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I love quirky words, don't you?
Mimi Speike
Posted: Friday, September 5, 2014 2:49 PM
Joined: 11/17/2011
Posts: 1016


I don't want to hear any writer say, nah, not so much. Plain talk suits me swell. There's no ball game can't use a curveball once in a while.

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I have thirty years of notes on wonderfully weird words and phrases. Let's put up our favorites. I'll start:

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Foofaraw: 1) a fuss or disturbance about very little    2) an excessive amount of ornamentation

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I got this off Thomas Pynchon just the other day. He spells it foofooaw; the dictionary says foofaraw. Either way, great fun.

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I'll review my files and be back with more. 


Atthys Gage
Posted: Friday, September 19, 2014 10:13 PM
Joined: 6/7/2011
Posts: 467


Kerfuffle.  Similar to a brouhaha, but not exactly a hugger-mugger.  Of Scottish origin, essentially meaning disorder, confusion, tangle.  

 

Another favorite is larrup.  No one is quite sure where larrup, comes from, perhaps from the Dutch word larpen meaning to thresh with flails (those are fine words as well.)  Sportswriters at a loss for alliterative nicknames for Lou Gehrig sometimes called him Larrupin' Lou, an awful nickname, really.  So many excellent synonyms for larrup:  clout, clobber, biff, cudgel, cold cock, soak, wallop, thump, belt.  

 

Speaking of soak and baseball, soak used to be a common enough word for getting a runner out by hitting them with the ball, Not tagging him with the ball, mind you, but beaning them on the base paths. Once, that was a legitimate means of putting a runner out. Those were different times, Jim. Soak. "Evers soaked Lajoie, leading to a kerfuffle of considerable protraction."


Mimi Speike
Posted: Saturday, September 20, 2014 12:46 AM
Joined: 11/17/2011
Posts: 1016


Good old Atthys! 

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I'm currently distracted by a plethora of issues, but I'll up your ante over the weekend.

 


Janet Umenta, Book Country Assistant
Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 2:16 PM
Joined: 4/7/2014
Posts: 141


I've always liked the word garrulous. It sounds funny! (and yes, I did discover this word while SAT studying )
Russell Giles
Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 2:48 PM
Joined: 3/4/2014
Posts: 19


Excellent words, all!

 

 I always like 'fisticuffs':  a wonderfully descriptive old-timey term for a fistfight.

 

'Jenkins, you garrulous old goat; this foofaraw has gone too far!  I shall be forced to larrup you soundly at the fisticuffs!'


Carl E. Reed
Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 2:55 PM
Joined: 4/27/2011
Posts: 608


oneiric: of or related to dreams and dreaming.

 

sample usage: H. P. Lovecraft's novella of startling imagery and incident, The Dream-Quest of Unknown Kadath, forms part of his celebrated "Dream Cycle"--as oneiric and surreal a weirdling road trip as has ever been chronicled by a "Gentleman Sage of Providence, Rhode Island". 

   

--edited by Carl E. Reed on 9/29/2014, 12:23 AM--


Lucy Silag - Book Country Community Manager
Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 2:56 PM
Joined: 6/7/2013
Posts: 1356


I like "kerfuffle." I use it to describe WAY too many situations in my life, LOL.
Robert G. Moons
Posted: Tuesday, September 23, 2014 6:03 PM
Joined: 3/3/2014
Posts: 18


jibber jabber
Mimi Speike
Posted: Wednesday, September 24, 2014 7:05 PM
Joined: 11/17/2011
Posts: 1016


Jibber jabber. I know that. My mother used to say it. I'd forgotten all about it.

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I'll have to google it, see how long in use. I covet that one for Sly. (Sixteenth century). A piece of nonsense like that, he could have made it up. Thanks, Robert.

 


K. Murphy Wilbanks
Posted: Sunday, September 28, 2014 4:47 PM
Joined: 12/12/2013
Posts: 15


I, too, used to collect interesting words, Mimi.   I remember reading an interview of Sting probably about thirty years ago now, when I was in middle school, and he talked about "gelignite,"  I looked it up in an unabridged dictionary and found out it's a gel explosive (I cannot remember the context in which he mentioned it in the interview).  At any rate, in looking up the word, I encountered gelid in one of the entries just prior to it, which means "icy."

 

One of my favorite onomatopoeic words is susurrus, which is a whispering or sibilant sort of rustling or pattering sound.


 

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