How about some words we love?

Postby Anna Holland » 10:28 pm 02/20/2008

Jim Thomsen wrote:hullabaloo


I was sooo proud when I got that in a headline.
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Postby Jim Thomsen » 11:09 pm 02/20/2008

For me, that would be the basis of a marriage proposal.
Jim Thomsen
 

Postby editer » 12:24 am 02/21/2008

kerfuffle

ecdysiast

callipygian

agog

zymurgy

zyzzyva

possum haw
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Postby Jim Thomsen » 12:48 am 02/21/2008

I'm guessing you're an absolute bastard at Scrabble.
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Postby editer » 1:04 am 02/22/2008

Hah! I wish. I haven't played in years.

I saw that documentary about the tournament Scrabble players a year or so ago. Those people are hardcore.

Bet we could even the odds by requiring definitions of each word played. Opponents could challenge the word *or* the definition.
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Postby editer » 1:49 am 02/22/2008

opprobrium

ne'er-do-well

meerkat

miscreant

mascarpone
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Postby HCFeldman » 5:27 pm 02/22/2008

Friday
Beer

On an only slightly more serious note, a second for mellifluous. I also love glissando. And I seem to use egregious a lot more than is probably warranted.

But I think some of my fiercest love is reserved for "street" English words that rarely, if ever, can be used in print: signifying, respresent, and, above all others, the irreplaceable trifling. Lord, is there any word in standard English so rich with scorn, so succinct in its dismissal of the subject described, as that one?
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Postby Jim Thomsen » 5:33 pm 02/22/2008

weaksauce
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Postby HCFeldman » 10:52 pm 02/28/2008

Belatedly: Weaksauce! Har!
HCFeldman
 

Postby bthrock » 10:42 pm 02/29/2008

susurrus
foofaraw
audacious
auspicious
festoon
vexing
oyster
besmirch
vespertilian
rhabdomancy
fork
psychedelia
mod
defenestrate
gazebo
starlet
arabesque\
anvil

Foreign language chapter:
péronnelle, which my Cassell's defined as "a pert hussy; a saucy baggage."

Least favorite:
dipsomania, which knocked me out of the finals of the 1975 National Spelling Bee (18th place)
Brian Throckmorton
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Lexington (Ky.) Herald-Leader
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Postby csmount » 12:02 am 03/01/2008

OK, I'm less than 12 hours from my flight back to Midwest reality after a nice, long vacation in Florida, reading the most recent posts here.

The cursor is sitting way off to the right in the middle of Brian's list, when a little box pops up: "Look in the iTunes Music Store?"

Just as I was thinking, damn, no dictionaries in this place ...
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Postby Gerri Berendzen » 12:09 am 03/01/2008

Late to tell you this Candy, but it's still winter here.

Now there's a word I hate, for reasons completely unrelated to copy editing or the language.
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Postby Powderhorn » 12:34 am 03/01/2008

I managed to get "defenestrate" into the student directory in college. I was quite pleased.
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Postby kschwing » 1:01 pm 03/01/2008

fisticuffs!
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Postby Jim Thomsen » 1:42 pm 03/01/2008

coiffure
Jim Thomsen
 

Postby daniel » 10:42 am 03/05/2008

some favorites:

languid
effulgence ("languid in the effulgence of the moon ...")
propinquity
neurasthenia
oh, and of course, British English:
gob-smacked
sod off
rotter
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Postby editer » 9:18 pm 03/05/2008

whomperjawed

crepuscular

("Dammit, Harris! I don't ever want to see you use the word 'crepuscular' in a memo again!")
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Postby LisaMc » 3:59 pm 03/06/2008

"Crepuscular" always makes me think of some awful disease.
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Postby ImperviousJackson » 3:20 pm 03/09/2008

Seems a fitting thread for my first post.

impervious

also:

sarcophagus
crescendo
chasm
nefarious
propensity
savvy
trepidation
stigma
cacophony
recant
gregarious
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Postby jljzen » 7:28 am 03/10/2008

ubiquitous
jljzen
 

Postby Stu Kelly » 10:19 pm 03/19/2008

I've got to second scurrilous. (I've described copy editors as such.)
Stu Kelly
 

Postby Stu Kelly » 10:48 pm 03/19/2008

...with tongue in cheek, of course.
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