Words You Love

Words You Love

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Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
01 Apr 13

Words You Love

* Frissons: "A moment of intense excitement; a shudder."

* Ineffable: "Incapable of being expressed in words."

* Nonce: "For the nonce, for the occasion, for the time being."

(In Memory of My Dear Mother Who Loved Language, the Magic of Books and Playing
Scrabble for Keeps Until She Departed this Life in December, 2011, At the Age of 93)

Few of Yours?

PDI

Joined
30 Sep 12
Moves
731
01 Apr 13
1 edit

I just like the sounds of these--

crocus cloth
spelunker
inter-regnum
confiscatory

Joined
29 Dec 08
Moves
6788
02 Apr 13

Originally posted by Paul Dirac II
I just like the sounds of these--

crocus cloth
spelunker
inter-regnum
confiscatory
All good.

A English professor of mine said that the most beautiful sounding word in the English language is "cellardoor". It would probably be better in print with a different spelling, like "sellahdahh". And it might be best with a slightly British or New England accent.

"A story told by syndicated columnists Frank Colby in 1949[6] and L. M. Boyd in 1979 holds that "cellar door" was Edgar Allan Poe's favorite phrase, and that the refrain Nevermore in "The Raven" was chosen as "the closest word to 'cellar door' he could think of.""

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellar_door

I used to play a sort of game with my daughter when she could just barely talk, as we drove somewhere such as to market. I would say, slowly, words like "abstemious" or "circumlocution" and she would repeat them back, identically. It was fun. Any multisyllabic word would do. I like to think it as having been good for her linguistic development.

Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
02 Apr 13
1 edit

Festina Lente: "Classical adage and oxymoron meaning 'make haste slowly' or 'more haste, less speed'. It has been
used as the motto of many people including the emperors Augustus and Titus, the Medicis and the Onslows." (wicki)

j

Dublin Ireland

Joined
31 Oct 12
Moves
14235
02 Apr 13

Originally posted by JS357
All good.

A English professor of mine said that the most beautiful sounding word in the English language is "cellardoor". It would probably be better in print with a different spelling, like "sellahdahh". And it might be best with a slightly British or New England accent.

"A story told by syndicated columnists Frank Colby in 1949[6] and L. M. Boyd in 19 ...[text shortened]... ld do. I like to think it as having been good for her linguistic development.
There's a place on the west coast of England
with a name that sounds like something an
Irish farmer would never do.


It's called Sellafield.

Hristos voskrese

feckin' 'ell

Joined
23 May 05
Moves
19603
02 Apr 13

Originally posted by Grampy Bobby
[b]Words You Love

* Frissons: "A moment of intense excitement; a shudder."

* Ineffable: "Incapable of being expressed in words."

* Nonce: "For the nonce, for the occasion, for the time being."

(In Memory of My Dear Mother Who Loved Language, the Magic of Books and Playing
Scrabble for Keeps Until She Departed this Life in December, 2011, At the Age of 93)

Few of Yours?[/b]
* Nonce: "For the nonce, for the occasion, for the time being or worked for the BBC.

Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
03 Apr 13

* No = Freedom.

l

Joined
10 May 07
Moves
10128
04 Apr 13

precious

progress

0,1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21,

Planet Rain

Joined
04 Mar 04
Moves
2702
06 Apr 13

titmouse
pussy willow
asinine
woodpecker
country
balderdash
beaver

Boston Lad

USA

Joined
14 Jul 07
Moves
43012
06 Apr 13
1 edit

* perogies

* poufies

* please

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
177782
06 Apr 13

pontificate
pompous

l

Joined
10 May 07
Moves
10128
06 Apr 13

potential
rational
dwell

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
177782
06 Apr 13

Originally posted by lolof
potential
rational
dwell
exorcism
ramshackle

l

Joined
10 May 07
Moves
10128
06 Apr 13

reconcile
recognition
compassion

Joined
14 Mar 04
Moves
177782
06 Apr 13

flatulation