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weathercock
persnickety
nescient
bromidic
esurient
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AWADmail Issue 417
June 27, 2010A Compendium of Feedback on the Words in A.Word.A.Day and Other Tidbits about Words and Language
This week's Email of the Week is from Erlinda E. Panlilio (see below), who'll receive the Uppityshirt of his choice, and there's a heck of a selection.
From: Terry McCreary (terry.mccreary murraystate.edu)
Subject: Weathercock
Def: 1. A weathervane, especially one with the figure of a rooster on it. 2. One who changes readily or often.
We use this word a lot in hobby rocketry. When a fin-stabilized model or high-power rocket lifts off, the presence of significant wind will cause the rocket to fly into the wind to some degree; the rocket weathercocks. In a very strong wind, a very stable rocket may take a trajectory almost parallel to the ground.
From: Christopher Schemm (cmschemm comcast.net)
Subject: Weathervane with a rooster
In Europe it is common to see a rooster on top of a Protestant church to remind Roman Catholics that the founder of the R.C. church, Peter, denied Christ three times before the cock crowed as Christ said Peter would. Protestant farms in Northern Germany often have roosters on the barns.
From: Dianne Spotts (diaspot verizon.net)
Subject: weathercock
After conversation in a Chinese restaurant yesterday (for a Fathers' Day dinner), and discussion about the Chinese Zodiac signs, your word tickled me. Not that I'm amused that some people have to expend great energy to maintain some normalcy in life, but that we can put weather in front of the other signs besides the cock, and have a new slant on, say, a weatherrabbit: interchangeably both entertaining and detached.
From: Roy Hogrebe (royfish aol.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--weathercock
We paddlers describe the tendency of a kayak to turn into the wind on the beam as weathercocking. Some boats are more susceptible to weathercocking than others.
From: Erlinda E. Panlilio (epanlilio mac.com)
Subject: Weathercock
Apparently, Quebec legislators are more onion-skinned than their Filipino counterparts. Every time there is a new President (now it's the late President Cory Aquino's son Noynoy), our politicians change parties or sides to that of the power-that-is. We have a word for it: balimbing [also known as starfruit], after the many-sided local fruit that's also indigenous to Indonesia and Thailand. In reality, they are all weathercocks, and don't take too much offense when called such.
From: John Whitley (john.whitley blueyonder.co.uk)
Subject: persnickety
Def: 1. Fussy about minor details. 2. Snobbish. 3. Requiring keen attention to detail, as a job.
Persnickety is what we say in Scotland. Pernickety is English, not for the whole of the UK.
From: Linda Landau (LLandauCPA aol.com)
Subject: Bromidic
Def: Commonplace; trite.
The musical South Pacific leaped into my mind upon reading bromidic. What great Rodgers & Hamnmerstein music and lyrics:
A cliche comin' true!
I'm bromidic and bright
As a moon-happy night
Pourin' light on the dew!
I'm as corny as Kansas in August,
High as a flag on the Fourth of July! ...
More
From: Michael Tremberth (michaelt4two googlemail.com)
Subject: bromidic derived from bromine (Greek bromos = stench)
Like Bromine, Osmium (from Greek osme) is another element with a distinct odour, which is caused by the presence of traces of osmium tetroxide in the otherwise pure element. A related word is anosmia.
Osmium has the distinction of being the densest element known, although it is not particularly hard.
From: Andrew MFC (andrewmfc aol.com)
Subject: esurient
Def: Hungry; greedy.
No discussion of the word "esurient" is complete without at least one mention of the Monty Python Cheese Shop sketch!
(video, text)
From: Amy Rogers (cathedralsfan ymail.com)
Subject: Re: A.Word.A.Day--weathercock
I don't remember where I saw this -- it may have been the title of a book -- but I like the saying, "Everybody's normal till you get to know them."
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