contrawise
@contrazz
Member
Joined: Jan 16, 2008
Topics: 7 / Replies: 10
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RE: The Mouth Feel of Words

A small fraction of the US population reports feeling "grossed out" by the word "moist." It seems to be a mouth-feel reaction.

14 years ago
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RE: A Roberta of Flax (full episode)

Ron Draney said: Ahem. Change of subject to another part of the episode. I can understand well why a musician would rankle at someone using "c...

14 years ago
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RE: A Roberta of Flax (full episode)

Apropos of pannas, scrapple, and other such peasant food designed to use everything in the pig including the oink ... I lived in Cincinnati for a ...

14 years ago
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RE: The Language of Less Than Three (full episode)

Ron Draney said: Of course, anyone who's ever programmed on a mainframe computer is familiar with IBM's unintentionally humorous "This page intent...

15 years ago
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RE: The Language of Less Than Three (full episode)

That guy who is the sweetie of the married lady? What to call him? One possibility is "fancy man," though it has other connotations. I've heard...

15 years ago
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Replies: 3
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17 years ago
Replies: 10
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RE: Kumbaya

And then we have words like “ausgezeichnet”. No one would be fooled into believing this word was English if they saw it. It doesn't look...

17 years ago
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RE: Kumbaya

Wordsmith said: The construction just seems too African not to mean something in some language (other than Gullah). I got involved in a very...

17 years ago
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Replies: 3
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RE: Kumbaya: Language Used As Weaponry

George Lakoff, yes. Wendell Berry's essays in "Standing by Words" The wonderful Canadian Magazines "Adbusters" and "This Magazine". The NCTE "D...

17 years ago
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RE: Kumbaya

Yeah - me too. I've worked on some Wikipedia pages, and know how off-base they can be at times. This one has some good attributions. As you sai...

17 years ago
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