What's in a pet's name? Martha and Grant swap stories about how they came up with names for their dogs. Also this week: Have you ever been called a stump-jumper? How about a snicklefritz? And what's the last word in the dictionary? Depending on which dictionary you consult, it might be zythum, zyzzyva, zyxomma, or zyxt.
This episode first aired February 27, 2010. Listen here:
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Sometimes the process of naming a pet takes a while. The hosts talk about how their dogs' names evolved.
A native Japanese speaker is mystified by the expression happy as a clam. In Japanese, she says, if you had a good night's sleep you might say you slept like a clam or slept like mud. So why do English speakers think clams are content?
What's the very last word in the dictionary? Depending on which dictionary you're using, you may see zythum, zyzzyva, zyxomma, or zyxt.
This week's word puzzle from Quiz Guy Greg Pliska involves taking a word, adding an "i" to the beginning, as if creating an Apple product, to get an entirely new word. For instance: "This is how Steve Jobs begins a card game."
A caller from Princeton, Texas, remembers that after a satisfying meal, her late father used to push back from the table and say, "I am sufficiently suffonsified. Anything more would be purely obnoxious to my taste. No thank you." What heck did he mean by that? Discoveries about the expression and all its variants can be found in the article "Among the Old Words" by now-deceased Dictionary of American Regional English editor Frederic G. Cassidy, published in American Speech, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Winter, 1980), pp. 295-297.
A Vermonter says he's sometimes called a stump-jumper. Should he be flattered or insulted?
Martha shares a couple of Tom Swifties, those funny sentences that make great punny use of adverbs, like "'My bicycle wheel is damaged,' Tom said outspokenly."
Why do we say that someone who's happy is in hog heaven?
Martha tells the story behind the term Tom Swifty. Grant shares some more funny examples from the A Way with Words discussion forum.
Gradoo is a word for something undesirable, the kind of thing you'd rather scrape off your shoe. A man who grew up in Louisiana wonders about the term, which he heard from both English and Cajun French speakers.
Someone who says, "I'll be there directly," may not necessarily get there right away. How did the meaning of "directly" change in some parts of the country to mean "by and by"?
"You little snickelfritz!" An Indiana man says his mother used to call him that when she meant "You little rascal!" Although the term's meaning has changed over time, its original meaning was a bit naughty.
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We found "zyzzogeton" a genus of large South American leaf hoppers in my wife's parents unabridged dictionary published in 1940.
Grant Barrett said:
Sometimes the process of naming a pet takes a while. The hosts talk about how their dogs' names evolved.
Inspired by Dorothy Parker naming her parrot Onan (because he spills his seed on the ground), I'd like to get a cat and name it "Nature".
[beat]
Because it abhors the vacuum.
Ron, thanks to that parrot quote, I'm afraid I just spilled coffee all over my screen. Nice cat name, too!
gradoo - in the figurative sense as well. In a park in Atlanta, two men were walking in front of me deep in converesation. Suddenly one pushed the other to the side. His friend looked startled until the first pointed to the dog droppings he had almost stepped in: "Campaign promises!"
(Someone once said politicians are like diapers: they should be changed often... and for the same reason.)