60s. Ah sweet memories!
Tessa Rosier van Rooyen, Cape Town, South Africa
From: John Harrier (thecraw windstream.net) So now when I hear a young person say “YOLO baby” I’ll think “Gaudeamus, (yawn), how 1823”.
John Harrier, Glenford, Ohio
From: David Micklethwait (micklethwait hotmail.com) In Oxford, a gaudy is a college feast, supposedly from “gaudeamus”, not from the adjective “gaudy”, meaning showy or ostentatious. Hence the title of one of Dorothy L. Sayers’ detective stories, Gaudy Night. In Cambridge, the summer post-graduation college celebration is a May Ball, which takes place in June.
David Micklethwait, London, UK
From: Steve Kirkpatrick (stevekirkp comcast.net) My father was an accountant and explained debenture to me, when I was a teenager. Later, when Janis Ian used debenture in her song At Seventeen, it occurred to me that one of her parents might be an accountant. Who else would use such a word in a song? Despite more accounting lyrics in the same verse, “when payment due exceeds accounts received”, I think neither parent of hers was an accountant.
Steve Kirkpatrick, DDS, Olympia, Washington
From: Karen L. Lew (karen karenllew.com) Ever since I moved out of a Hindu ashram, where I learned Sanskrit, I have been giving my cats Sanskrit names. One cat (still with me) is a very large Ragdoll, whom I named Maha, meaning big or great, which she is. Thus I was pleased to see her being recognized in your word of the day: Magnificat. Particularly fitting right after Christmas when many of my choral singing friends had also sung her praises.
Karen L. Lew, Lynnwood, Washington
From: Julie Baker (bakerjulie5 gmail.com) Your emails are a bright spot in my morning. Among all the negative news of politics and terrorism that fill my inbox, I can relax a bit and learn something new from the Word of the Day. The Thought of the Day is actually my favorite part. Great quotations!
Julie Baker, Willoughby, Ohio
From: Dharam Khalsa (dharamkk2 windstream.net)
Dharam Khalsa, Espanola, New Mexico
From: Anu Garg (words at wordsmith.org)
At the summit of tall roller coasters
-Steve Benko, New York, New York (stevebenko1 gmail.com)
The prisoner put up a fuss,
-Joan Perrin, Port Jefferson Station, New York (perrinjoan aol.com)
Screamed the zombies,”Forget gaudeamus!
-Anne Thomas, Sedona, Arizona (antom earthlink.net)
A poor chap had to sign a debenture.
-Zelda Dvoretzky, Haifa, Israel (zeldahaifa gmail.com)
For your car’s registration certificate
-Steve Benko, New York, New York (stevebenko1 gmail.com)
From: Phil Graham (pgraham1946 cox.net) Hoping no one noticed, her finger repeatedly paternoster’l a visit. Oklahoma mittimus of Clayton Lockett’s execution. “Her gold lamé dress is so gaudeamus say something catty!” She played very poorly and the coach had debenture. “I carry a .44 magnificat attacked, I’d use it.”
Phil Graham, Tulsa, Oklahoma
A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:
Bare lists of words are found suggestive to an imaginative and excited mind.
-Ralph Waldo Emerson, writer and philosopher (1803-1882)
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