Showing posts with label wondrous words. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wondrous words. Show all posts

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Wondrous Words 28/5/14


Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

It's been a while since I've participated in Wondrous Words Wednesday. Not that I haven't been finding new words, just been a bit lazy with getting posts together. I should have kept it up because when I came across demesne I knew I'd seen it before, and suspected that I'd even put it in a WWW post, and I hadMy recent reading of The Call of the Wild offered up many great new, first time, words.

1. Brumal (adjective)

Old longings nomadic leap
Chafing at custom's chain;
Again from its brumal sleep
Wakens the ferine strain.

Of, relating to, or occurring in winter.

2. Ferine (adjective)

Untamed, feral.

3. Tidewater (noun)

Buck did not read the newspapers, or he would have known that trouble was brewing not alone for himself, but for every tidewater dog, strong of muscle with warm, long hair, from Puget Sound to San Diego.

i) Water that inundates land at flood tide.
ii) Water affected by the tides, especially tidal streams.
iii) Low coastal land drained by tidal streams.

4. Chaffering (verb)

Buck heard them chaffering, saw the money pass between the man and the Government agent, and knew that the Scotch half-breed and the mail-train drivers were passing out of his life on the heels of Perrault and François and the others who had gone before.

i) To bargain or haggle.
ii) Chiefly British. To bandy words; to engage in small talk.

5. Forwent (verb)

He had learned well the law of club and fang, and he never forwent an advantage or drew back from a foe he had started on the way to Death.

Past tense of forgo.

6. Snub (verb)

At a particularly bad spot where a ledge of barely submerged rocks jutted out into the river, Hans cast off the rope, and, while Thornton poled the boat out into the stream, ran down the bank with the end in his hand to snub the boat when it had cleared the ledge.

i) To ignore of behave coldly toward; slight
ii) To dismiss, turn down, or frustrate the expectations of
iii) Nautical
    a) To check the movement of (a rope or cable running out) by turning it quickly about a post or cleat.
    b) To secure (a vessel, for example) in this manner
iv) To stub out (a cigarette, for example)

7. Palmated (adjective)

Back and forth the bull tossed his great palmated antlers, branching to fourteen points and embracing seven feet within the tips.

i) Having a shape similar to that of a hand with the fingers extended: palmate antlers; palmate coral.
ii) Botany. Having three or more veins, leaflets, or lobes radiating from one point; digitate: a palmate leaf.
iii) Zoology. Having webbed toes, as the feet of many water birds.


Picture source

8. Ambuscade (noun)

There is a patience of the wild- dogged, tireless, persistent as life itself- that holds motionless for endless hours the spider in its web, the snake in its coils, the panther in its ambuscade; this patience belongs peculiarly to life when it hunts its living food; and it belonged to Buck as he clung to the flank of the herd, retarding its march, irritating the young bulls, worrying the cows with their half-grown calves, and driving the wounded bull mad with helpless rage.

An ambush.

All definitions from thefreedictionary.com

Wednesday, 16 October 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 16/10/13




Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.



My Wondrous Word today comes from a press release. The big book news around here today is that New Zealander Eleanor Catton won the Man Booker Prize for The Luminaries. 


Eleanor is the youngest ever winner of the Booker, and has written the thickest book ever to win. Both the Canadians and Kiwis are claiming the win. I've just noticed that the prize was announced at the Guildhall in London. I went to a free concert there in July! It's rather silly, but makes me feel closer to the action. 

Orrery. Noun. 

It is, he said, “a book you sometimes feel lost in, fearing it to be 'a big baggy monster', but it turns out to be as tightly structured as an orrery”.

A mechanical model of the solar system. After Charles Boyle, Fourth Earl of Orrery (1676-1731), for whom one was made. The free dictionary. 

Picture source
I've seen things like that before, but never knew their name. I think orrery is a perfect word for the Chair of the Man Booker Judging Panel to use. 

Just for the record I think it's a mistake to change the rules for Booker contention to include American authors from next year. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. 

Wednesday, 25 September 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 25/9/13




Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

Todays words are the second selection to come from my recent reading of the Australian classic Picnic at Hanging Rock. The first post is here.


1. Sedulously (Adjective)

In actual fact, the very sight of the dazzling creature whose star-black eyes his own had sedulously avoided, had almost deprived him of the power of speech.

Persevering and constant in effort or application; assiduous.

2. Solar topee (Noun)

The bell brought a parlourmaid from a dark tiled passage where a sorrowful moose's head presided above a miscellany of hats, caps, coats, tennis racquets, umbrellas, fly veils, solar topees and walking sticks.

A lightweight hat worn in tropical countries for protection from the sun. Pith helmet.

Picture source

3. Scapegrace (Noun)

'We won't wait for that scapegrace of the fish will be ruined.'

Scoundrel. Rascal. An idle mischievous person.

4. Leghorn hat (Noun)

A few drops of rain plopped on the Leghorn hat.


i) The dried and bleached straw of an Italian variety of wheat.
ii) A plaited fabric made from this straw.
iii) A hat made from this fabric.

A stiff hat made of straw with a flat crown.

Picture source

5. Hogged (Verb)

Thus Albert, who always knew to the day precisely when Toby's mane was last hogged and when the mare was shod in Woodend, carefully placing the Leopold cheque in a jam tin under his bed, had no further need to refer to the letter, and after burning it over a stump of candle sat down to think things over.

i) Informal. To take more than one's share of.
ii) To cause (the back) to arch like that of a hog.
iii) To cut (a horse's mane) short and bristly.
iv) To shred (waste wood, for example) by machine.
v) Nautical. To arch upward in the middle. Used of a ship's keel.

Picture source

Wednesday, 18 September 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 18/9/13



Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

Todays words come from my recent reading of the Australian classic Picnic at Hanging Rock.

1. Caryatids (Noun)

Two in the long drawing-room of white marble, supported by pairs of caryatids as firm of bust as Madam herself; others of carved and tortured wood embellished with a thousand winking tiddling mirrors.

A sculpted female figure serving as an architectural support taking the place of a column or a pillar supporting an entablature on her head. Wiki.

Picture source


2. Pelisse (Noun)

A gaunt female figure in a puce- coloured pelisse was emerging from the outdoor 'dunnie', an earth-closet reached by a secluded path edged with begonias.

i) Any of various long outer garments, esp. a coat or cloak made of or lined or trimmed with fur.
ii) A woman's long cloak with slits for the arms. The free dictionary.

3. Crocodile (Noun)

For the first mile or two the scenery was familiar through the daily perambulation of the College crocodile.

Obviously, I know what a crocodile is but I'd never seen this usage before.

I ignored the many descriptors of large reptiles, and instead honed in on this one.

Brit informal. A line of people, esp schoolchildren, walking two by two.



4. Sevres clock (Noun)

Love for instance, when only a few minutes ago the thought of Louis' hand expertly turning the key of the little Sevres clock had made her feel almost ready to faint.

I was very excited to see this term crop up. On my recent trip to Paris we stayed on Rue de Sevres- a mganificent location in the 6th, so I knew that Sevres is a suburb of Paris, famous for porcelain.

Picture source


5. Truckle bed (Noun)

'I don't know, Mum, I'll ask Cook,' said Minnie, who had last seen her adored Tom half an hour ago, stretched out in his underpants on the truckle bed in her attic room.

A low bed on casters, usually pushed under another bed when not in use. Trundle bed. The free dictionary.

6. Flamdoodle

Or was there really something in all this flamdoodle about looking for the lost sheilas that made sense?

Nonsense. Dictionary.com.

I love flamdoodle. I may have to use it every day from now on.

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 11/9/13


Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

This weeks words are from my recent reading of Lost Cat

1. Rumspringa (Noun)

Maybe Tibby had gine to Antarctica, or on rumspringa, or a kitty walkabout. 

A period of adolescence for some members of the Amish community during which a youth temporarily leaves the community to experience life in the outside world. Wiki


2. Redacted (Verb)

The names have been redacted because everyone is innocent until proven guilty. 


i) Edit (text) for publication. 
ii) Censor or obscure (part of a text) for legal or security purposes. Google. 



Picture source

Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 4/9/13


Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

Todays words come from my recent reading of The Secret of Hanging Rock. It's only a slim little volume, but you can find new words anywhere.

1. Raddled (Adjective)

Used twice just a few pages apart, both times to describe the same character.

It was a woman with a gaunt, raddled face trimmed with bushy black eyebrows- a clown-like figure dressed in a torn calico camisole and long calico drawers frilled below the knees of two stick-like legs, feebly kicking out in black lace-up boots.

The raddled face was radiant. 

i) Worn-out and broken-down
ii) (esp of a person) unkempt or run-down in appearance. The free dictionary.

2. Rebus (Noun)

A rebus-model accounts for the brain full of intelligence and the heart full of understanding that the McCraw claims to perceive; (the rest of this sentence which I don't pretend to understand gives major spoilers for The Secret of Hanging Rock so I will omit it here).

A representation of words in the form of pictures or symbols, often presented as a puzzle. The free dictionary. 

Picture source, includes the solution

Wednesday, 28 August 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 28/8/13


Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

Today I don't have any new words from my reading to share for Wondrous Words Wednesday, but heard this wonderful discussion on the radio and thought I would share it with other word fans. I heard snippets of this on Radio National twice this week, although it was first broadcast in May. I had to search it out and listen to the whole thing.

Why Read Dictionaries was a session at the Sydney Writers Festival earlier this year and happily recorded for us to all enjoy. A delightful conversation between crossword compiler David Astle and author Mark Forsythe. Just click on the Download Audio button to share the joy.

The introduction alone introduces many wonderful words, possibly may favourite being groak. It turns out that I'd seen groaking in action for many years, but never known that there was a word for it.

Groak. Verb. Look or stare at longingly. Free dictionary.
To watch someone eating in the hope they will offer food. Urban dictionary.

Multispecies groaking in 2001

It's a beautiful discussion, and a very enjoyable way to spend half an hour. Very broad ranging from Capucin monks to Spam and Yakuza (although they suggest the etymology slightly incorrectly). Perhaps we should all read the dictionary a bit more often, maybe it's more fun than our school day memories would suggest?

Mark Forsyths' captivating blog The Inky Fool is also pleasantly diverting.

Wednesday, 7 August 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 7/8/13




Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading.

Some fantastic wondrous words from my recent reading of the Australian classic, The Magic Pudding.

1. Sockdolager

'If punching parrots on the beak wasn't too painful for pleasure, I'd land you a sockdolager on the muzzle that'd lay you out till Christmas.'

i) A conclusive blow or remark.
ii) Something outstanding






2. Poltroon

'You're a poltroon,' shouted Bill.

A wretched coward.
An abject or contemptible coward.




Definitions from the free dictionary.

Wednesday, 15 May 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 15/5/13






Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we've encountered in our weekly reading. 

Today's words are from my recent reading of Memoirs of a Suburban Girl. 

1. Tappets (Noun)

On your way to Surfers, the yellow Ford's tappets start tap, tap, tapping and the old girl starts sounding very sick and tired, so SB stops at a wrecking yard in a ten-house town to fish through a pile of car parts.

A tappet is a projection which imparts a linear motion to some other component within a mechanism. Wiki

A lever or projecting arm that moves or is moved by contact with another part, usually to transmit motion, as between a driving mechanism and a valve. The free dictionary. 


Picture source

I think that this would now constitute the maximum amount of time that I've ever spent wondering about an engine part.

2. Stobie pole (Noun)

And then when the older sister steered the old Holden around a sharp bend, it started to shimmy on the loose rocky balls, and she was finding it really hard to keep control, to the left, to the right, to the left, and she decided to brake heavily because she wanted to stop the car quickly but, oh, no, she was too young to know not to slam the brakes on a dirt road, and next you were all in a spin, and the car did a full circle, slid off the road into clumps of spiky grass, narrowly missed a Stobie pole, crashed through a wire fence, flipped on its side, and then over again until it landed upside down and came to a stop.

A Stobie pole is a power line pole made of two steel joists held apart by a slab of concrete in the middle. It was invented by Adelaide Electricity Supply Company design engineer James Cyril Stobie. Wiki


Picture source


I've been to Adelaide a few times but must admit to not noticing that their power poles were any different to ours. 

Wednesday, 10 April 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 10/4/13





Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we’ve encountered in our weekly reading.  

Today's words are the second selection of Wondrous Words from my recent reading of Howards End is on the Landing. The first are here


1. Mawkish (Adjective)

Graham Greene is one of the moderns who best conveys a great many aspects of love, whereas D.H. Lawrence is mawkish. 

i) Excessively and objectively sentimental.
ii) Sickening or insipid in taste. 

2. Recondite (Adjective)

Some of the alphabetical entries are predictable- Beginnings, Beauty, Humour, Food and Drink- but others are more unusual and give rise to more recondite and provocative entries. 

i) Not easily understood; abstruse. 
ii) Concerned with or treating something abstruse or obscure. 
iii) Concealed; hidden. 

3. Factotum (Noun)

I got a two-pounds-a-week job at the Belgrade as a general factotum, which was how I got to know Arnold and his wife Dusty, and how, when I went to King's, I spent happy evenings babysitting their small children. 

An employee or assistant who serves in a wide range of capacities. 

Turns out it's a book and a movie!

4. Tendentious (Adjective)

Some of it is sentimental, some of it tendentious. 

Marked by a strong implicit point of view; partisan. 

5. Bruited (Verb)

The satisfaction and illumination that come from reading more or less nothing but Anita Brookner for three weeks are immense, and have alerted me all over again to how disgraceful it is that so many of her books are no longer in print, how much better she is than talents bruited more loudly abroad, how she ranks among the very best novelists of the late twentieth century. 

To spread news of; repeat. 

I was really interested in bruited, as I'm very familiar with bruit- a medical term for the sound of turbulent blood flow in an artery, it was clear that meaning didn't work here. 

All definitions today from thefreedictionary.com

Wednesday, 27 March 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 27/3/13




Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we’ve encountered in our weekly reading.  

Today's words come from my recent reading of Howards End is on the Landing. A fabulous book, with a wonderful rich vocabulary- some of which I already knew- gloaming, liturgy and peripatetic, but many more that were new to me. So much so that they fill two Wondrous Words posts.

1. Trenchant (Adjective)

2. Mordant (Adjective)

What makes it of greater importance is her trenchant eye, her detached and sometimes mordant vision of these well-meaning, fumbling people at odds with so much of life. 

1. Trenchant

i) Forceful, effective and vigorous
ii) Caustic; cutting
iii) Distinct; clear-cut

2. Mordant

i) Biting sarcastic
ii) Incisive and trenchant
iii) Bitingly painful
iv) Serving to fix colors in dyeing. 


3. Dingle (Noun)

The sun went down in glory behind the dingle but still the work of love went on through the twilight and into the dusk until the moon rose full and splendid. 

A small wooded valley; a dell. 

A New Zealand dingle from our recent trip
Pupu Springs


4. Tyro (Noun)

I have no idea in whose house the smart drinks party was held or out of whose kindness I was invited as a tyro novelist cum undergraduate. 

A novice or beginner. 

To prove my lack of learning, I included this word in a WWW post less than two years ago. Perhaps I'll remember it now?

5. Ratiocinative (Adjective)

The very male, ratiocinative, intellectual atmosphere of Bloomsbury, and especially of the Apostles, is not attractive. 

Of, relating to, marked by, or skilled in methodical and logical reasoning. 

6. Bagatelle (Noun)

Yesterday I went to a drawer I open only a couple of times a year because it contains nothing but a pile of hooks for suspending Christmas tree baubles, the spare bagatelle balls, and a box of matches, which was what I came in search of.

i) An unimportant or insignificant thing; a trifle. 
ii) A short, light piece of verse or music.
iii) A game played on an oblong table with a cue and balls. 

Picture source
All definitions today from thefreedictionary.com

Wednesday, 20 March 2013

Wondrous Words Wednesday 20/3/13




Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we’ve encountered in our weekly reading.  

Reading the weekend supplements is often a great source of new words for me too. Today's word comes from a feature about the bicentenary of Pride and Prejudice

Chapbook (Noun)

I'm tempted, for instance, to make a chapbook out of the appearances of Mr Collins, the young man who is to inherit the Bennet estate after the death of Elizabeth's father.

A small book or pamphlet containing poems, ballads, stories, or religious tracts. (So called because it was originally sold by chapmen- peddlers). The Free Dictionary.

Picture source

Wednesday, 13 March 2013

Wondrous Words 13/3/13





Wondrous Words Wednesday is a fabulous weekly meme hosted by Bermuda Onion, where we share new (to us) words that we’ve encountered in our weekly reading.  

Whilst I didn't love The Prisoner of Zenda when I read it recently, I did appreciate the vocabulary. Lots of wonderful words like physiognomy, capacious and roisterers (one of my previous Wondrous Words). There were also some new words for me of course. 

1. Morganatic (Adjective)

It was quite possible that she, as George put it, was flying as high as a personage who was everything he could be, short of enjoying strictly royal rank: for the duke was the son of the late King of Ruritania by a second and morganatic marriage, and half-brother to the new king. 

Of or being a legal marriage between a person of royal or noble birth and a partner of lower rank, in which it is agreed that no titles or estates of the royal or noble partner are to be shared by the partner of inferior rank nor by any of the offspring of the marriage. 


2. Archiepiscopal (Adjective)

I saw nothing of the brilliant throng that filled it, I hardly distinguished the stately figure of the Cardinal as he rose from the archiepiscopal throne to greet me. 

Of or associated with an archbishop. 
3. Pikestaff (Noun)

It's as plain as a pikestaff.


i) The shaft of a pike.
ii) A waking stick tipped with a metal spike. 



4. Demesne

It is rising ground, and in the centre of the demesne, on top of the hill, stands a fine modern chateau, the property of a distant kinsman of Fritz's, the Count Stanislas von Tarlenheim. 

i) Law. Possession and use of one's own land.
i) Manorial land retained for the private use of a feudal lord. 
iii) The grounds belonging to a mansion or country house.
iv) An extensive piece of landed property; an estate.
v) A district; a territory.
vi) A realm; a domain

Picture source
I don't think I could describe my backyard, whilst large by suburban standards, as a demesne. 


5. Embrasure (Noun)

But Johann, swept with the rest to the rescue of the duke, did not open it; nay, he took a part against Rupert, putting himself forward more bravely than any in his anxiety to avert suspicion; and he had received a wound, in the embrasure of the window. 

i) An opening in a thick wall for a door or window, especially one with sides angled so that the opening is larger on the inside of the wall than on the outside. 
ii) A flared opening for a gun in a wall or parapet. 


Picture source
Sadly my house doesn't have any embrasures, so I don't know how well I'll remember the term. 

All definitions from thefreedictionary.com