step up your vocabulary game strut
rootlesscosmo
12,848 Posts
just learned a new one. rep some academic vocab game.crapulous KRAP-yuh-lus, adjective: 1. Suffering the effects of, or derived from, or suggestive of gross intemperance, especially in drinking; as, a crapulous stomach. 2. Marked by gross intemperance, especially in drinking; as, a crapulous old [1]reprobate. These were the dregs of their celebratory party: the half-filled glasses, the cold beans and herring, the shouts and smells of the crapulous strangers hemming them in on every side, the dead rinsed-out April night and the rain drooling down the windows. -- T. Coraghessan Boyle, [2]Riven Rock
Comments
portmanteau:[/b] A new word formed by combining two other words. "Smog" is a portmanteau of "smoke" and "fog," for example.
1 : to condemn strongly as unworthy, unacceptable, or evil
2 : to foreordain[/b] to damnation
foreordain
1 : to dispose or appoint in advance
They should have just made that word "foredain", it would have been much cooler.
TC Boyle is on that kryptonite...
Main Entry: de??fen??es??tra??tion
Pronunciation: (")dE-"fe-n&-'strA-sh&n
Function: noun
Etymology: de- + Latin fenestra window
: a throwing of a person or thing out of a window
- de??fen??es??trate /(")dE-'fe-n&-"strAt/ transitive verb
Characterized by a heavy snoring or gasping sound; hoarsely breathing.
In the cinder-block motel room he set the alarm, but his own stertorous breathing woke him before it rang.
-- E. Annie Proulx, "The Half-Skinned Steer", The Atlantic, November 1997
flib??ber??ti??gib??bet (flbr-t-jbt)
n.
A silly, scatterbrained, or garrulous person.
This word has suprisingly wide application.
Pronunciation: 'e-kw&-"poiz, 'E-
1 [/b]- Function: noun
1 : a state of equilibrium
2[/b]- Function: transitive verb
1 : to serve as an equipoise to
2 : to put or hold in equipoise
---
pillock[/b]
noun
(stupid, stupid person, dullard, dolt, pudding head, pudden-head, poor fish, pillock)
a person who is not very bright
Main Entry: aman??u??en??sis [/b]
Pronunciation: &-"man-y&-'wen(t)-s&s
Function: noun
Inflected Form(s): plural aman??u??en??ses /-(")sEz/
Etymology: Latin, from (servus) a manu slave with secretarial duties
: one employed to write from dictation or to copy manuscript
A market condition in which sellers are so few that the actions of any one of them will materially affect price and have a measurable impact on competitors.
-record game?